Appendix F to Part 61 - Federal Bureau of Investigation Procedures Relating to the Implementation of the National Environmental Policy Act
28:2.0.1.1.18.4.1.1.9 : Appendix F
Appendix F to Part 61 - Federal Bureau of Investigation Procedures
Relating to the Implementation of the National Environmental Policy
Act 1. Authority
These procedures are issued pursuant to the National
Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (NEPA), 42 U.S.C. 4321, et
seq., regulations of the Council on Environmental Quality
(CEQ), 40 CFR part 1500, regulations of the Department of Justice
(DOJ), 28 CFR part 61, the Environmental Quality Improvement Act of
1970, as amended, 42 U.S.C. 4371, et seq., and Executive
Order 11514, “Protection and Enhancement of Environmental Quality,”
March 5, 1970, as amended by Executive Order 11991, May 24,
1977.
2. Purpose
The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) NEPA Program has been
established to assist the FBI in integrating environmental
considerations into the FBI's mission and activities. The FBI NEPA
regulations have been developed to supplement CEQ and DOJ NEPA
regulations by outlining internal FBI policy and procedures.
Through these provisions, the FBI shall promote compliance with
NEPA and CEQ's implementing regulations, encourage environmental
sustainability by integrating environmental considerations into
mission and planning activities, and ensure that environmental
analyses reflect consideration of non-regulatory requirements
included in Federal orders, directives, and policy guidance.
3. Agency Description
The FBI is an intelligence-driven national security and law
enforcement component within DOJ. The FBI's mission is to protect
and defend the United States against terrorist and foreign
intelligence threats, to uphold and enforce the criminal laws of
the United States, and to provide leadership and criminal justice
services to Federal, state, municipal, and international agencies
and partners. General types of FBI actions include:
(a) Operational activities, including the detection,
investigation, and prosecution of crimes against the United States
and the collection of intelligence.
(b) Training activities, including the training of Federal,
state, local, and foreign law enforcement personnel.
(c) Real estate activities, including acquisitions and transfers
of land and facilities and leasing.
(d) Construction, including new construction, renovations,
repair, and demolition of facilities, infrastructure, utilities
systems, and other systems.
(e) Property maintenance and management activities, including
maintenance of facilities, equipment, and grounds and management of
natural resources.
(f) Administrative and regulatory activities, including
personnel management, procurement of goods and services, and
preparation of regulations and policy guidance.
4. NEPA Documentation and Decision Making
The FBI will use the NEPA process as a tool to ensure an
interdisciplinary review of its actions and to ensure that impacts
of those actions on the quality of the human environment are given
appropriate consideration in FBI decisions; to identify and assess
reasonable alternatives to its actions; and to facilitate early and
open communication, when practicable, with the public and other
agencies and organizations.
(a) Level of NEPA Analysis. The level of NEPA analysis
will depend on the context and intensity of the environmental
impacts associated with the proposed action. Environmental
Assessments (EAs) and Environmental Impact Statements (EISs) should
include a range of reasonable alternatives, as well as other
alternatives that are eliminated from detailed study with a brief
discussion of the reasons for eliminating them. If there are no
reasonable alternatives, the EA or EIS must explain why no
reasonable alternative exists. The decision maker must consider all
the alternatives discussed in the EA or EIS. The decision maker may
choose an alternative that is not expressly described in a draft EA
or EIS, provided it is qualitatively within the spectrum of
alternatives that were discussed in the draft.
(b) Responsibility for NEPA Analysis. (1) The FBI's
responsibility for NEPA review of actions shall be determined on a
case-by-case basis depending on the extent to which the entire
project is within the FBI's jurisdiction and on other factors. For
example, factors relevant to whether construction of a facility is
within FBI's jurisdiction include the following: The extent of FBI
control and funding in the construction or use of the facility,
whether the facility is being built solely for FBI requirements,
and whether the project would proceed without FBI action.
(2) The extent of the FBI's responsibility for NEPA review of
joint Federal actions, where the FBI and another Federal agency are
cooperating on a project, shall be determined on a case-by-case
basis depending on which agency is designated as the lead agency
and which is the cooperating agency.
