ML13063A517

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2013/02/28 NRR E-mail Capture - Official Species List for Project: Hatch Nuclearplant
ML13063A517
Person / Time
Site: Hatch  Southern Nuclear icon.png
Issue date: 02/28/2013
From:
US Dept of Interior (DOI)
To:
Office of Nuclear Reactor Regulation
References
Download: ML13063A517 (8)


Text

1 NRR-PMDAPEm Resource From: ecos-support@fws.gov Sent: Thursday, February 28, 2013 10:19 AM To: Logan, Dennis

Subject:

Official Species list for project: Hatch NuclearPlant Attachments:

Official_Species_List_GA ESFO.pdfThis email contains a US Fish and Wildlife Service official species list for your project (Hatch NuclearPlant) from the following office:

GEORGIA ECOLOGICAL SERVICES FIELD OFFICE 105 WESTPARK DRIVE WESTPARK CENTER SUITE D ATHENS, GA 30606 (706) 613-9493

If you have any problems opening the document, please contact our help desk at http://ecos.fws.gov/ecos/helpdesk.do

Hearing Identifier: NRR_PMDA Email Number: 621 Mail Envelope Properties (1579049231.151362064710952.JavaMail.root)

Subject:

Official Species list for project: Hatch NuclearPlant Sent Date: 2/28/2013 10:18:30 AM Received Date: 2/28/2013 10:18:32 AM From: ecos-support@fws.gov Created By: ecos-support@fws.gov Recipients: "Logan, Dennis" <Dennis.Logan@nrc.gov>

Tracking Status: None

Post Office: ifw9ecos-pkas01.tat.fws.gov Files Size Date & Time MESSAGE 423 2/28/2013 10:18:32 AM Official_Species_List_GA ESFO.pdf 42219 Options Priority: Standard Return Notification: No Reply Requested: No Sensitivity: Normal Expiration Date: Recipients Received:

United States Department of the Interior FISH AND WILDLIFE SERVICE GEORGIA ECOLOGICAL SERVICES FIELD OFFICE 105 WESTPARK DRIVE, WESTPARK CENTER SUITE D ATHENS, GA 30606 PHONE: (706)613-9493 FAX: (706)613-6059Consultation Tracking Number: 04EG1000-2013-SLI-0435February 28, 2013 Project Name: Hatch NuclearPlant

Subject:

List of threatened and endangered species that may occur in your proposed project location, and/or may be affected by your proposed project.

To Whom It May Concern:

The enclosed species list identifies threatened, endangered, and proposed species, designated critical habitat, and candidate species that may occur within the boundary of your proposed project and/or may be affected by your proposed project. The species list fulfills the requirements of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Service) under section 7(c) of the Endangered Species Act (Act) of 1973, as amended (16 U.S.C. 1531 ).

et seq.New information based on updated surveys, changes in the abundance and distribution of species, changed habitat conditions, or other factors could change this list. Please feel free to

contact us if you need assistance regarding potential impacts to federally proposed, listed, and candidate species and federally-designated and proposed critical habitat. Please note that under 50 CFR 402.12(e) of the regulations implementing section 7 of the Act, the accuracy of this

species list should be verified after 90 days. This verification can be completed formally or

informally as desired. The Service recommends that verification be completed by visiting the ECOS-IPaC website at regular intervals during project planning and implementation for updates to species lists and information.

The Endangered Species Act prohibits "take" of a listed species of fish or wildlife, where take is defined as to harass, harm, pursue, hunt, shoot, wound, kill, trap, capture, or

collect a listed species and/or to degrade habitat such that the action kills or injures a listed

species by significantly impairing essential behavioral patterns, such as breeding, feeding or sheltering.p> Development activities that increase impervious surface and stormwater runoff can degrade habitat for federally-protected aquatic species by:

Requiring culverts or other instream structures that block fish passage and reduce stream channel and bank stability; Increasing turbidity in stream systems during land-disturbing activities; Causing long term declines in water quality due to increased concentrations of herbicides, pesticides, sediment, and other pollutants in stormwater flowing from the site; and/or

Altering downstream hydrology in stream systems due to increased stormwater runoff, with resulting downstream channel scour, reduced bank stability, and increased long-term sedimentation and turbidity.

We recommend that proponents of urban development projects contact us early in the design process to discuss construction and maintenance best management practices that will minimize impacts of development on rare fish and other aquatic species.

