[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 40, Volume 22]
[Revised as of July 1, 2003]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 40CFR232.3]

[Page 282-285]
 
                   TITLE 40--PROTECTION OF ENVIRONMENT
 
         CHAPTER I--ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY (CONTINUED)
 
PART 232--404 PROGRAM DEFINITIONS; EXEMPT ACTIVITIES NOT REQUIRING 404 
PERMITS--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 232.3  Activities not requiring permits.

    Except as specified in paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section, any 
discharge of dredged or fill material that may result from any of the 
activities described in paragraph (c) of this section is not prohibited 
by or otherwise subject to regulation under this part.
    (a) If any discharge of dredged or fill material resulting from the 
activities listed in paragraph (c) of this section contains any toxic 
pollutant listed under section 307 of the Act, such discharge shall be 
subject to any applicable toxic effluent standard or prohibition, and 
shall require a section 404 permit.
    (b) Any discharge of dredged or fill material into waters of the 
United States incidental to any of the activities identified in 
paragraph (c) of this section must have a permit if it is part of an 
activity whose purpose is to convert an area of the waters of the United 
States into a use to which it was not previously subject, where the flow 
or circulation of waters of the United States may be impaired or the 
reach of such waters reduced. Where the proposed discharge will result 
in significant discernable alterations to flow or circulation, the 
presumption is that flow or circulation may be impaired by such 
alteration.

    Note: For example, a permit will be required for the conversion of a 
cypress swamp to some other use or the conversion of a wetland from 
silvicultural to agricultural use when there is a discharge of dredged 
or fill material into waters of the United States in conjunction with 
constuction of dikes, drainage ditches or other works or structures used 
to effect such conversion. A conversion of section 404 wetland to a non-
wetland is a change in use of an area of waters of the U.S. A discharge 
which elevates the bottom of waters of the United States without 
converting it to dry land does not thereby reduce the reach of, but may 
alter the flow or circulation of, waters of the United States.

    (c) The following activities are exempt from section 404 permit 
requirements, except as specified in paragraphs (a) and (b) of this 
section:
    (1)(i) Normal farming, silviculture and ranching activities such as 
plowing, seeding, cultivating, minor drainage, and harvesting for the 
production of food, fiber, and forest products, or upland soil and water 
conservation practices, as defined in paragraph (d) of this section.
    (ii)(A) To fall under this exemption, the activities specified in 
paragraph (c)(1) of this section must be part of an established (i.e., 
ongong) farming, silviculture, or ranching operation, and must be in 
accordance with definitions in paragraph (d) of this section. Activities 
on areas lying fallow as part of a conventional rotational cycle are 
part of an established operation.
    (B) Activities which bring an area into farming, silviculture or 
ranching use are not part of an established operation. An operation 
ceases to be established when the area in which it was conducted has 
been converted to another use or has lain idle so long that

[[Page 283]]

