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Bonneville Power Administration Wildlife Mitigation Program : Draft Environmental Impact Statement.
Author(s) -
United States. Bonneville Power Administration.
Publication year - 1996
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/441697
Subject(s) - wildlife , north american model of wildlife conservation , environmental impact statement , wildlife conservation , geography , environmental planning , environmental protection , environmental resource management , wildlife management , environmental impact assessment , political science , ecology , environmental science , law , biology
Bonneville Power Administration (BPA) is responsible for mitigating the loss of wildlife habitat caused by the development of the Federal Columbia River Power System. BPA accomplishes this mitigation by funding projects consistent with those recommended by the Northwest Power Planning Council (Council). The projects are submitted to the Council from Indian Tribes, state agencies, property owners, private conservation groups, and other Federal agencies. Future wildlife mitigation actions with potential environmental impacts are expected to include land acquisition and management, water rights acquisition and management, habitat restoration and enhancement, installation of watering devices, riparian fencing, and similar wildlife conservation actions. BPA needs to ensure that individual wildlife mitigation projects are planned and managed with appropriate consistency across projects, jurisdictions, and ecosystems, as well as across time. BPA proposes to standardize the planning and implementation of individual wildlife mitigation projects funded by BPA. Alternative 1 is the No Action alternative. Five standardizing alternatives are identified to represent the range of possible strategies, goals, and procedural requirements reasonably applicable to BPA-funded projects under a standardized approach to project planning and implementation. All action alternatives are based on a single project planning process designed to resolve site-specific issues in an ecosystem context and to adapt to changing conditions and information