Notwithstanding any special or general law to the contrary, the secretary of energy and environmental affairs shall undertake a Wetlands Restoration Streamlining Initiative to coordinate permitting pathways in support of innovative, nature-based, wetlands restoration projects.
The secretary shall designate a coordinator to lead the Initiative. The coordinator shall engage and organize state agencies including, but not limited to, the environmental policy act office, department of environmental protection, office of coastal zone management, division of fisheries and wildlife, natural heritage and endangered species program, division of marine fisheries, and division of ecological restoration, and any relevant federal agencies, to: (a) expedite nature-based wetlands restoration projects and coordinate permits for such projects; (b) align regulatory processes with the commonwealth’s climate mitigation, adaptation, and resiliency goals; (c) create a streamlined agency project review process; (d) expedite interagency permitting efforts; (e) limit the trial time of nature-based restoration techniques that have established standards or credible evidence showing benefit and manageable risk; and (f) provide technical assistance and support to state, nonprofit and municipal project proponents to expedite the permitting process to restore wetlands.
The coordinator shall also consult experts including academic and practitioner scientists, municipalities, environmental nonprofits, state and federal agencies, and staff administering state resiliency and ecological restoration programs to identify permitting and funding challenges and solutions to streamline and accelerate nature-based restoration projects.
The coordinator shall only support nature-based solutions projects as defined by section 1 of chapter 21N.
In consultation with experts and state agencies, the coordinator shall make the following recommendations: (a) regulatory reforms for nature-based wetlands restoration projects; (b) funding opportunities to address financial barriers and inequities created by state permitting requirements; and, if necessary, (c) recommendations for legislation to authorize such reforms. Reforms may include, but are not limited to, the promulgation of policies, guidelines, waivers, exemptions, and general permits for specific techniques; the clarification and improvement of regulatory definitions; and the adjustment of thresholds and size limits for landscape-scale projects. Reforms shall include a recommendation for a general, unified permitting process for categories of wetlands restoration, including both coastal and freshwater wetlands, designed to enable state permitting to be completed within three months of submission of a complete application.
Not later than 90 days after passage of this act, the coordinator shall ensure agency staff have been identified and convened and shall address delays in pending permit applications for salt marsh restoration projects. Not later than 180 days after passage of this act, the coordinator shall produce draft proposals for stakeholders and agency staff, which shall include technical clarifying definitions and interpretations. Not later than 12 months after the passage of this act, the coordinator shall submit final recommendations to the secretary, the house and senate committees on ways and means, and the joint committee on environment, natural resources, and agriculture.
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