modifications to the hydrological regime are necessary to resume 
operation. If an activity takes place outside the waters of the United 
States, or if it does not involve a discharge, it does not need a 
section 404 permit whether or not it was part of an established farming, 
silviculture or ranching operation.
    (2) Maintenance, including emergency reconstruction of recently 
damaged parts, of currently serviceable structures such as dikes, dams, 
levees, groins, riprap, breakwaters, causeways, bridge abutments or 
approaches, and transportation structures. Maintenance does not include 
any modification that changes the character, scope, or size of the 
original fill design. Emergency reconstruction must occur within a 
reasonable period of time after damage occurs in order to qualify for 
this exemption.
    (3) Construction or maintenance of farm or stock ponds or irrigation 
ditches or the maintenance (but not construction) of drainage ditches. 
Discharge associated with siphons, pumps, headgates, wingwalls, wiers, 
diversion structures, and such other facilities as are appurtenant and 
functionally related to irrigation ditches are included in this 
exemption.
    (4) Construction of temporary sedimentation basins on a construction 
site which does not include placement of fill material into waters of 
the United States. The term ``construction site'' refers to any site 
involving the erection of buildings, roads, and other discrete 
structures and the installation of support facilities necessary for 
construction and utilization of such structures. The term also includes 
any other land areas which involve land-disturbing excavation 
activities, including quarrying or other mining activities, where an 
increase in the runoff of sediment is controlled through the use of 
temporary sedimentation basins.
    (5) Any activity with respect to which a State has an approved 
program under section 208(b)(4) of the Act which meets the requirements 
of section 208(b)(4)(B) and (C).
    (6) Construction or maintenance of farm roads, forest roads, or 
temporary roads for moving mining equipment, where such roads are 
constructed and maintained in accordance with best management practices 
(BMPs) to assure that flow and circulation patterns and chemical and 
biological characteristics of waters of the United States are not 
impaired, that the reach of the waters of the United States is not 
reduced, and that any adverse effect on the aquatic environment will be 
otherwise minimized. The BMPs which must be applied to satisfy this 
provision include the following baseline provisions:
    (i) Permanent roads (for farming or forestry activities), temporary 
access roads (for mining, forestry, or farm purposes) and skid trails 
(for logging) in waters of the United States shall be held to the 
minimum feasible number, width, and total length consistent with the 
purpose of specific farming, silvicultural or mining operations, and 
local topographic and climatic conditions;
    (ii) All roads, temporary or permanent, shall be located 
sufficiently far from streams or other water bodies (except for portions 
of such roads which must cross water bodies) to minimize discharges of 
dredged or fill material into waters of the United States;
    (iii) The road fill shall be bridged, culverted, or otherwise 
designed to prevent the restriction of expected flood flows;
    (iv) The fill shall be properly stabilized and maintained to prevent 
erosion during and following construction;
    (v) Discharges of dredged or fill material into waters of the United 
States to construct a road fill shall be made in a manner that minimizes 
the encroachment of trucks, tractors, bulldozers, or other heavy 
equipment within the waters of the United States (including adjacent 
wetlands) that lie outside the lateral boundaries of the fill itself;
    (vi) In designing, constructing, and maintaining roads, vegetative 
disturbance in the waters of the United States shall be kept to a 
minimum;
    (vii) The design, construction and maintenance of the road crossing 
shall not disrupt the migration or other movement of those species of 
aquatic life inhabiting the water body;
    (viii) Borrow material shall be taken from upland sources whenever 
feasible;
    (ix) The discharge shall not take, or jeopardize the continued 
existence of, a

[[Page 284]]

threatened or endangered species as defined under the Endangered Species 
Act, or adversely modify or destroy the critical habitat of such 
species;
    (x) Discharges into breeding and nesting areas for migratory 
waterfowl, spawning areas, and wetlands shall be avoided if practical 
alternatives exist;
    (xi) The discharge shall not be located in the proximity of a public 
water supply intake;
    (xii) The discharge shall not occur in areas of concentrated 
shellfish production;
    (xiii) The discharge shall not occur in a component of the National 
Wild and Scenic River System;
    (xiv) The discharge of material shall consist of suitable material 
free from toxic pollutants in toxic amounts; and
    (xv) All temporary fills shall be removed in their entirety and the 
area restored to its original elevation.
    (d) For purpose of paragraph (c)(1) of this section, cultivating, 
harvesting, minor drainage, plowing, and seeding are defined as follows:
    (1) Cultivating means physical methods of soil treatment employed 
within established farming, ranching and silviculture lands on farm, 
ranch, or forest crops to aid and improve their growth, quality, or 
yield.
    (2) Harvesting means physical measures employed directly upon farm, 
forest, or ranch crops within established agricultural and silvicultural 
lands to bring about their removal from farm, forest, or ranch land, but 
does not include the construction of farm, forest, or ranch roads.
    (3)(i) Minor drainage means:
    (A) The discharge of dredged or fill material incidental to 
connecting upland drainage facilities to waters of the United States, 
adequate to effect the removal of excess soil moisture from upland 
croplands. Construction and maintenance of upland (dryland) facilities, 
such as ditching and tiling, incidental to the planting, cultivating, 
protecting, or harvesting of crops, involve no discharge of dredged or 
fill material into waters of the United States, and as such never 
require a section 404 permit;
    (B) The discharge of dredged or fill material for the purpose of 
installing ditching or other water control facilities incidental to 
planting, cultivating, protecting, or harvesting of rice, cranberries or 
other wetland crop species, where these activities and the discharge 
occur in waters of the United States which are in established use for 
such agricultural and silvicultural wetland crop production;
    (C) The discharge of dredged or fill material for the purpose of 
manipulating the water levels of, or regulating the flow or distribution 
of water within, existing impoundments which have been constructed in 
accordance with applicable requirements of the Act, and which are in 
established use for the production or rice, cranberries, or other 
wetland crop species.

