RECOMMENDATIONS FOR IMPROVING AGENCY NEPA PROCEDURES Substantive “*ssues: The Required Content of Environmental Statements. wl. ¢ Duty to Disclose Full Range of Impacts. Court decisions under the National Environmentai. oI. Policy Act have established that the "detailed" 7 statement referred to in section 102 of the Act must thoroughly explore all known environmental consequences of and alternatives to major proposed actions even though this may lead to consideration of effects and options outside the agency's actual -. = ~ oe ate - _ Tt Se - Te mot - ot et 1 control. 4 i, A. ener ss simply. anapplication-of MRSA Leteu39=— _“aisclésure" ‘yéquiremént;: this dasi¢cfprincipiepgoT = Meant to ensure that relevant ‘officials and the: -.7 ~~ "= public are alerted to the environmental impact of Federal agency action. See EDF v. Corps of Engineers, 2 ERC 1260, 1267 (E.D. Ark. 1971). “ Furthermore, the range of impacts which must be= 0 2 Ste ' considered cannot=-be-limited-to-thetraditionaF ~9- -- == area of agency jurisdiction or expertise. NEPA in essence adds a new mandate to the enabling legislation of all agencies, requiring the development of environmental awareness for the full range of impacts of proposed agency action. By failing to discuss reasonably foreseeable impacts or by discussing those impacts in a perfunctory manner, an agency defeats the purpose of the statement and lays *