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Isolated Wetlands and Streams: North Carolina’s Response to the SWANCC Decision Presented by John Dorney N.C. Division of Water Quality October 21, 2002 Web site: h2o.enr.state.nc.us/ncwetlands

I solated W etlands and S treams: North Carolina’s Response to the SWANCC Decision Presented by John Dorney N.C. Division of Water Quality October 21,

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Page 1: I solated W etlands and S treams: North Carolina’s Response to the SWANCC Decision Presented by John Dorney N.C. Division of Water Quality October 21,

Isolated Wetlands and Streams:

North Carolina’s Response to the SWANCC Decision

Presented by John DorneyN.C. Division of Water Quality

October 21, 2002

Web site: h2o.enr.state.nc.us/ncwetlands

Page 2: I solated W etlands and S treams: North Carolina’s Response to the SWANCC Decision Presented by John Dorney N.C. Division of Water Quality October 21,

Background - North Carolina’s Wetlands

“Original” “Present”

Total 11 million 5.7 million

Bottomland hardwood 1.5 1.2

Wet flats (savannas) 5.8 2.2

Pocosins 1.4 0.7

Salt Marsh 0.2 0.2

Other 2.4 1.4

Millions of acres (appx.)

Page 3: I solated W etlands and S treams: North Carolina’s Response to the SWANCC Decision Presented by John Dorney N.C. Division of Water Quality October 21,

Isolated Wetlands

Uncertain

Generally lack surface connection

Often perched groundwater

Estimates from 2% to 60%

Likely < 10% of total

US Fish and Wildlife Service - 17 to 24%

In error, many streams missing fromUSGS topo maps

Extent

Definition

Page 4: I solated W etlands and S treams: North Carolina’s Response to the SWANCC Decision Presented by John Dorney N.C. Division of Water Quality October 21,

Types and Distribution of Isolated Wetlands

Carolina Bays (some) Inner coastal plain

Sinkhole depressions Outer coastal plain

Mafic depressions Piedmont

Floodplain depressions Entire state

Drained ponds Entire state

Page 5: I solated W etlands and S treams: North Carolina’s Response to the SWANCC Decision Presented by John Dorney N.C. Division of Water Quality October 21,

Frog PondScotland County

Page 6: I solated W etlands and S treams: North Carolina’s Response to the SWANCC Decision Presented by John Dorney N.C. Division of Water Quality October 21,

Sinkhole PondCarteret County

Page 7: I solated W etlands and S treams: North Carolina’s Response to the SWANCC Decision Presented by John Dorney N.C. Division of Water Quality October 21,

Mafic DepressionMecklenburg County

summer

Page 8: I solated W etlands and S treams: North Carolina’s Response to the SWANCC Decision Presented by John Dorney N.C. Division of Water Quality October 21,

Mafic DepressionMecklenburg County

spring

Page 9: I solated W etlands and S treams: North Carolina’s Response to the SWANCC Decision Presented by John Dorney N.C. Division of Water Quality October 21,

Floodplain depression

Page 10: I solated W etlands and S treams: North Carolina’s Response to the SWANCC Decision Presented by John Dorney N.C. Division of Water Quality October 21,

Functions and Values of

NC Isolated Wetlands

Terms:

Function = What is provided by wetland.

Value = A function that is protected by law.

Page 11: I solated W etlands and S treams: North Carolina’s Response to the SWANCC Decision Presented by John Dorney N.C. Division of Water Quality October 21,

• Water storage and flood prevention

• Aquatic life habitat - esp. amphibians

• Wildlife habitat

• Endangered species habitat

• Pollutant removal (uncommon)

• Groundwater recharge (rarely)

Page 12: I solated W etlands and S treams: North Carolina’s Response to the SWANCC Decision Presented by John Dorney N.C. Division of Water Quality October 21,

Isolated Streams in North Carolina

NOT an oxymoron!

DefinitionStream segments separated by upland“Disappearing” streams (underground flow)

ExtentUnknown but probably small

Uppermost end of streamsWhere small channels enter larger floodplainsUnusual geology (i.e., fractured, porous rock)

LocationMostly in piedmont

Page 13: I solated W etlands and S treams: North Carolina’s Response to the SWANCC Decision Presented by John Dorney N.C. Division of Water Quality October 21,

Regulatory Background in North Carolina

Purpose for discussion - Set stage for NC’s response to SWANCC

1996 - NC Environmental Management Commission passes:

401 Water Quality Certification Rules

Wetland standards

especially, maintain natural hydrology except

with Permit or Certification to allow fill

Page 14: I solated W etlands and S treams: North Carolina’s Response to the SWANCC Decision Presented by John Dorney N.C. Division of Water Quality October 21,

Rules Controversial

Draft rules to Stakeholder group

Public hearings

Legislative Study Commission

Proposed Legislation to void rules - did not pass

Rules adopted October 1996

Court appeals (details to follow)

Page 15: I solated W etlands and S treams: North Carolina’s Response to the SWANCC Decision Presented by John Dorney N.C. Division of Water Quality October 21,

Underlying Policy Questions regarding rules

I. Can state regulate wetlands?Attorney General and Gov. Hunt - yesCourt case underway

Are “wetlands” “ waters of the state”“wetland” not in statute

“Swamp” and “all other waters” in statuteSuperior Court judge = yes, in 2001State Court of Appeals = heard Sept. 2002State Supreme Court?