(3) In cases where FBI actions are a component of a larger
project involving a private action or an action by a local or state
government, the FBI's proposed action analyzed in the NEPA document
shall include only the portions of the project over which the FBI
has sufficient control and responsibility to warrant Federal
review. However, the cumulative impacts analysis shall account for
past, present, and reasonably foreseeable future activities
affecting the same natural resources as the FBI project. When
actions are planned by private or other non-Federal entities, the
FBI shall provide the potential applicant reasonably foreseeable
requirements for studies or other information for subsequent FBI
action. In addition, the FBI shall consult early with appropriate
state and local agencies, tribal entities, interested private
persons, and organizations when its own involvement is reasonably
foreseeable.
(4) Whenever appropriate and practicable, the FBI shall
incorporate by reference and rely upon the environmental analyses
and reviews of other Federal, tribal, state, and local
agencies.
5. Categorical Exclusions
(a) Categorical Exclusion (CATEX) Criteria (40 CFR
1508.4). A CATEX is a category of actions which, barring
extraordinary circumstances, does not individually or cumulatively
have a significant effect on the quality of the human environment
and for which neither an EA nor an EIS is required. Using CATEXs
for such activities reduces unnecessary paperwork and delay. Such
activities are not excluded from compliance with other applicable
Federal, state, or local environmental laws. To qualify for a
CATEX, an action must meet all of the following criteria:
(1) The proposed action fits entirely within one or more of the
CATEXs;
(2) The proposed action has not been segmented and is not a
piece of a larger action. For purposes of NEPA, actions must be
considered in the same review if it is reasonably foreseeable that
the actions are connected (e.g., where one action depends on
another).
(3) No extraordinary circumstances exist that would cause the
normally excluded proposed action to have significant environmental
effects. Extraordinary circumstances are assumed to exist when the
proposed action is likely to involve any of the following
circumstances:
(i) An adverse effect on public health or safety;
(ii) An adverse effect on federally listed endangered or
threatened species, marine mammals, or critical habitat;
(iii) An adverse effect on archaeological resources or resources
listed or determined to be eligible for listing in the National
Register of Historic Places;
(iv) An adverse effect on an environmentally sensitive area,
including floodplains, wetlands, streams, critical migration
corridors, and wildlife refuges;
(v) A material violation of a Federal, state, or local
environmental law by the FBI;
(vi) An effect on the quality of the human or natural
environment that is likely to be highly scientifically
controversial or uncertain, or likely to involve unique or unknown
environmental risks;
(vii) Establishment of precedents or decisions in principle for
future actions that have the potential for significant impacts
(e.g., master plans, Integrated Natural Resource Management
Plans, Integrated Cultural Resource Management Plans);
(viii) Significantly greater scope or size than normally
experienced for a particular category of action;
(ix) Potential for substantial degradation of already existing
poor environmental conditions. Also, initiation of a potentially
substantial environmental degrading influence, activity, or effect
in areas not already substantially modified; or
(x) A connection to other actions with individually
insignificant, but cumulatively significant, impacts.
(b) Documentation of CATEX usage. As noted in paragraph
(c) below, certain FBI actions qualifying for a CATEX have been
predetermined to have a low risk of extraordinary circumstances
and, as such, have been designated as not requiring preparation of
a Record of Environmental Consideration (REC) Determination Form. A
REC Determination Form must be prepared for all other FBI actions
subject to NEPA review. The REC Determination Form shall determine
if the proposed action falls within a category of actions that has
been excluded from further NEPA review or if the action will
require further analysis through an EA or EIS. The REC
Determination Form shall also identify any extraordinary
circumstances that require the FBI to perform an EA or an EIS for
an action that would otherwise qualify for a CATEX.
(c) List of No REC Determination Form Required (NR) FBI
CATEXs. (NR1) Reductions, realignments, or relocation of
personnel, equipment, or mobile assets that does not result in
changing the use of the space in such a way that could cause
environmental effects or exceed the infrastructure capacity outside
of FBI-managed property. An example of exceeding the infrastructure
capacity would be an increase in vehicular traffic beyond the
capacity of the supporting road network to accommodate such an
increase.
