Michigan Administrative Code
Department - Environmental Quality
Water Resources Division
Wetlands Protection
Section R. 281.922a - Permit application review criteria
Current through Vol. 24-04, March 15, 2024
Rule 2a.
(1) The department shall review a permit application to undertake an activity listed in section 30304 of the act according to the criteria in section 30311 of the act.
(2) As required by subsection 30311(4) of the act, a permit applicant shall bear the burden of demonstrating that an unacceptable disruption to aquatic resources will not occur as a result of the proposed activity and demonstrating either of the following:
(3) A permit applicant shall provide adequate information, including documentation as required by the department, to support the demonstrations required by section 30311 of the act. The department shall independently evaluate the information provided by the applicant to determine if the applicant has made the required demonstrations.
(4) A permit applicant shall completely define the purpose for which the permit is sought, including all associated activities. An applicant shall not so narrowly define the purpose as to limit a complete analysis of whether an activity is primarily dependent upon being located in the wetland and of feasible and prudent alternatives. The department shall independently evaluate and determine if the project purpose has been appropriately and adequately defined by the applicant, and shall process the application based on that determination.
(5) The department shall consider a proposed activity as primarily dependent upon being located in the wetland only if the activity is the type that requires a location within the wetland and wetland conditions to fulfill its basic purpose; that is, it is wetland-dependent. Any activity that can be undertaken in a non-wetland location is not primarily dependent upon being located in the wetland.
(6) An alternative is feasible and prudent if both of the following provisions apply:
The applicant shall demonstrate that, given all pertinent information, there are no feasible and prudent alternatives that have less impact on aquatic resources. In making this demonstration, the applicant may provide information regarding factors such as alternative construction technologies; alternative project layout and design; local land use regulations and infrastructure; and pertinent environmental and resource issues. This list of factors is not exhaustive and no particular factor will necessarily be dispositive in any given case.
(7) If an activity is not primarily dependent upon being located in the wetland, it is presumed that a feasible and prudent alternative exists unless an applicant clearly demonstrates that a feasible and prudent alternative does not exist.
(8) Unless an applicant clearly demonstrates otherwise, it is presumed that a feasible and prudent alternative involving a non-wetland location will have less adverse impact on aquatic resources than an alternative involving a wetland location.
(9) An area not presently owned by the permit applicant that could reasonably be obtained, utilized, expanded, or managed in order to fulfill the basic purpose of the proposed activity is a feasible and prudent alternative location.
(10) An alternative may be considered feasible and prudent even if it does not accommodate components of a proposed activity that are incidental to or severable from the basic purpose of the proposed activity.
(11) An alternative may be considered feasible and prudent even if it entails higher costs or reduced profit. However, the department shall consider the reasonableness of the higher costs or reduced profit in making its determination.
(12) The department may offer a permit for a modification of an activity proposed in an application if the proposed activity cannot be permitted under the criteria listed in section 30311 of the act and if the modification makes that activity consistent with the criteria listed in section 30311 of the act.