Healthy
Watersheds Initiative
National Framework
and Action Plan
2011
&EPA
United States
Environmental Protection
Agency
EPA 841 -R-11 -005
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This Healthy Watersheds Initiative National Framework and Action Plan is a collaborative product of
EPA and our state and Federal partners. The following Association of State and Interstate Water
Pollution Control Administrators agencies and the Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies were
primarily involved in developing this document:
New Hampshire Department of Environmental Services
New Hampshire Fish and Game
Connecticut Department of Environmental Protection
Vermont Department of Environmental Conservation
Massachusetts Department of Fish and Game
Massachusetts Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs
New York Department of Environmental Conservation
Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection
Virginia Department of Environmental Quality
Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation
Maryland Department of Natural Resources
North Carolina Department of Environment and Natural Resources
Mississippi Department of Environmental Quality
Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency
Michigan Department of Environmental Quality
Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources
Minnesota Pollution Control Agency
Ohio Environmental Protection Agency
Oklahoma Conservation Commission
Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality
Texas Commission on Environmental Quality
Iowa Department of Natural Resources
Kansas Water Office
Utah Department of Environmental Quality
Oregon Department of Environmental Quality
Washington Department of Ecology
Alaska Department of Environmental Conservation
U.S. Forest Service
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
U.S. Geological Survey
The following non-governmental organizations provided ideas and input for the Healthy Watersheds
Initiative. We thank them for their technical expertise and input:
The Conservation Fund
The Green Infrastructure Center
The Nature Conservancy
The Trust for Public Land
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National Framework
and Action Plan
2011
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I Preface
On March 29, 2011, EPA released the Coming Together for Clean Water strategy as the framework for guiding the Agency's imple-
mentation efforts and actions to meet the 2011-2015 Strategic Plan objectives for protecting and restoring our waters.
One of the key areas of the Agency's strategy is to Increase Protection of Healthy Waters, including healthy watersheds. This
Healthy Watersheds Initiative (HWI) National Framework and Action Plan outlines a new approach for how EPA will meet this objective.
The approach provided in this document is a recommendation that does not replace existing laws or regulations or impose binding
requirements on EPA or the states in implementing partnerships to protect healthy watersheds.
What is different with the HWI?
The HWI represents a new construct for how EPA promotes the protection of chemical, physical and biological integrity of our
waters and aquatic ecosystems. This construct acknowledges that our waters and aquatic ecosystems are dynamic sys-
tems that are interconnected in the landscape. We recognize that while we may protect their parts (e.g., water chemistry)
or stream segments independently, it is also important to protect them as whole, interconnected systems that include all inte-
gral hydrologic, geomorphic and other processes.
The HWI represents a cost-effective, non-regulatory approach to protecting our aquatic ecosystems at the state scale that is
based on the implementation of strategic watershed protection priorities established by partnerships comprised of states
and Federal agencies. Protecting an integrated ecological network or infrastructure of healthy watersheds, in addition to re-
moving and reducing the causes of degradation, is important to sustaining healthy watershed processes and ensuring success-
ful restoration.
EPA will promote and support the national implementation of state healthy watersheds strategies by coordinating across
state water quality and aquatic resource protection agencies, and with Federal and non-Federal partners, to leverage programs
and resources for protecting and restoring the highest priority watersheds.
Protecting healthy watersheds has many benefits:
4 Strategies that prioritize the protection and restoration of healthy watersheds are cost-effective. Budgets are tight, and we can
no longer afford not to have a strategy.
4 Healthy watersheds provide sufficient amounts of clean water required for healthy aquatic ecosystems, habitat for fish and
wildlife, safe drinking water, and recreational opportunities as well as mental and physical health benefits, and help reduce vul-
nerability to climate change impacts and costs for adaptation.
Healthy watersheds provide many economic benefits such as reduced costs for supplying and treating drinking water, restor-
ing watersheds, and mitigating flood, hazard and climate change damage; expenditures on fishing, boating, swimming recre-
ation and eco-tourism; and increased property values.
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Healthy Watersheds
Initiative Tenets
1. Partnerships are established to identify and protect healthy watersheds.
2. Healthy watersheds are identified state-wide using professional, scientifically sound, strategic,
integrated assessments.
3. Healthy watersheds are listed, tracked, maintained and increased in number over time.
4. Healthy watersheds are protected and, if applicable, enhanced using the best regulatory and non-regulatory tools.
5. Progress on protecting healthy watersheds is measured and tied to securing and raising the overall goals of EPA's Water
Program, including direct support of the public health and environmental goals established in EPA's Strategic Plan.
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Healthy
Watersheds Initiative:
National Framework and Action Plan
I Table of Contents
Preface v
Healthy Watershed Initiative Tenets .vi
Part 1 -Introduction 1
What Are the Benefits of Healthy Watersheds? 1
Why a Healthy Watersheds Initiative? 4
What Is a Healthy Watershed? 6
What Is the Healthy Watersheds Initiative? 8
How Does the Healthy Watersheds Initiative Enhance and
Supplement Existing EPA Water Quality Programs? 8
Purpose of the National Framework and Action Plan 8
Part 2 - Healthy Watersheds Initiative Vision 9
Guiding Principles 9
Goals and Objectives 9
Part 3 - Healthy Watersheds Initiative Action Plan 11
Priority Actions: EPA Headquarters, Regions, States 11
EPA Headquarters Actions 12
EPA Regions Actions. 15
States Actions 16
Part4-Implementation Framework 17
Coordination and Communication 17
Tracking Progress 17
Determining Success 17
Specific Examples of Success 17
Summary of Actions for the HWI National Framework and Action Plan 20
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Parti
ntroduction
Recently, a large focus of EPA's water quality protection pro-
gram has been based on the remediation of impaired water-
bodies and, to a significant extent, on the reduction of specific
pollutant levels in waterbodies. Although EPA and our state and
other partners have made and are continuing to make consider-
able progress in this important work, we recognize the need at
the same time to protect and maintain the full chemical, physi-
cal and biological quality of our Nation's waters. The Healthy
Watersheds Initiative (HWI) explicitly addresses this need by
expanding our focus to include protection of intact aquatic eco-
systems and integrated processes as they naturally occur within
a watershed context: linked surface and subsurface waters and
habitats comprised of continuous rivers with natural flowing wa-
ter and sediment regimes; lakes and wetlands with natural water
volumes and level variation; and springs and groundwater con-
nected by hydrology. EPA acknowledged the need to increase
protection of healthy waters in the Coming Together for Clean
Water: EPA's Strategy to Protect America's Waters.1 The strat-
egy increased the focus on the protection of source waters and
healthy watersheds as one of five areas guiding the implementa-
tion efforts and actions to meet the Strategic Plan objectives in
the next 2 years and beyond.
Many states, Federal agencies and other EPA partners have
begun in recent years to implement broader, aquatic ecosystem-
based approaches that identify and protect their healthy water-
sheds. They recognize the benefits of protecting and maintaining
high-quality waters, which include reducing the number of future
impaired waters and resulting cost savings of not having to re-
store those waters; ensuring successful and holistic restoration
and maintenance of restored waters; and the overall socio-
economic benefits of healthy watersheds.
I What Are the Benefits
of Healthy Watersheds?
