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Washington State Environmental Policy Act SEPA

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Title: Washington State Environmental Policy Act SEPA


1
Washington State Environmental Policy Act (SEPA)
  • University of Washington
  • Environmental Law and Regulation
  • October 2007

2
Comparison of NEPA SEPA
3
SEPA Policy (RCW 43.21C.020)
  • To create and maintain conditions under which man
    and nature can exist in productive harmony and
  • Fulfill the social, economic, and other
    requirements of present and future generations of
    Washington citizens
  • Assure for all people of Washington safe,
    healthful, productive, and aesthetically and
    culturally pleasing surroundings
  • The legislature recognizes that each person has
    a fundamental and inalienable right to a
    healthful environment and that each person has a
    responsibility to contribute to the preservation
    and enhancement of the environment.

4
Judicial Elaboration of SEPA Policy
  • Polygon Corp. v. City of Seattle, 90 Wn.2d 59,
    578 P.2d 1309 (1978)
  • SEPA sets forth a state policy of protection,
    restoration, and enhancement of the environment.
    RCW 43.21C.020
  • Procedurally, the environmental protection policy
    is to be implemented by the preparation and
    circulation of an environmental impact statement
    disclosing the environmental impacts of the
    proposed action. RCW 43.21C.030(2)(c).
  • Reading SEPA as a purely procedure law would
    thwart the policies it establishes and would
    render the provision that environmental
    amenities and values will be given appropriate
    consideration in decision making a nullity. RCW
    43.21C.030(2)(b).
  • It necessarily follows that SEPA confers
    substantive authority to the deciding agency to
    act on the basis of the impacts disclosed.

5
Judicial Elaboration of SEPA Policy (Continued)
  • However, since the 1980s at least five appellate
    courts have held that government required
    mitigation or denial exceeded SEPA authority
  • But, the Court of Appeals decision in the
    Victoria Tower II case upheld Seattles SEPA
    conditions since SEPA bestows broad powers and is
    to be given a vigorous construction

6
Judicial Elaboration of SEPA Policy (Continued)
  • Required to Mitigate? Save a Valuable Environment
    (SAVE) v. City of Bothell, 89 Wn.2d 862, 870
    71, 576 P.2d 401, 405 06 (1978)
  • The action to rezone 141 acres of farm land to
    permit construction of a major regional shopping
    center was arbitrary and capricious in that it
    failed to serve the welfare of the community as a
    whole. Specifically, adverse environmental
    effects and potentially severe financial burdens
    on the affected community have been completely
    disregarded. If it is possible to substantially
    mitigate or avoid potential adverse environmental
    effects, and if Bothell takes the necessary steps
    to do so, responsible planning for the shopping
    center may be reasonable. It has not acted to
    avoid these consequences, however, and the rezone
    cannot be sustained.
  • It is the policy of this state, expressed in the
    State Environmental Policy Act that each person
    has a fundamental and inalienable right to a
    healthful environment . . . RCW 43.21C.020(3).
    This right has been threatened in the community
    directly affected by the environmental
    consequences of Bothell's zoning decision. The
    welfare of people living in this area must be
    served.

7
When is an EIS to be prepared?SEPA
  • The standard for when an EIS should be prepared
    is whether the proposal is "a major action
    significantly affecting the quality of the
    environment ...." RCW 43.21C.030(2)(c)
  • An EIS must be prepared whenever more than an
    moderate effect on the environment is a
    reasonable probability. Norway Hill
    Preservation and Protection Association v. King
    County Council, 87 Wn.2d 267, 278, 552 P.2d 674,
    680 (1976)
  • Cannot offset negative impacts with the positive
    impacts. WAC 197-11-330(5) King County v.
    Boundary Review Board

8
When is an EIS to be prepared?SEPA (Continued)
  • In close cases courts tend to require preparation
    of an EIS
  • Courts are not inclined to require an EIS where
  • There will be no environmental impact without a
    subsequent action that is subject to SEPA, and
  • The action does not imply a commitment to a later
    action likely to have environmental consequences
  • For rezones, significance tends to be based on
    the differences in allowed intensity between the
    existing and proposed zoning and whether there is
    a specific proposal
  • For development permits courts seem to focus on
  • Intensity and irrevocability of the proposed
    development
  • Vulnerability of the site and surroundings

