Off-Site Wetland Determination Proposal
description
Transcript of Off-Site Wetland Determination Proposal
Off-Site Wetland Determination
Proposal
State Technical Committee MeetingAugust 28, 2013Ritch Nelson – State Wildlife Biologist
Circular 1 – August 2006 Policy Change• National policy issued to allow State
Conservationist to use an “off-site” wetland delineation procedure in limited instances:• On-site visit is not required on actively managed cropland
and pastureland where adequate “tools” exist to make an off-site determination
• On-site visits are required in the following instances:• Off-site information is not adequate to make the call• Producer requests an on-site determination• A minimal effect determination is being made• If there is an “appeal” by the producer• Prior to withholding any benefits resulting from
conversion
Existing Off-Site Procedures• Current policy in NE only allows for off-
site on fields entirely Non-Wetland (NW) using a number of tools to screen for possible wetlands
• Determine scenarioswhere wetlands andtheir boundaries could bedelineated using thesesame off-site tools
Opportunity to Incorporate Off-Site Method• Current Nebraska
NRCS procedures require that a site visit be required where evidence of wetlands are present in the field/tract.• Hydric soils data• Aerial image “footprints”• Old NWI maps
Justification of Need to Adapt• Requests for Certified Wetland Determinations have nearly tripled from 2010 to 2012 (1,006 to 2,704) and 2013 requests are on pace to surpass 2012 (1,850 through Feb.)• In 2012, approximately 38 mitigation plans and 89 minimal effect agreements
Justification of Need to Adapt• Good Faith requests through FSA increased:•2010 = 0•2011 = 7•2012 = 13•2013 = 21
• Consultant Developed Mitigation Plans increased:•2009 = 1•2010 and 2011 = 3 each•2012 = 5•2013 = 8 proposals
Justification of Need to Adapt• “Separation of Duties” requirements have increased time spent on wetland calls starting in October of 2012 – primarily due to travel time and logistics of making determinations in an unfamiliar county (location, soils, available resources, etc.)
Justification of Need to Adapt•Complexity of determinations is much higher than 5 or 10 years ago due to changes in procedures (new plant list, mapping procedures, etc.) as well as documentation requirements (Appeal hearing results, proper quality review process, etc.)
Examples of Expanded Off-Site Uses• Using aerial photography
(minimum of 10 years) to verify presence or absence of wetland signatures
• If 3 of 10, or less show signatures (NW or PC)
• More than 6 of 10 show signatures (W or FW)
• In Between? > Requires a field visit to verify
• ONLY APPLIES TO PRELIMINARY DETERMINATIONS!
Need to Incorporate Other Tools• Access to Historic
Photos• Historic Signatures, Pre-Manipulated Condition
• “Real Time” Satellite Images• Access via Internet
• Old Paper Copy Soil Survey Books• Spot Symbols, Drainages
• NWI Maps• Color Infra-Red Photos
Use of LiDAR Coverage for Topography
Limitations of Using Off-Site Methods• Sites to be sod-
busted where wetland signatures obscured by tree cover
• Fields with multiple wetlands where at least one wetland requires field visit (30% to 60%)
Updates to Technical Documents/ToolsHYDROLOGY ELEMENTS• Modify precipitation charts to
clarify wet-dry-normal periods by month/year
• Standardize selection of weather stations based on location of wetland site
• Finalize the technical note on tile installation and standardize lateral effect information
• Develop Scope and Effect worksheets for pits, tile, pumping, and make updates to existing ditch worksheet
Updates to Technical Documents/ToolsSOILS AND GIS ELEMENTS• Corrections to soils
database with hydric inclusions and screening process
• Scanned FSA slides and historic photos
• LiDAR coverage for Nebraska
• Common data layer with certified wetland determinations mapped
Updates to Technical Documents/Tools
WETLAND VEGETATION ANDFUNCTIONAL ASSESSMENT ELEMENTS• Develop methods to search new
plant list for common name, prior scientific names, etc.
• Increase availability of plant field guides and wetland plant in-field training sessions
• Complete edits to existing wetland functional assessment methods (terminology and comments)
• Provide standard mitigation plans for different wetland types and conversion scenarios
Logistics to Implement Off-Site Process• Gain input on the issue from the
State Technical Committee• Test methods on different
wetland situations and conduct quality review in Fall of 2013
• Inform workgroup of wetland partners in Nebraska of details
• Adapt existing Off-Site Methods from Iowa and South Dakota to Nebraska circumstances
• Issue policy and procedure and provide training for staff to apply the new process
Current Testing Areas for Off-Site Method
Projected Outcome of Off-Site Methods• East – only 1/3rd of the
requests would qualify for off-site due to tree cover or a wetland signature in the “middle”
• North and South – maybe 50% of sites could use off-site on a portion of the wetlands (typically larger fields)
• Current estimates for off-site is an average of 4 hours per determination
• This would increase (since not just doing NW calls) to approximately 8 hours per determination
• Current on-site estimate is 12 hours per call (does this account for travel?)