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1 <br /> 2.0 REVIEW OF EXISTING INFORMATION <br /> ' Prior to conducting the site investigation, public resources were reviewed to gather background <br /> information on the subject property and the surrounding area in regards to critical areas. The <br /> following information was examined: <br /> 1 <br /> • United States Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) National Wetlands Inventory: The <br /> 1 • <br /> National Wetland Inventory(NWI) depicts a Palustrine, Scrub-Shrub, Seasonally Flooded <br /> wetland approximately 150 feet of the west of the site. <br /> • USDA/Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS)Web Soil Survey:The Web Soil <br /> Survey maps the soils on site as Alderwood-Urban land complex, 2 to 8 percent slopes, and <br /> Terric Medisaprists, nearly level. <br /> • WDFW Priority Habitat and Species (PHS) Interactive Map: PHS depicts the same <br /> wetland as shown by NWI. Additionally, PHS depicts records of Little Brown Bat (Myotis <br /> lucifugus) and Yuma myotis (Myotis yumanensis) near the location of the wetland. <br /> • WDNR Forest Practices Application Mapping Tool(FPAMT): The FPAMT map does not <br /> depict any resources on or near the property. The nearest resource mapped is a non-fish <br /> ' stream,which is shown over 1,000 feet to the east of the site. <br /> • Snohomish County PDS Map Portal: The PDS Map Portal depicts the wetland mapped <br /> by NWI on the western portion of the site, extending off-site to the west. A unknown/ <br /> ' untyped stream is shown flowing through the wetland approximately 150 feet west of the <br /> subject site. <br /> • WDFW SalmonScape: The nearest resource mapped as supporting salmonids is Wood <br /> Creek, located nearly 2,000 feet east of the subject site. <br /> • StreamNet Mapper: No features are depicted on or near the subject property. <br /> ' • City of Everett Critical Areas Map: The City of Everett Critical Areas Map depicts a <br /> wetland in the same location as NWI and a Type Ns stream flowing through the wetland. <br /> 1 <br /> 3.0 WETLAND AND STREAM DETERMINATION METHODOLOGY <br /> The ordinaryhigh water mark (OHWM) of streams is determined using the methodology <br /> g <br /> described in the Washington Department of Ecology's publication, Determining the Ordinary High <br /> Water Mark for Shoreline Management Act Compliance in Washington State(Anderson, et al. 2016). <br /> Wetland boundaries in western Washington are typically determined using the routine <br /> methodology described in the Corps of Engineers Wetlands Delineation Manual (Environmental <br /> Laboratory 1987) and the Regional Supplement to the Corps of Engineers Wetland Delineation Manual: <br /> Western Mountains, Valleys, and Coast Region (Version 2.0) (U.S.Army Corps of Engineers 2010).Under <br /> the routine methodology, the process for making a wetland determination is based on three steps: <br /> 1.) Examination of the site for hydrophytic vegetation (species present and percent cover); <br /> B Plan <br /> 8208 Florida Drive 3 Wetland and uffer Restoration a <br /> WRI#21348 Revision 1:June 15, 2022 <br />