Publication Title

Ecology Law Quarterly

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

1-1-2014

Abstract

Delays in implementing long-term neighborhood housing recovery measures following urban disasters profoundly disrupt a city's revitalization and resurgence. Following recent large-scale urban disasters, some blame the National Environmental Policy Act environmental and historical review requirement for greatly slowing the long-term recovery process. They claim that the National Environmental Policy Act review is ill suited for the exigencies of disasters. Finding effective ways to advance urban disaster recovery as quickly as possible, while not compromising key environmental quality objectives, is a central challenge to implementing effective post-disaster recovery plans. This Article addresses how best to balance necessary regulation with critical disaster recovery objectives. Drawing on long-term recovery lessons from Hurricanes Katrina and Rita, and most recently, Hurricane Sandy, this Article articulates five principles that the federal government should incorporate in a new Unified Federal Review process.

Comments

External Links

Lexis Advance

Recommended Citation

John Travis Marshall, Weathering NEPA Review: Superstorms and Super Slow Urban Recovery, 41 Ecology L.Q. 81 (2014).

Volume

41

Issue

1

First Page

81

Last Page

130

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