Appendix B to Part 325 - NEPA Implementation Procedures for the Regulatory Program
33:3.0.1.1.23.0.2.11.17 : Appendix B
Appendix B to Part 325 - NEPA Implementation Procedures for the
Regulatory Program 1. Introduction 2. General 3. Development of
Information and Data 4. Elimination of Duplication with State and
Local Procedures 5. Public Involvement 6. Categorical Exclusions 7.
EA/FONSI Document 8. Environmental Impact Statement - General 9.
Organization and Content of Draft EISs 10. Notice of Intent 11.
Public Hearing 12. Organization and Content of Final EIS 13.
Comments Received on the Final EIS 14. EIS Supplement 15. Filing
Requirements 16. Timing 17. Expedited Filing 18. Record of Decision
19. Predecision Referrals by Other Agencies 20. Review of Other
Agencies' EISs 21. Monitoring
1. Introduction. In keeping with Executive Order 12291
and 40 CFR 1500.2, where interpretive problems arise in
implementing this regulation, and consideration of all other
factors do not give a clear indication of a reasonable
interpretation, the interpretation (consistent with the spirit and
intent of NEPA) which results in the least paperwork and delay will
be used. Specific examples of ways to reduce paperwork in the NEPA
process are found at 40 CFR 1500.4. Maximum advantage of these
recommendations should be taken.
2. General. This Appendix sets forth implementing
procedures for the Corps regulatory program. For additional
guidance, see the Corps NEPA regulation 33 CFR part 230 and for
general policy guidance, see the CEQ regulations 40 CFR
1500-1508.
3. Development of Information and Data. See 40 CFR
1506.5. The district engineer may require the applicant to furnish
appropriate information that the district engineer considers
necessary for the preparation of an Environmental Assessment (EA)
or Environmental Impact Statement (EIS). See also 40 CFR 1502.22
regarding incomplete or unavailable information.
4. Elimination of Duplication with State and Local
Procedures. See 40 CFR 1506.2.
5. Public Involvement. Several paragraphs of this
appendix (paragraphs 7, 8, 11, 13, and 19) provide information on
the requirements for district engineers to make available to the
public certain environmental documents in accordance with 40 CFR
1506.6.
6. Categorical Exclusions - a. General. Even
though an EA or EIS is not legally mandated for any Federal action
falling within one of the “categorical exclusions,” that fact does
not exempt any Federal action from procedural or substantive
compliance with any other Federal law. For example, compliance with
the Endangered Species Act, the Clean Water Act, etc., is always
mandatory, even for actions not requiring an EA or EIS. The
following activities are not considered to be major Federal actions
significantly affecting the quality of the human environment and
are therefore categorically excluded from NEPA documentation:
(1) Fixed or floating small private piers, small docks, boat
hoists and boathouses.
(2) Minor utility distribution and collection lines including
irrigation;
(3) Minor maintenance dredging using existing disposal
sites;
(4) Boat launching ramps;
(5) All applications which qualify as letters of permission (as
described at 33 CFR 325.5(b)(2)).
b. Extraordinary Circumstances. District engineers should
be alert for extraordinary circumstances where normally excluded
actions could have substantial environmental effects and thus
require an EA or EIS. For a period of one year from the effective
data of these regulations, district engineers should maintain an
information list on the type and number of categorical exclusion
actions which, due to extraordinary circumstances, triggered the
need for an EA/FONSI or EIS. If a district engineer determines that
a categorical exclusion should be modified, the information will be
furnished to the division engineer who will review and analyze the
actions and circumstances to determine if there is a basis for
recommending a modification to the list of categorical exclusions.
HQUSACE (CECW-OR) will review recommended changes for Corps-wide
consistency and revise the list accordingly.
7. EA/FONSI Document. (See 40 CFR 1508.9 and 1508.13 for
definitions) - a. Environmental Assessment (EA) and Findings of
No Significant Impact (FONSI). The EA should normally be
combined with other required documents (EA/404(b)(1)/SOF/FONSI).
