Current through Register Vol. 18, September 20, 2024
(1) 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 an
environmental impact statement (EIS) on each proposal for projects, programs,
legislation, and other major actions of state government specifically 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:
(a) The agency
shall prepare an EIS as follows:
(i) whenever
an EA indicates that an EIS is necessary; or
(ii) whenever, based on the criteria in ARM
8.2.305, the proposed action is a
major action of state government significantly affecting the qualify of the
human environment.
(b)
An EA may serve any of the following purposes:
(i) 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;
(ii) 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;
(iii) to determine the need to prepare the
EIS through an initial evaluation and determination of the significance of
impacts associated with a proposed action;
(iv) 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
(v)
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 8.2.313 to obtain public review of
an EIS plus a reasonable period to prepare a draft EIS and, if required, a
final EIS.
(c) The
agency shall prepare an EA whenever:
(i) the
action is not excluded under (e) or (f) 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;
(ii) the action is not excluded under (e) or
(f) and although an EIS is not warranted, the agency has not otherwise
implemented the interdisciplinary analysis and public review purposes listed in
(b) (i) and (iv) through a similar planning and decision-making process;
or
(iii) statutory requirements do
not allow sufficient time for the agency to prepare an EIS.
(d) 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.
(e) The agency is not required to prepare an
EA or an EIS for the following categories of action:
(i) 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 an extraordinary circumstance
in which a normal excluded action requires an EA or EIS;
(ii) administrative actions: routine,
clerical or similar functions of a department, including but not limited to
administrative procurement, contracts for consulting services and personnel
actions;
(iii) minor repairs,
operations or maintenance of existing equipment or facilities;
(iv) investigation and enforcement; data
collection, inspection of facilities or enforcement of environmental
standards;
(v) ministerial actions:
actions in which the agency exercises no discretion, but rather acts upon a
given state of facts in a prescribed manner; and
(vi) actions that are primarily social or
economic in nature and that do not otherwise affect the human
environment.
(f) In
addition to the categories of actions listed under (e), the board has
determined that the following programs and/or actions do not have a significant
impact on the human environment, are primarily economic in nature, and
therefore do not require the preparation of an EA or an EIS;
(i) the purchase of all stocks publicly
traded on any national or international stock exchange;
(ii) the purchase of all bonds issued by
governmental entities or by corporations whose stock is listed on any national
or international stock exchange. This exemption does not apply to bonds
purchased by the board by private placement where the board is the sole
provider of funds;
(iii) the
issuance of bonds under the Municipal Consolidation Finance Act through the
Montana cash anticipation finance program (Title 17, chapter 5, part 16, MCA)
when the proceeds are used to fund loans to local governments to cover
temporary cash deficits;
(iv) the
issuance of bonds under the Montana Consolidation Finance Act through the
Montana cash anticipation finance program (Title 17, chapter 5, part 16, MCA)
when the proceeds are used to prepay debt to the federal bureau of reclamation
where original loan money from the federal government was used to improve
existing irrigation structures;
(v)
the issuance of bonds under the Municipal Consolidation Finance Act through the
intermediate term finance program when proceeds are used to finance loans to
local governments to acquire vehicles and equipment, or to make modest repairs
or improvements to real property. All other uses made under this program are
reviewed under these rules;
(vi)
the purchase of all residential loans made with pension funds;
(vii) the purchase of all federally
guaranteed loans;
(viii) the
purchase of all residential multi-family loans;
(ix) all deposits made under the linked
deposit program pursuant to ARM Title 8, chapter 97, subchapter 14;
and
(x) limited partnerships where
the board is not involved in the investment decision.
(g) If an extraordinary circumstance
pertaining to one of the programs and/or actions excepted in (f) is brought to
the attention of the board or board staff, the board shall determine whether
such circumstance may create a significant impact on the human environment. If
the board determines that such circumstance may create a significant impact on
the human environment, then the program and/or action is no longer exempt under
(f) and ARM
8.2.302 through
8.2.327 applies.
Sec.
2-3-103,
2-4-201, MCA; IMP, Sec.
2-3-104,
75-1-201,
MCA;