Hunting Washington Forum
Community => Advocacy, Agencies, Access => Topic started by: fair-chase on June 11, 2012, 02:13:58 PM
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WDFW NEWS RELEASE
Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife
600 Capitol Way North, Olympia, WA 98501-1091
http://wdfw.wa.gov/
June 11, 2012
Contact: Jeff Davis, (360) 902-2527
New permit fee supports protection
of state’s fisheries and aquatic health
OLYMPIA – Starting July 10, the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) will charge $150 to process the state permit required for construction projects in and around state waters.
The permit, called a hydraulic project approval (HPA), has been issued to the public at no direct cost since 1943, when it was created by the state Legislature to ensure that projects such as bulkheads, culverts and dock construction meet state standards for fish and shellfish protection.
This year, after a series of state budget cuts, the Legislature authorized WDFW to begin charging applicants to help meet the administrative costs of assessing proposed projects and recommending ways to reduce their effects on the marine and freshwater environment.
“The HPA program provides baseline protection for all of our state’s fish and shellfish resources including salmon, a northwest icon,” said Jeff Davis, WDFW program manager. “It’s a lot more cost-efficient to head off environmental problems than to correct them after the damage has been done.”
While requests for HPAs have remained steady at about 4,500 per year, Davis said state funding for the $7 million program has declined by approximately $2 million since 2000. Since then, the number of biologists deployed across the state to assess HPA projects has declined from 51 to 37.
The new application fee is expected to raise approximately $400,000 per year to help make up for some of those cutbacks, Davis said.
“This funding will help us get biologists back out into the field where they can help people protect fish and get their projects completed,” he said. “Our opportunity to ensure a successful project is directly related to the amount of time we can spend with applicants when they design their project and start work.”
Some HPA applications will be exempt from the new fee under the legislation approved this year. These include small-scale mineral prospecting, some agricultural projects and other “pamphlet” HPAs defined in state law. A new version of the application form, called a Joint Aquatic Resources Permit Application, or JARPA, will be available to applicants after June 29 from the Washington State Office of Regulatory Assistance’s website at www.epermitting.org.
Several new provisions also include changes designed to streamline the permitting process, such as:
Allowing WDFW to authorize minor modifications in the “work window” (timing) for some projects without the need to reissue an HPA.
Authorizing WDFW to issue a general permit for maintenance of marinas and marine terminals, provided the department is notified of the work 14 days in advance.
Integrating WDFW fish protection standards into forestry practices applications, and eliminating the need to obtain an HPA for forestry projects by Dec. 31, 2013.
“All of these changes will help us serve the public better and focus more attention on the high-priority projects that pose the greatest risk to the species that depend on state waters for their survival,” Davis said.
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I never could understand why they weren't already charging a fee for hydraulic permit review. :dunno: I don't think I have a problem with this one.,,,,,,,,,,,,,
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Just another tax. I'm sure our fearless leaders years ago figured this and other things were covered with all the other fees collected through government. If not there I'm sure somewhere this and other things help justify additional federal funding etc. Now they begin to single out things to charge for. It has and will just escalate to other charges....Discovery Pass ring a bell..
For crying out loud....cut none needed middle level management jobs in government. There's an abundance of those.....live within your budget for once. Example in our case..... if say gas went up a dollar a gallon we could then charge our boss a inflation fee to cover it. Get real.
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HPA permits are a racket! They reqire YOU to tell them there is water on your place... They get you because you want to do somehting and they require you to get permission and pay a fee.. If it were me I would up on the rules and do every by the book except telling them about it. :twocents:
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Here's a quote from the news release.......
“This funding will help us get biologists back out into the field where they can help people protect fish and get their projects completed,” he said. “Our opportunity to ensure a successful project is directly related to the amount of time we can spend with applicants when they design their project and start work.”
What they don't tell you is those "biologists" are already on staff. The fees have nothing at all to do with HPA's and the ability to put bios in the field to do the work, but rather prioritizing the biologists time and duties for those who are already on staff and working. "Help us get the biologists back out in the field"? That's where they should be you morons, not behind a desk playing journal jockey.
These are the same biologists who spend countless hours test fishing lakes and streams statewide prior to the general opener as part of their duties to inform the papers so that the papers can tell you, that you can expect to catch 8- 12 inch rainbows at whatever lake you may be heading to. Geez.... the hatchery folks who plant the lakes can provide that information for crying out loud. Maybe HPA's should rank higher than test fishing huh? There are other things on the biologist plates that could be shuffled around to accommodate "the getting back out in the field". :bash:
Smoke and mirrors folks, nothing more. Those bios have plenty of time to allocate an occasional HPA trip in route to their normal daily/weekly/monthly activities. What a lame excuse. Typical of what WDFW has become.