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Land-Based Wind Energy Guidelines Near Completion
January 5, 2012

The Service anticipates the finalization of its voluntary Land-Based Wind Energy Guidelines in early 2012. The Guidelines are designed to provide federal and state agencies, developers, and consultants with a process for planning, operating and monitoring wind energy facilities that minimize impacts to birds, bats and other wildlife. The final Guidelines will incorporate the advice of the Wind Turbine Guidelines Advisory Committee and comments from the public. The Committee included representatives of federal and state agencies, tribes, wind energy development organizations, and wildlife conservation organizations, and was formed to provide the Service with advice and recommendations on its land-based wind energy guidelines. A Notice of Availability will be published in the Federal Register to announce when the Guidelines are finalized. The Guidelines will be implemented on a voluntary basis immediately upon publication. Training on the Guidelines is under development and will be available within six months of publication.

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Guidance on Wind Energy Development Published in Federal Register Today
February 18, 2011

On February 8, 2011, the Service released two draft documents containing guidelines designed to provide agency employees, developers, other federal agencies and state organizations information needed to make the best possible decisions in the review and selection of sites for wind energy facilities to avoid and minimize negative impacts to fish, wildlife, plants and their habitats. The guidelines have now been published in the Federal Register (February 18, 2011) and are now open for public comment for 90 days until May 19, 2011.

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Federal Register Links:
Draft Eagle Conservation Plan Guidance
Draft Land-Based Wind Energy Guidelines

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Secretary of the Interior Salazar Announces Additional Steps toward Smarter Development of Renewable Energy on U.S. Public Lands
February 8, 2011

Photo Caption: Wind Turbines Credit: Joshua Winchell / USFWS
Photo Caption: Wind Turbines Credit: Joshua Winchell / USFWS

Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar today announced a number of initiatives designed to encourage rapid and responsible development of renewable energy on public lands. The proposals from the Department's Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) and the policy guidance from the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) provide clarity and guidance to stakeholders, including developers and employees, about smart siting and effective mitigation for renewable energy projects.

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Draft Land-Based Wind Energy Guidelines
Draft Voluntary Land-Based Wind Energy Guidelines Factsheet

Draft Voluntary, Land-Based Wind Energy Guidelines Questions and Answers
Draft Eagle Conservation Plan Guidance
Golden Eagles Status Fact Sheet

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International Exchange
November 15, 2010

Bill Wilen with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service's National Wetlands Inventory program recently traveled to Mexico to deliver several presentations on the U.S. National Wetlands Inventory. Mexico is considering developing its own wetlands inventory and is looking to the Service's National Wetlands Inventory and biological expertise as an example of how to develop a national program.

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U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to Develop Environmental Impact Statement On Proposed Habitat Conservation Plan Process for Ohio Wind Project
June 4, 2010

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is developing an Environmental Impact Statement to evaluate the effects on endangered Indiana bats of issuing an incidental take permit under the Endangered Species Act for a wind energy project in Champaign County, Ohio. 

The incidental take permit, requested by EverPower Wind Holdings, Inc., would cover take of the Indiana bat that is incidental to activities associated with the construction and operation of EverPower’s Buckeye Wind Energy project.

EverPower is planning to develop a wind energy facility spread over about 80,050 acres in Champaign County, Ohio.  Development would include installation of up to 100 wind turbines and associated collection lines, access roads, utility lines, substations, and operation and maintenance facility buildings.   Within the 80,050-acre project area, about 500 acres would be disturbed by construction.  Following restoration, the permanent operating footprint will be approximately 100 acres.

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U.S. Army Fort Stewart Military Reservation Receives National Conservation Award
March 26, 2010

Longleaf pine
longleaf pine
Fort Stewart today received the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service's 2009 Military Conservation Partner Award recognizing an extraordinary conservation partnership that, among other highlights, has seen the state's largest red-cockaded woodpecker population more than double in 15 years.
 
Rowan Gould, the Service's Acting Director, made the announcement at the 75th North American Wildlife and Natural Resources Conference in Wisconsin, citing its bold conservation partnership that features enhancing growing red-cockaded woodpecker populations, supporting the recovery of nearly two dozen other threatened and endangered species, and promoting outdoor recreational opportunities to hunt, fish, and watch wildlife. Conservation work at Fort Stewart, located in southeastern Georgia, and the largest army installation eats of the Mississippi, is led by Thomas Fry, chief of the Army's Environmental and Natural Resources Division, and his staff. 
 
