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ENVIRONMENTAL REVIEWS AND CASE STUDIES: Ultimate Streamlining: Making National Environmental Policy Act Documents as Small as the Law Will Allow

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 February 2015

Owen L. Schmidt*
Affiliation:
Owen L. Schmidt, B.A., M.A., J.D., NEPA Consultant, Owen L Schmidt LLC, Portland, Oregon.
*
Address correspondence to: Owen L. Schmidt, Owen L Schmidt LLC, PO Box 18147, Portland, OR 97218-8147; (phone) 503-789-4854; (e-mail) oschmidt@att.net.
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Abstract

The smallest possible National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) document is one that cannot be made more streamlined. A NEPA document could not be more streamlined than to present eight elements of essential information as outlined in this article. Neither an environmental assessment nor an environmental impact statement would include a distinct, separate no-action alternative. Instead, today’s situation would be extended to the same point in the future, for purposes of comparison, as are the action alternatives. NEPA documents for projects would not develop alternatives to the proposal. Instead, NEPA documents would only develop alternatives that accomplish the same thing as intended by the proposed alternative. An environmental assessment would have no alternatives except for mitigating actions not already included in the proposed action. NEPA documents would not include exhaustive lists of possible environmental and other social and cultural consequences. Instead, relevance would determine which of these aspects are analyzed and compared (though under current NEPA regulations it seems that relevance determinations should be included in NEPA documents). Ultimate streamlining uses plain language. It meets all minimum legal requirements. It takes the fewest pages and should take the least time. It is the least amount of work that can produce the desired outcome.

Environmental Practice 16: 309–315 (2014)

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Features
Copyright
© National Association of Environmental Professionals 2014 

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References

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Schmidt, O.L. 2010. NEPA Models and Case Lists. Rose City Park Press, Portland, OR, 824pp.Google Scholar
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