97-29996. Protection of Wetlands  

  • [Federal Register Volume 62, Number 221 (Monday, November 17, 1997)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 61215-61217]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 97-29996]
    
    
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
    
    Natural Resources Conservation Service
    
    7 CFR Part 650
    
    
    Protection of Wetlands
    
    AGENCY: Natural Resources Conservation Service, USDA.
    
    ACTION: Final rule.
    
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    SUMMARY: Pursuant to Government Performance Results Act, the Natural 
    Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) is removing obsolete, 
    unnecessary, or redundant regulations from the Code of Federal 
    Regulations. This action removes the regulations found at 7 CFR 650.26 
    concerning the NRCS wetland technical assistance policy.
    
    EFFECTIVE DATE: November 17, 1997.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Warren M. Lee (202) 720-3534.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    Executive Order 12866
    
        This document does not meet the criteria for a significant 
    regulatory action as specified in E.O. 12866.
    
    Regulatory Flexibility Act
    
        It has been determined that the Regulatory Flexibility Act is not 
    applicable to this rule because NRCS is not required by 5 U.S.C. 553 or 
    any other provision of law to publish a notice of proposed rule making 
    with respect to the subject matter of this rule.
    
    Environmental Evaluation
    
        This final rule will have no significant effect on the human 
    environment and is categorically exempt under 7 CFR 1b.3(a)(6), 
    therefore neither an environmental assessment nor an environmental 
    impact statement is required.
    
    Paperwork Reduction Act
    
        This rule does not contain reporting or record keeping requirements 
    subject to the Paperwork Reduction Act.
    
    Background
    
        Pursuant to the Administration effort to review existing agency 
    regulations and remove unnecessary regulations from the Code of Federal 
    Regulations, the NRCS has determined that the regulation found at 7 CFR 
    part 650.26, ``Protection of Wetlands,'' is unnecessary because the 
    regulation addresses a matter of internal agency policy, does not 
    regulate any member of the public, conflicts with agency implementation 
    of the wetland conservation provisions of the Food Security Act of 
    1985, as amended, 16 U.S.C. 3801 et seq., and utilizes a superseded 
    classification of wetlands.
    
    Executive Order 11990
    
        Wetlands provide fish and wildlife habitats, maintain ground water 
    supplies and water quality, protect shorelines from erosion, store 
    floodwaters and trap sediments, and provide recreational and 
    educational opportunities. Historically, wetlands have been converted 
    at a rapid rate with the concomitant loss of the functions and values 
    that they provide to the Nation. In some cases, activities of the 
    Federal government contributed to the loss of the Nation's wetlands. To 
    minimize adverse impacts on wetlands resulting from Federally-sponsored 
    activities, President Carter in 1977 issued an Executive Order to 
    protect wetlands. Executive Order 11990 established the policy that, to 
    the extent authorized by law, the Executive Branch would avoid direct 
    or indirect support of new construction in wetlands wherever there 
    exists a practicable alternative.
        Pursuant to the Soil Conservation and Domestic Allotment Act of 
    1935, 16 U.S.C. 590a et seq., the Soil Conservation Service (SCS) of 
    the United States Department of Agriculture provided technical 
    assistance to landowners for the protection of natural resources on 
    private lands. Technical assistance included the personnel and support 
    resources needed to conduct planning and conservation practice survey, 
    layout, design, installation and certification. Among activities 
    conducted prior to 1977, SCS provided technical assistance related to 
    the construction of drainage ditches and other structures that resulted 
    in the conversion of wetlands.
        Section 6 of Executive Order 11990 requires agencies to issue or 
    amend their existing procedures to comply with the policies of the 
    order, and accordingly, SCS revised its policy regarding technical 
    assistance in 1977. These changes restricted the situations in which 
    SCS employees could provide technical assistance to clients related to 
    new construction in wetlands. In 1979, SCS codified the wetland 
    technical assistance policy at 7 CFR 650.26. SCS modified this 
    regulation in 1982 to enable SCS employees to provide assistance for 
    new construction in wetlands when denial of such assistance would lead 
    to ``detrimental consequences on soil and water resources or on human 
    welfare and safety.'' 47 FR 34111 (August 6, 1982).
        Since 1982, SCS updated its technical assistance policy several 
    times, but such updates did not require amendments to the regulation at 
    7 CFR 650.26. Pursuant to Departmental reorganization in 1994, SCS was 
    abolished and the Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) assumed 
    most of the statutory and regulatory responsibilities of the SCS, 
    including the provision of technical assistance on private lands.
    
