PA DEP Claims Progress in Reducing Out-of-Control Permit Backlog

| | |

Permitting in Pennsylvania, especially permits overseen by the Dept. of Environmental Protection (DEP), has been broken for years. A Chapter 102 Erosion and Sedimentation permit sometimes takes two, three, or even six to eight months for approval — instead of the law-mandated 14 days. It got so bad that in the fall of 2019, PA State Sen. Gene Yaw introduced a bill to allow third-party reviews of these permits in an attempt to speed it up (see PA Sen. Yaw Intros Bill to Allow 3rd Party Review of Erosion Permits). In June 2023, then-DEP Sec. Rich Negrin told lawmakers at a Senate hearing that he was making good progress on his 10-point plan to speed up permits and cut down on red tape (see DEP Sec. Negrin Focused on Cutting Red Tape, Speeding New Permits). PA Gov. Josh Shapiro introduced a “money-back guarantee” on slow permits last November, which we exposed as bogus (see Shapiro’s DEP Money-Back Guarantee for Permit Delays is Bogus). The DEP says thanks to the guarantee and other changes, the agency is getting much better with turnaround times for permits.

Please Login to view this content. (Not a member? Join Today!)
You do not have permission to view the comments.