(NR2) Personnel, fiscal, management, and administrative
activities, including recruiting, processing, paying, contract
administration, recordkeeping, budgeting, personnel actions, and
travel.
(NR3) Decisions to close facilities, decommission equipment, or
temporarily discontinue use of facilities or equipment, where the
facility or equipment is not used to prevent or control
environmental impacts. This requirement excludes demolition
actions.
(NR4) Preparation of policies, procedures, manuals, and other
guidance documents for which the environmental effects are too
broad, speculative, or conjectural to lend themselves to meaningful
analysis and for which the applicability of the NEPA process will
be evaluated upon implementation, either collectively or case by
case.
(NR5) Grants of licenses, easements, or similar arrangements for
use by vehicles (not to include substantial increases in the number
of vehicles loaded); electrical, telephone, and other transmission
and communication lines; and pipelines, pumping stations, and
facilities for water, wastewater, stormwater, and irrigation; and
for similar utility and transportation uses. Construction or
acquisition of new facilities is not included.
(NR6) Acquisition, installation, operation, and maintenance of
temporary equipment, devices, or controls necessary to mitigate
effects of the FBI's missions on health and the environment. This
CATEX is not intended to cover facility construction or related
activities. Examples include:
(i) Temporary sediment and erosion control measures required to
meet applicable Federal, tribal, state, or local requirements;
(ii) Installation of temporary diversion fencing to prevent
earth disturbances within sensitive areas during construction
activities; and
(iii) Installation of temporary markers to delineate limits of
earth disturbances in forested areas to prevent unnecessary tree
removal.
(NR7) Routine flying operations and infrequent, temporary (fewer
than 30 days) increases in aircraft operations up to 50 percent of
the typical FBI aircraft operation rate.
(NR8) Proposed new activities and operations to be conducted in
an existing structure that would be consistent with previously
established safety levels and would not result in a change in use
of the facility. Examples include new types of research,
development, testing, and evaluation activities, and laboratory
operations conducted within existing enclosed facilities designed
to support research and development activities.
(NR9) Conducting audits and surveys; data collection; data
analysis; and processing, permitting, information dissemination,
review, interpretation, and development of documents. If any of
these activities results in proposals for further action, those
proposals must be covered by an appropriate CATEX or other NEPA
analysis. Examples include:
(i) Document mailings, publication, and distribution, training
and information programs, historical and cultural demonstrations,
and public affairs actions;
(ii) Studies, reports, proposals, analyses, literature reviews,
computer modeling, and intelligence gathering and sharing;
(iii) Activities designed to support improvement or upgrade
management of natural resources, such as surveys for threatened and
endangered species or cultural resources; wetland delineations; and
minimal water, air, waste, and soil sampling;
(iv) Minimally intrusive geological, geophysical, and
geo-technical activities, including mapping and engineering
surveys;
(v) Conducting facility audits, Environmental Site Assessments,
and environmental baseline surveys; and
(vi) Vulnerability, risk, and structural integrity assessments
of infrastructure.
(NR10) Routine procurement, use, storage, and disposal of
non-hazardous goods and services in support of administrative,
operational, or maintenance activities in accordance with executive
orders and Federal procurement guidelines. Examples include:
(i) Office supplies and furniture;
(ii) Equipment;
(iii) Mobile assets (i.e., vehicles, vessels,
aircraft);
(iv) Utility services; and
(v) Deployable emergency response supplies and equipment.
(NR11) Routine use of hazardous materials (to include
procurement, transportation, distribution, and storage of such
materials) and reuse, recycling, and disposal of solid, medical,
radiological, or hazardous waste in a manner that is consistent
with all applicable laws, regulations, and policies. Examples
include:
(i) Use of chemicals and low-level radio-nuclides for laboratory
applications;
(ii) Refueling of storage tanks;
(iii) Appropriate treatment and disposal of medical waste;
(iv) Temporary storage and disposal of solid waste;
(v) Disposal of radiological waste through manufacturer return
and recycling programs; and
(vi) Hazardous waste minimization activities.