The benefits of healthy watersheds are numerous. Healthy
watersheds provide sufficient amounts of clean water required
for healthy aquatic ecosystems; habitat for fish and wildlife; safe
drinking water; and recreation as well as mental and physical
health benefits; and help reduce vulnerability to climate and
land use change impacts and costs for adaptation. Healthy
watersheds provide many economic benefits such as reduced
costs for supplying and treating water for human consumption
and industrial uses, restoring watersheds, and mitigating flood,
hazard and climate change damage; expenditures on fishing,
boating, swimming and eco-tourism; and increased property
values. For example, by protecting aquifer recharge zones and
surface water sources, costs of drinking water treatment may
be reduced. A survey of the treatment costs and watershed
characteristics of 27 drinking water utilities found that for every
10 percent increase in forest cover of the source area, chemical
and treatment costs decrease by 20 percent (Ernst, C., 2004).2
1. https://blog.epa.gov/waterforum/wp-content/uploads/2011/04/ComingTogether-for-Clean-
Water-FINAL.pdf
2. Ernst C. Protecting the Source: Land Conservation and the Future of America's Drinking
Water. Trust for Public Land and the American Water Works Association, Water Protection
Series. 2004, 56 pp.
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Healthy Watersheds Initiative
"The once seemingly separable types of aquatic
ecosystems are, we now know, interrelated and
interdependent We cannot expect to preserve
the remaining qualities of our water resources
without providing appropriate protection for the
entire resource."
— Tennessee Senator Howard Baker reinforcing the fundamental impor-
tance of the Clean Water Act on the Senate floor, 1977
Also, healthy watersheds have an important role in climate
change mitigation and adaptation. Healthy watersheds provide
sufficient natural land cover and soil resources capable of pro-
viding carbon storage functions, thereby offsetting greenhouse
gas emissions. Intact floodplains and riparian zones of healthy
watersheds enable them to be better adapted to changes in
precipitation associated with climate change. Further, intro-
duced species are less likely to become invasive in healthy wa-
tersheds, as naturally functioning ecosystems reduce opportuni-
ties for colonization by favoring indigenous species and helping
them out-compete invasives.
The ecological services that healthy watersheds provide—and
the benefits they create—are often taken for granted when they
exist in natural systems, and are difficult, expensive or impossible
to achieve when they must be reproduced.
Case Study: New York City Watershed Economic Benefits and Costs Savings of Protecting the Clean Water Supply
A case study in the Natural Resources Fo-
rum Journal (Postel & Thompson, 2005)3
captured how one of our largest cities, New
York City, was able to protect their drinking
water source through a unique agreement
that links ecosystem-service providers and
beneficiaries.
The New York City case study demonstrates
that watershed protection can be a highly
cost-effective alternative to technological
treatment in meeting water quality stan-
dards that can work for both upstream and
downstream parties.
New York City was faced with building an
estimated $6 billion dollar filtration plant
with an annual operating cost of $300 mil-
lion to ensure compliance with the Safe
Drinking Water Act.
The City had the option of requesting a
waiver, however, if they could demon-
strate that they could meet their water
quality standards through protection of
their source watersheds. The City went
through a long agreement-building pro-
cess with the private landowners and
communities within the Catskill-Delaware
watershed, which supplies 90 percent of
its drinking water.
Terms of the agreement included that the
City would not condemn any land through
the state's health eminent domain pro-
cess. The City would purchase proper-
ties for their actual face value from willing
sellers and pay taxes on the properties so
it would not erode the local tax revenues.
The total amount of land purchased was
estimated at $94 million, which doubled
the area of the protected buffer. The over-
all investment was estimated at $ 1 billion.
The City also initiated other programs
and a trust fund within the area to pro-
mote best management practices. These
practices, along with the protected lands,
increased property values, provided addi-
tional income, created healthier streams
and habitats, and provided additional rec-
reational opportunities. Future protection
of this area will be dependent on popu-
lation and development growth and any
future regulations.
3. Postel S & BH Thompson, Jr. Watershed Protection:
Capturing the Benefits of Nature's Water Supply Ser-
vices. Natural Resources Forum. 2005, pp.98-108.
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t
f ~ 11 • -- V*" z*
Case Study: The Economic Impact of Recreational Trout Angling in the Driftless Area
Restored streams in the Driftless Area
(Drift fess Area
Minnesota
Wisconsin
Reprinted with permission from the United States
Department of Agriculture-Natural Resources Conservation
Service. The Economic Impact of Recreational Trout
Angling in the Drift/ess Area, April 2008.
The Driftless Area is a 24,000 square-mile
area that encompasses portions of south-
east Minnesota, northeast Iowa, southwest
Wisconsin and northwest Illinois bypassed
by the last continental glacier. According
to a study by Trout Unlimited, recreational
angling in the Driftless Area generates a
$1.1 billion annual economic benefit to
the local economy, far exceeding the com-
bined revenues of Illinois' professional
sports teams (the Bears, Bulls, Cubs and
White Sox) of $728 million. Anglers in the
Driftless Area spend an impressive $647
million each year that goes directly into the
local economy. The total economic impact is
actually much bigger than that. The money
produces a "ripple effect" of approximately
$3,000 additional spending per angler.
These indirect and induced effects represent
the money spent by Driftless Area anglers
continuing to flow through the local econo-
my as local business people turn around and
buy additional goods and services. The total
annual "ripple effect" of spending by anglers
in the Driftless Area is approximately $ 465
million. Adding the direct spending total
to the indirect and induced spending total
reveals that trout anglers produce an eco-
nomic benefit to the Driftless Area in excess
of $1.1 billion every year. The authors at-
tribute those economic benefits to the natu-
Angler in the Driftless Area
Reprinted with permission from Trout Unlimited —
Driftless Area Restoration Effort. The Economic
Impact of Recreational Trout Angling in the
Driftless Area, April 2008.
ral potential of the streams, good land stew-
ardship, public access and wise investment
in restoration. Overall, trout anglers have
a light impact on natural resources. Many
anglers release the fish they catch back to
the stream and treat the areas they fish
with respect. It is clear that clean water,
resilient streams and healthy fish popula-
tions help support a thriving economy in the
Driftless Area. For more information, go to
http://www.tu.org/atf/cf/%7BED0023C4-
EA23-4396-9371-8509DC5B4953%7D/
TroutUnlimited-EconStudySummaiyFinal.pdf
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If successfully implemented, the HWI will greatly enhance our abil-
ity to meet the Clean Water Act (CWA) Section 101 (a) objective,
"...to restore and maintain the chemical, physical and biological
integrity of the Nation's waters." The Committee Report written in
support of the 1972 Federal Water Pollution Control Act amend-
ments clarified that the term integrity "...refers to a condition in
which the natural structure and function of ecosystems is [sic]
maintained,"4 rather than simply improving water quality in a nar-
row sense. The HWI is intended to preserve and maintain natural
ecosystems by protecting our remaining healthy watersheds,
preventing them from becoming impaired, and accelerating our
restoration successes. It is based on an integrated, systems-
based approach to watershed protection, supported by the latest
science that views watersheds as dynamic systems that include
surface water (instream flow in rivers and lake levels) and sub-
surface groundwater quantity variability, water quality, biological
resources and their habitat, and other key processes (e.g., geo-
morphic) that support healthy aquatic resources.
EPA is embarking on the HWI as part of a comprehensive ap-
proach to integrate protection and restoration. Similar comple-
mentary approaches also have been adopted by the Associa-
tion of Fish and Wildlife Agencies and the Departments of the
Interior and Commerce - National Fish Habitat Action Plan5, and
the U.S. Forest Service - Watershed Condition Framework.6
The need for this approach has become increasingly clear:
despite our best efforts and many local successes, overall, our
aquatic ecosystems are declining nationwide. This trend has
been documented by many, including the Heinz Center (State
of the Nation's Ecosystems, 2008)7 and the American Fisheries
Society (see figure at top right).