“The Service is proud to honor Fort Stewart’s exceptional accomplishments in endangered species conservation and propagation, environmental education, and community outreach,” Gould said. “Fort Stewart’s environmental program is extremely comprehensive. They do everything from contributing 254 juvenile red-cockaded woodpeckers to the Service’s translocation program to hosting an annual Kid’s Fishing Event.”

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World Wetlands Day, 2010
February 2, 2010

Padding fun - Credit USFWS
Padding fun

What is World Wetlands Day? 2 February each year is World Wetlands Day. It marks the date of the signing of the Convention on Wetlands on 2 February 1971, in the Iranian city of Ramsar on the shores of the Caspian Sea. WWD was celebrated for the first time in 1997 and made an encouraging beginning. Each year, government agencies, non-governmental organizations, and groups of citizens at all levels of the community have taken advantage of the opportunity to undertake actions aimed at raising public awareness of wetland values and benefits in general and the Ramsar Convention in particular. From 1997 to 2009, the Convention’s Web site has posted reports from more than 98 countries of WWD activities of all sizes and shapes, from lectures and seminars, nature walks, children’s art contests, sampan races, and community clean-up days, to radio and television interviews and letters to newspapers, to the launch of new wetland policies, new Ramsar sites, and new programmes at the national level.

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ASARCO Settlement Provides $194 Million for Federal, State and Tribal Wildlife and Habitat Resource Restoration
December 10, 2009

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar announced today that an environmental damage settlement with ASARCO LLC, a North American mining conglomerate, would provide about $194 million for the recovery of wildlife, habitat and other natural resources managed by Interior, state, and tribal governments at more than a dozen sites around the nation. “Through this historic settlement, the American public is compensated for the damage and loss of natural resources resulting from ASARCO’s past mining, smelting and refining operations,” Secretary Salazar said. “Were it not for this agreement, these injured resources would either remain impaired for future generations or require taxpayer expenditures to achieve environmental restoration.”“This is a milestone not only for the Federal Government but also for Interior and its Natural Resource Damage Assessment and Restoration Program,” Salazar said. “It exemplifies government working effectively for the American taxpayer to recover damages from polluters and restore and protect significant national landscapes and wildlife resources that have been injured.” Assistant Secretary for Fish Wildlife and Parks Tom Strickland called the settlement the type of environmental enforcement action that ensures that those responsible for polluting the nation’s landscapes and waterways are made to pay for their actions. “I want to commend the extraordinary level and amount of federal, state and tribal cooperation and coordination that accomplished this settlement,” Strickland said.

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Salazar Cites Progress on New Energy Frontier in Hill Speech
September 17, 2009

WASHINGTON, D.C. – The Interior Department is making swift progress on President Obama’s clean energy agenda, Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar said today at the Alliance to Save Energy’s Summit in the Russell Senate Office Building, Washington, D.C. The full text of Secretary Salazar’s remarks, as prepared for delivery, are below:

Thank you, Kateri. And thank you to the entire Alliance to Save Energy for your leadership. It is great to be back among so many people I know here in the Senate.

Being here today reminds me just how much our world has changed in the last nine months.

When I left the Senate in January to serve in President Obama’s Cabinet, we were in the throes of the greatest economic recession since the 1930s. Credit was frozen. 700,000 people were losing their jobs every month. Five trillion dollars of Americans' household wealth had evaporated in just three months. It seemed the nation was heading off an economic cliff.

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Salazar Announces Guidelines to Protect Endangered Indiana Bat from Surface Coal Mining Impacts
September 3, 2009

Indiana Bat. Credit: USFWS
Photo of an Indiana Bat
Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar today announced the availability of coal mining guidelines developed to conserve and protect the endangered Indiana bat. The bat’s habitat stretches from the eastern United States through the Midwest, including 13 states with coal mining operations.

“These guidelines provide coal mining companies a set of consistent and reasonable protective measures they can use when their proposed operations could impact the Indiana bat and its critical habitat,” Secretary Salazar said. “This technical guidance was developed through extensive state and federal collaboration and will assist companies in complying with the requirements of the Endangered Species Act.

