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HomeMy WebLinkAbout20171559 Ver 3_SEPA INFORMATION_20220107ROY COOPER Governor ELIZABETH S. BISER Secretary WILLIAM F. LANE General Counsel NORTH CAROLINA Environmental Quality To: File From: DEQ Office of General Counsel RE: Applicability of the North Carolina Environmental Policy Act to Randolph County Economic Development Project Date: January 6, 2022 Introduction In this memo, we have reviewed whether a State action (such as DEQ's issuance of a permit or plan approval) related to the Toyota Battery Manufacturing site in Randolph County, which has been provided public monies through incentives and appropriations, would require the preparation of an environmental document under the North Carolina Environmental Policy Act ("SEPA") in Article 1 of N.C.G.S. Chapter 113A. Under SEPA, if certain criteria are met, environmental documents are not required. Based on the framework of the Toyota incentives award and resulting agreements, specific legislation from the General Assembly, and the four applicable statutory exclusions discussed below, we have determined that no SEPA-based environmental document would be required for anticipated DEQ actions related to the Toyota site. Project Summary On December 6, 2021 the North Carolina Economic Investment Committee ("EIC") awarded a Transitional Job Development Investment Grant ("JDIG") to Toyota Battery Manufacturing, North Carolina (the "Company") for a project to be located at the Greensboro -Randolph Megasite in Randolph County. The North Carolina General Assembly added the Transitional project classification to the JDIG program in, and appropriated additional funds for the project through, Session Law 2021-180 (Senate Bill 105), which was ratified and signed by Governor Cooper on November 18, 2021. Section 11.19.(b) of the Session Law defines the project as one for which an agreement requires the business to invest at least one billion dollars ($1,000,000,000) in private funds and create at least 1,750 eligible positions, as defined in N.C. Gen. Stat. 143B-437.51. A JDIG award is governed by a Community Economic Development Agreement ("CEDA") pursuant to N.C. Gen. Stat. 143B-437.57. For this project, the CEDA authorizes the cumulative payments to the Company of up to $79.1 million LD_E NORTH CAROLINA Department al Environmental Oual� North Carolina Department of Environmental Quality I General Counsel 217 West Jones Street 11601 Mail Service Center I Raleigh, North Carolina 27699-1601 919.707.8600 Randolph County Project January 6, 2022 Page 2 dollars over a period of 20 years if the Company (i) creates and maintains 1,750 eligible positions (see Table 1 below), (ii) makes a new capital investment of at least $1,144,800,000 in private funds by December 31, 2026 in land, buildings and fixtures, infrastructure, or machinery and equipment, and (iii) otherwise meets the terms of the CEDA. The CEDA also requires that the Company create the new jobs on a specified timetable as outlined below. If the Company creates and maintains 1,750 or more new jobs the grant term will be 20 years, but if the Company only maintains 1,488 jobs, the grant term will be reduced to twelve years. TABLE 1. BEGINNING JOB CREATION TARGETS AND MINIMUMS Grant Year Total New Jobs for Project Minimum To Avoid Default Year 1 (2025) 590 502 Year 2 (2026) 1176 1000 Year 3 (2027) 1465 1245 Year 4 (2028) 1745 1483 Year 5 (2029) 1750 1488 For Years 6 through 12 the minimum number of new jobs that must be retained to avoid default is 1488. As allowed by N.C. Gen. Stat. 143B-437.51(9c)(b), if the Company increases the number of jobs and capital investment committed to the project to 3,875 jobs and $3 billion of investment within 36 months of the award date, the Company will trigger Phase II of the Transitional JDIG and could then receive up to an estimated $315 million over the life of the grant, which could expand to run for as many as 39 years. If this option is exercised, the CEDA requires that the additional job creation and investment must be completed by December 31, 2034. The potential Phase II payment to the Company is only an estimate at this point, since the ultimate amount will be calculated based on when the increased investment and job creation targets are met, as well as the final reported number and type of jobs that are ultimately created for the project. Like all grants from the JDIG program, any state payments will only occur following performance verification each year by the departments of Commerce and Revenue that the Company has met its incremental job creation and investment targets. Session Law 2021-180 provided additional support to help with final site preparations at the Greensboro -Randolph Megasite. For the project's first phase Randolph County Project January 6, 2022 Page 3 (Section 11.19.