17.4.607 GENERAL REQUIREMENTS OF THE ENVIRONMENTAL REVIEW PROCESS
Section 75-1-201, MCA requires state agencies to integrate use of
the natural and social sciences and the environmental design arts in planning
and in decision-making, and to prepare a detailed statement (an EIS) on
each proposal for projects, programs, legislation, and other major actions of
state government significantly affecting the quality of the human environment.
In order to determine the level of environmental review for each proposed
action that is necessary to comply with 75-1-201, MCA, the agency
shall apply the following criteria:
(1) The agency shall prepare an EIS as follows:
(a) whenever an EA indicates that an EIS is
necessary; or
(b) whenever, based on the criteria in ARM
17.4.608, the proposed action is a major action of state government
significantly affecting the quality of the human environment.
(2) An EA may serve any of the following purposes:
(a) to ensure that the agency uses the natural
and social sciences and the environmental design arts in planning and decision-making.
An EA may be used independently or in conjunction with other agency planning
and decision-making procedures;
(b) to
assist in the evaluation of reasonable alternatives and the development of
conditions, stipulations or modifications to be made a part of a proposed
action;
(c) to
determine the need to prepare an EIS through an initial evaluation and
determination of the significance of impacts associated with a proposed action;
(d) to
ensure the fullest appropriate opportunity for public review and comment on
proposed actions, including alternatives and planned mitigation, where the
residual impacts do not warrant the preparation of an EIS; and
(e) to
examine and document the effects of a proposed action on the quality of the
human environment, and to provide the basis for public review and comment,
whenever statutory requirements do not allow sufficient time for an agency to
prepare an EIS. The agency shall determine whether sufficient time is available
to prepare an EIS by comparing statutory requirements that establish when the
agency must make its decision on the proposed action with the time required by
ARM 17.4.620 to obtain public review of an EIS plus a reasonable period to
prepare a draft EIS and, if required, a final EIS.
(3) The agency shall prepare an EA whenever:
(a) the action is not excluded under (5) of
this rule and it is not clear without preparation of an EA whether the proposed
action is a major one significantly affecting the quality of the human
environment;
(b) the action is not excluded under (5) of this rule and although an EIS is
not warranted, the agency has not otherwise implemented the interdisciplinary
analysis and public review
purposes listed
in (2) (a) and (d) of this rule through a similar planning and decision-making
process; or
(c) statutory requirements do not allow sufficient
time for the agency to prepare an EIS.
(4) The agency may, as an alternative to preparing
an EIS, prepare an EA whenever the action is one that might normally require an
EIS, but effects which might otherwise be deemed significant appear to be
mitigable below the level of significance through design, or enforceable controls
or stipulations or both imposed by the agency or other government
agencies. For an EA to suffice in this
instance, the agency must determine that all of the impacts of the proposed
action have been accurately identified, that they will be mitigated below the
level of significance, and that no significant impact is likely to occur. The agency may not consider compensation for
purposes of determining that impacts have been mitigated below the level of
significance.
(5) The agency is not required to prepare an EA or
an EIS for the following categories of action:
(a) actions that qualify for a categorical
exclusion as defined by rule or justified by a programmatic review. In the
rule or programmatic review, the
agency shall identify any extraordinary circumstances in which a normally
excluded action requires an EA or EIS;
(b) administrative actions: routine, clerical or
similar functions of a department, including but not limited to administrative
procurement, contracts for consulting services, and personnel actions;
(c) minor repairs, operations, or maintenance of
existing equipment or facilities;
(d) investigation and enforcement: data collection, inspection of facilities or
enforcement of environmental standards;
(e) ministerial actions: actions in which the
agency exercises no discretion, but rather acts upon a given state of facts in
a prescribed manner; and
(f) actions that are primarily social or economic
in nature and that do not otherwise affect the human environment.
History: 2-3-103, 2-4-201, MCA; IMP, 2-3-104, 75-1-201, MCA; NEW, 1989 MAR p. 226, Eff. 1/27/89; TRANS, from DHES, 1996 MAR p. 1497.