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Secretary Salazar, Western Governors and Western Area Power Administration Join Together to Extend Program to Recover Endangered Colorado River Fish
August 27, 2009

DENVER, CO – Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar, Colorado Governor Bill Ritter, Jr.; former Utah Governor Jon Huntsman, Jr.; Wyoming Governor Dave Freudenthal; and Western Area Power Administration Administrator Timothy Meeks renewed their commitment to a nationally recognized program that is working to recover endangered fishes in the Upper Colorado River Basin while water development continues in accordance with state and federal laws.    

These leaders signed an extension of a cooperative agreement for the Upper Colorado River Endangered Fish Recovery Program that will extend the program through 2023.  The extension will ensure continued cooperative work to recover the endangered bonytail, humpback chub, Colorado pikeminnow and razorback sucker while water development continues for agricultural, hydroelectric and municipal uses in the Upper Colorado River Basin.

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Federal Wetlands Mapping Standard Approved
August 18, 2009

Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar announced today the adoption of a Wetlands Mapping Standard that provides minimum requirements and guidelines for wetlands mapping efforts. The new standard is designed to guide current and future wetlands digital mapping projects and enhance the overall quality and consistency of wetlands data. Quality data on wetlands are considered critical for planning effective conservation strategies to benefit fish and wildlife resources now and in the future. 

Wetlands are among the Nation’s most biologically productive and economically important habitat types. Major emerging conservation issues, such as changing temperatures, sea-level rise, increasing storm severity, drought, energy development, and species declines are making the need for contemporary geospatial resource information even more important. Wetlands cover approximately five percent of the surface of the conterminous United States and are abundant in certain states and rare in others.

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Secretary Salazar Announces $454,000 for Lake Michigan Coastal Habitat Restoration in Wisconsin; Partners Break Ground for Ozaukee County Project
August 13, 2009

Charles Wooley (Deputy Midwest Regional Director), Darin Simpkins (GBFO - Coastal Program), Gary VanVreede (GBFO - Partners for Fish and Wildlife), Craig Czarnecki (East Lansing, MI Project Leader), Louise Clemency (Green Bay Project Leader)
Charles Wooley (Deputy Midwest Regional Director), Darin Simpkins (GBFO - Coastal Program), Gary VanVreede (GBFO - Partners for Fish and Wildlife), Craig Czarnecki (East Lansing, MI Project Leader), Louise Clemency (Green Bay Project Leader)

Today Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar announced that the Ozaukee-Washington Land Trust has received $454,000 in funding from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act. The funding supports the restoration and enhancement of coastal wetlands, forests, shrublands, and grasslands on a 116-acre tract in Ozaukee County, Wisconsin, which will provide critically needed stopover habitat for birds that migrate over Lake Michigan.

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U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Will Host Public Meetings on Coastal Barrier Resources System Pilot Project Units
June 29, 2009

Report to Congress: John H. Chafee Coastal Barrier Resources System Digital Mapping Pilot Project
Pilot Project
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Service) will conduct several virtual town hall meetings on the recently submitted Report to Congress: John H. Chafee Coastal Barrier Resources System Digital Mapping Pilot Project. The Service is soliciting public input on the report and draft maps during a 120-day public comment period that closes on August 5, 2009.

The Service will hold the public meetings via webcast and teleconference on July 14-15, 2009. This will provide an overview of the pilot project effort and offer an opportunity for questions and answers by the public and press. Members of the public planning to participate must register at www.fws.gov/habitatconservation/coastal_barrier.html by close of business on July 10, 2009. Registrants will be provided with instructions for participation via e-mail. Participants must have access to a computer and telephone to fully participate

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Service Releases Stock Assessment Reports on Polar Bears, Walrus
June 18, 2009

Polar bear female with young. Credit: USFWS
Polar bear female with young
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Service) has prepared draft revised marine mammal stock assessment reports (SARs) for the two stocks of polar bear and the Pacific walrus in Alaska. The purpose of SARs is to identify marine mammal stocks most affected by interactions with commercial fisheries. These reports are periodically updated to reflect the most current information and the draft reports are available for public review and comment. The public comment period will run for 90 days following the June 18th publication in the Federal Register. Interested parties may contact the Marine Mammals Management Office, 1011 East Tudor Road, Anchorage, AK 99503 for copies of the reports, or can view them online at:
 

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The Rapanos / Carabell Supreme Court Decision and Implications for Jurisdiction under the Clean Water Act

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Last updated: March 26, 2012
Fisheries and Habitat Conservation
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