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Last modified
1/26/2010 12:52:24 PM
Creation date
10/12/2006 12:00:41 AM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
Water Supply Protection
File Number
8065
Description
Section D General Statewide Issues - Endangered Species Act - Fisheries
State
CO
Basin
Statewide
Date
10/5/1994
Author
WSWC - Western Govs
Title
Water Management Symposium 1994 - The Effect of the Endangered Species Act on Western Water Management - Improving ESA Implementation - 10-5-94 through 10-7-94 - Meeting Materials - Part I of II
Water Supply Pro - Doc Type
Report/Study
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<br />00lG~~7 <br /> <br />Richard Opper, Director of the Missouri Basin States Association, described ESA impacts on the <br />Missouri River System. He said the ESA is at the heart of the new Missouri River Operations <br />Manual. Until the ESA. he said. fish and wildlife interests took a back seat to all other water <br />uses: now, the ESA greatly affects the entire 2300-mile long complex. He described how federal <br />agencies instituted river development that eliminated riparian habitat, including channelization, <br />dam construction, and control of flood plains. Yet, he said, the preferred option under the Army <br />Corps' of Engineers Missouri River Operation Plan won't offset the jeopardy opinion issued by <br />\ the USFWS for affected species. The USFWS reasonable and prudent alternative recommended <br />flooding an additional 64,000 acres. He noted that states and tribes were excluded from ESA <br />section 7 consultation processes. <br /> <br />Finally, Greg Power, Missouri River Coordinator for the North Dakota Game and Fish <br />Department, spoke on the Missouri River system. He said that flood control was the main reason <br />for the Missouri River Basin dams, and that water supply was a second major reason for them. <br />Since they were constructed, there has been an explosion in recreation and fishery interests at <br />reservoirs. He said that states should take a proactive role to protect critical habitat in avoidance <br />of listing. He commented that stocking and fish propagation are a "band-aid" approach, not a <br />long-term solution to the problem of fish decline, even if such methods work in the near term. <br /> <br />F. Habitat Conservation Plans <br /> <br />, <br />~ Symposium participants enjoyed a luncheon presentation on Habitat Conservation Plans (HCPs) <br />given by Adam Relin, a natural resources attorney from the California law firm of Nos sam an. <br />Guthner, Knox & Elliott. Over one hundred HCPs are in process nationally, Mr. Relin stated. <br />Among these, the plan for several species in Kern County is unprecedented in scope and <br />complexity, and has incurred considerable costs. A broad spectrum of agencies and interest <br />groups are working together to develop the HCP with the county, which must comply with both <br />state and federal endangered species acts. The working committee for the Kern County HCP has <br />endorsed a novel market-based conservation plan which would allow landowners to create <br />conservation credits by dedicating or enhancing habitat, then sell those credits to developers as <br />compensation for impacts on wildlife habitat. Thus, the system adopts an innovative market- <br />based approach in place of the command-and-control planning approach usually taken. HCPs <br />offer an opportunity to plan for species on a regional basis, instead of project-by-project, and also <br />provide local governments a lead role in ESA planning. HCPs take time to negotiate, depending <br />on the number of interested parties involved, he said. Development of necessary, accurate <br />biological data takes time. NEP A adds another year to the time required to obtain a section 10(a) <br />permit. HCPs may offer a means ofreaching a consensus in local planning to resolve conflicts. <br />However, Mr. Relin noted that no one has yet submitted an HCP covering aquatic species, nor <br />does the prospect of aquatic HCPs seem likely in the near future. <br /> <br />9 <br />
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