    The Conflict With the Wetland Conservation Provisions
    
        The wetland conservation provisions of the Food Security Act of 
    1985 (the 1985 Act), as amended, 16 U.S.C. 3801 et seq., encourage 
    participants in United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) programs 
    to adopt land management measures that protect wetland functions and 
    values by linking eligibility for USDA program benefits to farming 
    practices on converted wetlands. In particular, the wetland 
    conservation (WC) provisions of the 1985 Act provide that after 
    December 23, 1985, a program participant is ineligible for certain USDA 
    program benefits for the production of an agricultural commodity on a 
    converted wetland, or after November 28, 1990, for the conversion of a 
    wetland that makes the production of an agricultural commodity 
    possible. The 1985 Act, however, affords relief to program participants 
    who meet certain conditions identified under the 1985 Act by exempting 
    such actions from the ineligibility provisions.
        The current version of the wetland technical assistance rule, 7 CFR 
    650.26, allows NRCS to provide technical assistance to a producer that 
    could place the producer in violation of the WC provisions. In 
    particular, the rule allows NRCS personnel to provide technical 
    assistance for certain construction in types 1 and 2 wetlands under the 
    Circular 39 classification of wetlands. The wetland classification 
    system in
    
    [[Page 61216]]
    
    Circular 39 was established by the Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS), 
    United States Department of the Interior, and used by state and Federal 
    agencies. Currently, the FWS and other agencies do not use Circular 39.
        Many types 1 and 2 wetlands correlate with the NRCS definition of 
    ``farmed wetlands''. A producer can be found ineligible for USDA 
    program benefits if the drainage on farmed wetlands is increased beyond 
    that which existed on or before December 23, 1985. Thus, under the 
    current wetland technical assistance rule, NRCS could help design the 
    drainage system that causes the producer to lose program benefits and 
    also would violate Section 404 of the Clean Water Act if the drainage 
    activities were not permitted by the Army Corps of Engineers.
        The current version of the wetland technical assistance rule also 
    hinders the ability of NRCS to assist producers with WC provisions 
    compliance. Since December 23, 1985, program participants are farming 
    in a more environmentally-oriented manner, resulting in more wetlands 
    remaining available to perform the myriad of functions and values for 
    the Nation. Meeting the objectives of the WC provisions, however, has 
    been difficult for some producers. Wherever possible, USDA has helped 
    individual program participants address their unique resource concerns 
    in a manner that meets the requirements of the WC provisions.
        The Federal Agriculture Improvement and Reform Act (the 1996 Act), 
    enacted April 4, 1996, made several amendments to the WC provisions 
    which were intended to increase USDA's ability to meet these producers' 
    situations in a more flexible manner. These amendments provide 
    producers who wish to convert a wetland with greater flexibility to 
    mitigate the loss of wetland functions and values through restoration, 
    enhancement, or creation of wetlands.
        The WC provisions provide that a person may remain eligible for 
    USDA program benefits even if their action results in the conversion of 
    a wetland if the wetland functions and values are adequately mitigated, 
    as determined by NRCS, and the mitigation: is in accordance with a 
    mitigation plan approved by NRCS; is in advance of, or concurrent with, 
    the wetland conversion; is not at the expense of the Federal 
    government; occurs on lands in the same general area of the local 
    watershed as the converted wetlands; is on lands for which the owner 
    has granted an easement to USDA, and recorded the easement on public 
    land records; and provides the equivalent functions and values that 
    will be lost as a result of the wetland conversion. A person may also 
    remain eligible for USDA program benefits if the action has been 
    permitted by the Army Corps of Engineers after December 23, 1985, via 
    the individual permit process.
        This increased mitigation flexibility for producers creates 
    confusion between NRCS responsibilities under the WC provisions and 
    under the current technical assistance rules. Under the WC provisions, 
    NRCS must approve a mitigation plan if the producer meets the 
    requirements identified above, whether or not the impact to wetlands 
    from the conversion activity could have been minimized or avoided. 
    However, when NRCS delivers technical assistance, the current technical 
    assistance rule applies. Accordingly, NRCS cannot provide technical 
    assistance to a client for the conversion activity unless there is no 
    practicable alternative to the construction and the proposed conversion 
    actions includes all practicable measures to minimize harm to wetlands 
    which may result from such use.
        Since 1987, USDA has identified the threshold characteristics that 
    define: when a wetland has been manipulated sufficiently to make the 
    production of an agricultural commodity possible; when a wetland is 
    ``converted;'' which conditions meet a particular exemption identified 
    under the WC provisions; or when a producer has expanded the drainage 
    system beyond that which existed prior to December 23, 1985. The 
    current wetland technical assistance rule is outdated because it fails 
    to recognize these distinctions, utilizes a superseded classification 
    system, and describes identical terms differently from the current 
    prevailing methodologies and scientific understanding of wetland 
    systems.
        The removal of this regulation will not have any effect on the 
    public, any private enterprise, or any other Government agency. This 
    action will result in the removal of an unnecessary regulation from the 
    Code of Federal Regulations. As a matter related to internal agency 
    management, the policies and procedures related to the subject matter 
    of the wetland technical assistance rule is currently addressed through 
    agency manuals, handbooks, and directives.
    
