NRCS & U.S. Army Corp of Engineers question....
Posted: Thu May 08, 2008 12:53 pm
I know someone that just purchased a large tract of land that he wants to do a lot of improvements on to benefit waterfowl. This tract has over $80K CRP payment through 2015 on it that he would like to use for deer/duck improvements on this land.
He set up a meeting with the NRCS office to discuss the possibility of precision leveling three spots (two current and one new) for duck hunting. Two of these spots have enough watershed runoff to fill them up but the other would have to use a camelback and pump out of an adjacent existing wetland/old natural slough. He would also like to turn this current slough into a nice pond for fishing and waterfowl by creating a dam at one end and impounding more water. This would also allow more water to pump out of and providing more habitat for waterfowl, etc.
The NRCS guy said that this was a Corp of Engineers issue and that my friend would have to meet with the local Corp guy about creating the pond. (I hear that the Corp contact is a "by the book" person when it comes to wetlands). After creating a pond, the NRCS guy said that we would have to get a DEQ permit to pump out of it. He also said that my friend couldn't take a track hoe and clean out/channelize an old farm drainage ditch that had silted in.
However, with all of the above, the guy seemed to insinuate several time (in a very round about way) that "what they don't know won't hurt them."
Should my friend just do these improvements and not worry about any consequences?
(After all we are not draining any wetlands)
It should be noted that any improvements will not negatively affect any of our neighbors (i.e.-backing up water on them, draining water off of them, etc.) nor will any of what we are proposing adversely affect or break any of the rules regardging the CRP part of the property.
I believe that this NRCS guy is about ready to retire and I wonder if my friend would get the same answers from another NRCS person in the same position. I'd love to know everyone's thoughts.
He set up a meeting with the NRCS office to discuss the possibility of precision leveling three spots (two current and one new) for duck hunting. Two of these spots have enough watershed runoff to fill them up but the other would have to use a camelback and pump out of an adjacent existing wetland/old natural slough. He would also like to turn this current slough into a nice pond for fishing and waterfowl by creating a dam at one end and impounding more water. This would also allow more water to pump out of and providing more habitat for waterfowl, etc.
The NRCS guy said that this was a Corp of Engineers issue and that my friend would have to meet with the local Corp guy about creating the pond. (I hear that the Corp contact is a "by the book" person when it comes to wetlands). After creating a pond, the NRCS guy said that we would have to get a DEQ permit to pump out of it. He also said that my friend couldn't take a track hoe and clean out/channelize an old farm drainage ditch that had silted in.
However, with all of the above, the guy seemed to insinuate several time (in a very round about way) that "what they don't know won't hurt them."
Should my friend just do these improvements and not worry about any consequences?
(After all we are not draining any wetlands)
It should be noted that any improvements will not negatively affect any of our neighbors (i.e.-backing up water on them, draining water off of them, etc.) nor will any of what we are proposing adversely affect or break any of the rules regardging the CRP part of the property.
I believe that this NRCS guy is about ready to retire and I wonder if my friend would get the same answers from another NRCS person in the same position. I'd love to know everyone's thoughts.