    Note: The provisions of paragraphs (d)(3)(i) (B) and (C) of this 
section apply to areas that are in established use exclusively for 
wetland crop production as well as areas in established use for 
conventional wetland/non-wetland crop rotation (e.g., the rotations of 
rice and soybeans) where such rotation results in the cyclical or 
intermittent temporary dewatering of such areas.

    (D) The discharge of dredged or fill material incidental to the 
emergency removal of sandbars, gravel bars, or other similar blockages 
which are formed during flood flows or other events, where such 
blockages close or constrict previously existing drainageways and, if 
not promptly removed, would result in damage to or loss of existing 
crops or would impair or prevent the plowing, seeding, harvesting or 
cultivating of crops on land in established use for crop production. 
Such removal does not include enlarging or extending the dimensions of, 
or changing the bottom elevations of, the affected drainageway as it 
existed prior to the formation of the blockage. Removal must be 
accomplished within one year after such blockages are discovered in 
order to be eligible for exemption.
    (ii) Minor drainage in waters of the United States is limited to 
drainage within areas that are part of an established farming or 
silviculture operation. It does not include drainage associated with the 
immediate or gradual conversion of a wetland to a non-wetland (e.g., 
wetland species to upland species not typically adequate to life in

[[Page 285]]

saturated soil conditions), or conversion from one wetland use to 
another (for example, silviculture to farming).

In addition, minor drainage does not include the construction of any 
canal, ditch, dike or other waterway or structure which drains or 
otherwise significantly modifies a stream, lake, swamp, bog or any other 
wetland or aquatic area constituting waters of the United States. Any 
discharge of dredged or fill material into the waters of the United 
States incidental to the construction of any such structure or waterway 
requires a permit.
    (4) Plowing means all forms of primary tillage, including moldboard, 
chisel, or wide-blade plowing, discing, harrowing, and similar physical 
means used on farm, forest or ranch land for the breaking up, cutting, 
turning over, or stirring of soil to prepare it for the planting of 
crops. Plowing does not include the redistribution of soil, rock, sand, 
or other surficial materials in a manner which changes any area of the 
waters of the United States to dryland. For example, the redistribution 
of surface materials by blading, grading, or other means to fill in 
wetland areas is not plowing. Rock crushing activities which result in 
the loss of natural drainage characteristics, the reduction of water 
storage and recharge capabilities, or the overburden of natural water 
filtration capacities do not constitute plowing. Plowing, as described 
above, will never involve a discharge of dredged or fill material.
    (5) Seeding means the sowing of seed and placement of seedlings to 
produce farm, ranch, or forest crops and includes the placement of soil 
beds for seeds or seedlings on established farm and forest lands.
    (e) Federal projects which qualify under the criteria contained in 
section 404(r) of the Act are exempt from section 404 permit 
requirements, but may be subject to other State or Federal requirements.