[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 7, Volume 6]
[Revised as of January 1, 2008]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 7CFR624.6]

[Page 440-442]
 
                          TITLE 7--AGRICULTURE
 
   CHAPTER VI--NATURAL RESOURCES CONSERVATION SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF 
                               AGRICULTURE
 
PART 624_EMERGENCY WATERSHED PROTECTION--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 624.6  Program administration.

    (a) Sponsors. (1) When the State Conservationist declares that a 
watershed impairment exists, NRCS may, upon request, make assistance 
available to a sponsor which must be a State or political subdivision 
thereof, qualified Indian tribe or tribal organization, or unit of local 
government. Private entities or individuals may receive assistance only 
through the sponsorship of a governmental entity.
    (2) Sponsors must:
    (i) Contribute their share of the project costs, as determined by 
NRCS, by providing funds or certain services necessary to undertake the 
activity. Contributions that may be applied towards the sponsor's 
applicable cost-share of construction costs include:
    (A) Cash;
    (B) In-kind services such as labor, equipment, design, surveys, 
contract administration and construction inspection, and other services 
as determined by the State Conservationist; or
    (C) A combination of cash and in-kind services;
    (ii) Obtain any necessary real property rights, water rights, and 
regulatory permits; and
    (iii) Agree to provide for any required operation and maintenance of 
the completed emergency measures.
    (b) Eligibility. NRCS will provide assistance based upon the NRCS 
State Conservationist's determination that the current condition of the 
land or watershed impairment poses a threat to health, life, or 
property. This assistance includes EWP practices associated with the 
removal of public health and safety threats, and restoration of the 
natural environment after disasters, including acquisition of floodplain 
easements.
    (1) Priority EWP assistance is available to alleviate exigency 
situations. NRCS may approve assistance for temporary correction 
practices to relieve an exigency situation until a more acceptable 
solution can be designed and implemented.
    (2) Limitations. (i) In cases where the same type of natural event 
occurs within a 10-year period and a structural measure has been 
installed or repaired twice within that period using EWP assistance, 
then EWP assistance is limited to those sites eligible for the purchase 
of a floodplain easement as described in Sec. 624.10 of this part.
    (ii) EWP assistance will not be used to perform operation or 
maintenance, such as the periodic work that is necessary to maintain the 
efficiency and effectiveness of a measure to perform as originally 
designed and installed.
    (iii) EWP assistance will not be used to repair, rebuild, or 
maintain private or public transportation facilities, public utilities, 
or similar facilities.
    (iv) EWP assistance, funded by NRCS, will not be provided on any 
Federal lands if such assistance is found to augment the appropriations 
of other Federal agencies.
    (v) EWP assistance is not available for repair or rehabilitation of 
nonstructural management practices, such as conservation tillage and 
other similar practices.
    (3) Repair of structural, enduring, and long-life conservation 
practices. (i) Sponsors may receive EWP assistance for structural, 
enduring, and long-life conservation practices including, but not 
limited to, grassed waterways, terraces, embankment ponds, diversions, 
and water conservation systems, except where the recovery measures are 
eligible for assistance under the Emergency Conservation Program 
administered by the Farm Service Agency.
    (ii) EWP assistance may be available for the repair of certain 
structural practices (i.e., dams and channels) originally constructed 
under Public Law 83-566; Public Law 78-534; Subtitle H of Title XV of 
the Agriculture and Food Act of 1981 (16 U.S.C. 3451 et seq., commonly 
known as the Resource Conservation and Development Program); and the 
Pilot Watershed Program of the Department of Agriculture Appropriation 
Act of 1954 (Pub. L. 83-156; 67 Stat. 214). EWP assistance may not be

[[Page 441]]

used to perform operation and maintenance activities specified in the 
agreement for the covered structure project entered into with the 
eligible local organization responsible for the works of improvement.
    (iii) NRCS may authorize EWP assistance for modifying damaged 
practices when technology advances or construction techniques warrant 
modifications, including when modifications are the result of federal 
permitting or other requirements necessary to implement the recovery 
measure, and will be cost-shared as described in Sec. 624.7.
    (iv) EWP assistance is only available when public or private 
landowners, land managers, land users, or others document they have 
exhausted or have insufficient funding or other resources available to 
provide adequate relief from applicable hazards.
    (4) Increased level of protection. In cases other than those 
described in paragraph (b)(3)(iii) of this section, if the sponsor 
desires to increase the level of protection that would be provided by 
the EWP practice, the sponsor will be responsible for paying 100 percent 
of the costs of the upgrade or additional work.
    (c) Eligible practices. NRCS will only provide assistance for 
measures that:
    (1) Provide protection from additional flooding or soil erosion; 
and,
    (2) Reduce threats to life or property from a watershed impairment, 
including sediment and debris removal in floodplains and uplands; and
    (3) Restore the hydraulic capacity to the natural environment to the 
maximum extent practical; and
    (4) Are economically and environmentally defensible and technically 
sound.
    (d) Documentation. NRCS will document the economic rationale of 
proposed practices in appropriate detail before the allocation of 
emergency funding, including projects under consideration for floodplain 
easements in Sec. 624.10. Generally, the expected value of the property 
restored should exceed the cost of emergency measures, including taking 
into consideration environmental benefits. Documentation will include, 
but is not limited to:
    (1) Number of locations and extent of damage, including 
environmental and cultural resources at risk, because of the watershed 
impairment;
    (2) Estimated damages to the values at risk if the threat is 
imminent but not yet realized;
    (3) Events that must occur for any imminent threat to be realized 
and the estimated probability of their occurrence both individually and 
collectively;
    (4) Estimates of the nature, extent, and costs of the emergency 
practices to be constructed to recover from an actual threat or relieve 
an imminent threat;
    (5) Thorough description of the beneficial and adverse effects on 
environmental resources, including fish and wildlife habitat;
    (6) Description of water quality and water conservation impacts, as 
appropriate;
    (7) Analysis of effects on downstream water rights; and
    (8) Other information deemed appropriate by NRCS to describe 
adequately the environmental impacts to comply with the National 
Environmental Policy Act, Endangered Species Act, National Historic 
Preservation Act, and related requirements.
    (e) Implementation. When planning emergency recovery practices, NRCS 
will emphasize measures that are the most economical and are to be 
accomplished by using the least damaging practical construction 
techniques and equipment that retain as much of the existing 
characteristics of the landscape and habitat as possible. Construction 
of emergency practices may include, but are not limited to, timing of 
the construction to avoid impacting fish spawning, clearing of right-of-
ways, reshaping spoil, debris removal, use of bioengineering techniques, 
and revegetation of disturbed areas. Mitigation actions needed to offset 
potential adverse impacts of the EWP Program practices should be planned 
for installation before, or concurrent with, the installation of the EWP 
Program practices. In rare occurrences where mitigation cannot be 
installed concurrently, plans will require mitigation be accomplished as 
soon as practical.
    (f) NRCS may determine that a measure is not eligible for assistance 
for

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any reason, including economic and environmental factors or technical 
feasibility.