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<br />.. <br /> <br />- ^ <br /> <br />permit applications. These environmental criteria are known as the Sectio~ <br />404(b){1) guidelines. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the National Marine <br />Fisheries Service, and the state resource agencies have important advisory roles. <br />Under a Memorandum of Agreement, the U.S. Department of Agriculture's <br />Natural Resources Conservation Service is the lead federal agency for making <br />wetlands determinations .on. agricultural lands. <br />Many states and some communities also have their own wetland protection <br />programs. Local programs can fill the gaps in the federal or state regulations, <br />particularly for smaller wetlands and unregulated activities. <br />To F'lIId Out More .. .. City and county permit and engineering offices; <br />state, county, and regional stormwater agencies; the state natUral resources <br />agency; the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service; the U.S. Environmental Protection <br />Agency; the Natural Resources Conservation Service; and the U.S. Army Corps <br />of Engineers can provide information about wetlands protection. You can get <br />copies of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's We/lands FaCl Sheets and <br />other help by calling the EPA Wetlands Information Hotline at (800) 832-7828. <br /> <br />Drainage system maintenance <br /> <br />Ongoing maintenance programs are needed to clean out channels and detention <br />basins blocked by overgrowth or debris. The work is usually done by a public <br />works or drainage district crew. These activities normally do not affect the shape <br />of the channel or basin, but they do affect how well it performs. <br />Many people do not realize the consequences their actions have on the <br />drainage system. They may, for example, fill in the ditch in their front yard, not <br />realizing that it is needed to drain street runoff. They may not understand how <br />regrading their yard, filling a wetland, or dumping leaves or branches into a <br />stream or ditch can cause problems both big and small. <br />A drainage system maintenance program should, therefore, include <br />regulations preventing regrading, filling, dumping in, or altering watercourses or <br />storage basins. Public information materials should be available to explain the <br />reasons for the rules as well as the penalties. Regular inspections to catch <br />violations also should be scheduled. <br />To Find Out More .. .. Agencies that can provide technical advice about <br />drainage system maintenance include local drainage districts, the state natural or <br />water resource agency, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, and the Natural <br />Resources Conservation Service. <br /> <br />. <br /> <br />Real estate disclosure <br /> <br />After a flood, people often say they would have taken steps to protect themselves <br />if only they had known they had purchased a flood-prone property. All federally <br />regulated lending institutions must tell people who apply for a mortgage or other <br />loan whether or not the building that secures the loan lies in a floodplain as shown <br />on the Flood Insurance Rate Map. <br />Because the deadline for meeting this requirement is only five days before <br />closing, often the applicants are already committed to purchasing the property <br />when they first learn of the flood hazard. State laws and local practices by real <br />estate boards can overcome this deficiency and advise newcomers about the hazard <br />earlier. They may also require disclosure of past flooding or sewer problems, <br />regardless of whether the property is in a mapped floodplain. <br /> <br />. <br /> <br />18 <br />