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4. Water II. Section 402 Permits NPDES = National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (WPDES in Wisconsin) “The Administrator may… issue a permit for.

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Presentation on theme: "4. Water II. Section 402 Permits NPDES = National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (WPDES in Wisconsin) “The Administrator may… issue a permit for."— Presentation transcript:

1 4. Water II

2 Section 402 Permits NPDES = National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (WPDES in Wisconsin) “The Administrator may… issue a permit for the discharge of any pollutant, or combination of pollutants, notwithstanding section 301(a), upon condition that such discharge will meet… all applicable requirements under sections 301, 302, 306, 307, 308 and 403 of this Act.” §402(a)(1)

3 Water Quality Trading Measure to deal with Non-Point sources Farmers generate “credits” by undertaking voluntary actions to improve WQ Point-sources, POTWs, MS4s buy credits to stay under their Waste Load Allocation (under a TMDL). Can only trade after meeting TBEL. Farmers reluctant to enter into contracts.

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7 What is a Wetland? An ecosystem defined by Federal Regulation: “ Those areas that are inundated or saturated by surface or groundwater at a frequency and duration sufficient to support, and that under normal circumstances do support, a prevalence of vegetation typically adapted for life in saturated soil conditions. ” 33 CFR 218 Not more than 18 ” deep, wet for at least 2 weeks in average growing season. 1776: 220 million acres 1985: 105 million acres Loss rate: 60 ac/hr

8 Houses built on filled wetlands in San Francisco Bay.

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10 Development permitting trends indicated that San Francisco Bay would become filled by development (The Oakland Tribune, 1960)

11 Wisconsin Wetlands ~10 million acres pre-settlement 5,385,290 acres remain (53%)

12 404 Permit Program Corps issues permits for all “dredge and fill” in Waters of the United States (WOTUS) EPA writes the environmental criteria for issuing such permits – Not written until 1980: the 404(b)(1) Guidelines – EPA can decide Corps has mis-applied Guidelines EPA can VETO Corps permits Agricultural wetlands exempt

13 What is Fill? 1993 “Fill Rule”: Corps regulation that “incidental fallback” from dredging constitutes “fill”. 1998: Rule invalidated by DC Court of Appeals: “… the straightforward statutory term ‘addition’ cannot reasonably be said to encompass the situation in which material is removed from the waters of the United States and a small portion of it happens to fall back. Because incidental fallback represents a net withdrawal, not an addition, of material, it cannot be a discharge.” Nat’l Mining v. Corps. 1998 2002: New “Fill Rule” – anything “changing bottom elevation.”

14 Jurisdiction: What is a WOTUS? “The term ‘navigable waters’ means the waters of the United States, including the territorial seas.” CWA §502(7) “Navigable waters of the United States are those waters that are subject to the ebb and flow of the tide and/or are presently used, or have been used in the past, or may be susceptible to use to transport interstate or foreign commerce.” 33 CFR 329.4 (Corps regs issued 7/19/1977)

15 Jurisdictional Battles 1976: NRDC v. Callaway – expansive definition 1985: Riverside Bayview – adjacent wetlands 1985: Migratory Bird Rule – commerce clause 2001: SWANCC v. Corps – strikes down MBR 2006: Rapanos v. United States – requires ‘nexus’

16 Jurisdiction after Rapanos

17 Mitigation 1980: EPA issues 404 “Guidelines” describing how Corps should issue permits – Alternatives analysis (Avoidance), identification of LEDPA (Least Env. Damaging Practicable Alternative) – Rebuttable presumptions of non-water dependency and non-aquatic site availability – For remaining significant degradation, “habitat mitigation”. – “The Mitigation Sequence”: Avoid, Minimize, Compensate.