The rate at which new waters are being listed for water quality
impairments exceeds the pace at which waters are removed
from the list (EPA, Region 3, see figure at bottom right).
Pollution and water quality problems continue to be causes,
but other significant sources of the decline include loss of
habitat and habitat fragmentation, hydrologic alteration and
fragmentation, invasive species and climate change. It is clear
that a better strategy is needed if we are to achieve the Section
101 (a) objective of the CWA.
The HWI is a further refinement and enhancement of EPA's exist-
ing watershed approaches; an explicit recognition that restora-
Numbers of imperiled North American freshwater and diadromous fish taxa in
each status category as listed previously by the American Fisheries Society
Endangered Species Committee in Deacon et al. (1979), Williams et al. (1989),
and Jelks et al. (2008).
(1)
.a
3
300 -i
200 -
100 -
Vulnerable
Threatened
Endangered
| Extinct
Delisted
1979
1999
2008
Conservation status of imperiled North American freshwater and diadromous
fishes. Jelks HL, et al. Fisheries 2008;33(8):372-407.
tion will not succeed without maintaining healthy watershed
"infrastructure" of habitat, biotic communities, water chemistry,
and intact watershed hydrologic (surface and subsurface) and
geomorphic processes. The HWI is based on a key, overarching
concept: the integrity of aquatic ecosystems is tightly linked to
the watersheds of which they are part. There is a direct relation-
ship between land cover, hydrology and key watershed process-
es and the condition of aquatic ecosystems. Healthy, functioning
watersheds provide the building blocks that anchor water quality
restoration efforts. Without this ecological support system, we
will not only fail to successfully restore impaired waters, but also
waste limited financial resources as additional waters become
impaired and other socio-economic benefits are lost.
Gap between impaired waters and delisted waters
7000n
5000-
£ 3000-
I
1000-
Impaired Waters
Delisted Waters
1998 2000
2002
2004 2006
EPA Region 3.
4. U.S. Government Printing Office. Report for the Committee on Public Works-United
States House of Representatives with additional and supplemental views of H.R. 11896
to amend the Federal Water Pollution Control Act. House Report 92-911. 92nd Congress,
2nd session, 11 Match 1972, page 149.
5. National Fish Habitat Action Plan. 2006. www.fishhabitat.org.
6. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service. Watershed Condition Framework.
Publication Number FS-977, May 2011.
7. Heinz Center. State of the Nation's Ecosystems Report. Washington, DC: Island
Press. 2008.
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Linking Watershed Protection With Restoration
The Woonasquatucket River Watershed (land use and forest and wetland resources thematic maps)
Land Use Forest & Wetland Resources
qurtudut HJvw VMmlwl
KKK
KKK
Reprinted with permission from the University of Rhode Island Environmental Data Center.
The Woonasquatucket River is a small,
19-mile river originating 300 feet above
sea level in the town of North Smithfield,
Rhode Island. From several ponds there,
the river flows south and east to downtown
Providence, and at sea level, it joins the
Moshassuck River to form the Providence
River, which flows into Narragansett Bay.
The lower reaches of the river are tidal be-
fore blockage by the first dam in Providence.
The Native Americans who lived here named
it "Woonasquatucket," meaning "the place
where the salt water ends" or the meeting of
the river and the sea.
These maps illustrate the challenges and
opportunities in promoting a healthy water-
shed approach. Although the river itself is
only 19 miles long, its watershed drains 50
square miles in parts of six towns, ranging
from the rural headwaters of North Smith-
field to the channelized post-industrial cor-
ridors of Johnston, North Providence and
Providence, and passing 18 dams, a Super-
fund site and numerous official and unof-
ficial brownfields. The contrast between
the northern half of the watershed and its
urbanized south is not only stark, but also
it is misleading. With funding from the U.S.
Forest Service, an intensive study of the en-
tire river corridor found scores of sites with
riparian restoration potential. Although
some 80 percent of the existing riparian
forestlands are in the upper part of the wa-
tershed, the key fisheries of alewife, shad
and herring only spawn there if they can
make it through the dams of Providence and
the southern watershed. The two halves
need each other: restoration of the impaired
reaches and fish passage in the urbanized
south is only sustainable if the healthy sec-
tions in the northern half remain so.
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Healthy Watersheds Initiative I Part 1
What Is a
I Healthy Watershed?
Ideally, a healthy watershed has the ability to
provide the following:
Habitat of sufficient size and connectivity and hydrologic
(surface and subsurface) connectivity to sustain native
aquatic and riparian species;
Native vegetation and green infrastructure (network of
habitat hubs and corridors) in the landscape to maintain
natural hydrology (including recharge of groundwater) and
nutrient and organic matter inputs essential to maintaining
aquatic ecosystem functions;
4 Biotic refugia or critical habitat (e.g., deep pools, seeps and
springs, cold water tributary junctions for survival during
droughts all sustained by sufficient water levels in lakes and
instream flows in rivers);
4 Natural hydrology (e.g., flow regime, lake water levels) that
supports aquatic species and habitat;
Natural transport of sediment and stream geomorphology
that provide a natural habitat;
4 Natural disturbance regimes (e.g., floods and fire) on
which biota depend;
4 Water quality that supports aquatic and riparian biotic
communities and habitat; and
4 Healthy, self-sustaining aquatic and riparian
biological communities.
A healthy watershed has, either in its entirety or as components,
intact and functioning headwaters, wetlands, floodplains, ripar-
ian corridors, biotic refugia, instream and lake habitat, and biotic
communities; green infrastructure; natural hydrology (e.g., range
of instream flows, lake water levels); sediment transport and flu-
vial geomorphology; and natural disturbance regimes expected
for its location. Healthy watersheds range from those undis-
turbed by humans to developed areas that still retain healthy
components and habitat connectivity (e.g., Fairfax County, VA).8
Healthy watersheds are identified through integrated assess-
ments of landscape condition, biotic communities, habitat,
water chemistry and intact hydrologic (surface and subsurface)
and geomorphic processes. This is similar to the essential
ecological attributes assessment approach (see figure below)
proposed by EPA's Science Advisory Board in its report, A
Framework for Assessing and Reporting on Ecological Condi-
tion: An SAB Report (EPA, 20029) and many other approaches
(e.g., Doppelt, etal., 199310and Annear, et al., 200411).
Essential ecological attributes8
Ecological
Landscape
Condition
Biotic
Condition
Natural
Disturbance
Landscape condition is the patterns and connectivity of habi-
tat in the landscape, both terrestrial and aquatic (e.g., forest
cover, headwaters, riparian corridors, floodplains, wetlands,
lakes and stream network connectivity). Green infrastructure
assessments are useful in providing this information. Green
infrastructure is an interconnected network of natural areas and
open spaces that sustains ecosystems (Benedict MA and ET
McMahon, 2006).12
8. Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation and Virginia Commonwealth Univer-
sity Center for Environmental Studies. Healthy Waters-A New Ecological Approach to
Identifying and Protecting Healthy Waters in Virginia, www.dcr.virginia.gov/healthywa-
ters. 2009, 28 pp.
9. EPA. A Framework for Assessing and Reporting on Ecological Condition: An SAB
Report. EPA Science Advisory Board, Washington, DC, 2002, Publication Number
EPA-SAB-EPEC-02-009.
