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| Introduction | |
1.2
Introduction Intent of NEPA and NPS Mission |
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| The DO-12 Handbook and Director's Order | Intent of NEPA and NPS Mission | Actions Requiring NEPA Analysis | NEPA Fundamentals | Timing of NEPA | Specificity of Data Needed Plans and Projects | ||
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A. Policy The declared purpose of NEPA and the mission of the NPS express very similar goals. Both contain language designed to result in the conservation and protection of our nation's resources for the benefit of future generations. NEPA was enacted for a simple reason: to make sure that agencies fully consider the environmental costs and benefits of their proposed actions before they make any decision to undertake those actions. |
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| The purpose of NEPA as stated in section 2 of the act that created it is to encourage productive and enjoyable harmony between man and his environment; to promote efforts which will prevent or eliminate damage to the environment and biosphere and stimulate the health and welfare of man; and to enrich the understanding of the ecological systems and natural resources important to the Nation.... | ||
| DO 52A Communicating the NPS Mission B. Tools NEPA and the CEQ regulations have put two important mechanisms in place to achieve this stated intent. One is the requirement that all agencies make a careful, complete, and analytic study of the impacts of any proposal that has the potential to affect the environment, and alternatives to that proposal, well before any decisions are made. The other is the mandate that agencies be diligent in involving any interested or affected members of the public in the NEPA process. Key features of the analysis are made available to the public in one of three types of NEPA documents, depending on the degree of impact to the environment and the process outlined in chapter 2.0 of this handbook. Generally, if the proposal clearly has no potential for measurable environmental impact, it is categorically excluded (see chapter 3.0) and a short 1- or 2- page notice is prepared. If it has the potential for significant environmental impact, an environmental impact statement, or EIS, is required (see chapter 4). If the proposed action would have a measurable impact on the environment, or if it is unclear whether it has the potential for a significant impact, an environmental assessment (EA) is the appropriate document to prepare (see chapter 5). If the EA shows the action may have a significant effect, an EIS is also required (unless the provisions of section 5.2 (1) apply). NEPA imposes many additional rules and requirements beyond this simple strategy for determining which level of documentation is appropriate for any given analysis. These rules are part of this handbook and should be read carefully before you begin environmental impact work under NEPA. |
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| The Organic Act creating NPS states that NPS will ...conserve the scenery and the natural and historic objects and the wild life therein and...provide for the enjoyment of the same in such manner and by such means as will leave them unimpaired for the enjoyment of future generations (16 U.S. Code 1, the National Park Service Organic Act). | ||
| C. Early
planning
D. A procedural act NEPA's policies encourage agencies to incorporate environmental information and public involvement in making decisions. The detailed and scientifically valid study of impacts and alternatives, and appropriate input from the public, must be available before a federal agency makes any commitment of resources. It is up to the decision-maker how he or she will use this information. If the only way to meet an essential agency goal requires implementing an alternative with the potential for severe adverse environmental impacts, this is ultimately allowed for under NEPA. NEPA is therefore a procedural, or process-oriented, law, rather than a substantive, or substance-oriented, one. Other laws, including the Organic Act, are substantive and often prevent an agency from taking action or pieces of an action that have too great an impact on a particular resource. The process of environmental analysis under NEPA provides the information that the NPS needs to make substantive decisions for the long-term conservation of resources. E. A substantive result The information and analysis produced through the NEPA process is used by the NPS in making management decisions about NPS administered resources. In making these decisions the NPS is guided by the requirements of the National Park Service Organic Act and related laws. The requirements placed on the NPS by these laws, and especially by the Organic Act mandate that resources are passed on to future generations unimpaired. Impacts that are likely to or would result in impairment of resources must be fully described and evaluated in environmental documents. In addition, decision documents must confirm the nature and extent of impacts and whether or not an impairment results from any of the alternatives analyzed or selected for implementation. |
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