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7007 SEAWAY BLVD 2025-07-14
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7007 SEAWAY BLVD 2025-07-14
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Last modified
7/14/2025 1:49:51 PM
Creation date
6/2/2025 12:56:45 PM
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Address Document
Street Name
SEAWAY BLVD
Street Number
7007
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(6) Compensatory mitigation requirements (e.g., resource type and amount to be provided as <br /> compensatory mitigation, site protection, ecological performance standards, monitoring requirements) <br /> may be addressed through conditions added to the NWP authorization, instead of components of a <br /> compensatory mitigation plan (see 33 CFR 332.4(c)(1)(ii)). <br /> (g) Compensatory mitigation will not be used to increase the acreage losses allowed by the acreage limits <br /> of the NWPs. For example, if an NWP has an acreage limit of 1/2-acre, it cannot be used to authorize any <br /> NWP activity resulting in the loss of greater than 1/2-acre of waters of the United States, even if <br /> compensatory mitigation is provided that replaces or restores some of the lost waters. However, <br /> compensatory mitigation can and should be used, as necessary, to ensure that an NWP activity already <br /> meeting the established acreage limits also satisfies the no more than minimal impact requirement for the <br /> NWPs. <br /> (h) Permittees may propose the use of mitigation banks, in-lieu fee programs, or permittee-responsible <br /> mitigation. When developing a compensatory mitigation proposal, the permittee must consider <br /> appropriate and practicable options consistent with the framework at 33 CFR 332.3(b). For activities <br /> resulting in the loss of marine or estuarine resources, permittee-responsible mitigation may be <br /> environmentally preferable if there are no mitigation banks or in-lieu fee programs in the area that have <br /> marine or estuarine credits available for sale or transfer to the permittee. For permittee-responsible <br /> mitigation, the special conditions of the NWP verification must clearly indicate the party or parties <br /> responsible for the implementation and performance of the compensatory mitigation project, and, if <br /> required, its long-term management. <br /> (i)Where certain functions and services of waters of the United States are permanently adversely <br /> affected by a regulated activity, such as discharges of dredged or fill material into waters of the United <br /> States that will convert a forested or scrub-shrub wetland to a herbaceous wetland in a permanently <br /> maintained utility line right-of-way, mitigation may be required to reduce the adverse environmental <br /> effects of the activity to the no more than minimal level. <br /> 24. Safety of Impoundment Structures. To ensure that all impoundment structures are safely designed, <br /> the district engineer may require non-Federal applicants to demonstrate that the structures comply with <br /> established state or federal, dam safety criteria or have been designed by qualified persons. The district <br /> engineer may also require documentation that the design has been independently reviewed by similarly <br /> qualified persons, and appropriate modifications made to ensure safety. <br /> 25. Water Quality. (a) Where the certifying authority (state, authorized tribe, or EPA, as appropriate) has <br /> not previously certified compliance of an NWP with CWA section 401, a CWA section 401 water quality <br /> certification for the proposed discharge must be obtained or waived (see 33 CFR 330.4(c)). If the <br /> permittee cannot comply with all of the conditions of a water quality certification previously issued by <br /> certifying authority for the issuance of the NWP, then the permittee must obtain a water quality <br /> certification or waiver for the proposed discharge in order for the activity to be authorized by an NWP. <br /> (b) If the NWP activity requires pre-construction notification and the certifying authority has not previously <br /> certified compliance of an NWP with CWA section 401, the proposed discharge is not authorized by an <br /> NWP until water quality certification is obtained or waived. If the certifying authority issues a water quality <br /> certification for the proposed discharge, the permittee must submit a copy of the certification to the district <br /> engineer. The discharge is not authorized by an NWP until the district engineer has notified the permittee <br /> that the water quality certification requirement has been satisfied by the issuance of a water quality <br /> certification or a waiver. <br /> (c)The district engineer or certifying authority may require additional water quality management <br /> measures to ensure that the authorized activity does not result in more than minimal degradation of water <br /> quality. <br /> 26. Coastal Zone Management. In coastal states where an NWP has not previously received a state <br /> coastal zone management consistency concurrence, an individual state coastal zone management <br /> consistency concurrence must be obtained, or a presumption of concurrence must occur(see 33 CFR <br /> 330.4(d)). If the permittee cannot comply with all of the conditions of a coastal zone management <br /> 8 <br />
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