By Matthew Karmel, Riker Danzig Scherer Hyland and Pertetti 

Since September 2020, the Garden State has been waiting for the Department to complete the gargantuan task of implementing the first of its kind Environmental Justice Law. The New Jersey law authorizes the Department to deny or condition certain permits for facilities that would have a disproportionate impact on an overburdened community. 

However, the substantive provisions of the law do not go into effect until the Department adopts regulations to implement the Environmental Justice Law. While the Department has gone to great lengths, including through a substantial stakeholder process, to develop implementing regulations, the regulations have not yet been proposed or adopted. (The regulations are expected to be proposed in late 2021 and adopted in late 2022.)

With the issuance of Administrative Order 2021-25 on September 22, 2021, certain aspects of the Environmental Justice Law are now in effect. The terms of the Administrative Order apply to:

  • All facilities subject to the Environmental Justice Law, including:

       – major sources of air pollution (i.e., facilities with Title V air permits, such as power plants);
       – solid waste facilities;
       – landfills;
       – incinerators;
       – sewage treatment facilities that process more than 50 million gallons per day;
       – scrap metal recycling facilities; and
       – other recycling facilities that process more than 100 tons per day.

  • That seek covered permits in overburdened communities, which are mapped by the Department (these areas encompass 4.5 million people in 3,168 census block groups and 331 municipalities).

For these facilities, the Administrative Order:

  • Extends the public comment period for relevant permits applications to at least 60 days, with a potential extension for an additional 30-day period upon the written request of a member(s) of the overburdened community;
  • Requires a mandatory public hearing in a manner intended to maximize participation of individuals within the overburdened community;
  • Encourages individuals to provide the facilities and the Department with information regarding existing conditions within the overburdened community and potential facility-wide environmental and public health stressors that could result in adverse impacts in the event of an approval;
  • Requires the facility to respond to and address the concerns raised by individuals in the overburdened community and to conduct any additional analysis that the Department deems necessary for its review;
  • Strongly encourages each facility to engage directly with individuals in the overburdened community in advance of, and in addition to, formal public comment, including providing relevant information related to facility-wide impacts; and
  • Authorizes the Department to apply special permit conditions as may be necessary to avoid or minimize environmental or public health stressors.

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