Municipal Class Environmental Assessments

Municipal Class Environmental Assessments
Author: Frank J. E. Zechner
Publisher:
Total Pages: 22
Release: 2012
Genre: Infrastructure (Economics)
ISBN:

This review included the environmental assessment ("EA") laws and procedures of more than 20 other jurisdictions outside of Canada as they relate to municipal infrastructure projects such as roads, water and wastewater systems. The review included countries on every continent with the exception of South America and Antarctica and more than a dozen separate U.S. states. The original purpose of this study was to conduct a review of cost parameters and the potential use of indexing in selected jurisdictions. Surprisingly, none of the other jurisdictions reviewed used capital cost of the construction project as a determining factor with respect to the level or intensity of environmental assessment for such projects.

Class Environmental Assessment for Municipal Sewage and Water Projects

Class Environmental Assessment for Municipal Sewage and Water Projects
Author: Municipal Engineers Association
Publisher:
Total Pages: 88
Release: 1987
Genre: Environmental impact analysis
ISBN:

Guidelines for a Class Environmental Assessment for municipal sewage and water projects where either a new municipal sewage or water facility is being established, or where an existing municipal sewage or water facility requires any physical modification over and above maintenance activity or operational improvements. By using these guidelines, which cover the design and planning process and include the documentation required, the proponent of the work does not have to apply for formal approval under the Act provided the project is planned in accordance with the guidelines. A summary is given and a glossary of terms is included.

Understanding the Reasons for Part II Order Requests in Municipal Class Environmental Assessments

Understanding the Reasons for Part II Order Requests in Municipal Class Environmental Assessments
Author: Leah Shoshana Weller
Publisher:
Total Pages: 156
Release: 2014
Genre:
ISBN:

The practice of environmental assessment (EA) in Ontario, Canada and elsewhere has been criticized for resulting in projects that are not necessarily “good” for the environment or society, but simply “less bad.” In Ontario, the ongoing erosion over time of meaningful public involvement in the EA process is seen as a major reason for the degradation of EA practice from something closer to its idealistic purpose of creating “sustainable” development down to its current state, as many have suggested, as an administrative process to ensure legislated minimum requirements (for action or outcome) are met. Nonetheless, the EA process in Ontario continues to offer one of the best legislated processes available for addressing the potential negative impacts associated with public projects in the province. Ontario's streamlined Class EA process allows for routine, low-impact public projects to proceed without ministerial review so long as certain minimum standards for technical review and public consultation are met. It also includes a mechanism for stakeholders to request ministerial review should a stakeholder believe a substantive or procedural error or oversight has occurred during the study. This mechanism, called a Part II Order request, has been invoked in recent years for multiple reasons in addition to correcting substantive or procedural errors or oversights. This research asks why stakeholders request Part II Orders. Through review and coding of Part II Order request letters from various projects across Ontario, and conducting detailed case studies of projects for which Part II Order requests were made in the Greater Toronto Area, it was determined that the two most commonly-found issues in the Part II Order letters were related to stakeholders feeling distrustful of the proponent or the EA process, and stakeholders feeling as though they were not adequately engaged in public consultation activities for the EA study. The case studies examined these themes in greater detail, and found that these two issues were intertwined with issues of stakeholder power and control. The research findings suggest that EA outcomes can be improved by altering public consultation activities to provide stakeholders with greater control over the decision-making process in a transparent manner so that stakeholders are aware not only of the perspectives of the proponent, but also those of other stakeholders.