(b)), $135 million has been appropriated to the Department of Commerce, which will be used by the North Carolina Department of Transportation for road, highway interchange, and other site improvements in Randolph County ($35 million) and at the megasite ($100 million). The $135 million in funds is contingent on the award of the JDIG grant by the EIC. Should the Company exercise its option to trigger Phase II of the Transitional JDIG, then an additional $185 million in site development funds would become available. If the job creation requirements established under the CEDA are not met (1,750 for Phase I and 3,875 for Phase II) in accordance with the specified timetable, the Site Work Agreement between the State and Toyota will require the Company to repay an amount of the $185 million and the $100 million proportional to the failure to meet the job creation targets set forth in the CEDA. Analysis of North Carolina Environmental Policy Act Exemptions In its current form, the North Carolina Environmental Policy Act of 1971 requires that State agencies prepare an environmental document for any action "involving significant expenditure of public moneys or use of public land for projects and programs significantly affecting the quality of the environment of this State[.]" N.C. Gen. Stat. 113A-4(2). Despite this statement of general applicability, the General Assembly has set forth specific provisions under which no environmental document is required, including four that are applicable to this project. Section 401 Certification Exemption In N.C. Gen. Stat. 113A-12(2)(i), the General Assembly has exempted from SEPA an action approved under "A certification issued by the Division of Water Resources of the Department of Environmental Quality under the authority granted to the Environmental Management Commission by G.S. 143B-282(a)(1)u." This provision refers to the issuance by DEQ of a Section 401 Water Quality Certification in conjunction with the issuance of a federal license or permit, such as a Section 404 Permit under the Clean Water Act. It is our understanding there is a pending individual Section 404 Permit application with the United States Army Corps of Engineers ("USACE") and a pending application for an individual Section 401 Certification with DEQ for the project. It is also our understanding that the USACE has defined the scope of the proposed project to include the entire megasite property and the offsite utility and transportation improvements. Thus, the geographic scope of the Section 404 permit and the incorporated Section 401 certification would, upon issuance, include all Randolph County Project January 6, 2022 Page 4 areas where work would be performed pursuant to the Phase I appropriation of $135 million ($100 million for site work and $35 million for road work) and the Phase II appropriation of $185 million. Therefore, the project as described in the 404 permit would be exempt from SEPA through the issuance of the 401 Certification. National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA') Exemption Under N.C. Gen. Stat. 113A-10, the General Assembly has stated: In those instances where a State agency is required to prepare an environmental document or to comment on an environmental document under provisions of federal law, no separate environmental document shall be required to be prepared or published under this Article so long as the environmental document or comment meets the provisions of this Article. According to DOT, all aspects of the project within the scope of the aforementioned 404 permit will be subject to the NEPA process and the accompanying federal environmental document that is being prepared by the USACE. Therefore, the project as described in the 404 permit would be exempt from SEPA due to the concurrent NEPA evaluation. Incentives Projects Exemption In N.C. Gen. Stat. 113A-12(5), the General Assembly has provided specific criteria for excluding from the SEPA document requirements a State action associated with a state -funded incentives -based project: Any State action in connection with a project for which public lands are used and/or public monies are expended if the land or expenditure is provided as an incentive for the project pursuant to an agreement that makes the incentives contingent on prior completion of the project or activity, or completion on a specified timetable, and a specified level of job creation or new capital investment. This exemption establishes five criteria to be fulfilled in order for an activity to be exempt from the SEPA requirement to prepare environmental documents: Randolph County Project January 6, 2022 Page 5 1. The State action must be made in connection with a project where public lands are used and/or public monies are expended. In Session Law 2021-180, Sections 11.19.