CEQ: What to Expect at a Scoping Meeting
CT.GOV
Connecticut Council on Environmental Quality
/ceq Website

Environmental Monitor
WHAT IS CEPA?
CEPA STATUTES
CEPA REGULATIONS
WHAT TO EXPECT AT A SCOPING MEETING
WHAT IS SCOPING?
HOW TO REQUEST A PUBLIC MEETING
Monitor Archives
{ }

Governor Care and Share

Connecticut
Council on
Environmental
Quality
79 Elm Street
Hartford, CT 06106
 
Phone:
(860) 424-4000
Fax:
(860) 424-4070
 
Karl J. Wagener,
Executive Director
E-Mail Address:
 

{e-Alerts}
Receive CEQ news updates by e-mail.
Subscribe now or update your e-Alerts

{Login}

What to Expect at a Scoping Meeting

RETURN TO THE MONITOR

When the state agency proposing a project (the "sponsoring agency") holds a public scoping meeting, it will choose a meeting format that is suited to the type of project and the size of the anticipated audience.  The meeting can be very formal, with presentations by the sponsoring agency followed by comments from the public in the manner of a public hearing.  Sometimes, an agency will schedule a more informal session, where citizens can view maps and displays on their own and communicate one-on-one with agency staff.  If the sponsoring agency expects a low turnout, it might even hold the meeting around a table, as if it were a committee meeting.
 
It is important to remember that the sponsoring agency is required to conduct scoping at the earliest possible point in the planning of the proposed project.  When you attend a scoping meeting, you should not expect the agency to be able to provide detailed information about the project's design, alternatives, or environmental impact.  At a scoping meeting, the sponsoring agency is there to hear your thoughts about what alternatives and what environmental impacts should be studied when it conducts the Environmental Impact Evaluation.
 
By law, the sponsoring agency must provide the following at a public scoping meeting:
 
(A) A description of the proposed action
 
(B) a description of the purpose and need of the proposed action
 
(C) a list of the criteria for a site for the proposed action
 
(D) a list of potential sites for the proposed action
 
(E) the resources of any proposed site of the proposed action
 
(F) the environmental limitations of such sites
 
(G) potential alternatives to the proposed action
 
(H) any of the information the sponsoring agency deems necessary
 



Content Last Modified on 10/14/2005 4:54:46 PM





Home | CT.gov Home | Send Feedback

State of Connecticut Disclaimer and Privacy Policy  Copyright © 2002 - 2009 State of Connecticut