9
When is an EIS to be prepared?SEPA (Continued)
  • Shoreline substantial development permits usually
    require an EIS given the SMA policy
  • Courts review the threshold decision using the
    arbitrary or capricious standard
  • Willful and unreasonable action without
    consideration and in disregard of facts and
    circumstances
  • If there is room for two opinions, it is not
    arbitrary or capricious
  • In Norway Hill the Washington Supreme Court also
    held that the clearly erroneous standard is also
    used
  • Firm and definite conviction a mistake has been
    made
  • Taking SEPAs policy into account

10
SEPA Categorical Exemptions
  • Statutory exemptions in RCW 43.21C.035 through
    0384 for certain irrigation projects, school
    closures, annexations, fish habitat restoration,
    air operating permits, water waste discharge
    permits for existing dischargers, and others
  • Administrative exemptions in Part Nine of SEPA
    Rules
  • Administrative exemptions cannot include major
    actions significantly affecting the quality of
    the environment. RCW 43.21C.110(1)(a)
  • Include optional flexible thresholds WAC
    197-11-800(1)
  • From 4 to 20 dwelling units
  • From 10,000 to 30,000 sq. ft. agricultural
    buildings
  • 20 to 40 car parking lots
  • From 100 to 500 cubic yard landfills or
    excavations

11
Process for SEPA Threshold Determination
  • If not categorically exempt, applicant or agency
    proposing action prepares a SEPA Checklist
  • Based on applicants own knowledge and
    observations
  • Normally to be prepared by applicant with agency
    assistance
  • However, not uncommon for a consultant to prepare
    a checklist
  • Independently reviewed by the lead agency. WAC
    197-11-335 provides that If the lead agency
    determines the checklist does not provide
    reasonably sufficient information to evaluate the
    proposal,
  • The lead agency must either obtain additional
    information or
  • Defer the threshold determination
  • The needed information may be provided by the
    applicant, the lead agency, or consultation with
    agencies with jurisdiction or environmental
    expertise

12
Process for SEPA Threshold Determination
(Continued)
  • Responsible Official makes the threshold
    determination
  • Determination of Nonsignificance, no EIS required
  • Mitigated Determination of Nonsignificance (DNS),
    no EIS required due to mitigating conditions
  • Determination of Significance (DS) and Scoping
    Notice, EIS is required
  • Notice is required for DNSs for certain types of
    development such as those where another agency
    has jurisdiction and clearing or grading permits

13
SEPA Mitigated Determinations of Nonsignificance
  • Provided for in WAC 197-11-350
  • Applicant may modify proposal so that it is not
    "a major action significantly affecting the
    quality of the environment ....
  • Or the lead agency can require conditions to meet
    the same standard
  • Since 1989s West 514 decision, there has been a
    judicial trend not to overturn MDNSs

14
SEPA EIS Requirements
  • WAC 197-11- 430 -- 443
  • Fact Sheet including the planned date of the
    final action
  • Table of Contents
  • Summary of the contents
  • Alternatives including the proposed action
  • Must evaluate the no-action alternative and
    compare it to the other alternatives
  • Must include reasonable alternatives
  • Reasonable alternatives include actions that
    could feasibly attain or approximate a proposals
    objectives, but at a lower environmental cost or
    a decreased level of environmental degradation
  • The lead agency may limit reasonable alternatives
    to those over which an agency with jurisdiction
    has authority to control impacts either directly,
    or indirectly through requirement of mitigation
    measures
  • In the Citizens Alliance case, the WA Supreme
    Court said that municipalities decide whether to
    review alternatives outside their jurisdiction

