Laserfiche WebLink
Nationwide 5 Permit Summary <br />otherwise applicable limit, as provided for in NWPs 13, 21, <br />29, 36, 39, 40, 42, 43, 44, 50, 51 or 52, the district engineer <br />will only grant the waiver upon a written determination that <br />the NWP activity will result in minimal adverse effects. When <br />making minimal effects determinations the district engineer <br />will consider the direct and indirect effects caused by the <br />NWP activity. The district engineer will also consider site <br />specific factors, such as the environmental setting in the <br />vicinity of the NWP activity, the type of resource that will be <br />affected by the NWP activity, the functions provided by the <br />aquatic resources that will be affected by the NWP activity, <br />the degree or magnitude to which the aquatic resources <br />perform those functions, the extent that aquatic resource <br />functions will be lost as a result of the NWP activity (e.g., <br />partial or complete loss), the duration of the adverse effects <br />(temporary or permanent), the importance of the aquatic <br />resource functions to the region (e.g., watershed or ecoregion), <br />and mitigation required by the district engineer. If an <br />appropriate functional assessment method is available and <br />practicable to use, that assessment method may be used by the <br />district engineer to assist in the minimal adverse effects <br />determination. The district engineer may add case - specific <br />special conditions to the NWP authorization to address site - <br />specific environmental concerns. <br />❑ 2. If the proposed activity requires a PCN and will <br />result in a loss of greater than 1 /10- acre of wetlands, the <br />prospective permittee should submit a mitigation proposal <br />with the PCN. Applicants may also propose compensatory <br />mitigation for projects with smaller impacts. The district <br />engineer will consider any proposed compensatory mitigation <br />the applicant has included in the proposal in determining <br />whether the net adverse environmental effects to the aquatic <br />environment of the proposed activity are minimal. The <br />compensatory mitigation proposal may be either conceptual or <br />detailed. If the district engineer determines that the activity <br />complies with the terms and conditions of the NWP and that <br />the adverse effects on the aquatic environment are minimal, <br />after considering mitigation, the district engineer will notify <br />the permittee and include any activity- specific conditions in <br />the NWP verification the district engineer deems necessary. <br />Conditions for compensatory mitigation requirements must <br />comply with the appropriate provisions at 33 CFR 332.3(k). <br />The district engineer must approve the final mitigation plan <br />before the permittee commences work in waters of the United <br />States, unless the district engineer determines that prior <br />approval of the final mitigation plan is not practicable or not <br />necessary to ensure timely completion of the required <br />compensatory mitigation. If the prospective permittee elects to <br />submit a compensatory mitigation plan with the PCN, the <br />district engineer will expeditiously review the proposed <br />compensatory mitigation plan. The district engineer must <br />review the proposed compensatory mitigation plan within 45 <br />calendar days of receiving a complete PCN and determine <br />whether the proposed mitigation would ensure no more than <br />minimal adverse effects on the aquatic environment. If the net <br />adverse effects of the project on the aquatic environment (after <br />consideration of the compensatory mitigation proposal) are <br />determined by the district engineer to be minimal, the district <br />engineer will provide a timely written response to the <br />applicant. The response will state that the project can proceed <br />under the terms and conditions of the NWP, including any <br />Page 8 <br />activity- specific conditions added to the NWP authorization <br />by the district engineer. <br />❑ 3. If the district engineer determines that the adverse <br />effects of the proposed work are more than minimal, then the <br />district engineer will notify the applicant either: (a) That the <br />project does not qualify for authorization under the NWP and <br />instruct the applicant on the procedures to seek authorization <br />under an individual permit; (b) that the project is authorized <br />under the NWP subject to the applicant's submission of a <br />mitigation plan that would reduce the adverse effects on the <br />aquatic environment to the minimal level; or (c) that the <br />project is authorized under the NWP with specific <br />modifications or conditions. Where the district engineer <br />determines that mitigation is required to ensure no more than <br />minimal adverse effects occur to the aquatic environment, the <br />activity will be authorized within the 45 -day PCN period, with <br />activity- specific conditions that state the mitigation <br />requirements. The authorization will include the necessary <br />conceptual or detailed mitigation or a requirement that the <br />applicant submit a mitigation plan that would reduce the <br />adverse effects on the aquatic environment to the minimal <br />level. When mitigation is required, no work in waters of the <br />United States may occur until the district engineer has <br />approved a specific mitigation plan or has determined that <br />prior approval of a final mitigation plan is not practicable or <br />not necessary to ensure timely completion of the required <br />compensatory mitigation. <br />D. Further Information <br />1. District Engineers have authority to determine if an <br />activity complies with the terms and conditions of an NWP. <br />2. NWPs do not obviate the need to obtain other federal, <br />state, or local permits, approvals, or authorizations required by <br />law. <br />3. NWPs do not grant any property rights or exclusive <br />privileges. <br />4. NWPs do not authorize any injury to the property or <br />rights of others. <br />5. NWPs do not authorize interference with any existing or <br />proposed Federal project. <br />E. Definitions <br />Best management practices (BMPs): Policies, practices, <br />procedures, or structures implemented to mitigate the adverse <br />environmental effects on surface water quality resulting from <br />development. BMPs are categorized as structural or non- <br />structural. <br />Compensatory mitigation: The restoration (re- establishment <br />or rehabilitation), establishment (creation), enhancement, <br />and/or in certain circumstances preservation of aquatic <br />resources for the purposes of offsetting unavoidable adverse <br />impacts which remain after all appropriate and practicable <br />avoidance and minimization has been achieved. <br />Currently serviceable: Useable as is or with some <br />maintenance, but not so degraded as to essentially require <br />reconstruction. <br />Direct effects: Effects that are caused by the activity and <br />occur at the same time and place. <br />