[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 33, Volume 3]
[Revised as of July 1, 2001]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 33CFR331.2]

[Page 474-476]
 
                TITLE 33--NAVIGATION AND NAVIGABLE WATERS
 
         CHAPTER II--CORPS OF ENGINEERS, DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY
 
PART 331--ADMINISTRATIVE APPEAL PROCESS--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 331.2  Definitions.

    The terms and definitions contained in 33 CFR Parts 320 through 330 
are applicable to this part. In addition, the following terms are 
defined for the purposes of this part:
    Affected party means a permit applicant, landowner, a lease, 
easement or option holder (i.e., an individual who has an identifiable 
and substantial legal interest in the property) who has received an 
approved JD, permit denial, or has declined a proffered individual 
permit.
    Agent(s) means the affected party's business partner, attorney, 
consultant, engineer, planner, or any individual with legal authority to 
represent the appellant's interests.
    Appealable action means an approved JD, a permit denial, or a 
declined permit, as these terms are defined in this section.
    Appellant means an affected party who has filed an appeal of an 
approved JD, a permit denial or declined permit under the criteria and 
procedures of this part.
    Approved jurisdictional determination means a Corps document stating 
the presence or absence of waters of the United States on a parcel or a 
written statement and map identifying the limits of waters of the United 
States on a parcel. Approved JDs are clearly designated appealable 
actions and will include a basis of JD with the document.
    Basis of jurisdictional determination is a summary of the indicators 
that support the Corps approved JD. Indicators supporting the Corps 
approved JD can include, but are not limited to: indicators of wetland 
hydrology, hydric soils, and hydrophytic plant communities; indicators 
of ordinary high water marks, high tide lines, or mean high water marks; 
indicators of adjacency to navigable or interstate waters; indicators 
that the wetland or waterbody is of part of a tributary system; or 
indicators of linkages between isolated water bodies and interstate or 
foreign commerce.
    Declined permit means a proffered individual permit, including a 
letter of permission, that an applicant has refused to accept, because 
he has objections to the terms and special conditions therein. A 
declined permit can also be an individual permit that the applicant 
originally accepted, but where such permit was subsequently modified by 
the district engineer, pursuant to 33 CFR 325.7, in such a manner that 
the resulting permit contains terms and special conditions that lead

[[Page 475]]

the applicant to decline the modified permit, provided that the 
applicant has not started work in waters of the United States authorized 
by such permit. Where an applicant declines a permit (either initial or 
modified), the applicant does not have a valid permit to conduct 
regulated activities in waters of the United States, and must not begin 
construction of the work requiring a Corps permit unless and until the 
applicant receives and accepts a valid Corps permit.
    Denial determination means a letter from the district engineer 
detailing the reasons a permit was denied with prejudice. The decision 
document for the project will be attached to the denial determination in 
all cases.
    Jurisdictional determination (JD) means a written Corps 
determination that a wetland and/or waterbody is subject to regulatory 
jurisdiction under Section 404 of the Clean Water Act (33 U.S.C. 1344) 
or a written determination that a waterbody is subject to regulatory 
jurisdiction under Section 9 or 10 of the Rivers and Harbors Act of 1899 
(33 U.S.C. 401 et seq.). Additionally, the term includes a written 
reverification of expired JDs and a written reverification of JDs where 
new information has become available that may affect the previously 
written determination. For example, such geographic JDs may include, but 
are not limited to, one or more of the following determinations: the 
presence or absence of wetlands; the location(s) of the wetland 
boundary, ordinary high water mark, mean high water mark, and/or high 
tide line; interstate commerce nexus for isolated waters; and adjacency 
of wetlands to other waters of the United States. All JDs will be in 
writing and will be identified as either preliminary or approved. JDs do 
not include determinations that a particular activity requires a DA 
permit.
    Notification of Appeal Process (NAP) means a fact sheet that 
explains the criteria and procedures of the administrative appeal 
process. Every approved JD, permit denial, and every proffered 
individual permit returned for reconsideration after review by the 
district engineer in accordance with Sec. 331.6(b) will have an NAP form 
attached.
    Notification of Applicant Options (NAO) means a fact sheet 
explaining an applicant's options with a proffered individual permit 
under the administrative appeal process.
    Permit denial means a written denial with prejudice (see 33 CFR 
320.4(j)) of an individual permit application as defined in 33 CFR 
325.5(b).
    Preliminary JDs are written indications that there may be waters of 
the United States on a parcel or indications of the approximate 
location(s) of waters of the United States on a parcel. Preliminary JDs 
are advisory in nature and may not be appealed. Preliminary JDs include 
compliance orders that have an implicit JD, but no approved JD.
    Proffered permit means a permit that is sent to an applicant that is 
in the proper format for the applicant to sign (for a standard permit) 
or accept (for a letter of permission). The term ``initial proffered 
permit'' as used in this part refers to the first time a permit is sent 
to the applicant. The initial proffered permit is not an appealable 
action. However, the applicant may object to the terms or conditions of 
the initial proffered permit and, if so, a second reconsidered permit 
will be sent to the applicant. The term ``proffered permit'' as used in 
this part refers to the second permit that is sent to the applicant. 
Such proffered permit is an appealable action.
    Request for appeal (RFA) means the affected party's official request 
to initiate the appeal process. The RFA must include the name of the 
affected party, the Corps file number of the approved JD, denied permit, 
or declined permit, the reason(s) for the appeal, and any supporting 
data and information. No new information may be submitted. A grant of 
right of entry for the Corps to the project site is a condition of the 
RFA to allow the RO to clarify elements of the record or to conduct 
field tests or sampling for purposes directly related to the appeal. A 
standard RFA form will be provided to the affected party with the NAP 
form. For appeals of decisions related to unauthorized activities a 
signed tolling agreement, as required by 33 CFR 326.3(e)(1)(v), must be 
included with the RFA, unless a signed tolling agreement

[[Page 476]]

has previously been furnished to the Corps district office. The affected 
party initiates the administrative appeal process by providing an 
acceptable RFA to the appropriate Corps of Engineers division office. An 
acceptable RFA contains all the required information and provides 
reasons for appeal that meets the criteria identified in Sec. 331.5.
    Review officer (RO) means the Corps official responsible for 
assisting the division engineer or higher authority responsible for 
rendering the final decision on the merits of an appeal.
    Tolling agreement refers to a document signed by any person who 
appeals an approved JD associated with an unauthorized activity or 
applies for an after-the-fact (ATF) permit, where the application is 
accepted and evaluated by the Corps. The agreement states that the 
affected party agrees to have the statute of limitations regarding any 
violation associated with that approved JD or application ``tolled'' or 
temporarily set aside until one year after the final Corps decision, as 
defined at Sec. 331.10. No ATF permit application or administrative 
appeal associated with an unauthorized activity will be accepted until a 
tolling agreement is furnished to the district engineer.