(NR12) Acquisition, installation, maintenance, operation, or
evaluation of security equipment to screen for or detect dangerous
or illegal individuals or materials at existing facilities or to
enhance the physical security of existing critical assets. Examples
include:
(i) Low-level x-ray devices;
(ii) Cameras and biometric devices;
(iii) Passive inspection devices;
(iv) Detection or security systems for explosive, biological, or
chemical substances;
(v) Access controls, screening devices, and traffic management
systems;
(vi) Motion detection systems;
(vii) Impact-resistant doors and gates;
(viii) Diver and swimmer detection systems, except sonar;
and
(ix) Blast and shock impact-resistant systems for land-based and
waterfront facilities.
(NR13) Maintenance of facilities, equipment, and grounds.
Examples include interior utility work, road maintenance, window
washing, lawn mowing, trash collecting, facility cleaning, and snow
removal.
(NR14) Recreation and welfare activities (e.g., picnics
and Family Day).
(NR15) Training FBI personnel or persons external to the FBI
using existing facilities and where the training occurs in
accordance with applicable permitting requirements and other
requirements for the protection of the environment. This exclusion
does not apply to training that involves the use of live chemical,
biological, radiological, or explosive agents, except when
conducted at a location designed and constructed to accommodate
those materials and their associated hazards. Examples include:
(i) Administrative or classroom training;
(ii) Tactical training, including training in explosives and
incendiary devices, arson investigation and firefighting, and
emergency preparedness and response;
(iii) Chemical, biological, explosive, or hazardous material
handling training;
(iv) Vehicle, aircraft, and small boat operation training;
(v) Small arms and less-than-lethal weapons training;
(vi) Security specialties and terrorist response training;
(vii) Crowd control training, including gas range training;
(viii) Enforcement response, self-defense, and interdiction
techniques training; and
(ix) Fingerprinting and drug analysis training.
(NR16) Projects, grants, cooperative agreements, contracts, or
activities to design, develop, and conduct national, state, local,
or international exercises to test the readiness of the nation to
prevent or respond to a terrorist attack or a natural or manmade
disaster, where the activity in question is conducted in accordance
with existing facility or land use designations. This exclusion
does not apply to exercises that involve the use of live chemical,
biological, radiological, nuclear, or explosive agents/devices
(other than small devices such as practice grenades or flash bang
devices used to simulate an attack during exercises), unless these
exercises are conducted under the auspices of existing plans or
permits that have undergone NEPA review.
(d) List of REC Determination Form Required (R) FBI
CATEXs. (R1) Reductions, realignments, or relocation of
personnel, equipment, or mobile assets that results in changing the
use of the space in such a way that could cause changes to
environmental effects, but does not result in exceeding the
infrastructure capacity outside of FBI-managed property. An example
of exceeding the infrastructure capacity would be an increase in
vehicular traffic beyond the capacity of the supporting road
network to accommodate such an increase.
(R2) Acquisition or use of space within an existing structure,
by purchase, lease, or use agreement. This requirement includes
structures that are in the process of construction or were recently
constructed, regardless of whether the existing structure was built
to satisfy an FBI requirement and the proposed FBI use would not
exceed the carrying capacity of the utilities and infrastructure
for the use and access to the space. This requirement also includes
associated relocation of personnel, equipment, or assets into the
acquired space.
(R3) Transfer of administrative control over real property,
including related personal property, between another Federal agency
and the FBI that does not result in a change in the functional use
of the property.
(R4) New construction (e.g., facilities, roads, parking
areas, trails, solar panels, and wind turbines) or improvement of
land where all of the following conditions are met:
(i) The site is in a developed or a previously disturbed
area;
(ii) The proposed use will not substantially increase the number
of motor vehicles at the facility or in the area;
(iii) The construction or improvement will not result in
exceeding the infrastructure capacity outside of FBI-managed
property (e.g., roads, sewer, water, and parking);
(iv) The site and scale of construction or improvement are
consistent with those of existing, adjacent, or nearby buildings;
and
(v) The structure and proposed use are compatible with
applicable Federal, tribal, state, and local planning and zoning
standards and consistent with federally approved state coastal
management programs.
