Notes, ideas, and up-to-date information on how your business can work with New York State's environmental and energy policies.

Recently in regulations Category

Every single day, the Federal Register prints new rules, proposals, and interpretations of environmental and energy regulations that can affect your operations. If you operate in New York or the neighboring states, there are even more changes in the works, from the need to evaluate your carbon emissions to new RACT requirements. How can you keep track of it all?

The United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has just launched a new Rulemaking Gateway, and so far it looks like a very useful tool for companies with compliance obligations. The site lets you sort rulemakings by topics, by the phase the rulemaking is in, and even by effects - so if you want to check out all the pending rulemakings that  anticipate an effect on small business, for example, you can keep tabs on them through this website. EPA is currently looking for feedback on this new site, and we highly encourage you to take it for a test run.

The New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) has a less sophisticated site but still makes it relatively easy to keep an eye on its regulatory proposals, which are featured on this webpage. DEC also publishes (by email) a weekly Environmental Notice Bulletin, which covered required notices of proposed actions throughout the state, including SEQR notices, proposed regulations, and permit activity.

It's still a huge amount to wade through. That's why one of the most important services Carl Johnson Consulting provides to its clients is to keep them up to date on Federal, State and local policies that could have impacts on their operations. Check out the official websites linked above, and if you have any questions about what you see, please give us a call or send us an email.


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Your project is a puzzle, and the pieces not only have to fit, they have to fall into place at the right times. Often, the hardest piece of the puzzle is timing of permits -- and environmental permits can be the trickiest of all. With all the levels of government you have to deal with, it's easy to miss a requirement that can trip you up, causing costly delays.

Environmental approvals can seem like a maze -- wrong turns, dead ends, and no clear view of the finish. What can you do to keep your project moving through the environmental maze? Plenty.

  • First, talk to your regulators, early and often. If you wait until you need your permits to start working on them, the bureaucrats aren't going to feel your pain.
  • Second, make sure you know all the permits you need, who needs to issue them, and which part of your team is responsible for them. It's best to have one person on your team who keeps track of all the permits.
  • Third, and most important: prepare to be flexible. Project sponsors often lose critical weeks or months arguing with regulators over what turn out to be relatively small points. Don't win the battle to lose the war.
No project is easy in New York, but with the right guidance, you can get the pieces to fit. Call Carl Johnson Consulting, LLC, for help in putting it all together.
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This page is an archive of recent entries in the regulations category.

permits is the previous category.

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