In general, we recommend the following measures for post-construction stormwater management, road and

utility crossings, and grading, in addition to adequate sediment and erosion control, protection

of riparian buffers, and control of stormwater during construction.

Stormwater Runoff Infiltrate excess stormwater generated by the development.

Design and implement structural and non-structural BMPs so that all runoff from

impervious surfaces is directed to on-site stormwater controls.

Use numerous distributed stormwater BMPs located as close as possible to runoff-generating sources. A distributed stormwater management system is less prone to

environmentally damaging failure than a system that relies on a single facility to serve an

entire site.(recommendations meet Corps requirements for use of NWP 14)

Road Crossings Bridge any stream with a drainage area equal to or greater than 20 sqmi.

Cross streams with a drainage area smaller than 20 sqmi and larger than 0.2 sqmi with

bridges, bottomless culverts, or embedded box or pipe culverts. Multi-barrel culverts should be designed using box culverts, preferably with a bottomless center barrel(s).

Accommodate bank-full flows at all road crossings, and culvert floodplains, where

present, to allow sheetflow of stormwaters.

Embed all culverts (except bottomless) 25% of their diameter or rise and place them at the existing channel slope.

Design all stream crossings to maximize infiltration of stormwater runoff generated by

roadways.Utility Crossings Use isolation crossing methods and limit open trench work to periods outside the goldline darter spawning period Grading Limit the surface area of erodible material at one time to 17 acres Leave at least 30% of all areas of a site that contain slopes equal to or greater than 25%

over a contiguous area of at least 5000 sqft ungraded.

Bald and golden eagles are protected under the Bald and Golden Eagle Protection Act (16U.S.C. 668 ). Projects affecting these species may require development of an eagle et seq.conservation plan (http://www.fws.gov/windenergy/eagle_guidance.html).

Wind energy projects should follow the wind energy guidelines http://www.fws.gov/windenergy/ for minimizing impacts to migratory birds and bats.

Guidance for minimizing impacts to migratory birds for projects including communications towers (e.g., cellular, digital television, radio, and emergency broadcast) can be found at:

http://www.fws.gov/migratorybirds/CurrentBirdIssues/Hazards/towers/towers.htm;

http://www.towerkill.com; and http://www.fws.gov/migratorybirds/CurrentBirdIssues/Hazards/towers/comtow.html.

We appreciate your concern for threatened and endangered species. The Service encourages Federal agencies to include conservation of threatened and endangered species into their project planning to further the purposes of the Act. Please include the Consultation Tracking Number in the header of this letter with any request for consultation or correspondence about your project

that you submit to our office.

Attachment http://ecos.fws.gov/ipac, 02/28/2013 08:18 AMPage1 Official Species List Provided by:

GEORGIA ECOLOGICAL SERVICES FIELD OFFICE 105 WESTPARK DRIVE

WESTPARK CENTER SUITE D

ATHENS, GA 30606

(706) 613-9493 Consultation Tracking Number:

04EG1000-2013-SLI-0435 Project Type:

Power Generation Project

Description:

Request to the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission to revise the minimum water level at which the Hatch Nuclear Plant can withdraw cooling water from the Altahama River.

United States Department of Interior Fish and Wildlife Service Project name: Hatch NuclearPlant http://ecos.fws.gov/ipac, 02/28/2013 08:18 AMPage2 Project Counties:

Toombs, GA United States Department of Interior Fish and Wildlife Service Project name: Hatch NuclearPlant http://ecos.fws.gov/ipac, 02/28/2013 08:18 AMPage3 Endangered Species Act Species List Species lists are not entirely based upon the current range of a species but may also take into consideration actions that affect a species that exists in another geographic area. For example, certain fish may appear on the species list because a

project could affect downstream species. Please contact the designated FWS office if you have questions.

Altamaha Spinymussel (Elliptio spinosa)

Population: Entire Listing Status: Endangered

Critical Habitat: Final designated Eastern Indigo snake (Drymarchon corais couperi)

Population: Entire Listing Status: Threatened Gopher tortoise (Gopherus polyphemus)

Population: eastern Listing Status: Candidate Shortnose sturgeon (Acipenser brevirostrum)

Population: Entire Listing Status: Endangered United States Department of Interior Fish and Wildlife Service Project name: Hatch NuclearPlant