10. Doppelt B, M Scurlock, C Frissell, & J Karr. Entering the Watershed: A New Approach
to Save America's River Ecosystems. The Pacific Rivers Council. Washington, DC:
Island Press, 1999.
11. Annear T, I Chisholm, H Beecher, A Locke, P Aarrestad, C Coomer, et al. Instream Flows
for Riverine Resource Stewardship. Revised Edition. Instream Flow Council, Cheyenne,
WY, 2004.
12. Benedict MA and ET McMahon. Green Infrastructure Linking Landscapes and Com-
munities. The Conservation Fund. Washington, DC: Island Press, 2006.
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"/ ask that your marvelous natural resources
be handed on unimpaired to your posterity."
— Theodore Roosevelt, Sacramento, CA, 1903
Aquatic biota, habitat and water chemistry are assessed in
state water quality monitoring programs, natural heritage, fishery
and other programs. These include bioassessments (e.g.,
macroinvertebrates, fish, periphyton), habitat assessments,
wetland assessments, biodiversity surveys, fish population as-
sessments and ecologically relevant water chemistry (e.g., tem-
perature, dissolved oxygen, pH and nutrients).
Hydrology includes instream flow, lake level and groundwater
regimes characterized by seasonal varying components of mag-
nitude, frequency, duration, timing and rate of change, which are
required to sustain healthy freshwater ecosystems (Poff, et al.
1997).13 Instream flow and lake level requirements are assessed
using a variety of hydroecological assessment approaches (e.g.,
Ecological Limits of Hydrologic Alteration [ELOHA]) that are similar
to bioassessment approaches and result in ecologically relevant
flow and water level standards for different river and lake types as
well as ecological condition goals.
Geomorphology describes the channel form and sediment
transport processes that define instream habitat. Fluvial geo-
morphic assessments identify rivers and streams that have a
natural channel form and dynamic equilibrium in sediment trans-
port (i.e., the volume of sediments moving in equals the volume
of sediments moving out of a stream segment).
Protection programs span a wide range, including habitat and
stream corridor protection, conservation tax credits, landowner
stewardship, sustainable forestry, instream flow and lake level wa-
ter protection, water resource policy, source water and ground-
water protection, anti-degradation, wetland protection, invasive
species control, monitoring, and education. Some state and local
examples of these diverse watershed protection programs are
included as success stories at the end of this document.
13. Poff NL, et al. The natural flow regime: a paradigm for river conservation and restora-
tion. B/oscfence 1997;7(11): 769-784.
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The key components of the HWI are to:
1. Establish partnerships to identify and implement protection
of healthy watersheds;
2. Identify healthy watersheds and intact components of
altered watersheds state-wide through integrated
assessments;
3. Implement state-wide strategic protection plans and pro-
grams based on vulnerability and other opportunities;
4. Implement local protection programs based on priorities
from state and local assessments;
5. Provide information to inform ecological recoverability and
help set priorities for restoration of impaired waters; and
6. Provide information to the public on healthy watersheds,
including the socio-economic benefits of their protection.
How Does the Healthy Watersheds Initiative
Enhance and Supplement Existing EPA Water
Quality Programs?
The HWI promotes the utilization of a set of analyses (e.g.,
hydroecology, fluvial geomorphology and green infrastructure)
using state-of-the-science and improvements to methods that
were not fully developed or available until the past decade, and
combines the results of these analyses using modern comput-
ing power to assess watersheds as functional systems. These
and similar technical tools and approaches are used to support
a holistic systems approach. Going beyond watershed planning
approaches that focus on impaired waterbodies and specific
pollutant-based impairments to those waterbodies, healthy wa-
tersheds assessments focus on also identifying those habitats
and critical watershed processes that are intact and in good
condition. Once identified, those habitats and processes can
be protected as part of a comprehensive watershed plan that
includes both protection and restoration. Moreover, healthy
watersheds assessments are meant to be strategic at the state
scale in terms of focusing state and local protection resources
towards the remaining high-quality areas throughout the state,
and to help target restoration opportunities.
Purpose of the HWI National Framework
and Action Plan:
The purpose of this HWI National Framework and Action Plan
is to provide a clear and consistent framework with sufficient
flexibility for appropriate action by EPA and our partners. EPA
will work with states and other partners to implement the HWI
linking to other related initiatives and programs, and including
the actions herein. EPA Regions will develop healthy watershed
strategies that are consistent with this national framework, but
also tailored to the unique opportunities within the Regions.
Clinch/Powell Watersheds: Local Protection of Healthy Watersheds
Photo and map are courtesy of The Nature Conservancy.
The Upper Clinch and Powell River Watersheds, located in south-
western Virginia and northeastern Tennessee, harbor one of the most
diverse fish and mussel assemblages in North America with 118
native fish species and 45 species of mussels. The Commonwealth
of Virginia and State of Tennessee both identified these watersheds
as priorities for coordinated protection and, in 2007, along with
EPA Regions 3 and 4, established the Clinch Powell Clean Rivers
Initiative (CPCRI). The main goal of the CPCRI is to protect and
restore water quality by: (1) conducting cutting-edge science and
river monitoring to advance understanding of watershed stressors
and the causes of rare mussel decline; (2) translating the results of
science and monitoring into more effective regulations, best manage-
ment practices and conservation strategies; (3) fostering increased
coordination between state and Federal agencies, the regulated
community and other key watershed stakeholders; and (4) elevat-
ing awareness of the Clinch River system as a national model for
collaborative environmental management. The CPCRI, led by The
Nature Conservancy, represents an excellent example of coordination
and leveraging of multiple stakeholders and their programs towards
protecting and restoring high-priority healthy watersheds.
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Part 2
HWI Vision
Guiding
Principles
EPA's broad mission charges us with protecting the Nation's en-
vironment, including land, water and air that comprise a whole
ecosystem. We will promote achievement of the intended use
of the term "integrity" in Section 101 (a) of the Clean Water Act
(CWA),"... to restore and maintain the chemical, physical and
biological integrity of the Nation's waters," by recognizing the
importance of preserving natural aquatic ecosystems to fully
meet the goals and objectives of the CWA.
EPA recognizes that our Federal partners, state and local gov-
ernments, and non-government organizations already have
made great progress in protecting healthy watersheds and bring
significant resources and complementary tools to this work.
The HWI both supports and expands on this work. This Initia-
tive only can be successful if we collaborate with others to inte-
grate protection and restoration in watersheds. The proposed
action plan presented here aims to provide a clear, consistent
framework for action, both internally among our own programs,
and externally in working with our partners.
Goals
and Objectives
GoaM
Identify, protect and maintain a network of healthy water-
sheds and supportive green infrastructure habitat networks
across the United States.
Objectives
In collaboration with states, other Federal agencies and
non-governmental partners:
* Support state-wide assessments of green infrastruc-
ture, hydrology, geomorphology, and biotic, habitat and
chemical condition, as well as integrated assessments
of the above to help identify healthy watersheds.
* Establish state watershed goals that help protect and
maintain a healthy watershed condition.
* Implement strategic state programs and plans to
protect identified healthy watersheds, including green
infrastructure and restored watersheds.
-------
Healthy Watersheds Initiative
Healthy Watersheds Initiative Vision:
Protect and maintain the aquatic ecological
integrity of watersheds and supporting habitat
networks to ensure that future generations may
enjoy these resources and the social and economic
benefits that they provide.
Goal 2
Goal3
Integrate protection of healthy watersheds into EPA
programs.
