[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 33, Volume 3]
[Revised as of July 1, 2007]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 33CFR320.1]

[Page 391-393]
 
                TITLE 33--NAVIGATION AND NAVIGABLE WATERS
 
 CHAPTER II--CORPS OF ENGINEERS, DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY, DEPARTMENT OF 
                                 DEFENSE
 
PART 320_GENERAL REGULATORY POLICIES--Table of Contents
 
Sec.  320.1  Purpose and scope.

    (a) Regulatory approach of the Corps of Engineers. (1) The U.S. Army 
Corps of Engineers has been involved in regulating certain activities in 
the nation's waters since 1890. Until 1968, the primary thrust of the 
Corps' regulatory program was the protection of navigation. As a result 
of several new laws and judicial decisions, the program has evolved to 
one involving the consideration of the full public interest by balancing 
the favorable impacts against the detrimental impacts. This is known as 
the ``public interest review.'' The program is one which reflects the 
national concerns for both the protection and utilization of important 
resources.
    (2) The Corps is a highly decentralized organization. Most of the 
authority for administering the regulatory program has been delegated to 
the thirty-six district engineers and eleven division engineers. A 
district engineer's

[[Page 392]]

decision on an approved jurisdictional determination, a permit denial, 
or a declined individual permit is subject to an administrative appeal 
by the affected party in accordance with the procedures and authorities 
contained in 33 CFR Part 331. Such administrative appeal must meet the 
criteria in 33 CFR 331.5; otherwise, no administrative appeal of that 
decision is allowed. The terms ``approved jurisdictional 
determination,'' ``permit denial,'' and ``declined permit'' are defined 
at 33 CFR 331.2. There shall be no administrative appeal of any issued 
individual permit that an applicant has accepted, unless the authorized 
work has not started in waters of the United States, and that issued 
permit is subsequently modified by the district engineer pursuant to 33 
CFR 325.7 (see 33 CFR 331.5(b)(1)). An affected party must exhaust any 
administrative appeal available pursuant to 33 CFR Part 331 and receive 
a final Corps decision on the appealed action prior to filing a lawsuit 
in the Federal courts (see 33 CFR 331.12).
    (3) The Corps seeks to avoid unnecessary regulatory controls. The 
general permit program described in 33 CFR parts 325 and 330 is the 
primary method of liminating unnecessary federal control over activities 
which do not justify individual control or which are adequately 
regulated by another agency.
    (4) The Corps is neither a proponent nor opponent of any permit 
proposal. However, the Corps believes that applicants are due a timely 
decision. Reducing unnecessary paperwork and delays is a continuing 
Corps goal.
    (5) The Corps believes that state and federal regulatory programs 
should complement rather than duplicate one another. The Corps uses 
general permits, joint processing procedures, interagency review, 
coordination, and authority transfers (where authorized by law) to 
reduce duplication.
    (6) The Corps has authorized its district engineers to issue formal 
determinations concerning the applicability of the Clean Water Act or 
the Rivers and Harbors Act of 1899 to activities or tracts of land and 
the applicability of general permits or statutory exemptions to proposed 
activities. A determination pursuant to this authorization shall 
constitute a Corps final agency action. Nothing contained in this 
section is intended to affect any authority EPA has under the Clean 
Water Act.
    (b) Types of activities regulated. This part and the parts that 
follow (33 CFR parts 321 through 330) prescribe the statutory 
authorities, and general and special policies and procedures applicable 
to the review of applications for Department of the Army (DA) permits 
for controlling certain activities in waters of the United States or the 
oceans. This part identifies the various federal statutes which require 
that DA permits be issued before these activities can be lawfully 
undertaken; and related Federal laws and the general policies applicable 
to the review of those activities. Parts 321 through 324 and 330 address 
special policies and procedures applicable to the following specific 
classes of activities:
    (1) Dams or dikes in navigable waters of the United States (part 
321);
    (2) Other structures or work including excavation, dredging, and/or 
disposal activities, in navigable waters of the United States (part 
322);
    (3) Activities that alter or modify the course, condition, location, 
or capacity of a navigable water of the United States (part 322);
    (4) Construction of artificial islands, installations, and other 
devices on the outer continental shelf (part 322);
    (5) Discharges of dredged or fill material into waters of the United 
States (part 323);
    (6) Activities involving the transportation of dredged material for 
the purpose of disposal in ocean waters (part 324); and
    (7) Nationwide general permits for certain categories of activities 
(part 330).
    (c) Forms of authorization. DA permits for the above described 
activities are issued under various forms of authorization. These 
include individual permits that are issued following a review of 
individual applications and general permits that authorize a category or 
categories of activities in specific geographical regions or nationwide. 
The term ``general permit'' as used in these regulations (33 CFR parts 
320 through

[[Page 393]]

330) refers to both those regional permits issued by district or 
division engineers on a regional basis and to nationwide permits which 
are issued by the Chief of Engineers through publication in the Federal 
Register and are applicable throughout the nation. The nationwide 
permits are found in 33 CFR part 330. If an activity is covered by a 
general permit, an application for a DA permit does not have to be made. 
In such cases, a person must only comply with the conditions contained 
in the general permit to satisfy requirements of law for a DA permit. In 
certain cases pre-notification may be required before initiating 
construction. (See 33 CFR 330.7)
    (d) General instructions. General policies for evaluating permit 
applications are found in this part. Special policies that relate to 
particular activities are found in parts 321 through 324. The procedures 
for processing individual permits and general permits are contained in 
33 CFR part 325. The terms ``navigable waters of the United States'' and 
``waters of the United States'' are used frequently throughout these 
regulations, and it is important from the outset that the reader 
understand the difference between the two. ``Navigable waters of the 
United States'' are defined in 33 CFR part 329. These are waters that 
are navigable in the traditional sense where permits are required for 
certain work or structures pursuant to Sections 9 and 10 of the Rivers 
and Harbors Act of 1899. ``Waters of the United States'' are defined in 
33 CFR part 328. These waters include more than navigable waters of the 
United States and are the waters where permits are required for the 
discharge of dredged or fill material pursuant to section 404 of the 
Clean Water Act.

[51 FR 41220, Nov. 13, 1986, as amended at 64 FR 11714, Mar. 9, 1999; 65 
FR 16492, Mar. 28, 2000]