Current through Register Vol. 24-18, September 15, 2024
(1)
Description: The department
defines mitigation as sequentially avoiding impacts, minimizing and rectifying
unavoidable impacts, and compensating for remaining impacts. This mitigation
must achieve no net loss.
(2)
Fish life concerns: Work conducted in or near water can negatively
impact fish life. Best management practices such as proper design and siting,
construction timing, isolating the work area, sediment and erosion control,
water-quality management, and revegetation can avoid, minimize, and rectify
many of these impacts. These best management practices are reflected in the
technical provisions. However, remaining impacts may require compensation to
offset the loss of fish life and habitat that supports fish life.
(3)
Mitigation requirements:
(a) The department must determine if the
project actions proposed will mitigate for the project impacts to fish life and
the habitat that supports fish life based on available information.
(b) A person must pay for any surveys,
studies, or reports required by the department to determine if the hydraulic
project mitigates impacts to fish life and the habitat that supports fish life.
When required, the department will provide a written explanation of why the
information is required and what standards or protocols the applicant must
follow.
(c) All work subject to
this chapter must achieve no net loss through a sequence of mitigation actions.
However, the department may not impose permit conditions that attempt to
optimize conditions for fish life that are out of proportion to the impact of
the proposed project.
(d)
Mitigation includes all of the action steps in the mitigation
sequence.
(e) Compensatory
mitigation is not required for hydraulic projects if other actions in the
mitigation sequence are taken that avoid or offset impacts to fish
life.
(f) The department may
require advance mitigation if an experimental mitigation technique is being
performed. If required, the advance mitigation should be fully functional prior
to the project impacts.
(g) All
maintenance work must comply with the applicable common technical construction
provisions and project-specific and site-specific construction provisions.
Maintenance work that rehabilitates and replaces a structure must also comply
with the applicable common technical design provisions.
(h) Replacement of any portion of any
structure must comply with the requirements in this chapter governing materials
that may be used.
(4)
Compensatory mitigation:
(a) The
department may determine that compensatory mitigation actions are needed to
offset impacts remaining after other actions in the mitigation sequence are
completed.
(b) When compensatory
mitigation is needed to offset impacts, the department prefers compensatory
mitigation actions that restore impacted habitat types and functions on-site or
immediately adjacent to the impact site. If mitigation actions on or near the
project site cannot mitigate the project impacts, then the department prefers
compensatory mitigation actions at another location benefit the same fish life
populations, habitat types and functions as those impacted by the project.
However, the department must give due consideration to any compensatory
mitigation proposal that improves the overall habitat functions in the
watershed for the affected fish life populations at the project site.
(c) At the request of the project proponent,
the department must accommodate the mitigation needs of the infrastructure or
noninfrastructure development, including proposals or portions of proposals
that are explored or developed in
RCW
90.74.040. However, the department will not
approve compensatory mitigation that does not provide equal or better habitat
functions, value and quantity by habitat type.
(d) The department will evaluate mitigation
credits and debits on a scientifically valid measure of habitat function,
value, and quantity by habitat type. Compensatory mitigation must also
compensate for temporal losses, uncertainty of performance, loss of habitat
quantity by habitat type, and differences in habitat functions and
value.
(e) The department will
consider the use of credits from an approved programmatic option such as a
state or federal certified fish conservation bank, a joint 404/401 mitigation
and fish conservation bank, or in-lieu fee program as a form of compensation
only after the standard mitigation sequencing has been applied at the impact
site. These credits should benefit the same fish life populations as those
impacted by the hydraulic project.
(f) For calculating compensatory mitigation
requirements under this chapter, the environmental baseline is habitat
conditions at the time the HPA application is submitted. However, this baseline
does not apply to hydraulic projects constructed illegally. Structures that
predate the hydraulic code or structures that were previously authorized under
past versions of the hydraulic code are deemed legal structures.
(g) The department will evaluate impacts
caused by a hydraulic project by comparing the condition of the habitat before
project construction or the performance of work to the anticipated condition of
the habitat after project completion.
(h) Maintenance on a legally constructed
structure does not require compensatory mitigation unless:
(i) The maintenance causes a new loss of
habitat function, value, or quantity by habitat type that is not associated
with the original construction of the structure; or
(ii) The maintenance work does not comply
with subsection (3)(g) in this section.
(i) Removal of a human-made or engineered
structure does not require compensatory mitigation. However, the department may
require bank resloping, revegetation, and other job site stabilization measures
after structure removal.
(j) The
department may require monitoring to determine the extent and severity of
impacts and the effectiveness of the compensation projects. The department may
require a monitoring and contingency plan to ensure the compensatory mitigation
meets the performance goals and objectives specified in the HPA. This plan may
be part of a larger mitigation plan.
(5)
Mitigation plan:
(a) The department may require a mitigation
plan for projects with ongoing, complex, and experimental mitigation
actions.
(b) The department must
notify a person in writing if a mitigation plan is required and specify what
the plan must include if a mitigation plan was not submitted with the
application.
(c) When reviewing a
mitigation plan under
RCW
77.55.021, the department must, at the
request of the applicant, follow the guidance contained in
RCW
90.74.005 through
90.74.030. Pursuant to
RCW
90.74.020, a mitigation plan must do the
following:
(i) Guarantee long-term viability
of the created, restored, enhanced, or preserved habitat, including assurances
for protecting any essential habitat functions and values defined in the
mitigation plan;
(ii) Provide
long-term monitoring of any created, restored, or enhanced mitigation site;
and
(iii) Be consistent with the
local comprehensive land use plan and any other applicable planning process in
effect for the development area, such as an adopted subbasin or watershed
plan.
(d) When making a
permit decision, the department must consider, pursuant to
RCW
90.74.020, whether the mitigation plan
provides equal or greater habitat functions, value, and quantity by habitat
type compared to the existing conditions. This consideration must be based upon
the following factors:
(i) The relative value
of the mitigation for the target fish life, in terms of the habitat functions,
value, and quantity by habitat type;
(ii) The compatibility of the proposal with
broader resource management and habitat management objectives and plans, such
as existing resource management plans, species recovery plans and associated
habitat restoration strategies, watershed plans, critical areas ordinances, the
forestry riparian easement program, the riparian open space program, the family
forest fish passage program, and shoreline master programs;
(iii) The ability of the mitigation to
address scarce habitat functions or types within a watershed;
(iv) The benefits of the proposal to the
broader watershed landscape, including the benefits of connecting various
habitat units and reducing fish life-limiting habitats;
(v) The benefits of implementing advance
compensatory mitigation before the project's anticipated impacts occur;
and
(vi) The significance of any
negative impacts to nontarget fish life.
(e) A mitigation plan may be approved through
a memorandum of agreement between a person and the department.
(f) The department will require a memorandum
of agreement between an applicant and the department if mitigation actions,
including monitoring, exceed the five-year statutory time limitation of the
HPA.