Page 16: I solated W etlands and S treams: North Carolina’s Response to the SWANCC Decision Presented by John Dorney N.C. Division of Water Quality October 21,

II. Should the state regulate wetlands?

Basic question - why regulate when

the USACE already does?

Page 17: I solated W etlands and S treams: North Carolina’s Response to the SWANCC Decision Presented by John Dorney N.C. Division of Water Quality October 21,

Tulloch Rule and Its Demise

Tulloch rule - need 404 Permit to

ditch wetlands

Fourth Circuit case in 2000

- no 404 Permit needed

Page 18: I solated W etlands and S treams: North Carolina’s Response to the SWANCC Decision Presented by John Dorney N.C. Division of Water Quality October 21,

Wetland standards apply - delay enforcement to allow public notification

Response - extensive wetland ditching and draining 12,000 acres; 100 sites

Subsequent state and federal compliance and enforcement

Conclusion - Most ditching done illegally esp. lack of sediment control

Response in North Carolina

Page 19: I solated W etlands and S treams: North Carolina’s Response to the SWANCC Decision Presented by John Dorney N.C. Division of Water Quality October 21,

Subsequent resolution

• 22 % (development) in compliance

• 27 % still unclear - most claim forestry exemption

• 50 % being restored

(past violations)

Page 20: I solated W etlands and S treams: North Carolina’s Response to the SWANCC Decision Presented by John Dorney N.C. Division of Water Quality October 21,

Important context of Tulloch Rule debacle

I. Division of Water Quality showedthat wetland standards applied to activities in wetlands even without 404 Permit

II. Massive wetland impact can occur without needing 404 Permit

Page 21: I solated W etlands and S treams: North Carolina’s Response to the SWANCC Decision Presented by John Dorney N.C. Division of Water Quality October 21,

III. State can (and does) have important role in wetland management

IV. State can (and should) adopt new rules regarding

exempt activities

Page 22: I solated W etlands and S treams: North Carolina’s Response to the SWANCC Decision Presented by John Dorney N.C. Division of Water Quality October 21,

Legal Logic of NC’s Isolated Wetland Rules

I. Wetlands are waters of the state.

II. State Permit needed for discharges of waste to state waters and to createan outlet to state waters.

Page 23: I solated W etlands and S treams: North Carolina’s Response to the SWANCC Decision Presented by John Dorney N.C. Division of Water Quality October 21,

III. “Waste” includes “sediment, and all

other substances” in definition.

IV. Therefore, NC has existing authority

for a State permitting program for

discharges to isolated wetlands and waters.

Page 24: I solated W etlands and S treams: North Carolina’s Response to the SWANCC Decision Presented by John Dorney N.C. Division of Water Quality October 21,

Activities exempt from 404 Permitting - How to comply

with wetland standards?

Adoption of new rules - transfer 404 exemptions into state rules with clarifications

Rules adopted in 2001.

Page 25: I solated W etlands and S treams: North Carolina’s Response to the SWANCC Decision Presented by John Dorney N.C. Division of Water Quality October 21,

Isolated Wetland Rules

Basic philosophy -

• No wetland impact without Permit

• Develop permit process similar

to 404/401 process

• Clarify 1996 rules

Page 26: I solated W etlands and S treams: North Carolina’s Response to the SWANCC Decision Presented by John Dorney N.C. Division of Water Quality October 21,

Environmental Management Commission action

April 2001 - original (1996) intent to regulate isolated wetlands

Stakeholder group - meet four times,reviewed and modified draft Rules

Page 27: I solated W etlands and S treams: North Carolina’s Response to the SWANCC Decision Presented by John Dorney N.C. Division of Water Quality October 21,

September 2001 - adopt temporary rules

October 2001 - overrule ALJ regarding temporary rule authority

October 22, 2001 - effective date of temporary rules

Page 28: I solated W etlands and S treams: North Carolina’s Response to the SWANCC Decision Presented by John Dorney N.C. Division of Water Quality October 21,

Permanent RulesNovember 2001 - draft rule published

February 2002 - EMC approved permanent rule for hearing

April 2002 - Public hearings (four)

July 2002 - Adoption by EMC

October 2002 - Approval by Rules Review Commission

January 2003 - Before NC Legislature

Page 29: I solated W etlands and S treams: North Carolina’s Response to the SWANCC Decision Presented by John Dorney N.C. Division of Water Quality October 21,

Remaining Steps for Rules

• To date, 21 Permits or approvals issued

• NC Legislature review

• Develop General Permit to streamline process

• Coordinate with Corps of Engineers

Page 30: I solated W etlands and S treams: North Carolina’s Response to the SWANCC Decision Presented by John Dorney N.C. Division of Water Quality October 21,

Corps role• Determine if site is wetlands

• Determine if site is isolated

If isolated, refer to state

If not, follow 404/401 process

State role•If isolated, follow Isolated

Wetland process•If not, follow 401 Certification process

Page 31: I solated W etlands and S treams: North Carolina’s Response to the SWANCC Decision Presented by John Dorney N.C. Division of Water Quality October 21,

Prognostications• State role increases as federal role

narrowed by court cases. Process not over

• Need strong administrative and legal support

• Expect controversy

• Demonstrate need for state role

• Have long term strategy and be flexible

Page 32: I solated W etlands and S treams: North Carolina’s Response to the SWANCC Decision Presented by John Dorney N.C. Division of Water Quality October 21,

Pretty Pond BayRobeson County