
Army
Corps and EPA Improve Wetland and Stream Mitigation
Contacts:
Corps of Engineers - Gene Pawlik, (202) 761-7690 / eugene.a.pawlik@usace.army.mil
or
Doug Garman, (202) 761-1807 / doug.m.garman@usace.army.mil;
EPA - Shakeba
Carter-Jenkins, (202) 564-4355 / carter-jenkins.shakeba@epa.gov
(
Washington
,
D.C.
-
March 31, 2008
)
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency today released a new rule to clarify how to provide
compensatory mitigation for unavoidable impacts to the nation's wetlands
and streams. The rule will enable the agencies to promote greater
consistency, predictability and ecological success of mitigation
projects under the Clean Water Act.
"This rule greatly improves implementation, monitoring, and
performance, and will help us ensure that unavoidable losses of aquatic
resources and functions are replaced for the benefit of this Nation.
This is a key step in our efforts to make the Army's Regulatory Program
a winner, and the best it can be for the regulated community we serve
and those interested in both economic development and environmental
protection," said John Paul Woodley, Jr., Assistant Secretary of
the Army for Civil Works.
"This rule advances the president's goals of halting overall
loss of wetlands and improving watershed health through sound science,
market-based approaches, and cooperative conservation," said EPA
Assistant Administrator for Water, Benjamin H. Grumbles. "The new
standards will accelerate our wetlands conservation efforts under the
Clean Water Act by establishing more effective, more consistent, and
more innovative mitigation practices."
Benefits of the compensatory mitigation rule include:
·
Fostering greater
predictability, increased transparency and improved performance of
compensatory mitigation projects
·
Establishing
equivalent standards for all forms of mitigation
·
Responding to
recommendations of the National Research Council to improve the success
of wetland restoration and replacement projects
·
Setting clear
science-based and results-oriented standards nationwide while allowing
for regional variations
·
Increasing and
expanding public participation
·
Encouraging
watershed-based decisions
·
Emphasizing the
"mitigation sequence" requiring that proposed projects avoid
and minimize potential impacts to wetlands and streams before proceeding
to compensatory mitigation
Each year thousands of property owners undertake projects that
affect the nation's aquatic resources. Proposed projects that are
determined to impact jurisdictional waters are first subject to review
under the Clean Water Act. The Corps of Engineers reviews these projects
to ensure environmental impacts to aquatic resources are avoided or
minimized as much as possible. Consistent with the administration's goal
of "no net loss of wetlands" a Corps permit may require a
property owner to restore, establish, enhance or preserve other aquatic
resources in order to replace those impacted by the proposed project.
This compensatory mitigation process seeks to replace the loss of
existing aquatic resource functions and area.
Property owners required to complete mitigation are encouraged to
use a watershed approach and watershed planning information. The new
rule establishes performance standards, sets timeframes for decision
making, and to the extent possible, establishes equivalent requirements
and standards for the three sources of compensatory mitigation:
permittee-responsible mitigation, mitigation banks and in-lieu-fee
programs.
The new rule changes where and how mitigation is to be completed,
but maintains existing requirements on when mitigation is required. The
rule also preserves the requirement for applicants to avoid or minimize
impacts to aquatic resources before proposing compensatory mitigation
projects to offset permitted impacts.
Wetlands and streams provide important environmental functions
including protecting and improving water quality and providing habitat
to fish and wildlife. Successful compensatory mitigation projects will
replace environmental functions that are lost as a result of permitted
activities.
For more information on the compensatory mitigation rule visit: http://www.usace.army.mil/cw/cecwo/reg/citizen.htm
or http://www.epa.gov/wetlandsmitigation
Information about the importance of wetlands is available at: http://www.epa.gov/owow/wetlands/
R075
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Source:
http://www.prnewswire.com/cgi-bin/stories.pl?ACCT=104&STORY=/
www/story/03-31-2008/0004783042&EDATE=
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