“EA” as used throughout this Appendix normally refers to this
combined document. The district engineer should complete an EA as
soon as practicable after all relevant information is available
(i.e., after the comment period for the public notice of the
permit application has expired) and when the EA is a separate
document it must be completed prior to completion of the statement
of finding (SOF). When the EA confirms that the impact of the
applicant's proposal is not significant and there are no
“unresolved conflicts concerning alternative uses of available
resources * * *” (section 102(2)(E) of NEPA), and the proposed
activity is a “water dependent” activity as defined in 40 CFR
230.10(a)(3), the EA need not include a discussion on alternatives.
In all other cases where the district engineer determines that
there are unresolved conflicts concerning alternative uses of
available resources, the EA shall include a discussion of the
reasonable alternatives which are to be considered by the ultimate
decision-maker. The decision options available to the Corps, which
embrace all of the applicant's alternatives, are issue the permit,
issue with modifications or deny the permit. Modifications are
limited to those project modifications within the scope of
established permit conditioning policy (See 33 CFR 325.4). The
decision option to deny the permit results in the “no action”
alternative (i.e., no activity requiring a Corps permit).
The combined document normally should not exceed 15 pages and shall
conclude with a FONSI (See 40 CFR 1508.13) or a determination that
an EIS is required. The district engineer may delegate the signing
of the NEPA document. Should the EA demonstrate that an EIS is
necessary, the district engineer shall follow the procedures
outlined in paragraph 8 of this Appendix. In those cases where it
is obvious an EIS is required, an EA is not required. However, the
district engineer should document his reasons for requiring an
EIS.
b. Scope of Analysis. (1) In some situations, a permit
applicant may propose to conduct a specific activity requiring a
Department of the Army (DA) permit (e.g., construction of a pier in
a navigable water of the United States) which is merely one
component of a larger project (e.g., construction of an oil
refinery on an upland area). The district engineer should establish
the scope of the NEPA document (e.g., the EA or EIS) to address the
impacts of the specific activity requiring a DA permit and those
portions of the entire project over which the district engineer has
sufficient control and responsibility to warrant Federal
review.
(2) The district engineer is considered to have control and
responsibility for portions of the project beyond the limits of
Corps jurisdiction where the Federal involvement is sufficient to
turn an essentially private action into a Federal action. These are
cases where the environmental consequences of the larger project
are essentially products of the Corps permit action.
Typical factors to be considered in determining whether
sufficient “control and responsibility” exists include:
(i) Whether or not the regulated activity comprises “merely a
link” in a corridor type project (e.g., a transportation or utility
transmission project).
(ii) Whether there are aspects of the upland facility in the
immediate vicinity of the regulated activity which affect the
location and configuration of the regulated activity.
(iii) The extent to which the entire project will be within
Corps jurisdiction.
(iv) The extent of cumulative Federal control and
responsibility.
A. Federal control and responsibility will include the portions
of the project beyond the limits of Corps jurisdiction where the
cumulative Federal involvement of the Corps and other Federal
agencies is sufficient to grant legal control over such additional
portions of the project. These are cases where the environmental
consequences of the additional portions of the projects are
essentially products of Federal financing, assistance, direction,
regulation, or approval (not including funding assistance solely in
the form of general revenue sharing funds, with no Federal agency
control over the subsequent use of such funds, and not including
judicial or administrative civil or criminal enforcement
actions).
B. In determining whether sufficient cumulative Federal
involvement exists to expand the scope of Federal action the
district engineer should consider whether other Federal agencies
are required to take Federal action under the Fish and Wildlife
Coordination Act (16 U.S.C. 661 et seq.), the National
Historic Preservation Act of 1966 (16 U.S.C. 470 et seq.),
the Endangered Species Act of 1973 (16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.),
Executive Order 11990, Protection of Wetlands, (42 U.S.C. 4321
91977), and other environmental review laws and executive
orders.
C. The district engineer should also refer to paragraphs 8(b)
and 8(c) of this appendix for guidance on determining whether it
should be the lead or a cooperating agency in these situations.
These factors will be added to or modified through guidance as
additional field experience develops.
