Wetland Delineation & Permits
Delineation as per standards of
1987 Army Corps Manual, and Regional
Supplements.
Since 1985, we have successfully
defended hundreds of our wetland delineations with the
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers through Jurisdictional
Determination (“JD”) approvals.
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Pre-acquisition
wetland assessments, as part of “due
diligence” |
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Non-JD
presence/absence reports |
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Jurisdictional
Determination (“JD” for Army Corps
5-year acceptance) Reports require data
forms, captioned photos, photo & data
points on plan. |
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Wetland
Mitigation Design, Permitting,
Construction, Monitoring |
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General Permits,
Joint Permits, Small Projects Permits,
Dam Permits |
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Studies for
Threatened and Endangered Species |
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Macro-invertebrate studies |
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Carelessly placing a wetland flag 20 feet to the
right or left could make the difference between a
30-day simple permit and a 2-year expensive permit.
Your wetland delineator must stay fluent and current
in local, state, and federal regulations and
permits.
If wetlands are to be impacted, it is essential to
distinguish between wetlands and “other waters”
(ponds, streams, rivers, lakes, ditches), because
the permit thresholds for linear and areal impacts
vary for each kind of resource.
A higher level of skill is required to defend tight
boundaries for intricate wetland delineations!
Anyone with plastic flagging in their pocket can
loosely define a conservatively safe, oversized,
wetland. This may be adequate for site plans
on tracts with surplus space. Consulting with
a Certified
Professional Soil Scientist to define the limits of
hydric soil
indicators
could prevent you from giving up more buildable land
than necessary, or needlessly processing permits.
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