ePermit Act
Summary
What This Bill Does
The ePermit Act turns federal environmental review and authorization work into a more standardized digital workflow. It directs the Chair of the Council on Environmental Quality, in consultation with the Federal Permitting Improvement Steering Council, the Chief Information Officers Council, the Office of Management and Budget, federal agencies, and other stakeholders, to publish data standards within 60 days. Those standards must define common taxonomies, data categories, environmental document metadata, geospatial information, public comment data, case events, and milestones so agencies can exchange authorization data without duplicative review systems.
The bill then requires CEQ to design, test, and build prototype tools for environmental reviews. Those tools must support case or project management, application submission and tracking portals, public comment tracking, automated application and review workflows, data exchange between agency systems, and faster complex environmental reviews. CEQ must publish implementation guidance within 120 days for application data sharing, automated project screening, public screening criteria, case management repositories, GIS analysis, document management, AI-assisted comment compilation, administrative record management, common user services, cloud storage, APIs, privacy, cybersecurity, and accessibility. Federal agencies responsible for environmental reviews or authorizations must compare their systems against those standards within 90 days, submit implementation plans, begin implementation within 180 days, and file progress reports at least twice per year.
Who Benefits and How
Project sponsors benefit because a common digital portal and shared data standards can make application submission, timeline tracking, document exchange, and interagency coordination more predictable. Infrastructure developers, energy project applicants, transportation project sponsors, environmental consultants, permitting software vendors, and geospatial data providers benefit from clearer data requirements and potential contract work. Local communities and public commenters benefit if notices, public meetings, project status, comment periods, and review documents are easier to find through a public portal. OMB and congressional overseers benefit from more comparable data on agency review timelines and milestones.
Who Bears the Burden and How
The Council on Environmental Quality, Federal Permitting Improvement Steering Council, Chief Information Officers Council, Office of Management and Budget, General Services Administration, federal permitting agencies, agency chief information officers, and agency environmental review officers must develop standards, issue guidance, build or adopt tools, file implementation plans, report progress twice each year, comply with privacy and cybersecurity requirements, and migrate existing review systems toward the shared architecture. Agencies also face a restriction: the bill says CEQ and federal agencies may not use the Act as authority to impose extra regulatory processes beyond NEPA or other existing law.
Key Provisions
- Requires CEQ to publish and update federal environmental review data standards within 60 days.
- Directs CEQ to prototype tools for case management, application tracking, public comment tracking, automated workflows, agency data exchange, and complex review acceleration.
- Requires CEQ implementation guidance within 120 days for minimum functional requirements, cloud storage, APIs, GIS tools, document metadata, AI-assisted comment handling, cybersecurity, and accessibility.
- Requires federal permitting agencies to compare existing systems, submit implementation plans, begin implementation within 180 days, and report progress twice per year.
- Establishes a unified interagency data system with a common digital cloud-based authorization portal.
- Authorizes CEQ contracts with federal agencies, private organizations, and businesses to carry out the Act.
- Clarifies that the bill does not authorize CEQ or agencies to impose extra regulatory processes beyond NEPA or other existing law.
Evidence Chain:
This summary is generated from the full bill text using AI analysis. Expand "Detailed Analysis" below for identified beneficiaries/burden bearers with clause-level evidence links.
At a Glance
What This Bill Does
Requires the Council on Environmental Quality to build a digital permitting framework for federal environmental reviews by setting data standards, prototyping shared tools, issuing implementation guidance, requiring agency implementation plans, and developing a unified interagency data system.
Key Policy Areas
Environment, Government Technology, Infrastructure Permitting
Primary Purpose
Requires the Council on Environmental Quality to build a digital permitting framework for federal environmental reviews by setting data standards, prototyping shared tools, issuing implementation guidance, requiring agency implementation plans, and developing a unified interagency data system.
Policy Domains
Substantive provisions
Identified Gains
- Project sponsors
- Infrastructure developers
- Energy project applicants
- Transportation project sponsors
- Environmental consultants
- Permitting software vendors
- Geospatial data providers
- Local communities
- Public commenters
- Congressional overseers
Identified Costs
- Council on Environmental Quality
- Federal Permitting Improvement Steering Council
- Chief Information Officers Council
- Office of Management and Budget
- General Services Administration
- Federal permitting agencies
- Agency chief information officers
- Agency environmental review officers
Sponsors
Legislative Progress
Passed HouseReceived; read twice and referred to the Committee on Environment …
Passed House (inferred from eh version)
Received in the Senate and Read twice and referred to …
DEBATE - The House proceeded with forty minutes of debate …
Motion to reconsider laid on the table Agreed to without …
On motion to suspend the rules and pass the bill, …
Passed/agreed to in House: On motion to suspend the rules …
Considered under suspension of the rules. (consideration: CR H5088-5091)
Mr. Crank moved to suspend the rules and pass the …
Additional sponsors: Mr. Crank, Mr. Magaziner, Mr. Evans of Colorado, …
Stakeholder Effects
cui bono?How this legislation distributes effects. Mention counts reflect frequency, not effect magnitude.
Agency chief information officers, Agency environmental review officers, Council on Environmental Quality
Federal permitting agencies faces effects in multiple directions
Environmental review software vendors, Geospatial data providers, Permitting software vendors
Bill Structure & Actor Mappings
Who is "The Secretary" in each section?
- "omb"
- → Office of Management and Budget
- "chair"
- → Chair of the Council on Environmental Quality
- "council"
- → Federal Permitting Improvement Steering Council
We use a combination of our own taxonomy and classification in addition to large language models to assess meaning and potential beneficiaries. High confidence means strong textual evidence. Always verify with the original bill text.
Learn more about our methodology