(3) Examples: If a non-Federal oil refinery, electric
generating plant, or industrial facility is proposed to be built on
an upland site and the only DA permit requirement relates to a
connecting pipeline, supply loading terminal or fill road, that
pipeline, terminal or fill road permit, in and of itself, normally
would not constitute sufficient overall Federal involvement with
the project to justify expanding the scope of a Corps NEPA document
to cover upland portions of the facility beyond the structures in
the immediate vicinity of the regulated activity that would effect
the location and configuration of the regulated activity.
Similarly, if an applicant seeks a DA permit to fill waters or
wetlands on which other construction or work is proposed, the
control and responsibility of the Corps, as well as its overall
Federal involvement would extend to the portions of the project to
be located on the permitted fill. However, the NEPA review would be
extended to the entire project, including portions outside waters
of the United States, only if sufficient Federal control and
responsibility over the entire project is determined to exist; that
is, if the regulated activities, and those activities involving
regulation, funding, etc. by other Federal agencies, comprise a
substantial portion of the overall project. In any case, once the
scope of analysis has been defined, the NEPA analysis for that
action should include direct, indirect and cumulative impacts on
all Federal interests within the purview of the NEPA statute. The
district engineer should, whenever practicable, incorporate by
reference and rely upon the reviews of other Federal and State
agencies.
For those regulated activities that comprise merely a link in a
transportation or utility transmission project, the scope of
analysis should address the Federal action, i.e., the
specific activity requiring a DA permit and any other portion of
the project that is within the control or responsibility of the
Corps of Engineers (or other Federal agencies).
For example, a 50-mile electrical transmission cable crossing a
1 1/4 mile wide river that is a navigable water of the United
States requires a DA permit. Neither the origin and destination of
the cable nor its route to and from the navigable water, except as
the route applies to the location and configuration of the
crossing, are within the control or responsibility of the Corps of
Engineers. Those matters would not be included in the scope of
analysis which, in this case, would address the impacts of the
specific cable crossing.
Conversely, for those activities that require a DA permit for a
major portion of a transportation or utility transmission project,
so that the Corps permit bears upon the origin and destination as
well as the route of the project outside the Corps regulatory
boundaries, the scope of analysis should include those portions of
the project outside the boundaries of the Corps section 10/404
regulatory jurisdiction. To use the same example, if 30 miles of
the 50-mile transmission line crossed wetlands or other “waters of
the United States,” the scope of analysis should reflect impacts of
the whole 50-mile transmission line.
For those activities that require a DA permit for a major
portion of a shoreside facility, the scope of analysis should
extend to upland portions of the facility. For example, a shipping
terminal normally requires dredging, wharves, bulkheads, berthing
areas and disposal of dredged material in order to function.
Permits for such activities are normally considered sufficient
Federal control and responsibility to warrant extending the scope
of analysis to include the upland portions of the facility.
In all cases, the scope of analysis used for analyzing both
impacts and alternatives should be the same scope of analysis used
for analyzing the benefits of a proposal.
8. Environmental Impact Statement - General - a.
Determination of Lead and Cooperating Agencies. When the
district engineer determines that an EIS is required, he will
contact all appropriate Federal agencies to determine their
respective role(s), i.e., that of lead agency or cooperating
agency.
b. Corps as Lead Agency. When the Corps is lead agency,
it will be responsible for managing the EIS process, including
those portions which come under the jurisdiction of other Federal
agencies. The district engineer is authorized to require the
applicant to furnish appropriate information as discussed in
paragraph 3 of this appendix. It is permissable for the Corps to
reimburse, under agreement, staff support from other Federal
agencies beyond the immediate jurisdiction of those agencies.
c. Corps as Cooperating Agency. If another agency is the
lead agency as set forth by the CEQ regulations (40 CFR 1501.5 and
1501.6(a) and 1508.16), the district engineer will coordinate with
that agency as a cooperating agency under 40 CFR 1501.6(b) and
1508.5 to insure that agency's resulting EIS may be adopted by the
Corps for purposes of exercising its regulatory authority. As a
cooperating agency the Corps will be responsible to the lead agency
for providing environmental information which is directly related
to the regulatory matter involved and which is required for the
preparation of an EIS. This in no way shall be construed as
lessening the district engineer's ability to request the applicant
to furnish appropriate information as discussed in paragraph 3 of
this appendix.
