The Evolution of Virginia’s Nontidal Wetlands Program National Governor’s Association

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The Evolution of Virginia’s Nontidal Wetlands Program National Governor’s Association State Wetlands Workshop October 21-22, 2002

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The Evolution of Virginia’s Nontidal Wetlands Program National Governor’s Association State Wetlands Workshop October 21-22, 2002. IN THE BEGINNING……………. THERE WAS CLEAN WATER ACT SECTION 401 CERTIFICATION OF SECTION 404 PERMITS. PROGRESS IS MADE…………. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of The Evolution of Virginia’s Nontidal Wetlands Program National Governor’s Association

Page 1: The Evolution of Virginia’s Nontidal Wetlands Program  National Governor’s Association

The Evolution of Virginia’s Nontidal Wetlands Program

National Governor’s AssociationState Wetlands Workshop

October 21-22, 2002

Page 2: The Evolution of Virginia’s Nontidal Wetlands Program  National Governor’s Association

IN THE BEGINNING…………….

THERE WAS CLEAN WATER ACT SECTION

401 CERTIFICATION OF SECTION 404 PERMITS

Page 3: The Evolution of Virginia’s Nontidal Wetlands Program  National Governor’s Association

PROGRESS IS MADE…………..State Water Control Law in 1992

established Virginia Water Protection Permit Program

Still served only as Section 401 Program, so DEQ could issue permits only when the Corps took permit action

DEQ exercised ability to waive the requirement for a permit for many activities

Page 4: The Evolution of Virginia’s Nontidal Wetlands Program  National Governor’s Association

Then Problems Arose……..

Federal court decisions had created loopholes in federal jurisdiction, and

hence Virginia’s jurisdiction

Tulloch Wilson case (4th Circuit only-VA, NC, SC,

WV) SWANCC

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What this meant for Virginia’s Wetlands

Virginia has approximately 1,044,900 acres of wetlands; 23% tidal, 77% nontidal1

About 58% of these wetlands are located in the Urban Crescent between D.C. to Norfolk

Of 804,573 acres of nontidal wetlands: 750,000 acres are palustrine 380,000 acres are headwaters over 150,000 acres can be considered isolated 1 Based on 8/2000 data from Virginia Institute of Marine Science

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Impacts from Tulloch Ditching

Estimates of greater than 588,000 acres of Virginia's nontidal wetlands were susceptible to ditching and draining

Over 2700 acres of nontidal wetlands in Virginia were actually ditched between

1997 and 2000 as a result of the Tulloch court decision

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Impacts to Isolated Wetlands Estimates of over

180,000 acres of isolated wetlands in Virginia

Over 70 acres of isolated wetlands filled without a permit or compensation between 1998 and 2000

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General Assembly Takes Notice

CBF, SELC, JRA and others organized aggressive grass roots campaign and lobbying effort

Legislative committee studies the issue during the summer of 1999

Wetland protection was the pre-eminent topic for the 2000 Session

Page 9: The Evolution of Virginia’s Nontidal Wetlands Program  National Governor’s Association

General Assembly Takes Notice

Five bills introduced to enhance state nontidal wetlands programs to varying degrees

Some looking only for “fix” to Tulloch ditching and unpermitted impacts to isolated wetlands

Some proposed more comprehensive revisions to statute creating “nontidal wetlands law”

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Bipartisan Effort

Final Bills (HB 1170 and SB648) enjoyed bipartisan support

Final Bills supported by Home Builders Association of Virginia and local development groups as well as Chesapeake Bay Foundation and other environmental groups

Bills also had public support through education and outreach efforts

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2000 Legislation

Built on existing Virginia Water Protection Permit Program

Created nontidal wetlands program independent of Section 401 certification

Expedited permitting process through specific timeframes and general permits

Increased life of permitsRequired DEQ by 7/1/02 to request State

Programmatic General Permit from USACE

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What is regulated?