(b) and (c), the General Assembly appropriated $320,000,000 to the Department of Commerce, allocating $135,000,000 to be transferred to the Department of Transportation for Phase I improvements at and around the project site and $185,000,000 to reimburse the manufacturer for Phase II project costs related to site work, roadwork and wetlands mitigation. Further, the EIC awarded a transitional JDIG grant to the project currently valued at $79,100,000, with the potential to be expanded up to $315,000,000. The appropriation/grant processes result in the expenditure of public monies and thus this element of the exemption is satisfied. 2. The land used or monies expended are provided as an incentive for the project. The CEDA agreement with the manufacturer authorizes JDIG payments to the Company if the Company meets targeted levels of job creation and capital investment. In addition, the Session Law 2021-180 appropriations provide further incentives: the $135 million in Section 11.19.(b) is contingent on the award of a JDIG grant and the $185 million in Section 11.19.(c) would be used to reimburse the qualifying manufacturer if it increases its investment such that it qualifies as a Phase II transitional project. These incentives meet the second element of the exemption. 3. The incentives are memorialized in an agreement. The JDIG provisions are memorialized in the CEDA agreement. The provisions related to the $100 million for Phase I DOT site work and $185 million in Phase II site work reimbursements will be memorialized in the Site Work Agreement. The CEDA agreement and Site Work Agreement meet the third element of the exemption. 4. The agreement makes the incentives contingent on prior completion of the project or activity or completion on a specified timetable. The CEDA agreement incorporates the requirements of a Transitional project established in N.C. Gen. Stat. 143B-437.51(9c)(b) and codified in Section 11.19.(e) of Session Law 2021-180. Those requirements include making the Randolph County Project January 6, 2022 Page 6 incentives contingent upon the manufacturer reaching targeted levels of job creation and capital investment according to a defined schedule. The agreement makes the incentives contingent on either prior completion of the project or activity or completion on a specified timetable and thus meets the fourth element of the exemption. Additionally, in accordance with Section 11.19.(d) of Session Law 2021-180, the Site Work Agreement will make the $100 million and $185 million appropriations contingent on either prior completion of the project or completion on a specified timetable. 5. The agreement makes the incentives contingent on a specified level of job creation or new capital investment. As stated in item 4 above, the CEDA agreement and the Site Work Agreement will make the incentives contingent on both a specified level of job creation and a specified amount of new capital investment and thus meet the fifth element of the exemption. Therefore, because the incentives -based project and related agreements meet all elements of the statutory exemption, the $79.1 million (or more) of JDIG funding, the $100 million of Phase I site work funding and the $185 million of Phase II site work funding do not trigger SEPA environmental document requirements. Exemption for Projects Required or Authorized by the General Assembly In N.C. Gen. Stat. 113A-12(10), the General Assembly has exempted "Any project or facility specifically required or authorized by an act of the General Assembly." Although the scope of this exemption may not be definitive, it may still have some relation to this project. In this case, under the heading "Economic Development Project Appropriation," the General Assembly took multiple budgetary steps to provide public investment for the project. First, the legislature made specific findings in Section 11.19.(a) of the budget bill to justify the site improvement expenditures. Further, it appears that the General Assembly has "authorized" the aspects of the project contained in the $135 million appropriation. Additionally, the General Assembly has specifically appropriated $185 million to reimburse the manufacturer for costs required at the project site. Therefore, it is arguable that the project should be exempt from SEPA due to the specific action and involvement by the General Assembly. Randolph County Project January 6, 2022 Page 7 Conclusion Based on the framework of the Toyota incentives award and resulting agreements, legislation from the General Assembly, and the four statutory exclusions discussed above, we have determined that no SEPA-based environmental document would be required for anticipated DEQ actions related to the Toyota site.