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What is an EIR? An Environmental Impact Report (EIR) is the planning document which describes the environmental impacts associated with a project. Typical impacts may include: traffic, air quality, noise, city services, and land use, among others. The EIR discusses these impacts and determines which ones are significant. It also describes mitigation measures to reduce the impacts to an appropriate or acceptable level. An important part of the EIR process is the public review period. During this time, the public is invited to make comments on the Draft EIR. The lead agency (the agency which had the EIR prepared and may eventually certify it) is then required to provide responses to these comments and incorporate the responses and the comments into the Final EIR. Providing effective comments is, therefore, one of the most important ways that the public has to effect change in a proposed project.
One
important thing to understand is that the EIR process is
governed by the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA),
which specifies in great detail the steps that must be taken
and the contents of the Environmental Impact Report (EIR).
This process is not the time or place to simply support or
oppose a project, although it may feel good to so.
The Final
EIR becomes an information source for the public body to
draw from in a subsequent discretionary decision, which may
include approval or denial of a project or approval with
conditions.
Substantive
EIR Comments
To start,
comments that simply reflect an opinion about the project
will not be addressed. For example, a comment that states,
“I don’t like the project,” or “ I oppose a casino”
typically result simply in a response of “Comment Noted.”
Serious
comments sometimes lead to changes in the EIR and in the
project. Therefore, comments should be accompanied by
factual support. The comments should be written in a manner
that requires the lead agency to respond.
To have a significant impact on the EIR process, comments
must point out errors, inconsistencies, omissions of data or
analyses, conclusions not based on evidence, or failures to
provide discussion required by CEQA.
The agency
needs to respond to respond adequately to such
substantive comments prior to certification of the Final
EIR. Failure to do so would provide the basis for a legal
challenge to a certified (approved) EIR, and if the
court agreed with the challenge, the EIR would be found
invalid. This is what happened on a recent ruling regarding
a Chevron Energy and Hydrogen Renewal project. The Court did
not reject the project; it rejected an EIR that it
considered incomplete. Click here for some topics on which you may want to comment.
Alternatives
The EIR
describes the environmental impacts of the proposed project
and those of a number of alternative plans. The alternative
plans considered are intended to cover the full range of
feasible alternatives.
The
potentially feasible alternatives must be discussed in
"meaningful detail," and provide sufficient "information to
the public to enable it to understand, evaluate, and
respond" to the agency's conclusions. The discussion should
"contain facts and analysis, not just the agency's bare
conclusions or opinions."
Mitigations
When the
proposed plan (the preferred alternative) has
significant environmental impacts, the EIR must propose
mitigations that would eliminate, minimize or repair
the greater environmental impact of the preferred
alternative.
In
instances where mitigations are not feasible or the agency
does not wish to adopt a feasible alternative that would
avoid them, the EIR must describe the unavoidable
environmental impacts and, in instances where it chose
to accept them, the reasons why it made this choice.
CEQA
Compels Description Not Choice
CEQA does
not compel the agency to adopt the most environmentally
desirable alternative, but only to describe feasible
alternatives in meaningful detail and to adopt mitigation
measures or to justify their non-adoption.
Helpful
Hints
Where to
Direct Comments All comments must be submitted no later than 5:00 P.M., November 23, 2009. Direct comments on DEIR No. 475 to: Riverside County Planning Department Comments must be in writing and may be submitted by mail, fax or email. |
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