(R5) Renovation, addition, repair, alteration, and demolition
projects affecting buildings, roads, airfields, grounds, equipment,
and other facilities, including subsequent disposal of debris,
which may be contaminated with hazardous materials such as
polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), lead, or asbestos. Hazardous
materials shall be disposed of at approved sites in accordance with
Federal, state, and local regulations. Examples include the
following:
(i) Realigning interior spaces of an existing building;
(ii) Adding a small storage shed to an existing building;
(iii) Retrofitting for energy conservation, including
weatherization, installation of timers on hot water heaters,
installation of energy efficient lighting, installation of low-flow
plumbing fixtures, and installation of drip-irrigation systems;
(iv) Installing a small antenna on an already existing antenna
tower that does not cause the total height to exceed 200 feet and
where the FCC's NEPA procedures allow for application of a CATEX;
or
(v) Closing and demolishing a building not eligible for listing
under the National Register of Historic Places.
(R6) Acquisition, installation, reconstruction, repair by
replacement, and operation of utility (e.g., water, sewer,
electrical), communication (e.g., data processing cable and
similar electronic equipment), and security systems that use
existing rights-of-way, easements, distribution systems, or
facilities.
(R7) Acquisition, installation, operation, and maintenance of
permanent equipment, devices, and/or controls necessary to mitigate
effects of the FBI's missions on health and the environment. This
CATEX is not intended to cover facility construction or related
activities. Examples include:
(i) Pollution prevention and pollution control equipment
required to meet applicable Federal, tribal, state, or local
requirements;
(ii) Installation of fencing, including security fencing, that
would not have the potential to significantly impede wildlife
population movement (including migration) or surface water
flow;
(iii) Installation and operation of lighting devices;
(iv) Noise abatement measures, including construction of noise
barriers, installation of noise control materials, or planting
native trees or native vegetation for use as a noise abatement
measure; and
(v) Devices to protect human or animal life, such as raptor
electrocution prevention devices, and fencing and grating to
prevent accidental entry to hazardous or restricted areas.
(R8) Non-routine procurement, use, storage, and disposal of
non-hazardous goods and services in support of administrative,
operational, or maintenance activities in accordance with executive
orders and Federal procurement guidelines.
(R9) Use of hazardous materials (to include procurement,
transportation, distribution, and storage of such materials) and
reuse, recycling, and disposal of solid, medical, radiological, or
hazardous waste in a manner that is consistent with all applicable
laws, regulations, and policies, but uncharacteristic of routine
FBI use, reuse, recycling, and disposal of hazardous materials and
waste. Examples include:
(i) Procurement of a new type of chemical or procurement of a
larger quantity of a particular chemical than generally used by the
FBI; and
(ii) Disposal of items that contain PCBs (e.g., carpets,
lighting, caulk).
(R10) Herbicide application and pest management, including
registered pesticide application, in accordance with Federal,
state, and local regulations.
(R11) Natural resource management activities on FBI-managed
property to aid in the maintenance or restoration of native flora
and fauna, including site preparation and control of non-indigenous
species, excluding the application of herbicides.
6. Environmental Assessment
An EA is a concise public document for actions that do not meet
the requirements for applying a CATEX, but for which it is unclear
whether an EIS is required. An EA briefly provides evidence and
analysis for determining whether to prepare an EIS or a Finding of
No Significant Impact (FONSI), and facilitates preparation of an
EIS when one is required. The requirements and contents of an EA
are described in 40 CFR 1508.9. Significance of impacts shall be
determined based on the criteria outlined in 40 CFR 1508.27. The
FBI will comment on other agencies' EAs when relevant to the FBI's
mission, or where the FBI has jurisdiction by law or relevant
special expertise.
(a) Examples of types of FBI actions that typically require an
EA include the following:
(1) Long-term plans for FBI-managed properties and
facilities.
(2) Proposed construction, land use, activity, or operation
where it is uncertain whether the action will significantly affect
environmentally sensitive areas.
(3) New activities for which the impacts are not known with
certainty, but where the impacts are not expected to cause
significant environmental degradation.
7. Environmental Impact Statement
An EIS is a detailed, written statement Federal agencies must
prepare for major Federal actions that will significantly affect
the quality of the human environment, or when an EA concludes that
the significance threshold of the impacts associated with a
proposed action would be crossed. An EIS describes effects of the
proposed action and any reasonable alternatives. A Notice of Intent
(NOI) is published in the Federal Register as soon as practicable
after a decision to prepare an EIS is made. The FBI may prepare an
EIS without prior preparation of an EA. The format and content of
an EIS are described in 40 CFR part 1502.
