Corps of Engineers Revises and Renews Nationwide PermitsThe U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) published a final notice in the Federal Register, dated Monday, March 12, 2007, to reissue and modify the Nationwide Permits (NWPs), including issuance of 6 new NWPs, 2 new general conditions and 13 new definitions. The final notice also addresses comments received on the proposed NWPs published in the Federal Register Notice, dated Tuesday, September 26, 2006. The effective date for the reissued and new NWPs will be March 19, 2007. The USACE Tulsa District has issued a public notice about the reissuance of the NWPs. The current NWPs will expire March 18, 2012. Nationwide Permit ProgramNationwide permits (NWPs) are a type of general permit issued by the Chief of Engineers and are designed to regulate with little, if any, delay or paperwork certain activities having minimal impacts. The NWPs are proposed, issued, modified, reissued (extended), and revoked from time to time after an opportunity for public notice and comment. Proposed NWPs or modification to or reissuance of existing NWPs will be adopted only after the Corps gives notice and allows the public an opportunity to comment on and request a public hearing regarding the proposals. Activities can be authorized under NWP only if that activity and the permittee satisfy all of the NWPs terms and conditions, including regionally specific conditions or limitations explained below. An individual or regional general permit still may authorize activities that do not qualify for authorization under a NWP. The following links provide more information about the NWP Program. NWP Regional Conditions and Water Quality Certification
With each cycle of revision and reauthorization of the NWP Program, Corps Districts examine regional issues and determine the need for District-specific regional conditions. A part of this process is obtaining Clean Water Act (CWA) Section 401 Water Quality Certification (WQC) from the appropriate State agency for those NWPs that would authorize activities under Section 404 CWA. A State's decision on WQC may result in additional conditions on the NWPs, denial of certification for specific NWPs, or denial of certification in certain sensitive waters in the state. In the Tulsa District, all 3 states have included special conditions in their WQCs for the NWPs, and in Oklahoma WQC has been denied in particular instances. Another factor that influences the manner in which the NWP program is administered in various Corps Districts is the presence of designated Critical Resource Waters (CRW) within the district. NWP General Condition (GC) 25 identifies particular categories of waters as CRWs and states that the District Engineer may designate additional waters as CRWs as appropriate. Under GC 25, some of the NWPs are prohibited from use in CRWs while other NWPs require mandatory notification to the Corps in these waters. The Tulsa District has designated specific waters in Oklahoma possessing high aquatic resource quality and value as CRWs. Detailed information on the three state's WQCs and CRWs is available in the following links. General Permits
Endangered Species and Critical Habitat Maps
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