18 The Mitigation Sequence “…no discharge of dredged or fill material shall be permitted unless appropriate and practicable steps have been taken which will minimize potential adverse impacts of the discharge on the aquatic ecosystem. Subpart H identifies such possible steps.” 230.10(d) “Habitat development and restoration techniques can be used to minimize adverse impacts and to compensate for destroyed habitat.” Subpart H 230.75(d) i.e.: Avoid, Minimize, Compensate

19 Corps v. EPA “It has been our experience that the Corps ignores application of the Guidelines and regularly issues permits for activities in wetlands which are non- water dependent and for which there are practicable alternatives.” EPA field staff, 1984 “The Corps will not require mitigation beyond that which is necessary to tip the public interest balance so that issuance of a permit would not be contrary to the public interest.” Corps Management, 1986

20 Burying the hatchet Attleboro Mall/Sweeden’s Swamp decision affirms the Sequence The EPA Guidelines “requir[e] the Corps’ 404 program to protect wetlands and other special aquatic sites from unnecessary destruction or degradation” General Kelly, 1989

21 Avoid, Minimize, Compensate 1990 Memorandum of Agreement: Aquatic resource impacts must be avoided “to the maximum extent practicable,” Unavoidable impacts must be minimized “to the extent appropriate and practicable” Remaining impacts must be compensated for “to the extent appropriate and practicable”

22 Minimization

23 Compensation Compensatory Mitigation “ No Net Loss ” Regulatory Failure: Erwin 1991 (FL) – 33% were built – 6% met “ success ” criteria 40,000 acres of wetlands restored/preserved for 20,000 acres filled (2005)

24 Compensation Methods (ELI, 2006)

25 Compensation Mechanisms Permittee-responsible mitigation (PRM) Third-party mitigation – Mitigation Banks – In-Lieu Fee (ILF) (USACOE, 2005)

26 The Compensation Rule 2001 NRC Report 2008 Compensation Rule “… the Secretary of the Army… shall issue regulations establishing performance standards and criteria for the use… of on- site, off-site, and in-lieu fee mitigation and mitigation banking as compensation for lost wetlands functions in permits issued by the Secretary of the Army under such section.” 2004 DAA 314(b)

27 Mitigation Plans 1.Project objectives 2.Site selection factors 3.Site protection instrument 4.Baseline information (at impact site and compensation site) 5.Credit determination methodology 6.Work plan 7.Maintenance plan 8.Performance standards 9.Monitoring requirements 10.Long-term management plan 11.Adaptive management plan 12.Financial assurances

28 Why Wetland Banks? Regulatory Failure Market Rhetoric/Policy – Entrepreneurial interest – Administration ideology Private banks originated with 2 nd oil shock, 1981. Entrepreneurial: first permit in 1991, first sale in 1994.

29 Components of a Bank bank site: the physical location of the restored wetlands bank instrument: the administrative document which establishes ecological criteria for credit release, financial sureties, ecological monitoring, liability, etc. service area: the geographic area within which impacts can be mitigated at a given bank; mitigation bank review team (MBRT): a team composed of federal agency staff who monitor the site and approve credits for sale.

30 Proposed wetland bank site in suburban Chicago (6 phases)

31 Steps in making and using a wetland bank 1.Acquire site 2.Prospectus 3.Bank Instrument 4.Develop site 5.Developer applies for permit 6.Agency requires compensation 7.Permittee purchases credits 8.Credits debited from bank ledger

32 Income in Chicago wetland credits

33 Landscape changes and Hotspots

34 Who purchases credits?

35 Lessons: Fragmentation of Spatial Markets

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37 Section 401: State Certification 281.36 (3b) (b) The department may not issue a water quality certification wetland general or individual permit under this section unless it determines that the discharge authorized pursuant to the wetland general or individual permit will comply with all applicable water quality standards. 2011 Wisconsin Act 118

38 Safe Drinking Water Act of 1974 Public Health Service Act of 1912 regulated waterborne sources of communicable disease. Establishes strict levels for contaminants in drinking water, far stricter than the Clean Water Act. 1984 report identified 200+ contaminants nationwide in drinking water 1986 amendments required the EPA to set standards for 25 new contaminants every three years. Homeowners get annual reports from water utilities on the state of contaminants in drinking water. Newer pollutants: hormones and pharmaceuticals.

39 Safe Drinking Water Act Not a pollution cleanup law; aimed at public water treatment, public health, consumer protection Standards made and enforced by Federal government Covers many more pollutants than Clean Water Act. Creative SDWA settlements have led to considerable environmental conservation: NYC

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41 Lake trout recovery in Lake Superior, 1930-1995.

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