(a) A Record of Decision (ROD) is prepared at the time a
decision is made regarding a proposal that is analyzed and
documented in an EIS. The ROD will state the decision, discuss the
alternatives considered, and state whether all practicable means to
avoid or minimize environmental harms have been adopted or, if not,
why they were not adopted. Where applicable, the ROD will also
describe and adopt a monitoring and enforcement plan for any
mitigation. The FBI will comment on other agencies' EISs when
relevant to the FBI's mission, or where the FBI has jurisdiction by
law or relevant special expertise.
(b) Examples of types of actions that typically require an EIS
include the following:
(1) Proposed major construction or construction of facilities
that would have a significant effect on wetlands, coastal zones, or
other environmentally sensitive areas.
(2) Change in area, scope, type, and/or frequency of operations
or training that will result in significant environmental
effects.
(3) Actions where the effects of a project or operation on the
human environment are likely to be highly scientifically uncertain,
but are perceived to have potential for significant impacts.
8. Scoping
Scoping may be used for all NEPA documents in order to
streamline the NEPA process by identifying significant issues and
narrowing the scope of the environmental review process. The FBI
may seek agencies with specialized expertise or authority in
environmental planning requirements that may be beneficial to FBI
mission planning and encourage such agencies to be cooperating
agencies (40 CFR 1501.6, 1508.5). In cases where an EIS is prepared
in response to a finding of significant impact following
preparation of an EA, the EIS scoping process shall incorporate the
results of the EA development process.
9. Public Involvement
The FBI may use such means as newspaper announcements,
electronic media, and public hearings to disseminate information to
potentially interested or affected parties about NEPA actions, as
appropriate. When preparing an EIS, and in certain cases an EA, the
FBI shall invite comment from affected Federal, tribal, state, and
local agencies, and other interested persons in accordance with 40
CFR part 1503.
10. Mitigation
(a) Mitigation measures, such as those described in 40 CFR
1508.20, may be used to offset environmental impacts associated
with implementation of an action. If a FONSI or ROD is based on
mitigation measures, all mitigation measures stipulated in the EA
or EIS must be implemented as described in the FONSI or ROD.
(b) Mitigation measures, where applicable, must be included as
conditions in grants, permits, and relevant contract documents.
Funding of actions shall be contingent on performance of mitigation
measures, where such measures are identified in a FONSI or ROD. If
mitigation is required, a mitigation monitoring plan shall be
developed prior to the initiation of the proposed action. To the
extent practicable, the FBI shall make available the progress or
results of monitoring upon request by the public or
cooperating/commenting agencies.
11. Programmatic, Tiered, and Supplemental NEPA Documents
(a) Programmatic EAs or EISs may be prepared to cover broad
actions, such as programs or plans (e.g., Master Plan
EA).
(b) Tiered EAs or EISs may be prepared to cover narrower actions
that are a component to previously prepared Programmatic EAs or
EISs as described in 40 CFR 1508.28.
(c) Supplemental EAs or EISs shall be prepared when the FBI
makes substantial changes to the proposed action that are relevant
to environmental concerns; when there are significant new
circumstances or information relevant to environmental concerns and
bearing on the proposed action or its impacts (e.g., new
study has revealed rare, threatened, and endangered species in the
project vicinity); or when the FBI determines that the purposes of
NEPA will be furthered by doing so.
(1) Supplemental EAs may either be prepared by tracking changes
in the original EA or by preparing a separate document that only
discusses the changes in the project scope and/or new information
and the associated changes with regard to impacts. The process
concludes with a decision regarding whether to issue a revised
FONSI (using one of the methods listed in section 9 of these
procedures) or a decision to prepare an EIS.
(2) Supplemental EISs are prepared in the same way as an EIS.
If, however, a supplemental EIS is prepared within one year of
filing the ROD for the original EIS, no new scoping process is
required. The process concludes with a decision regarding whether
to issue a revised ROD.
[84 FR 14013, Apr. 9, 2019]