Public Outreach Proposal Not So Daunting
Environmental justice, public outcry, NIMBYs, and costly, protracted litigation,
are just some of the doomsday phrases that come to mind when developers,
corporations and elected officials consider the recent New Jersey Department of
Environmental Protection (DEP) proposed public notification rules for
increasing public participation in site remediation cases.
Last summer, the media swarmed over the discovery of mercury contamination at a
day care center operating in a former thermometer manufacturing facility.
Parents of the day care center students were justifiably outraged, fingers were
pointed in all directions and state regulators were criticized for hiding the
truth from the public. The episode created a somewhat exaggerated view of a deficiency in the state’s oversight of environmentally challenged sites. These proposed public outreach
requirements are a direct result of that experience.
Conventional wisdom among developers, responsible parties and their consultants
holds that when proposing remediation for an environmentally challenged site,
the lower the profile the better. According to this pattern, working behind the
scenes helps avoid potential delays related to outcry by politically motivated
local officials, candidates, citizen groups, the media, or some combination
thereof.
Whether public engagement is a good idea depends upon one’s perspective and the specifics of each individual site. Yet, while businesses—and their attorneys—may see greater risk in communicating with the public, there also exists great
potential for positive results.
Keeping the public out of the situation may appear to be the most time- and
cost-efficient strategy when working with the regulatory agencies and local
officials. Yet all too often, that initial spirit of cooperation lasts only as
long as there is no public debate. History shows that once a political,
environmental or activist group asks the potentially difficult questions,
support from regulatory or elected allies rapidly evaporates and much of the
upfront work is lost, along with time and money.
For more than a decade, we have provided communications consulting to clients
ranging from major corporations to single-unit real estate developers. We have
proposed aggressive public outreach and education efforts to build allies in
the community or region for our clients. That is not to say that we advise
clients to approach the public with hat in hand, to allow the public to dictate
the solution, or something worse. Quite the contrary. With very few exceptions,
we have advocated including the public in the decision-making process, arguing
that if the community has skin in the game, it will be more likely to
compromise and make progress. By giving the community some degree of ownership,
it becomes responsible for the success or failure of the remediation plan.
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The new DEP public participation guidance will increase credibility in the
community and region where the site is located, establish an appropriate
framework for conducting public outreach, and could streamline the approval
process. As long as public officials are responsive to public outcry, there is
great value in engaging the public early in the process.
Many of the proposed requirements in the DEP draft follow the comprehensive
public outreach and education guidance issued by the U.S. EPA and the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission. The requirements from these agencies involve Superfund
or radiological waste cleanup efforts, certainly not something with which most
brownfield developers want to be associated.
But the interests of the public are, in most cases, aligned with the developer.
Both seek to minimize or eliminate risk and provide an opportunity for
development to produce economic benefits. For the public, that could mean
neighborhood revitalization, job creation, tax revenues, and increased property
values. While every site is different and decisions must be made based on
boots-on-the-ground intelligence, the DEP’s proposal establishes a solid baseline approach that both developers and
citizens can use.
Some involved in the DEP’s site remediation standards task force have expressed concerns about the scope
of the proposed outreach criteria. Anyone with experience in dealing with the
public on a remedial action or development will agree that these critics have
good reason to be cautious of increased public participation. In New Jersey,
local environmental advocates, citizen groups and faith-based organizations
have proven to be skilled legal adversaries. They have come out on the winning
side of some of the most important environmental justice and court-ordered
remedial actions in history, including the Honeywell site in Jersey City,
where, after years of inaction and frustration, a local
citizen/environmental/faith-based triumvirate succeeded in forcing one of the
most costly single-site contamination cleanup actions in state history.
One of the more legitimate criticisms of the provision establishing criteria for
identifying potentially affected citizens and communicating with them in their
native language, came from a land use attorney who remarked that even in
English, cleanup and redevelopment terms are difficult enough to understand.
He’s not wrong, but there are ways to reach these pockets of local residents, such
as through religious congregations, social services and local civic
associations. Educating non-English speaking residents will be challenging, but
simply advertising and/or setting up a hotline is no longer enough.
The greatest virtue of the proposed DEP guidance is that it allows the
developer/company to establish its message and the facts of the project to the
public before it is established for them. We are living in the age of the
24-hour media cycle. The public’s ability to generate controversy over an issue such as redevelopment or
chemical contamination fills the media’s incessant need for content. Often, inaccurate information and uninformed
speculation are the cause of such controversy. Proactively engaging in the
dialogue and being accessible to the public and media greatly increases the
likelihood that accurate information is conveyed, anxiety-inducing terminology
is understood, and the positive messages of the project make it to key opinion
leaders and the general public.
If for no other reason, actively communicating with the public demonstrates that
the developer/company is not hiding, but has a respect for neighbors and wants to satisfy the reasonable needs and concerns of the community. The more we focus on
redeveloping our urban core, the more the public will need to be involved.
Other states with fairly comprehensive public participation protocol or plans to
enhance their public participation include California, the most comprehensive,
Maryland, Massachusetts, New York, Pennsylvania, and West Virginia.
Michael P. Turner is managing principal of Government Process Solutions LLC, in
Princeton, New Jersey.
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