Objectives
* Develop and implement a policy to protect a national
network of remaining healthy watersheds, including
supporting green infrastructure habitat networks.
* Look for opportunities to integrate healthy water-
sheds protection into EPA Water and other programs
(e.g., implementation of the Compensatory Mitigation
Rule, watershed restoration programs, Water Quality
Standards, Source Water Protection Program, Clean
Water and Drinking Water State Revolving Fund,
National Environmental Policy Act [NEPA], Smart
Growth, etc.).
* Support state strategic plans that integrate protection
and restoration priorities into program implementation
to achieve environmental results efficiently and cost ef-
fectively through the continuing planning process and
in performance partnership agreements.
* Identify funding resources and develop guidance and
measures to support healthy watersheds assess-
ment and protection opportunities.
Increase awareness and understanding of the importance
of protecting our remaining healthy watersheds and the
range of management actions needed to protect and avoid
adverse impacts to those healthy watersheds.
Objectives
* Develop and implement public outreach programs on
the importance of protecting healthy watersheds, in-
cluding the ecological services, economic benefits and
cost savings they provide, and on actions that can be
taken to avoid adverse environmental impacts from
land use changes, energy development and climate
change.
* Provide information and examples on the myriad
of successful healthy watersheds protection and
prevention actions.
* Provide support to local and regional planning com-
missions and governments for implementing pro-
grams to protect healthy watersheds.
10
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Parts
HWI Action Plan
This Action Plan is organized by the roles of EPA Headquarters,
EPA Regions and states. It includes six major focus areas that
support the Goals and Objectives:
EPA Regions
Actions
Policy and Guidance
Assessments
Protection
Outreach and Communications
Partnerships
Research
Goal2
Goal 1
...Goals 1, 2 and 3
Goal 3
Goals 1 and 3
Goal 1
The actions below are a sub-set of those in the tables that follow
and represent those actions that will be implemented initially.
I EPA Headquarters
Actions
4 Develop as EPA policy that protection of healthy water-
sheds is a priority and an integral part of water programs
under the CWA.
4 Develop guidance on how healthy watersheds protection
will be integrated into EPA programs.
4 Identify and dedicate sources of funding and associated
guidance to implement the HWI.
4 Develop HWI measures for the EPA Strategic Plan and
National Water Program Guidance and a periodic report
on the national status of healthy watersheds.
4 Document the economic and social benefits as well as
cost savings of protecting healthy watersheds.
4 Develop Memoranda of Understanding (MOUs) with
other Federal agencies and a statement of intent with
our partners.
4 Develop and implement Regional HWI Strategies.
4 Provide guidance and technical assistance to states and
local communities to help them develop healthy water-
sheds assessments and implement healthy watersheds
protection programs.
4 Develop and implement partnerships with states, lo-
cal governments, Federal agencies, non-governmental
organizations (NGOs) and others to identify and protect
healthy watersheds.
4 Pilot demonstrations that incorporate healthy watersheds
protection into EPA programs.
4 Develop healthy watersheds in-reach and outreach
programs.
States
Actions
Inventory healthy watersheds using integrated assess-
ments developed through collaboration across state
agencies and with other partners.
4 Develop and implement coordinated healthy watershed
protection programs both at the state level and collabora-
tively at the local level.
4 Develop partnerships with other states, Federal agencies,
NGOs, etc. to inventory and protect healthy watersheds.
Activities are already underway for some of the focal areas
outlined below and others are yet to be conceptualized. The
actions are intended to be carried out by EPA and the states
with our Federal and non-Federal partners. Because the HWI is
a new initiative, it is expected that these actions will evolve and
perhaps expand with new partners joining the effort. The Action
Plan will be updated periodically to reflect changes as the HWI
matures into a program.
11
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Healthy Watersheds Initiative
EPA Headquarters
Actions
EPA Headquarters will take the primary lead on Policy and Guidance and have some responsibilities under the other five focus areas.
EPA has a unique role and opportunity to institutionalize the HWI through new policy and guidance. Key to the success of the HWI
will be the launch of a new healthy watersheds national policy that commits the Agency, working with our state and other partners, to
leverage new and existing technical and financial resources towards the assessment and protection of healthy watersheds. This new
healthy watersheds national policy would be supported by complementary guidance.
Focus Area
Policy and Guidance
(Goal 2)
When Action
2011
2011 &
ongoing
2011 &
ongoing
2012
2012
2011 &
ongoing
Develop policy statement on protecting healthy watersheds
Purpose: To make it a priority and an integral part of water
quality and watershed programs at EPA and in the states
Partners
Regions
Develop HWI measures for the EPA Strategic Plan and National Water Regions, states
Program Guidance (NPG)
Purpose: To create the accountability framework and incentives
to implement healthy watersheds protection programs at EPA and in
the states
Identify funding sources for the HWI and develop funding guidance Regions
Purpose: To support states and others in conducting healthy
watersheds assessments and implementing protection programs
Develop an annual HWI Report, including guidelines for reporting on
healthy watershed activities and progress (healthy watersheds list
and national status) at EPA and in the states
Purpose: To track progress and inform the public on how
we are doing
Integrate healthy watersheds into EPA programs and develop
guidelines for leveraging and working with EPA's programs (e.g.,
wetlands, National Environmental Policy Act, coastal programs, 604
(b) Continuous Planning Process, total maximum daily load and
nonpoint source program implementation, water quality standards,
source water protection, etc.)
Purpose: To improve our protection capabilities by using a
holistic, system-based approach to aquatic ecosystem protection
Support, through the continuing planning process and in perfor-
mance partnership agreements, the development of state strategic
plans that integrate protection and restoration priorities into program
implementation
Purpose: To achieve environmental results efficiently and cost
effectively
Regions, states
Regions
12
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EPA Headquarters
Actions
Focus Area
When Action
Partners
Assessments (Goal 1)
Strategic healthy watershed protection is guided
by identifying healthy watersheds at the state
scale. The healthy watersheds approach advo-
cates assessing watersheds as systems integrat-
ing assessments of landscape condition, habitat,
biological integrity, water quality, hydrology and
geomorphology. Once integrated assessments
are complete, vulnerability is assessed to help
guide strategic protection. EPA and its partners
will promote and provide technical support to
interested states to develop (or for assessments
underway, complete) healthy watersheds assess-
ments. EPA and its partners will develop
assessment tools.
Fall 2011 Develop the document, Identifying and Protecting Healthy Water-
sheds Concepts, Assessments and Management Approaches
Purpose: Facilitate implementation of the HWI by providing EPA,
state and local practitioners with an overview of key concepts
behind the healthy watersheds approach, examples of healthy
watersheds assessments, an integrated assessment framework
for identifying healthy watersheds, examples of management ap-
proaches, sources of data and key assessment tools
November
2010
(Workshop)
April 2011
(Report)
Convene a Healthy Watersheds Integrated Assessment Expert ORD, Regions,
Workshop and produce a report states, NGOs,
Purpose: To develop ideas and further research needed to improve ottier exPerts
and advance integrated healthy watersheds assessment methods
Outreach and Communications
(Goal 3)
A successful HWI will require significant and
effective outreach to internal and external stake-
holders. This includes outreach within EPA and
with the public and others. Some of this is well
underway (e.g., HWI website [www.epa.gov/
healthywatersheds] and the Fact Sheet (on web-
site). Also, future outreach and communications
actions will be outlined in the Communications
Strategy (ideas may include a newsletter; healthy
watersheds on agendas of major conferences,
meetings and forums; healthywatersheds course
on EPA's Watershed Academy; talking points;
Q&As, etc.).