When the Corps is a cooperating agency because of a regulatory
responsibility, the district engineer should, in accordance with 40
CFR 1501.6(b)(4), “make available staff support at the lead
agency's request” to enhance the latter's interdisciplinary
capability provided the request pertains to the Corps regulatory
action covered by the EIS, to the extent this is practicable.
Beyond this, Corps staff support will generally be made available
to the lead agency to the extent practicable within its own
responsibility and available resources. Any assistance to a lead
agency beyond this will normally be by written agreement with the
lead agency providing for the Corps expenses on a cost reimbursable
basis. If the district engineer believes a public hearing should be
held and another agency is lead agency, the district engineer
should request such a hearing and provide his reasoning for the
request. The district engineer should suggest a joint hearing and
offer to take an active part in the hearing and ensure coverage of
the Corps concerns.
d. Scope of Analysis. See paragraph 7b.
e. Scoping Process. Refer to 40 CFR 1501.7 and 33 CFR
230.12.
f. Contracting. See 40 CFR 1506.5.
(1) The district engineer may prepare an EIS, or may obtain
information needed to prepare an EIS, either with his own staff or
by contract. In choosing a contractor who reports directly to the
district engineer, the procedures of 40 CFR 1506.5(c) will be
followed.
(2) Information required for an EIS also may be furnished by the
applicant or a consultant employed by the applicant. Where this
approach is followed, the district engineer will (i) advise the
applicant and/or his consultant of the Corps information
requirements, and (ii) meet with the applicant and/or his
consultant from time to time and provide him with the district
engineer's views regarding adequacy of the data that are being
developed (including how the district engineer will view such data
in light of any possible conflicts of interest).
The applicant and/or his consultant may accept or reject the
district engineer's guidance. The district engineer, however, may
after specifying the information in contention, require the
applicant to resubmit any previously submitted data which the
district engineer considers inadequate or inaccurate. In all cases,
the district engineer should document in the record the Corps
independent evaluation of the information and its accuracy, as
required by 40 CFR 1506.5(a).
g. Change in EIS Determination. If it is determined that
an EIS is not required after a notice of intent has been published,
the district engineer shall terminate the EIS preparation and
withdraw the notice of intent. The district engineer shall notify
in writing the appropriate division engineer; HQUSACE (CECW-OR);
the appropriate EPA regional administrator, the Director, Office of
Federal Activities (A-104), EPA, 401 M Street SW., Washington, DC
20460 and the public of the determination.
h. Time Limits. For regulatory actions, the district
engineer will follow 33 CFR 230.17(a) unless unusual delays caused
by applicant inaction or compliance with other statutes require
longer time frames for EIS preparation. At the outset of the EIS
effort, schedule milestones will be developed and made available to
the applicant and the public. If the milestone dates are not met
the district engineer will notify the applicant and explain the
reason for delay.
9. Organization and Content of Draft EISs - a.
General. This section gives detailed information for
preparing draft EISs. When the Corps is the lead agency, this draft
EIS format and these procedures will be followed. When the Corps is
one of the joint lead agencies, the joint lead agencies will
mutually decide which agency's format and procedures will be
followed.
b. Format - (1) Cover Sheet. (a) Ref. 40 CFR
1502.11.
(b) The “person at the agency who can supply further
information” (40 CFR 1502.11(c) is the project manager handling
that permit application.
(c) The cover sheet should identify the EIS as a Corps permit
action and state the authorities (sections 9, 10, 404, 103, etc.)
under which the Corps is exerting its jurisdiction.
(2) Summary. In addition to the requirements of 40 CFR
1502.12, this section should identify the proposed action as a
Corps permit action stating the authorities (sections 9, 10, 404,
103, etc.) under which the Corps is exerting its jurisdiction. It
shall also summarize the purpose and need for the proposed action
and shall briefly state the beneficial/adverse impacts of the
proposed action.
(3) Table of Contents.
