Selection of Dentons as EIS review consultant confirmed
The Inos administration has confirmed the selection of a consultant to handle a third-party review of a draft environmental impact statement on military activities on Tinian and Pagan.
Press secretary Ivan Blanco confirmed a report by Saipan Tribune on Monday, which said that Dentons, a global law firm, is the consultant selected to review thousands of pages of draft EIS documents on proposed live-fire training.
Blanco said an official announcement will be made from the Governor’s Office soon.
It was reported that Dentons had submitted a joint application for environmental impact consultant job with Environmental Science Associates, or ESA, an environmental science and planning firm.
Notably, Dentons assisted the National Trust for Historic Preservation and the Guam Preservation Trust in suing the U.S. Department of Defense to prevent the building of live-fire range complexes on Pagat, an ancient Chamorro village in Guam.
The groups argued that the U.S. Navy failed to adequately consider and evaluate alternate sites for their firing complex, and by doing so failed to comply with the National Environmental Policy Act.
In November 2011—in what was called a victory by these groups—the U.S. Navy filed a declaration in federal court to order another supplemental review of proposed sites—essentially restarting the NEPA process over again.
On their website, under “Environmental Litigation,” Dentons say the National Environmental Policy Act is an area of “particular strength” for the firm.
“The head of our U.S. Environmental practice was the lead draftsman for the NEPA’s implementing regulations (which apply to all federal agencies), and no NEPA document on which we have advised has ever been found inadequate in court,” Dentons says.
Dentons was referring to partner Nicholas Yost, who served as general counsel of the Council on Environmental Quality—in the executive office of the President of the United States—from 1977 to 1981.
Yost was also attorney of the Guam Preservation Trust in their lawsuit against DOD.