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The basic form of authorization used by Corps
districts is the individual permit. Processing such permits involves
evaluation of individual, project specific applications in what can
be considered three steps: pre-application consultation (for major
projects), formal project review, and decision making.
Pre-application consultation usually involves
one or several meetings between an applicant, Corps district staff,
interested resource agencies (Federal, state, or local), and
sometimes the interested public. The basic purpose of such meetings
is to provide for informal discussions about the pros and cons of a
proposal before an applicant makes irreversible commitments of
resources (funds, detailed designs, etc.). The process is designed
to provide the applicant with an assessment of the viability of some
of the more obvious alternatives available to accomplish the project
purpose, to discuss measures for reducing the impacts of the
project, and to inform him of the factors the Corps must consider in
its decision making process.
Once a complete application is received, the
formal review process begins. Corps districts operate under what is
called a project manager system, where one individual is responsible
for handling an application from receipt to final decision. The
project manager prepares a public notice, evaluates the impacts of
the project and all comments received, negotiates necessary
modifications of the project if required, and drafts or oversees
drafting of appropriate documentation to support a recommended
permit decision. The permit decision document includes a discussion
of the environmental impacts of the project, the findings of the
public interest review process, and any special evaluation required
by the type of activity such as compliance determinations with the
Section 404(b)(1) Guidelines or the ocean dumping criteria.
The Corps supports a strong, partnership with
states in regulating water resource developments. This is achieved
with joint permit processing procedures (e.g., joint public notices
and hearings), programmatic general permits founded on effective
state programs, transfer of the Section 404 program in non-navigable
waters, joint EISs, special area management planning, and regional
conditioning of nationwide permits.
Below are links regarding the different type of
permit processes that could be used.
2007 Nationwide Permit Regulation
Regional Permits
Individual Permits
- Instructions for Preparing a Department of the Army
Application
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Individual Permit Application
(Updated - 11/20/2009)
Page created by William J Fonferek 10/01/2008
Web pages updated by
Joe Rivera
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