    The Revised NRCS Wetland Technical Assistance Policy
    
        It is the policy of NRCS to protect and promote wetland functions 
    and values in all NRCS planning and application assistance. NRCS 
    recognizes the beneficial and varied functional attributes of the 
    different wetland types, and as such, strives to reconcile the need for 
    wetland protection with that of promoting viable agricultural 
    enterprises. NRCS supports the restoration, enhancement, creation, and 
    preservation of wetlands as important and realistic components of 
    comprehensive conservation plans, not only on a farm-by-farm basis, but 
    also on a watershed or landscape basis. When providing technical 
    assistance, NRCS will conduct an environmental evaluation, considering 
    the objectives of the client in the context of environmental, economic, 
    and other pertinent factors.
        Upon conducting an environmental evaluation, NRCS will identify 
    whether any practicable alternatives exist that will either adequately 
    maintain or improve the wetland functions and values, or avoid or 
    minimize the harm to wetlands. If practicable alternatives exist, NRCS 
    will inform and advise the client of the available options and explain 
    the benefits of conducting the desired activity in a manner that will 
    achieve the objectives of the client, while adequately maintaining or 
    improving the functions and values of wetland resources in the area.
        If the client selects one of the practicable alternative options, 
    NRCS may provide technical assistance for the conversion activity, as 
    well as the development of a mitigation plan. If the findings of the 
    environmental evaluation show that no practicable alternatives exist, 
    NRCS may provide technical assistance which allows for the conversion 
    of the wetland and develop a mitigation plan for compensation of the 
    functions and values that were lost through the conversion activity. 
    Prior to or concurrent with NRCS assistance, the client will obtain all 
    necessary permits or approvals related to the conversion activity.
        If the client chooses to pursue an activity other than a 
    practicable alternative, NRCS should advise the client about 
    eligibility criteria under the WC provisions of the Food Security Act, 
    as amended.
        The regulation at 7 CFR 650.26 defines wetlands in accordance with 
    Circular 39 of the Fish and Wildlife Service, and not the current 
    definition recognized by all Federal agencies with wetland 
    responsibilities. Additionally, the former wetland technical assistance 
    policy and regulation allowed NRCS employees to provide technical 
    assistance to producers which placed such producers in violation of the 
    wetland conservation provisions of the
    
    [[Page 61217]]
    
    Food Security Act of 1985, as amended (FSA). The removal of the 
    regulation will prevent the implementation of inconsistent policies.
    
    List of Subjects in 7 CFR Part 650.26
    
        Technical Assistance, wetlands.
    
    
    Sec. 650.26  [Removed]
    
        In consideration of the above, 7 CFR part 650.26 is removed.
    
        Signed at Washington, D.C. on November 6, 1997.
    Paul W. Johnson,
    Chief, Natural Resources Conservation Service.
    [FR Doc. 97-29996 Filed 11-14-97; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 3410-16-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
11/17/1997
Published:
11/17/1997
Department:
Natural Resources Conservation Service
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule.
Document Number:
97-29996
Dates:
November 17, 1997.
Pages:
61215-61217 (3 pages)
PDF File:
97-29996.pdf
CFR: (1)
7 CFR 650.26