2011 &
beyond
2011
2011 &
ongoing
2011 &
ongoing
Develop and implement an HWI Communications Strategy (empha-
sizing cost/benefits)
Purpose: To help implement healthywatersheds approaches
and programs at the state and local levels across the country
Regions,
states, AFWA14
Prepare a white paper on economic and social benefits and cost
savings of protecting healthy watersheds and develop outreach tools
Purpose: To provide sound evidence to convince the public and
others of the value of protecting healthy watersheds
Update the EPA healthy watersheds website
Purpose: To provide the latest information on healthywatersheds
assessment and protection approaches and the HWI
Conduct healthy watersheds webinars at EPA HQ and the Regions
Purpose: To share information on the latest approaches with larger
audiences
ORD, OPEI
14. Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies.
13
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Healthy Watersheds Initiative I Part 3
Focus Area
When Action
Partners
Partnerships (Goals 1 & 3)
Protecting healthy watersheds requires effective
partnerships. We all share the responsibility for
protecting the environment. Bringing practitioners
and policy makers together will help us integrate
and share resources. Partnerships across orga-
nizations are particularly important. Our environ-
mental laws and regulations have created stove-
pipe organizations at the Federal and state levels
of government. Ecosystem-based environmental
protection calls for integration of programs and ap-
proaches; thus, working across Federal and state
agencies is a necessity if we are to be successful
in protecting the remaining healthy watersheds.
Partnerships with key non-governmental organiza-
tions (NGOs) and local governments and organiza-
tions also are important as they have the most
direct effect on the resource. Some partnership
building has occurred already with Federal and
state agencies, between agencies within states,
and with NGOs, and others.
2011
2011 &
ongoing
2011 &
ongoing
Develop a statement of intent among partners to work together to
identify and protect healthy watersheds (initiated and signed by the
EPA Administrator)
Purpose: To establish Federal and non-Federal support and
coordination of mutual efforts to achieve a national network of
healthy watersheds
Develop partnerships (e.g., MOUs) with (e.g., U.S. Fish & Wildlife
Service [USFWS] on the Landscape Conservation Cooperatives;
USFWS and National Marine Fisheries Service [NMFS] on the
National Fish Habitat Action Plan; U.S. Forest Service [USFS] on the
Strategic Framework for Water and Watershed Condition Assessments;
Department of Transportation [DOT] on Ecological; U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers [USCOE] on Integrated Basin Management Plans,
Compensatory Mitigation Rule, Principles and Standards for Water Re-
sources Planning, Sustainable Rivers Program, instream flow program,
etc.; U.S. Geological Service [USGS] on the National Water Census;
Natural Resources Conservation Service [NRCS] on Floodplains
Easements, Wetlands Reserve Programs)
Purpose: To coordinate our similar efforts more effectively with our
state partners
Develop partnerships with the states and NGOs such as The Nature
Conservancy (TNC), USGS, and the Instream Flow Council (IFC) on
instream flow; The Conservation Fund (TCP) on Green Infrastructure;
Source Water Collaborative (SWC), and other NGOs
Purpose: To coordinate our mutual goals and efforts more
effectively so that we can achieve a national network of healthy
watersheds
Federal
agencies,
national state
organizations,
NGOs (TBD)
USFWS, NMFS,
USFS, DOT,
COE, USGS,
NRCS, and
other agencies
TNC, USGS,
states, IFC, TCP,
SWC, etc.
Research (Goal 1)
Research support is critical as some of the science
supporting healthy watersheds assessment and benefits
analyses is burgeoning. This is particularly relevant for
hydroecology, fluvial geomorphology, and economic and
social benefits. There is some research support in EPA's
Office of Research and Development; however, research
needs and a plan have not been developed yet.
2011 & Develop partnerships with national state organizations: ASIWPCA,
ongoing AFWA, ASFM, NASF, ASWM and IFC
Purpose: To establish effective implementation of the HWI by work-
ing across state agencies
2012 Develop a healthy watersheds research plan
Purpose: To identify critical research and methods needed for
improved healthy watersheds assessments, including social and
economic benefits assessments, and social marketing
ASIWPCA15,
AFWA16,
ASFM17,
NASF18,
ASWM19, IFC20
ORD
15. Association of State and Interstate Water Pollution Control Administrators.
16. Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies.
17. Association of State Floodplain Managers.
18. National Association of State Foresters.
19. Association of State Wetland Managers, Inc.
20. Instream Flow Council.
14
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EPA Regions
Actions
The Regions will develop and implement HWI strategies that are tailored to the interest of the states and unique opportunities within
the Region. This will include developing a wide array of partnerships and in-reach and outreach activities, and providing technical as-
sistance to the states. The Regions also will help Headquarters identify program integration opportunities and implement pilot projects.
Focus Area
Policy and Guidance
(Goal 2)
When Action
Assessments (Goal 1)
2012 &
ongoing
2011 -
2014
Ongoing
Regional healthy watersheds strategies
Purpose: To develop and refine overtime organized strategies sup-
ported by management that implement the HWI with the states and
our other partners
Pilot demonstrations of incorporating healthy watersheds protection
into EPA programs
Purpose: To begin exploring how healthy watersheds protection can
strengthen our programs
Conduct multi-state or regional assessments (e.g., Region 4 Water-
shed Index Tool, Region 3 Natural Infrastructure), as appropriate
Purpose: To share data across state boundaries, enhance state as-
sessments, and help set protection and restoration priorities
Partners
NGOs, states,
Federal
Agencies
HQ, states
ORD, states,
and others
Ongoing
Protection (Goals 1,2 & 3)
Protection of healthy watersheds is implemented by
governments, the private sector, non-governmental
organizations (NGOs), citizens and others at the na-
tional, state and local scales. This can include a range
of actions (e.g., land acquisition, local planning and
zoning, land stewardship, conservation tax credits,
water resource policies, instream flow regulations, flood
hazard ordinances, river corridor protection programs,
invasive species prevention, watershed protection
plans), national programs (e.g., National Fish Habitat
Action Plan), healthy watersheds monitoring, education
and outreach, and many more.
Partnerships (Goals 1 & 3)
Outreach and Communications
(Goal 3)
Ongoing
Ongoing
2011 &
beyond
Provide technical assistance to states and local governments to
implement assessments, including one-on-one workshops, webi-
nars, funding, etc. (e.g., hydroecology, green infrastructure, fluvial
geomorphology, integrated assessments, vulnerability)
Purpose: To share the latest assessment methods
Provide guidance and technical assistance to states and local com-
munities on implementing healthy watersheds protection programs
Purpose: To help states and local communities protect healthy
watersheds
Partnerships with other Federal agencies, NGOs, etc.
Purpose: To collaborate on similar efforts and most effectively
implement healthy watersheds identification and protection
Develop healthy watersheds in-reach and outreach programs
Purpose: To educate staff and the public on healthy watersheds
protection and to involve them in implementing the HWI
Local
governments,
states, NGOs,
and others
Local
communities,
states, and
governments
Federal
agencies,
NGOs, others
HQ
15
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States
Actions
Healthy Watersheds Initiative I Part 3
States will be primary implementers of many healthy watershed assessments and protection programs and activities. States will play
a key role in identifying and tracking healthy watersheds. They also will work closely with local governments and others implementing
protection by providing assessment information and tools to protect healthy watersheds. In addition, states will implement protection
programs, for example, conservation tax credits, water quality anti-degradation, and instream flow (e.g., permits or water resource
policies). States will implement this by using partnerships with others, including working across state agencies.
