ACHIEVING LEGALLY ENTRENCHED ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT MARCH 19, 2013 Stephen Hazell.

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ACHIEVING LEGALLY ENTRENCHED ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT MARCH 19, 2013 Stephen Hazell

Transcript of ACHIEVING LEGALLY ENTRENCHED ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT MARCH 19, 2013 Stephen Hazell.

Page 1: ACHIEVING LEGALLY ENTRENCHED ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT MARCH 19, 2013 Stephen Hazell.

ACHIEVING LEGALLY ENTRENCHED

ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT

MARCH 19, 2013

Stephen Hazell

Page 2: ACHIEVING LEGALLY ENTRENCHED ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT MARCH 19, 2013 Stephen Hazell.

Overview

• Comparison of U.S. and Canadian Federal Legislative Development in EA

• Rafferty-Alameda and Entrenching Federal Environmental Assessment Law

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Why a Law?

• Regulatory agencies already examine environmental effects

• Legal requirements limit discretion of governments to balance issues and respond appropriately to circumstances

• Delays good projects

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Key Influences on Canadian EA Law Development 1970s, 1980s

• LaGrande Project and James Bay and

Northern Quebec Agreement

• Berger Inquiry Mackenzie Gas Project

• National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (United States)

• Successes of Environmental groups in Rafferty-Alameda and Oldman cases

Page 5: ACHIEVING LEGALLY ENTRENCHED ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT MARCH 19, 2013 Stephen Hazell.

National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (U.S.)

• Legislative response to community opposition to interstate highway construction and Santa Barbara oil spill

• Purpose - ensure that environmental factors are weighted equally with other factors in federal decision-making, including a multidisciplinary approach to considering environmental effects

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NEPA Process • Agency determines that proposed action

(federal funding or permit for project) is covered by NEPA

• Three levels of analysis:– preparation of Categorical Exclusion (CE)– preparation of Environmental Assessment

(EA), Finding of No Significant Impact (FONSI)

– Preparation/drafting of Environmental Impact Statement (EIS)

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NEPA

• No public hearings

• No criminal or civil sanctions

• Enforcement through judicial remedies sought by communities, proponents etc

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Environmental Assessment and Review Process Guidelines Order

• Charles Caccia appointed Environment Minister in 1983, pressed for federal EA statute

• Order in Council in June 1984 (final Trudeau government decision) reflected internal government conflict on issue of legally binding EA rules

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EARPGO – Similarities to NEPA

• Applies to “proposals” not “actions”

• Proposals are initiatives, undertakings or activities for which Canada has a decision-making responsibility

• Projects not having adverse environmental effects excluded

• Initial assessments akin to EAs under NEPA, no public input

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EARPGO

• If initial assessment determines that proposal has adverse environmental effects that are insignificant or mitigable, proposal may proceed

• If initial assessment finds significant adverse effects, proposal referred to Environment Minister for detailed review

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EARPGO

• EARPGO provides for public review by a panel, with public hearings as well as public input and comment on EIS prepared by proponent

• Conventional wisdom - EARPGO not mandatory. Why else would term “Guidelines” be used?

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Rafferty – Alameda – Legal Entrenchment of Federal EA

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Rafferty – Alameda – Legal Entrenchment of Federal EA

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Rafferty – Alameda Project

• February 1986 – Rafferty-Alameda project proposed

• Two dams in Souris River basin to control floods

• Souris river is international waterway, flowing south into North Dakota, looping back north into Manitoba

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Rafferty – Alameda Project Environmental Effects

• Loss of critical riparian habitat for endangered, threatened, rare species

• Mercury contamination, eutrophication of reservoirs

• Concern that reservoirs might not fill due to higher evapotranspiration from shallow, long (22km) reservoirs

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Rafferty – Alameda Project Federal Decision Making

• Boundary Waters Treaty

• International Rivers Improvement Act

• Fisheries Act

• Navigable Waters Protection Act

• Souris Basin Development Authority and Saskatchewan attempted to shut feds out of review process

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Rafferty – Alameda Project SBDA Environmental Impact

Statement • Failed to consider environmental effects

in Manitoba and North Dakota

• Inadequate data on filling times for reservoirs

• Inadequate for licence under International Rivers Improvement Act

Page 18: ACHIEVING LEGALLY ENTRENCHED ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT MARCH 19, 2013 Stephen Hazell.

Rafferty – Alameda Project Federal Engagement

• January 1988 - SBDA applies for International Rivers Improvement Act licence

• Canadian Wildlife Federation calls for federal EARPGO environmental assessment

• June 1988 - Environment Minister refuses to apply EARGO, issues licence

• Elizabeth May resigns

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Canadian Wildlife Federation Cases (Rafferty No. 1)

• November 1988 - CWF files application for judicial review in Federal Court seeking certiorari and mandamus against federal Environment Minister

• Advantages of judicial reviews/actions by way of statement of claims?

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Canadian Wildlife Federation Cases (Rafferty No. 1)

• Legal Arguments favouring “Mandatory” interpretation– Use of word “shall” throughout indicates

intention that EARGO binds all to whom they are addressed, including Minister

– Applies to wide range of activities over which feds decide; must be mandatory

– “Applies to any proposal” s. 6 – Exceptions provided s.7,8,11(a)

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Canadian Wildlife Federation Cases (Rafferty No. 1)

• Legal Arguments opposing “Mandatory” interpretation– Ordinary meaning of Guidelines connotes

discretion on part of decision-maker – Minister of the Environment Act permits the

Minister to issue guidelines for use by regulatory bodies in the exercise of their powers not binding orders or regulations

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Canadian Wildlife Federation Cases (Rafferty No. 1)

• Federal Court Trial Division quashed Iicence under International Rivers Improvement Act, issued certiorari and mandamus order that EARPGO be applied

• Federal Court of Appeal upheld Trial Division ruling

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Outcomes from Rafferty-Alameda

• Hundreds of judicial review applications (including Oldman) follow based on decision that EARPGO is legally binding

• Federal government commits to federal statute, and introduces Bill C-78 in June 1990

• Resources and authority of FEARO increase dramatically

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Legislating CEAA

• EARPGO widely considered within federla bureaucracy to be inadequate as a law:– “Proposal” too broad – applied to policies,

programs– EAs not linked to decision-making– Agency no legal “oversight” authority – No legal requirement to provide convenient

public access to EA information• Inadequacies – key driver for bureaucratic

support for statute

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Legislating CEAA: Policy and Politics

• Process to enact a federal EA statute took five years (1987 – 1992) with two separate bills tabled in Parliament

• Sept. 87 Environment Minister McMillan releases EA Reform Green Paper

• Nov. 87 – Jan. 88 Public Consultations with funding for ENGOs

• ENGO advocacy through RCEN EA Caucus

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Legislating CEAA: Lessons

• First, get their attention (Rafferty-Alameda and Oldman cases)

• Identify clear problem for government requiring legislation as key policy solution

• Work closely with inside champions (Ray Robinson, FEARO)

• Build public support and line up allies (EA Caucus of RCEN)

• Neutralize bureaucratic and provincial opposition