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Permitting Marine Projects. Presented by Heather Page January 27, 2010. Presentation Overview. Permit Triggers Major Environmental Laws and Permitting Case Study: Gig Harbor Eddon Boatyard Project. What Triggers the need for a Permit?. Any work in, over, or under navigable waters
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Permitting Marine Projects Presented by Heather Page January 27, 2010
Presentation Overview • Permit Triggers • Major Environmental Laws and Permitting • Case Study: Gig Harbor Eddon Boatyard Project
What Triggers the need for a Permit? • Any work in, over, or under navigable waters • Any work in salt or fresh waters of the state • Discharge of dredge or fill material into waters of the U.S. • Discharge of pollutants (point and nonpoint sources) into waters of the U.S.
What Triggers the need for a Permit? • Projects within 200 feet of a regulated water body • Projects that impact wetlands, fish and wildlife habitat, frequently flooded areas, aquifer recharge areas, and geologically hazardous areas • Projects that impact threatened or endangered species • Projects that impact historic and cultural resources
Major Environmental Laws • Rivers and Harbors Act of 1899 – Section 10 • Clean Water Act • Coastal Zone Management Act of 1972 • Endangered Species Act of 1973 • Section 106 of the Nat’l Historic Preservation Act • Shoreline Management Act • Growth Management Act • Washington Hydraulic Code
Rivers and Harbors Act of 1899 – Section 10 • The purpose of this section of the Act was to prohibit the obstruction or alteration of navigable waters of the U.S. • The meaning of “navigable water” • A Section 10 Permit is required for any work in, over, or under navigable waters
Clean Water Act of 1972, amended in 1977 • An amendment to the Federal Water Pollution Control Act of 1972, which set the basic structure for regulating discharges of pollutants to waters of the United States • CWA made it unlawful for any person to discharge any pollutant from a point source into navigable waters (or waters of the state), unless a permit was obtained under its provisions
CWA – Section 404 • Established a program to regulate the discharge of dredged or fill material into waters of the U.S. • CWA built on the definition of navigable waters, and defined “waters of the U.S.” • Rapanos v United States
CWA – Section 401 • Required of any applicant for a federal license or permit to conduct any activity that may result in a discharge into navigable waters • 401 Certifications are made by the state in which the discharge originates • Approval can be issued in the form of a 401 Water Quality Certification, Letter of Verification, or No Further Action
CWA – Section 402 • National Pollutant Discharge EliminationSystem (NPDES) • NPDES programcontrols water pollution by regulating point sources that discharge pollutants into waters of the U.S. • It is an EPA program, typically administered by states
Types of NPDES Permits • Aquatic Pesticides General Permit • Boatyard General Permit • Construction Stormwater General Permit • Fresh Fruit Packing General Permit • Individual Permit • Industrial Stormwater General Permit • Municipal Stormwater General Permit • Sand and Gravel General Permit
Coastal Zone Management Act of 1972 • Established the nationalpolicy to preserve, protect, develop, and restore coastal zones • Provides for various grants to coastal states for development of coastal zone management plans and management of various programs
Endangered Species Act of 1973 • Conservation of threatened and endangered fish, wildlife, and plant species • Administered by National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) • Projects with a federal nexus that could affect listed species trigger Section 7 consultation
Section 7 Consultation Process • Biological assessments analyze the potential effects of projects on listed species and critical habitat, and justify particular effect determinations • “Consultation” versus “Conference” with NMFS and USFWS • Informal versus formal consultation
Section 106 Process • Initiating Review • Does the project affect historical or archaeological resources ? • Early coordination with Tribes • Identifying Cultural Resources • Identify area of potential effect (APE) • Prepare Cultural Resource Report • Assessing Effects on Cultural Resources • Avoid, minimize, or mitigate adverse effects
Section 106 Process • Obtain SHPO Concurrence on “No Adverse Effect” • Resolving Adverse Effects • Reach agreement with the SHPO/Tribal Historic Preservation Officer on measures to deal with adverse effects • Mitigation may include active preservation in place for future study or other use, recovery or partial recovery of archaeological data, public interpretive display, etc.
Shoreline Management Act of 1971 • Local government has the primary responsibility for initiating the planning required by the SMA and administering the regulatory program (Shoreline Master Program) • Ecology acts primarily in a supportive and review capacity • Development projects within 200 feet of a regulated water body must be consistent with the local Shoreline Master Program
Growth Management Act • Requires state and local governments to manage Washington’s growth by identifying and protecting critical areas and natural resource lands and designating urban growth areas • Critical areas: wetlands, fish and wildlife habitat, frequently flooded areas, aquifer recharge areas, and geologically hazardous areas • GMA versus SMA: SB 5726 and HB 1653
Washington Hydraulic Code • Chapter 220-110 WAC • Hydraulic Project Approval (HPA) is required of any activity that uses, diverts, obstructs, or changes the natural flow or bed of any of the salt or fresh waters of state • Work requiring an HPA also includes… • Administered by the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife
Pre-existing Marine Structures Pre-existing Marine Structures
What were the project elements? • Demolition and removal of existing marine and shoreline creosote treated timber • Deconstruction, salvage, and temporary relocation of floating dock, gangway, and carriageways • Dredging and removal of contaminated marine sediments • Excavation and removal of contaminated upland soils • Clean backfill placement/capping • Reconfiguration of nearshore land to gentle slope
What was the permitting approach? • Early coordination with Ecology and design team • Identified environmental resources in the area • Developed permit strategy • SEPA Mitigated Determination of Non-significance • 401 Water Quality Certification from Ecology • Section 404/10 Permit from Corps • Endangered Species Act Concurrence from Services/Corps • Section 106 Concurrence from DAHP/Tribes/Corps • Hydraulic Project Approval from WDFW • Local permits from City of Gig Harbor, including Shoreline Substantial Development Permit
What were some permitting strategies? • Design of floating dock and gangway • Meet the needs of City of Gig Harbor, WDFW, Tribes, and DAHP • Be cost effective • Avoid impacts to cap • Conducted joint agency meeting • Back-pocket mitigation: • “Self” mitigating project • Creosote bulkhead removal • Negotiated permit conditions
Environmental Resources • Identifying resources on site: • Wetland • Stream • Tidal flats/nearshore habitat • Historical and cultural resources • Employing avoidance and minimization measures • Ensuring water quality
Containment boom and silt curtain (left) and high visibility fence around saltmarsh vegetation area (right)