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PURPOSE OF A
NOTICE OF PROJECT CHANGE (NPC)
The
MEPA regulations require the filing a NPC for either of two purposes:
·
to document a material change to a project and any related
environmental impacts, or
·
to notify the Secretary and reviewers
of a lapse of time in the development of a project.
Notice
of Project Change for Project Change
When
is a NPC required?
A
NPC is required whenever there is a material change (positive or negative)
in a project prior to the taking of all agency actions for the project.
When
is a change significant?
The
MEPA regulations specify the factors which the Secretary may consider in
determining whether changes to a project are significant. These factors include:
·
expansion in the physical dimensions of a project of 10% or
more
·
an increase in the level of impacts previously reviewed of
25% or more
·
meeting or exceeding any review threshold that was not previously
met or exceeded
·
change in the expected date for commencement of the project,
commencement of construction, completion date, or schedule
·
change of the project site
·
new application for a permit or new request for financial assistance
or land transfer
·
for a project with net benefits to the environment, any change
that prevents or materially delays realization of such benefits
Proponents
should refer to Section 11.10(6) of the MEPA regulations for greater detail.
A
proponent may include in a NPC a request that the Secretary determine the
change to be insignificant in terms of its environmental consequences. The request for a determination of insignificance
should refer specifically to these factors and provide any other relevant
information. If the Secretary determines
that the change is insignificant, the NPC will not be noticed in the Environmental
Monitor, and she will issue a Certificate on the NPC within ten days
of its receipt in the MEPA Office. Otherwise,
the NPC will undergo the ordinary MEPA review as described below.
All NPCs, including those requesting
to be found insignificant, must satisfy the circulation
requirements described below.
Notice
of Project Change for Lapse of Time
When
is a NPC required?
A
NPC is required if more than three years have elapsed between
(1) the
publication of the Environmental Notification Form (ENF) and the publication
of the notice of availability of the single or final EIR; or
(2) the publication of the notice of availability of the single
or final EIR; and the earlier of:
(a) notification of commencement of construction
(see 301 CMR 11.08(9)), and
(b) commencement of non-construction related
work or activity, including expenditure of funds for final design, property
acquisition, or marketing, provided that the proponent has continued to
take major steps in a continuous sequence to advance the project.
Suspension
or abandonment of project construction for more than 3 years may also require
a NPC.
When
is a change significant?
The
Secretary may consider changes in the ambient environment or in information
concerning the ambient environment when determining whether a NPC for lapse
of time is significant.
Notice of Project Change Upon Secretarys
Determination (see 301 CMR 11.10(5))
When
is a NPC required?
If the Secretary determines that a proponent
has, either knowingly or inadvertently, concealed a material fact or submitted
false information during MEPA review, or has segmented the project, the
Secretary may consider the determination to be a NPC.
The
first three pages of the NPC form will be published in the Environmental
Monitor. When filling out these
pages, do not leave questions unanswered
and do not refer reviewers to attached pages.
For
detailed instructions on filling out the parts of the NPC form that are
consistent with the ENF, please refer to the instructions for completing
the ENF.
The
NPC form is intended to collect information specific to the project change.
In many instances, responses to the form may be limited to information
about the change itself, without reference to the project as a whole.
The
box on the first page that asks for a very brief description of the
project change is intended to replace the short summary of the project change,
which has previously been published in the Environmental Monitor. This description should be limited to the size
of the box on the form, and this box should not be expanded. Recent examples of appropriately brief descriptions
include, The project change involves
· modification of the drainage system and the resulting
need for a Mass. Highway Dept. Access Permit
·
construction of two new general office and research &
development buildings totaling 261,000 square feet with 348 additional parking
spaces
Note
that page 3 of the form asks for a detailed description of the project change
and is the appropriate location on the form for such a description.
When assembling the NPC for submittal
to the MEPA Office, include
·
one signed original NPC with all of the attachments, and
·
one unbound copy of the NPC form only.
Attachments. The NPC filing must also include
the following attachments:
·
Secretarys most
recent Certificate on this project
·
Plan showing most recent
previously-reviewed proposed build condition
·
Plan showing currently
proposed build condition
·
Original U.S.G.S. map
or good quality color copy (8-1/2 x 11 inches or larger) indicating the
project location and boundaries
·
List of all agencies
and persons to whom the proponent circulated the NPC, in accordance with
301 CMR 11.10(7)
Circulation
Requirements. If the NPC is being
filed by the proponent, a copy of the complete NPC package, including the
attachments, must be circulated to any agency or person who received the
ENF or who commented on the ENF or any EIR.
The NPC must be circulated prior to or when the NPC is filed with
the Secretary.
If
the NPC is being filed by an agency or person other than the proponent,
the agency or person filing the NPC must send a copy to the proponent prior
to or when filing with the Secretary.
Review of the NPC
Environmental Monitor Notice. The first three pages of the NPC will be printed
in the Environmental Monitor. The
publication date of the Environmental Monitor on which the NPC is
published is the starting date of the 20 day comment period. During that period, the Secretary will accept
written comment on the NPC.
Following the close of the comment period, the Secretary has ten days to issue her Certificate stating whether the project requires any additional MEPA review and, if it does, what the substance of that review will be. The Certificate will be mailed to the proponent along with a copy of each comment letter received. A copy of the Certificate, only, will be mailed to everyone who submits a written comment on the NPC.
Updated
March 3, 2004