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Oregon’s Federal Aid Highway Programmatic Biological Opinion. ( FAHP) Presentation to the Local Agencies November 14, 2013. Background & Purpose. Emphasis on Programmatic Agreements Previous Programmatic outdated FHWA as the lead Federal Nexus (not Corps anymore)
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Oregon’s Federal Aid Highway Programmatic Biological Opinion (FAHP) Presentation to the Local Agencies November 14, 2013
Background & Purpose • Emphasis on Programmatic Agreements • Previous Programmatic outdated • FHWA as the lead Federal Nexus (not Corps anymore) • Increasing role of ODOT in Local Agency projects • No stormwater coverage in SLOPES IV
Programmatic Goals • Overall Goals • Improve the condition of the environmental baseline most directly impacted by the transportation program (e.g., habitat connectivity, water quality) • Avoid and minimize adverse impacts to federally-listed species and critical habitat • Decrease consultation time and associated costs
Communication • Better tracking of project impacts…fewer actions need regulatory approval in future • Necessary for ODOT and Local Agency • Greater transparency & communication
Exclusions Excluded activities may require Individual Consultation • Tidegates • EIS • Solely related to mass transit or rail • New permanent stream crossings or roads in the riparian zone (With some exceptions) • In-water work downstream of Willamette Falls Dec. 1 - Jan. 31 • Stream channel realignment (except to restore former channels or eroding banks)
STEPS • Document early coordination with Services (new requirement) • Project Notification which may or may not require Service’s approval depending on action
Actions Requiring Service’s Approval • (a) Actions with required mitigation such as: on-site stormwater treatment deficit, net increase in artificial fill or abandoned fill in the functional floodplain, unvegetated streambank riprap, any streambank riprap above OHW, in-stream flow control structures. • (b) In-water work extension requests. • (c) Fisheries restoration structures and/or fishways, including ladders, culvert retrofits, pool-riffle structures, and roughened chutes. • (d) Weed control that does not meet herbicide treatment standards. • (e) Blasting in/near aquatic habitats (only allowed when listed species will not be present5). • (f) Bridge replacement that cannot meet fluvial performance or pile driving standards. • (g) Stream channel modifications or waterway enhancements that do not meet design standards, such as fish passage retrofits, channel restoration, set-backs, and water control. • (h) Stormwater flow management in a drainage basin that is less that 100 mi2. • (i) Other modifications to FAHP design standards that may result in direct impacts to listed aquatic resources.
Actions that don’t require Service’s Approval • (a) Work below ordinary high water (OHW) completed during the in-water work period. • (b) Weed control near aquatic habitat that occurs manually or otherwise meets FAHP herbicide treatment design standards. • (c) Bridge replacement that meets fluvial performance and pile driving standards. • (d) Projects without stream channel or waterway enhancements, or projects with stream channel or waterway enhancement that meet design standards. • (e) Projects that involve stormwater flow management in drainage basins larger than 100 mi2 that meet design standards. • (f) Project may or may not involve minor modifications to buffer distances, riparian habitat impacts; or otherwise can be designed as per the FAHP.
STEPS • Construction Initiation Notice • Fish Salvage • Environmental Inspection • Project Completion Report • Post-construction biological monitoring is required for all FAHP projects that clear vegetation or grade within riparian zones and streams, or involve streambank restoration, site restoration, or other habitat enhancements.
Modifications • Expedite Project Notification by designing & building according to Design Standards • NMFS recognizes one-size-does-not-fit-all • Substantive modifications –Early Coordination; likely will trigger Services approval of Notification • Channel confinement
Communication with FHWA & NMFS • Quarterly meetings to discuss issues • Annual summary report • Webmap interface for on demand reporting • Allows geo-spatial view of project locations and status • Quick access to detailed project information • Constantly updated and always available
Website http://www.oregon.gov/ODOT/HWY/GEOENVIRONMENTAL/Pages/fahp.aspx Key to Success: Download the Biological Opinion and User Guide and refer to them often.
Questions? • Michael.P.Barry@odot.state.or.us; 541.963.1353 • Howard.Postovit@odot.state.or.us; 541.963.1343 • Christian.Jilek@odot.state.or.us; 541.963.1597