Mitigation requirements are outlined in the Code of Federal Regulations Compensatory Mitigation for Losses of Aquatic Resources Final Rule (33 CFR Part 332), commonly referred to as the Federal mitigation rule. The mitigation rule promotes consistency and predictability and improves ecological success of mitigation efforts through better site selection, use of a watershed approach for planning and project design, and use of ecological success criteria to evaluate and measure performance of mitigation projects.
The following links provide the regulatory references related to the Corps compensatory mitigation requirements:
In 1980, EPA finalized regulations that constitute the substantive environmental criteria used in evaluating activities regulated under Section 404 of the Clean Water Act under 40 CFR 230, entitled “SECTION 404(b)(1) GUIDELINES FOR SPECIFICATION OF DISPOSAL SITES FOR DREDGED OR FILL MATERIAL.”
See Section 404(b)(1) Guidelines
The USACE, Regulatory Division must determine the nature and extent of the compensatory mitigation to be required based on what is practicable, environmentally preferable, and capable of compensating for the aquatic resource functions that would be lost as a result of the permitted activity (33 CFR 332.3(a)(1)). The nature and extent of the proposed mitigation must be commensurate with the scale and scope of the impacts.
Compensatory mitigation as defined in 33 CFR 332.2 is “the restoration (re-establishment or rehabilitation), establishment (creation), enhancement, and/or in certain circumstances preservation of aquatic resources for the purposes of offsetting unavoidable adverse impacts which remain after all appropriate and practicable avoidance and minimization has been achieved.” The objective of compensatory mitigation is to offset environmental losses resulting from discharges of dredged or fill material into waters of the United States. All compensatory mitigation will be for significant resource losses which are specifically identifiable, reasonably likely to occur, and of importance to the human or aquatic environment. Also, all mitigation will be directly related to the impacts of the proposal, appropriate to the scope and degree of those impacts, and reasonably enforceable (33 CFR 320.4(r)(2)).
33 CFR §332, the regulations that embody the Mitigation Rule, explains the different forms of compensatory mitigation and the considerations that must be made once it has been determined that compensatory mitigation is required. Further, the Mitigation Rule establishes a set of standards that all forms of compensation must satisfy to improve the planning, implementation, and management of compensatory mitigation projects. The Mitigation Rule specifies the components of a complete compensatory mitigation plan including assurances of long-term protection of compensation sites, financial assurances, and identification of the parties responsible for specific project tasks. It also emphasizes a watershed approach in selecting compensatory mitigation project locations, requires enforceable ecological performance standards tied to project objectives, and mandates regular monitoring for all types of compensation.
The Mitigation Rule (33 CFR §332) established a preference hierarchy for mitigation mechanisms (33CFR 332.3(b)) as follows:
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Purchase of Mitigation Bank credits
Purchase of ILF Program credits
Permittee Responsible Mitigation (PRM) under a watershed approach
On-site and/or in-kind PRM
Off-site and/or out-of-kind PRM
Note that at this time, there are no Mitigation Banks or ILF Programs with a service area within the Honolulu District. This website will be updated to include any new Mitigation Banks or ILF Programs that may become available at a future date.