For Citizens How to Get Involved
The Commission provides a number of important opportunities for landowners and citizens to participate in decision making on proposed natural gas and hydroelectric projects.
These include:
- Attending and participating in public scoping meetings
and site visits. Participants can tell Commission Staff about:
- Environmental and socioeconomic resources that are important and should be examined FERC
- Other alternatives to the proposed project that should be evaluated
- Commenting on the Commission's draft Environmental Assessment
(EA) and Environmental Impact Statement (EIS).
- All timely comments are answered in the Final EA or EIS.
- Commenters should support any recommendations for any mitigative measures that they want the FERC to include in any approvals issued (hydropower licensees and natural gas certificates of public convenience).
- Asking the Commission's Alternative
Dispute Resolution for assistance in resolving disputes
with the energy company that is proposing a project.
- The Commission encourages applicants and citizens to resolve disputes
- The Commission also encourages applicants and affected organizations to enter into Settlement Agreements to resolve large, controversial hydropower projects and natural gas projects.
- Anyone can ask the Commission to reconsider its hydropower licensing and natural gas certification decisions. This is called a petition for rehearing.
Project Correspondence
Keeping up with and managing project-related correspondence is
no small task. Prior to eFiling and eSubscription, this was a
paper-intensive process. We encourage all participants who have
computers and an email address (Yahoo and Microsoft Hotmail offer
free email addresses) to:
- Use eFiling to submit documents and comments to FERC;
- Use eSubscription to subscribe to the project number of any hydroelectric or natural gas project in which they are interested;
- Use the Calendar of Events, especially Scoping Meetings and Site Visits; and
- Become acquainted with the features of eLibrary.
« Should I get Involved? | The Process » |