All activities in surface waters/wetlands currently regulated under Section 404 Clean Water Act

Excavation in all wetlands (7/01/00) Permanent flooding or impounding (10/01/01) New activities to cause draining or other new

activities, causing significant alteration or degradation of existing wetland acreage and function (10/01/01)

Filling or dumping (10/01/01)

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What is exempt

Activities Exempt from VWP regulation: Normal agricultural activities Normal silvicultural activities Normal residential lawn and yard

maintenance and use activities Isolated wetlands of minimal ecological

value (<1/10 acre, not forested, no t&e or special community, not in floodplain)

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FACTORS FOR PERMIT ISSUANCE

Must avoid and minimize wetland impacts to maximum extent practicable (incorporates 404(b)(1) guidelines)

Must consider cumulative impacts to water quality and fish and wildlife resources

Must compensate for wetland impacts to achieve no net loss of wetland acreage and function; stream impacts also to be compensated

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Regulatory Process

Technical Advisory Committee (TAC) formed with 30 people representing varied constituencies

TAC charged with assisting DEQ staff in developing workable regulations

TAC met 8 times in 6 months Nontidal wetland regulation and 4 general

permits were developed

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Compromises Made

More information required for permit applications, but as 2 stage process (for example, final mitigation plan can be approved after permit is issued based on concept plan)

Mitigation banks and in lieu fee funds are acceptable forms of compensation, but only after going through formal approval process

Easier to make minor changes after permit is issued, including small increases in impacts that are fully mitigated

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General Permits for Majority of ProjectsGenerally cover impacts up to 2 acres of surface

waters, including 500 l.f. perennial and 1500 l.f. intermittent streams

Standard conditions allow for simplified application and review

Reduced DEQ review time (max 45 days)No public comment or hearings on projects Certifications of Corps NWPs remain in effect to

minimize program overlap

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Implementation Results

Since July 2000, unpermitted Tulloch ditching has stopped in Virginia

One permit application to Tulloch ditch has been received

Since October 2001, unpermitted impacts to isolated wetlands

have stopped

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How We Permit Tulloch Ditching

Impact area is the ditch footprint plus adjacent area that is effectively drained

Full Compensation required for the entire impact area

This approach is an economic deterrent because fill footprint is often smaller than ditch

impact footprint

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How DEQ Regulates Isolated Wetlands

Part of “state waters” Can waive requirement for permit for

isolated wetlands of “minimal ecological value” (<1/10 acre, not forested, no t&e or special community, not in floodplain)

Corps will approve delineations, make isolated wetland determination, and note that for isolated wetlands applicant must seek permit from DEQ even if no Section 404 permit is required

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Streamlining The State/Federal Process

Corps Norfolk District issued State Program General Permit (SPGP) for development and transportation impacts effective 11/1/02

In Virginia, NWP 39 and nontidal portions of NWP 14 are suspended

Corps and DEQ have MOA on coordination of duties

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How SPGP Works

SPGP is General Permit that feeds off of DEQ General Permits

Tiered approach to issuing permits: Tier I: DEQ issues alone (1/2 acre and up to 300 l.f.

stream bed for development projects; 1/3 acre per crossing for transportation projects)

Tier II: DEQ issues, Corps reviews and either issues or yields to DEQ permit (between 1/2 and 1 acre for development projects and up to 2,000 l.f. stream bed)

Tier III: DEQ issues GP or IP, Corps issues IPFor details go to Norfolk District website at:

http://www.nao.usace.army.mil/Regulatory/SPGP-01.htm

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Why it all worked

Successful lobbying effort and bipartisan support

Trade off between more comprehensive program and expedited permitting

Built on existing permit program to reduce “surprises”

Included requirement to work with Corps to reduce duplication of permitting efforts

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Success of the Program --Something For Everyone

Environmentalists -- protection of more wetland resources

Developers -- Quicker permitting, more certainty, less regulatory duplication

Regulators -- Clearer regulation, GPs minimize paperwork and give more time for compliance inspections and enforcement

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Still Have Questions?Contact Ellen Gilinsky

VWPP Program Manager804-698-4375

[email protected] visit our website at

http://www.deq.state.va.us/wetlands