PermitsConsolidated Permits
Section § 71020
This law requires the secretary to create a system, by January 1, 1995, for permit applicants who want to identify a single agency to handle all permits needed for certain projects. This system will involve creating regulations to decide which agency will be this central 'consolidated permit agency.'
The law outlines factors to consider in this decision, such as the impact on public health and environment, complexity of regulations, and which agency has the most significant role in overseeing the project.
If there's confusion or disagreement about which agency should be in charge, the project can be referred to the council for a decision. This happens if guidelines are unclear, if there’s disagreement among agencies, or if a designated agency declines to serve and others don't want the role either.
Section § 71021
This law allows a project permit applicant to ask the secretary to appoint a single agency to handle all necessary environmental permits for their project. The secretary must decide on an agency or refer the choice to a council within 30 days. Applicants must supply details of the project, potential environmental permits needed, a lead agency, and involved permit agencies to aid in this decision.
The chosen agency acts as the main contact for the applicant, ensuring they have all necessary information for permit applications and managing the permit process. This agency coordinates with other agencies to streamline environmental permit reviews and aims to resolve any conflicts between the different agencies' requirements.
However, the law doesn't diminish the individual powers of any involved agency. Each agency still makes their own call on key issues related to their specific permits, like deciding if an application is complete or granting, conditioning, or denying a permit. The lead agency can’t override these decisions.
Section § 71022
This law requires the consolidated permit agency to meet with a project applicant and participating agencies within 15 working days of being designated as the main agency. During this meeting, they will review all necessary environmental permits, discuss application forms, and decide if a single, consolidated permit application can be used instead of multiple individual ones. They'll also set timelines for reviewing and processing these permits and ensure public and other agency involvement isn't rushed or compromised.
The agency will also plan any needed public hearings, determine if these hearings can be streamlined, and discuss fee arrangements for permitting. The agency can ask the applicant for any extra info needed to meet their obligations. Decisions from this meeting should be publicly available once the environmental application is submitted.
Section § 71023
This law section outlines two processes related to the participation in a consolidated permit process. First, an applicant can opt out entirely by submitting a request to terminate the process. The agency handling the consolidated permit will then inform all involved agencies of the withdrawal. Second, an applicant can request a specific agency to withdraw if they believe it will speed up the permit process. The agency will only withdraw if the main permit agency agrees with the applicant's request.
Section § 71024
This law section requires the main permit agency to make sure that all necessary environmental permit decisions are made by the relevant agencies. These decisions must be included in the consolidated permit, and each part of these permits must be handled within specific time limits mentioned in another section of the law.
Section § 71025
This law states that when multiple environmental permits are combined into one consolidated permit, each permit keeps the same legal power and regulatory effect it would have if issued separately. The agency responsible for each individual permit will still manage and enforce it as if it were issued alone.
Section § 71026
This law allows an agency, known as a consolidated permit agency, to charge fees to people seeking a consolidated permit. These fees aim to cover the estimated costs the agency incurs while meeting the legal requirements for issuing these permits.
The fees must only cover the agency's service costs and can either be negotiated with the applicant or be pre-set by the environmental agency before they become the consolidated permit agency for a project. The billing process must accurately record time and costs and allow for payments to be made as work progresses.
Section § 71027
If a permit applicant wants to challenge an environmental agency's decision about an environmental permit, they must submit a petition to the relevant agency. This applies to decisions about issuing, denying, or amending a permit. The agency that receives the petition must follow its own procedures to process it. Additionally, within 30 days, the agency must inform all other agencies involved in the original permit process about the petition.
Section § 71028
If someone requests major changes to a consolidated permit application or its environmental components, the agency in charge must bring all involved permit agencies back together for a new meeting, following certain procedures.
Section § 71029
If you apply for a consolidated environmental permit but don't provide all the necessary information, the processing time will pause until you hand in the missing information.