15
SEPA EIS Requirements (Continued)
  • For private projects the lead agency may not be
    required analyze off site alternatives. This
    exemption does not apply to rezones unless the
    rezone is consistent with a comprehensive plan
    that has undergone SEPA review
  • A description of the affected environment,
    significant impacts, and mitigation measures
  • A succinct description of the principal features
    of the environment that would be affected or
    created
  • Describe the significant impacts on the built and
    natural environments
  • Clearly indicate mitigation measures that could
    be implemented or might be required as well as
    those that agencies or applicants are committed
    to implement
  • Summarize significant impacts that cannot or will
    not be mitigated
  • The final EIS must include comment letters and
    responses

16
Procedural Requirements for SEPA EISs
  • After the threshold determination, the lead
    agency issues the scoping notice. WAC 197-11-
    408
  • The lead agency shall narrow the scope of every
    EIS to the probable significant adverse impacts
    and reasonable alternatives, including mitigation
    measures
  • Must invite agencies, affected tribes, and the
    public to comment on the scope
  • Must allow comments for 21 days, unless expanded
    scoping is used

17
Procedural Requirements for SEPA EISs (Continued)
  • EIS preparation. WAC 197-11-420
  • Lead agency and responsible official responsible
    for compliance
  • EIS must be professionally prepared and with an
    interdisciplinary methodology
  • Must be readable
  • Draft EIS is issued for public comment. WAC
    197-11-455
  • Must be provided to each agency with jurisdiction
    or environmental expertise
  • Must give public notice. WAC 197-11-510
  • Include in SEPA register
  • May hold a public hearing or when 50 people or
    two or more agencies request one
  • 30 day comment period, may be extended to 45 days
  • Issuance of Final EIS. WAC 197-11-455

18
When is a SEPA EIS Adequate?
  • The Adequacy of an EIS is tested under the rule
    of reason. Citizens Alliance To Protect Our
    Wetlands v. City of Auburn, 126 Wn.2d 356,
    361-362, 894 P.2d 1300, 1304 (1995)
  • In order for an EIS to be adequate under this
    rule, the EIS must present decision makers with a
    "reasonably thorough discussion of the
    significant aspects of the probable environmental
    consequences" of the agency's decision. Cheney,
    87 Wn.2d at 344-45 552 P.2d 184 (quoting Trout
    Unlimited v. Morton, 509 F.2d 1276, 1283 (9th
    Cir.1974)).
  • The rule of reason is "in large part a broad,
    flexible cost-effectiveness standard", in which
    the adequacy of an EIS is best determined "on a
    case-by-case basis guided by all of the policy
    and factual considerations reasonably related to
    SEPA's terse directives". R. Settle, The
    Washington State Environmental Policy Act A
    Legal and Policy Analysis 14(a)(i) (4th
    ed.1993) .
  • This court "must determine whether the
    environmental effects of the proposed action are
    sufficiently disclosed, discussed, and
    substantiated by supportive opinion and data."
  • The court does not rule on the wisdom of the
    proposed development but rather on whether the
    FEIS gave the decision maker sufficient
    information to make a reasoned decision

19
When is a SEPA EIS Adequate?(Continued)
  • Remote and speculative impacts or alternatives
    need not be considered
  • Based on cost-effectiveness grounds. SWAP v.
    Okanogan County v. Okanogan County, 66 Wn. App.
    439, 832 P.2d 503 (1992)
  • Professor William Rogers has observed a rule of
    thumb that in Washington a statement, any
    statement, is more likely to withstand judicial
    review than a declaration of nonsignificance.
    Rogers, The Washington Environmental Policy Act,
    60 WASH. L. REV. 33, 50 (1984)
  • The appellant courts have addressed EIS adequacy
    in 14 cases, only three have found an EIS
    inadequate

20
SEPA AppealsRCW 43.21C.060 080 WAC 197-11-
680
  • You must exhaust administrative remedies before
    filing a judicial appeal
  • The agency or local government is not required to
    have a local appeal process
  • But they may
  • A SEPA appeal must be combined with an appeal of
    the substantive decision, except for an appeal of
    a DS
  • May use a notice of action taken to set a final
    deadline for a SEPA judicial appeal, 21 days from
    the second publication of the notice

21
Resources
  • Ecologys SEPA website http//www.ecy.wa.gov/prog
    rams/sea/sepa/e-review.html
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