(4) Purpose and Need. See 40 CFR 1502.13. If the scope of
analysis for the NEPA document (see paragraph 7b) covers only the
proposed specific activity requiring a Department of the Army
permit, then the underlying purpose and need for that specific
activity should be stated. (For example, “The purpose and need for
the pipe is to obtain cooling water from the river for the electric
generating plant.”) If the scope of analysis covers a more
extensive project, only part of which may require a DA permit, then
the underlying purpose and need for the entire project should be
stated. (For example, “The purpose and need for the electric
generating plant is to provide increased supplies of electricity to
the (named) geographic area.”) Normally, the applicant should be
encouraged to provide a statement of his proposed activity's
purpose and need from his perspective (for example, “to construct
an electric generating plant”). However, whenever the NEPA
document's scope of analysis renders it appropriate, the Corps also
should consider and express that activity's underlying purpose and
need from a public interest perspective (to use that same example,
“to meet the public's need for electric energy”). Also, while
generally focusing on the applicant's statement, the Corps, will in
all cases, exercise independent judgment in defining the purpose
and need for the project from both the applicant's and the public's
perspective.
(5) Alternatives. See 40 CFR 1502.14. The Corps is
neither an opponent nor a proponent of the applicant's proposal;
therefore, the applicant's final proposal will be identified as the
“applicant's preferred alternative” in the final EIS. Decision
options available to the district engineer, which embrace all of
the applicant's alternatives, are issue the permit, issue with
modifications or conditions or deny the permit.
(a) Only reasonable alternatives need be considered in detail,
as specified in 40 CFR 1502.14(a). Reasonable alternatives must be
those that are feasible and such feasibility must focus on the
accomplishment of the underlying purpose and need (of the applicant
or the public) that would be satisfied by the proposed Federal
action (permit issuance). The alternatives analysis should be
thorough enough to use for both the public interest review and the
404(b)(1) guidelines (40 CFR part 230) where applicable. Those
alternatives that are unavailable to the applicant, whether or not
they require Federal action (permits), should normally be included
in the analysis of the no-Federal-action (denial) alternative. Such
alternatives should be evaluated only to the extent necessary to
allow a complete and objective evaluation of the public interest
and a fully informed decision regarding the permit application.
(b) The “no-action” alternative is one which results in no
construction requiring a Corps permit. It may be brought by (1) the
applicant electing to modify his proposal to eliminate work under
the jurisdiction of the Corps or (2) by the denial of the permit.
District engineers, when evaluating this alternative, should
discuss, when appropriate, the consequences of other likely uses of
a project site, should the permit be denied.
(c) The EIS should discuss geographic alternatives, e.g.,
changes in location and other site specific variables, and
functional alternatives, e.g., project substitutes and design
modifications.
(d) The Corps shall not prepare a cost-benefit analysis for
projects requiring a Corps permit. 40 CFR 1502.23 states that the
weighing of the various alternatives need not be displayed in a
cost-benefit analysis and “* * * should not be when there are
important qualitative considerations.” The EIS should, however,
indicate any cost considerations that are likely to be relevant to
a decision.
(e) Mitigation is defined in 40 CFR 1508.20, and Federal action
agencies are directed in 40 CFR 1502.14 to include appropriate
mitigation measures. Guidance on the conditioning of permits to
require mitigation is in 33 CFR 320.4(r) and 325.4. The nature and
extent of mitigation conditions are dependent on the results of the
public interest review in 33 CFR 320.4.
(6) Affected Environment. See Ref. 40 CFR 1502.15.
(7) Environmental Consequences. See Ref. 40 CFR
1502.16.
(8) List of Preparers. See Ref. 40 CFR 1502.17.
(9) Public Involvement. This section should list the
dates and nature of all public notices, scoping meetings and public
hearings and include a list of all parties notified.
(10) Appendices. See 40 CFR 1502.18. Appendices should be
used to the maximum extent practicable to minimize the length of
the main text of the EIS. Appendices normally should not be
circulated with every copy of the EIS, but appropriate appendices
should be provided routinely to parties with special interest and
expertise in the particular subject.
(11) Index. The Index of an EIS, at the end of the
document, should be designed to provide for easy reference to items
discussed in the main text of the EIS.
10. Notice of Intent. The district engineer shall follow
the guidance in 33 CFR part 230, Appendix C in preparing a notice
of intent to prepare a draft EIS for publication in the Federal
Register.