Focus Area
When Action
Partners
Assessments (Goal 1)
Protection (Goals 1,2 & 3)
Partnerships (Goals 1 & 3)
Outreach and Communications
(Goal 3)
2011 & Inventory healthy watersheds using integrated assessments
beyond developed through collaboration across state agencies and with
other partners
Purpose: To identify healthy watersheds across the state for protec-
tion by collaborating with experts in related state programs across
agencies and with other partners
2011 & Complete and implement instream flow and other hydrological
beyond assessments (e.g., lake levels, groundwater) working across
state agencies
Purpose: To develop instream flow, lake level, and groundwater de-
pendent ecosystem protections in state programs and to strengthen
integrated healthy watersheds assessments
2011 & Complete and implement state-wide green infrastructure
beyond assessments
Purpose: To conserve green infrastructure to protect both aquatic
ecosystems and drinking water supplies, our natural heritage, and to
strengthen integrated healthy watersheds assessments
2015 & Complete state-wide fluvial geomorphic assessments and imple-
beyond ment river and stream corridor protection programs
Purpose: To protect natural stream dynamics and habitat; human
infrastructure and safety; adapt to climate change; and to strengthen
integrated healthy watersheds assessments
2011 & Develop and implement healthy watershed protection plans and
beyond programs both at the state level and in collaboration with the local
level (e.g., conservation tax credits), water quality anti-degradation,
CWA Section 401 certifications, instream flow (e.g., permits or water
resource policies), floodplain protection, etc.
Purpose: To protect a network of healthy watersheds across the
state and maintain the services they provide
Ongoing Develop collaborations with other states, Federal agencies, NGOs,
etc. to inventory and protect healthy watersheds
Purpose: To effectively implement healthy watersheds protection
with key partners and stakeholders
2011 & Develop healthy watersheds in-reach and outreach programs
beyond Purpose: To educate staff and the public on healthy watersheds
protection and to involve them in implementing the HWI
Other state
agencies
Federal
agencies,
states, NGOs,
and others
Federal
agencies,
states, NGOs,
and others
Federal
Emergency
Management
Agency, states,
other partners
Federal
agencies, local
government,
NGOs, and
others
Federal
agencies,
states, NGOs,
others
Other state
agencies,
NGOs, Federal
agencies,
others
16
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Part 4
mplementation Framework
Coordination and Communication
Overall coordination and communication will be maintained
through the HWI network of EPA Headquarters and Regional
Coordinators and our Federal and state partners under the
leadership of EPA Headquarters and the Lead Region. This will
take the form of periodic conference calls, electronic communi-
cations and national meetings. Task-specific teams will manage
their own projects with communications networks.
Tracking Progress
Progress on the actions will be tracked through an annual report
to the HWI Network and EPA management and posted on the
EPA healthy watersheds website (www.epa.gov/healthywater-
sheds). Additionally, the Office of Wetlands, Oceans, and Wa-
tersheds and the Lead Region will present an annual progress
report to senior Office of Water and Regional management.
Progress on some actions will be tracked through EPA's ac-
countability framework: EPA's Strategic Plan and National Water
Program Guidance.
Determining Success
Overall success is embodied in the HWI Vision statement:
Protect and maintain the aquatic ecological integrity of water-
sheds and supporting habitat networks to ensure that future
generations may enjoy these resources and the social and
economic benefits that they provide.
In the long-term, success would ultimately be that:
4 States conduct integrated assessments to identify
healthy watersheds.
4 States implement strategic protection and restoration
programs based on integrated healthy watersheds
assessments.
4 Localities and watershed organizations use data, informa-
tion, and support from states to protect healthy watersheds
in their comprehensive plans and land use regulations.
4 Partnerships are formed with key government, non-
government, public and other stakeholders to conduct
healthy watersheds assessments and protection activities
at the state and local levels.
4 EPA, states, local governments and others document
the status of healthy watersheds, ecological services
benefits to the economy, and the progress towards imple-
menting protective measures that maintain and increase
healthy watersheds.
Specific examples of success and what they might look like are
on the pages that follow:
I Headquarters
Example of Success:
EPA recognition of importance of protecting healthy watersheds
(e.g., the 2071 Coming Together for Clean Water: EPA's Strat-
egy to Protect America's Waters)
What Success Might Look Like
4 Each EPA Regional Office develops and implements a
healthy watersheds strategy.
4 EPA provides both technical and funding support to
states and other entities for identifying and protecting
healthy watersheds.
4 EPA integrates protection of healthy watersheds into all
applicable programs to better protect and restore aquatic
ecosystems.
Healthy watersheds protection as an EPA priority
Established funding source and associated guidance
Provisions for healthy watersheds protection in EPA program guidance (e.g.,
CWA Section 404, total maximum daily load, water quality integrated re-
ports, storm water permits, etc.)
Strong partnerships with national state organizations (e.g.,ASIWPCA,
AFWA, etc.), Federal agencies (e.g., Forest Service, Federal Housing
Administration, USFWS, USGS, USCOE, etc.), and NGOs (e.g.JNCJCF,
Trust for Public Land, etc.)
Public interest, awareness and support for protecting healthy
watersheds
17
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Healthy Watersheds Initiative
I REGIONS
Examples of Success:
Technical Assistance
Instream flow protection —EPA New England has worked
with the six New England states over the past few years to help
them develop policies, guidelines and regulations related to
protecting instream flows and aquatic resources, with particular
attention to key fish communities dependent on good water
quality and adequate base flow.
Watershed-based wetland mitigation—The States of New
Hampshire and Maine have been working with the New England
District of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and EPA New Eng-
land and have developed an "in-lieu fee" program for mitigation
of unavoidable wetland impacts as part of the CWA Section
404 permit process. This program allows for collection of a
"fee" based on the amount of impact. These fees are collected
across the state then distributed for projects that replace the
lost function and values, as well as implement priority restora-
tion and protection projects in the watershed, as determined by
a multi-agency and NGO review committee.
What Success Might Look Like
Prioritize National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System permits in
headwater streams for review/issuance, and prioritize permits else-
where based on ecological and cumulative impacts rather than size of
the discharge or permittee
Develop a set of criteria using healthy watersheds data for what we
expect for "avoidance and minimization" of wetland and water quality
impacts from residential development, including low impact develop-
ment practices and smart growth
I STATES
Examples of Success:
Protecting the Stream Corridor
Vermont River Corridor Protection Program
The Vermont River Corridor Protection Program is a program
of the Department of Environmental Conservation, within the
Agency of Natural Resources (ANR) that seeks to restore and
protect the natural values of rivers and minimize flood damage.
Achieving natural stream stability over time through a reduction
in riparian infrastructure can minimize cost from flood damage
and improve aquatic and riparian ecological integrity. Vermont
ANR provides technical assistance to communities throughout
the state to help delineate river corridors, develop municipal
fluvial erosion hazard zoning districts, and implement river cor-
ridor easements. The primary purpose of this delineation, with
respect to river corridor planning, is to capture the meander belt
and other active areas of the river that are likely to be inundated
or erode under flooding flows. As part of the stream geomor-
phic assessment, a stream sensitivity rating is assigned to each
reach based on existing stream type and geomorphic condition.
