Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 55— - NATIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER IV— - FEDERAL PERMITTING IMPROVEMENT › § 4370m–2
Project sponsors must tell the Executive Director and the facilitating agency when they start a covered project. If no facilitating agency exists for that kind of project, the agency that receives the notice becomes the facilitating agency. The notice must say the project’s goals, general location (with maps if available), that the sponsor can build it, what federal money, reviews, or permits might be needed, and why it is a covered project. Any Native American natural, cultural, or historical information in the notice must be kept confidential and is not subject to public disclosure under FOIA or the Federal Advisory Committee Act. The Executive Director must keep an online Permitting Dashboard and make a searchable entry for each covered project within 14 days of adding it or receiving notice. Within 21 days of that Dashboard entry, the facilitating or lead agency must list all likely federal and non‑federal agencies and invite federal agencies to join as participating or cooperating agencies, with a 14‑day deadline to respond. Agencies become participants unless they opt out in writing before the deadline. The facilitating or lead agency must, within 60 days, make a coordinated project plan with roles, a permitting timetable with intermediate and final dates, mitigation ideas, and outreach plans, and update it at least quarterly. Agencies must meet the timetable or, 30 days before or when they miss a date, explain why, propose a new date, and file monthly updates. Disputes go to the Executive Director to mediate; if not solved in 30 days, the Director of OMB with the CEQ Chair will resolve it within a 60‑day period and that decision is final. Timetable changes need consultation and justification, and total extensions normally cannot exceed half the original schedule unless OMB allows more and reports to Congress within 5 days. States may opt in and coordinate through MOUs. At the Executive Director’s request, the Secretary and the Secretary of the Army should try to provide Dashboard info on projects likely to cost more than $200,000,000 and needing an EIS; adding them to the Dashboard does not make them subject to these rules.
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The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Citation
42 U.S.C. § 4370m–2
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73