11. Public Hearing. If a public hearing is to be held
pursuant to 33 CFR part 327 for a permit application requiring an
EIS, the actions analyzed by the draft EIS should be considered at
the public hearing. The district engineer should make the draft EIS
available to the public at least 15 days in advance of the hearing.
If a hearing request is received from another agency having
jurisdiction as provided in 40 CFR 1506.6(c)(2), the district
engineer should coordinate a joint hearing with that agency
whenever appropriate.
12. Organization and Content of Final EIS. The
organization and content of the final EIS including the abbreviated
final EIS procedures shall follow the guidance in 33 CFR
230.14(a).
13. Comments Received on the Final EIS. For permit cases
to be decided at the district level, the district engineer should
consider all incoming comments and provide responses when
substantive issues are raised which have not been addressed in the
final EIS. For permit cases decided at higher authority, the
district engineer shall forward the final EIS comment letters
together with appropriate responses to higher authority along with
the case. In the case of a letter recommending a referral under 40
CFR part 1504, the district engineer will follow the guidance in
paragraph 19 of this appendix.
14. EIS Supplement. See 33 CFR 230.13(b).
15. Filing Requirements. See 40 CFR 1506.9. Five (5)
copies of EISs shall be sent to Director, Office of Federal
Activities (A-104), Environmental Protection Agency, 401 M Street
SW., Washington, DC 20460. The official review periods commence
with EPA's publication of a notice of availability of the draft or
final EISs in the Federal Register. Generally, this notice appears
on Friday of each week. At the same time they are mailed to EPA for
filing, one copy of each draft or final EIS, or EIS supplement
should be mailed to HQUSACE (CECW-OR) WASH DC 20314-1000.
16. Timing. 40 CFR 1506.10 describes the timing of an
agency action when an EIS is involved.
17. Expedited Filing. 40 CFR 1506.10 provides information
on allowable time reductions and time extensions associated with
the EIS process. The district engineer will provide the necessary
information and facts to HQUSACE (CECW-RE) WASH DC 20314-1000 (with
copy to CECW-OR) for consultation with EPA for a reduction in the
prescribed review periods.
18. Record of Decision. In those cases involving an EIS,
the statement of findings will be called the record of decision and
shall incorporate the requirements of 40 CFR 1505.2. The record of
decision is not to be included when filing a final EIS and may not
be signed until 30 days after the notice of availability of the
final EIS is published in the Federal Register. To avoid
duplication, the record of decision may reference the EIS.
19. Predecision Referrals by Other Agencies. See 40 CFR
part 1504. The decisionmaker should notify any potential referring
Federal agency and CEQ of a final decision if it is contrary to the
announced position of a potential referring agency. (This pertains
to a NEPA referral, not a 404(q) referral under the Clean Water
Act. The procedures for a 404(q) referral are outlined in the
404(q) Memoranda of Agreement. The potential referring agency will
then have 25 calendar days to refer the case to CEQ under 40 CFR
part 1504. Referrals will be transmitted through division to
CECW-RE for further guidance with an information copy to
CECW-OR.
20. Review of Other Agencies' EISs. District engineers
should provide comments directly to the requesting agency
specifically related to the Corps jurisdiction by law or special
expertise as defined in 40 CFR 1508.15 and 1508.26 and identified
in Appendix II of CEQ regulations (49 FR 49750, December 21, 1984).
If the district engineer determines that another agency's draft EIS
which involves a Corps permit action is inadequate with respect to
the Corps permit action, the district engineer should attempt to
resolve the differences concerning the Corps permit action prior to
the filing of the final EIS by the other agency. If the district
engineer finds that the final EIS is inadequate with respect to the
Corps permit action, the district engineer should incorporate the
other agency's final EIS or a portion thereof and prepare an
appropriate and adequate NEPA document to address the Corps
involvement with the proposed action. See 33 CFR 230.21 for
guidance. The agency which prepared the original EIS should be
given the opportunity to provide additional information to that
contained in the EIS in order for the Corps to have all relevant
information available for a sound decision on the permit.
21. Monitoring. Monitoring compliance with permit
requirements should be carried out in accordance with 33 CFR 230.15
and with 33 CFR part 325.
[53 FR 3134, Feb. 3, 1988]