Based on the river corridor delineations, Vermont ANR works
with communities to develop river corridor plans that analyze
geomorphic condition, identify stressors and constraints to
stream equilibrium, and prioritize management strategies. By
focusing on "key attenuation assets", flood and fluvial erosion
hazards, water quality and habitat are improved at minimum
cost. Attenuation areas are captured in the corridor delinea-
tion process and include Active River Area components. The
river corridor plans are incorporated into existing watershed
plans, and ANR also works with municipalities to develop Fluvial
Erosion Hazard (FEH) Area Districts in their bylaws or zoning
ordinances. A River Corridor Easement Program also has been
established to purchase river channel management rights. This
prevents landowners from dredging and armoring the channel
and gives the easement holder the right to establish vegetated
buffers in the river corridor. So far, 19 river corridor easements
have been completed and 12 municipalities have adopted FEH
Area zones.
For more information, go to: http://www.anr.state.vt.us/dec/wa-
terq/rivers/htm/rv_restoration.htm
Critical Areas Protection
Washington Critical Areas Growth Management Act of 1990
Washington State adopted its Growth Management Act in re-
sponse to rapid uncoordinated and unplanned growth that was
threatening the environment, sustainable economic develop-
ment, and the health, safety and high quality of life afforded to
its citizens. The Act requires all Washington counties and cities
to designate and protect critical areas and natural resource
areas. Critical areas include wetlands, fish and wildlife habitat
conservation areas, aquifer recharge areas, frequently flooded
areas and geologically hazardous areas. Natural resource areas
include forest, agricultural and mineral lands. The Act has 14
18
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goals that include reducing sprawl by focusing growth in urban
areas, maintenance of natural resource-based industries and
encouragement of sustainable economic development, and
protection of the environment by retaining open space and habi-
tat areas. Based on county population and growth rate, some
counties (and all cities within them) are required to fully plan
under the Act, while others can choose to plan. All cities and
counties, however, are required to designate and protect critical
areas, and are given wide latitude on how to do so as long as
they use the "best available science" and give special consider-
ation to the protection of anadromous fish habitat.
Washington State provides technical assistance and other plan-
ning tools to assist communities with their performance-based
goals. Snohomish County is an example of a local government
adopting a wide variety of these techniques.
For more information, go to: http://www.commerce.wa.gov/
site/418/default.aspx
I LOCAL LEVEL
Examples of Success:
Protecting and Restoring Instream Flow
Meeting Urban Water Demands While Protecting Rivers,
Rivanna River Basin, Virginia (Richter B., 2007)
The Rivanna River Basin contains some of the highest quality
river and stream systems located in piedmont Virginia. In ad-
dition to having numerous endemic and rare species, the rivers
provide recreational opportunities and drinking water for the
growing population of Charlottesville and the surrounding area.
The Rivanna Water and Sewer Authority partnered with The
Nature Conservancy to develop a new water supply plan that
meets growing water demands and improves river ecosystem
health. The new plan mimics natural flow regimes through con-
trolled dam releases while ensuring adequate water supplies
during drought. The releases are calculated as varying percent-
ages of the inflow to the reservoir.
For more information, go to: http://www.nature.org/initiatives/
freshwater/files/awwa Journal June07_richter.pdf
Watershed-Based Zoning
Watershed-Based Zoning in James City County, Virginia
James City County, Virginia, completed its Powhatan Creek
Watershed Management Plan in 2001. Due to the rapid devel-
opment experienced in the previous two decades, the county
decided to pursue a watershed-based zoning approach to pro-
tect its high-quality streams from future development impacts.
An impervious cover and instream/riparian habitat assessment
categorized each of the county's subwatersheds as Excellent,
Good, Fair or Poor. Using a combination of innovative land use
planning techniques, including TDR, conservation development,
rezoning, and resource protection overlay districts, the county
has directed growth away from its most sensitive and ecological-
ly valuable subwatershed and developed strategies to minimize
further impacts in those degraded subwatersheds designated for
growth. Each subwatershed also was targeted for other specific
management measures to either conserve, protect or restore
streams according to the level of threat imposed on each.
For more information, go to: http://www.jccegov.com/
environmental/index.html
19
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Healthy Watersheds Initiative I Part 4
I Summary
of Actions
Healthy Watersheds Initiative Vision:
Protect and maintain the aquatic ecological integrity of watersheds and supporting habitat networks to ensure that future generations
may enjoy these resources and the social and economic benefits they provide
HWI
Components
Integrated assessments
State-wide protection strategies
for priority watersheds
Multi-partner implementation of conservation
and protection priorities
Goals/
Objectives
Identify, protect and maintain net- Integrate HW into EPA programs
work of healthy watersheds and
supportive green infrastructure
* State-wide assessments
* Watershed goals strategic
protection programs
Policy and guidance
Funding resources
Progress measures
Build awareness and support
* Public outreach programs
* Support local and regional planning
commissions and governments for
implementing programs
EPA
Strategies for
Implementation
Program Integration
Provide Technical Assistance
Action Plan
| Policy/Guidance
Policy statement making
healthy watersheds protection
a priority and an integral part
of water quality and watershed
programs
Timeframe: 2011
HWI measures for the EPA Stra-
tegic Plan and National Water
Program Guidance
Timeframe: 2011 &
ongoing
Identify funding sources and
guidance to support programs
Timeframe: 2011 &
ongoing
Annual HWI report and guide-
lines for reporting activities and
progress
Timeframe: 2012
Integrate healthy watersheds
protection into EPA programs
and guidelines for leveraging and
working with EPA's programs
Timeframe: 2012
Regional healthy watersheds
strategies
Timeframe: 2011
Regional pilot demonstrations
of incorporating healthy wa-
tersheds protection into EPA
programs
Timeframe: 2011-2012
Assessments/Protection/Research
* Healthy Watersheds technical document
Timeframe: Fall 2011
* Integrated assessment expert workshop
Timeframe: November 2010
* Healthy Watersheds research plan to
identify critical research and methods
needed for improved healthy watersheds
assessments, including social and economic
benefits assessments, and social marketing
Timeframe: 2012
Multi-state or regional assessments
Timeframe: Ongoing
Technical assistance to states on healthy
watersheds assessments
Timeframe: Ongoing
State inventories of healthy watersheds
Timeframe: 2011 & beyond
State instream flow assessments and
implementation
Timeframe: 2011 & beyond
State green infrastructure assessments
and implementation
Timeframe: 2011 & beyond
State fluvial geomorphic assessments and
river/stream corridor protection programs
Timeframe: 2015 & beyond
State healthy watershed protection plans
and programs
Timeframe: 2011 & beyond
Collaborate With
Multiple Partners at
Multiple Scales
Partnerships
* Statement of intent
among partners to work
together to identify and
protect healthy water-
sheds
Timeframe: 2011
* MOUs with other
Federal agencies
Timeframe: 2011 &
beyond
Partnerships with TNC&
USGS on instream flow
and with TCF, SWC on
green infrastructure
Timeframe: 2011&
ongoing
Partnerships with na-
tional state organizations
Timeframe: 2011&
ongoing
Regional partnerships
with other Federal agen-
cies, NGOs, etc.
Timeframe: Ongoing
State partnerships with
other states, Federal
agencies, NGOs, etc.
Timeframe: Ongoing
Build Awareness and
Support
Outreach/Communications
* Communications
Strategy
Timeframe: 2011
* Update website
Timeframe: Ongoing
* Webinars
Timeframe: 2011 &
ongoing
* White paper on econom-
ic and social benefits
Timeframe: 2011
* Regional in-reach and
outreach programs
Timeframe: 2011 &
beyond
* State in-reach and out-
reach programs
Timeframe: 2011 &
beyond
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