My WebLink
|
Help
|
About
|
Sign Out
Home
Browse
Search
Correspondences Concerning Upper Colorado Biological Opinions 1993
CWCB
>
Water Supply Protection
>
DayForward
>
5001-6000
>
Correspondences Concerning Upper Colorado Biological Opinions 1993
Metadata
Thumbnails
Annotations
Entry Properties
Last modified
5/30/2013 11:32:04 AM
Creation date
8/13/2012 1:46:03 PM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
Water Supply Protection
Description
Correspondences Concerning Upper Colorado Biological Opinions 1993
State
CO
Date
11/30/1993
Title
Correspondences Concerning Upper Colorado Biological Opinions 1993
Water Supply Pro - Doc Type
Biological Opinion
There are no annotations on this page.
Document management portal powered by Laserfiche WebLink 9 © 1998-2015
Laserfiche.
All rights reserved.
/
64
PDF
Print
Pages to print
Enter page numbers and/or page ranges separated by commas. For example, 1,3,5-12.
After downloading, print the document using a PDF reader (e.g. Adobe Reader).
Show annotations
View images
View plain text
Ira W. Hatch, District Ranger <br />11 <br />Colorado River Basin" (Program) (U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service 1987). In <br />order to further define and clarify processes outlined in Sections 4.1.5, <br />4.1.6, and 5.3.4 of the Program, an additional agreement addressing Section 7 <br />consultation on depletion impacts was developed. <br />The Section 7 agreement establishes a framework for conducting all future <br />Section 7 consultations on depletion impacts related to new projects and those <br />associated with historic projects in the Upper Basin. Procedures outlined in <br />the Section 7 agreement will be used in conjunction with the Recovery <br />Implementation Program Recovery Action Plan (Plan) to determine if sufficient <br />progress is being accomplished in the recovery of the endangered fishes to <br />enable the Program to serve as a reasonable and prudent alternative to avoid <br />jeopardy. The Plan is expected to be finalized in September 1993 and will be <br />reviewed annually. <br />In accordance with the Section 7 agreement, the Service has agreed to assess <br />impacts of projects that require Section 7 consultation and determine if <br />progress toward recovery has been sufficient for the Program to serve as a <br />reasonable and prudent alternative. If sufficient progress is being achieved, <br />biological opinions will be written to identify activities and accomplishments <br />of the Program that support it as a reasonable and prudent alternative. If <br />sufficient progress in the recovery of the endangered fishes has not been <br />achieved by the Program, actions from the Plan will be identified which must <br />be completed to avoid jeopardy to the endangered fishes. For historic <br />projects, these actions will serve as the reasonable and prudent alternative <br />as long as they are completed according to the schedule identified in the <br />Plan. For new projects, these actions will serve as the reasonable and <br />prudent alternative so long as they are completed before the impact of the <br />project occurs. PacifiCorp's Trail Mountain 1993 Coal Exploration Project is <br />considered a historic project. <br />The evaluation by the Service, to determine if sufficient progress has been <br />achieved, considered (a) actions which result in a measurable population <br />response, a measurable improvement in habitat for the fishes, legal protection <br />of flows needed for recovery, or a reduction in the threat of immediate <br />extinction; (b) status of fish populations; (c) adequacy of flows; and <br />(d) magnitude of the project impact. In addition, the Service considered <br />support activities (funding, research, information and education, etc.) of the <br />Program if they help achieve a measurable population response, a measurable <br />improvement in habitat for the fishes, legal protection of flows needed for <br />recovery, or a reduction in the threat of immediate extinction. The Service <br />evaluated progress separately for the Colorado River and Green River <br />subbasins; however, it gave due consideration to progress throughout the Upper <br />Basin in evaluating progress toward recovery. <br />Based on current Program accomplishments (Appendix A) and <br />the Plan will be fully implemented in a timely manner, th <br />that sufficient progress has been achieved under the Proa <br />serve as the reasonable and prudent alternative to avoid <br />endangered fishes by the impacts caused by this action. <br />projects, t e responsibility for implementation of all el <br />reasonable and prudent alternative rests with the Pro ram <br />the individual project proponent., <br />
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.