Or. Admin. Code § 635-100-0140 - Endangered Species Management Plans for State Land Owning or Managing Agencies
(1) Within four
months of its decision to list a species as endangered, the commission shall
determine if state land can play a role in the conservation of the species. In
making this determination, the commission shall consult and coordinate with the
appropriate state land owning or managing agencies.
(2) The commission shall consider the
species' biology and the geography of the land base (i.e., location, quality
and quantity of the species' habitats) to determine if the species or its
habitat is found on state land.
(a) If
neither the species nor its habitat is found on state land, the commission
shall determine that state land has no role to play in the conservation of the
species. If the commission makes such a determination, then state land owning
and managing agencies shall not be required to prepare an endangered species
management plan.
(b) If the species
or its habitat is found on state land, the commission shall consider the impact
state agency actions may have on the species and its habitat in determining
whether the state land can play a role in the conservation of the species. If
the commission determines that state land can play a role, it shall notify the
affected state land owning or managing agencies in writing.
(3) Once notified that state land
can play a role in conservation of the species, each agency shall, in
consultation with the department, determine the role the state land it owns or
manages shall serve in the conservation of the species. This role may include,
but is not limited to, conservation, contribution toward conservation or take
avoidance. In making this determination, each agency shall balance the
following:
(a) The statutory or
constitutional requirements, rules and policies applicable to the agency's
programs;
(b) The social and
economic impacts that conservation would have on the state;
(c) The conservation needs of the
species;
(d) The purpose of the
state land; and
(e) The roles that
land other than state land will play in the conservation of the
species.
(4) The agencies
shall balance the factors listed in section (3) of this rule consistent with
the biological aspects of species management identified by the department and
the statutory or constitutional obligations of the agencies (including the
land's statutory purpose).
(5) To
carry out its consultation role under this rule, the department shall provide
the agencies with an assessment of the conservation needs of the species, as
well as a list of the existing management rules, plans and other management
guidelines and biological information related to management of the listed
species. The assessment of the conservation needs of the species should be
based on the information and factors the commission considered in listing the
species. In order to expedite the development of endangered species management
plans, the department shall provide this information in as timely a manner as
possible.
(6) After determining the
role its land shall play, each agency shall develop, and approve according to
the agency's procedures, an endangered species management plan within 18 months
of the commission's decision to list a species as endangered. The agency shall
develop the plan in consultation with the department and consistent with this
rule. The plan shall address, at a minimum:
(a) What state land is covered by the
plan;
(b) What role that state land
is to play in conservation of the species and how the agency defined that role
(i.e., how the agency balanced the factors listed in sections (3) and (4) of
this rule);
(c) How the agency will
manage the state land to achieve its defined role;
(d) Whether the agency will monitor
implementation of the plan, and if so, how and when;
(e) Whether the agency will reassess and
review the plan and its implementation, and if so, how and when. For example,
the agency may determine that new biological information, catastrophic events,
changes in the species' listing status, changes in land use practices, or other
factors will trigger the agency's reassessment and review of the
plan;
(f) How the agency's plan
relates to other state agency endangered species management plans, federal
recovery plans and state and other recover efforts;
(g) What process the agency used in
developing the plan, including the review and approval process, if
any.
(h) The agency shall submit
the plan to the commission for review and approval. The commission shall review
the plan to determine whether it achieves the role defined for the affected
land is consistent with the commission's rules for endangered species
management plans. If the commission determines that, based on the biology of
the endangered species, the plan does not achieve the define role, in
consultation with the agency, it may modify the plan as necessary to be
consistent with the role as defined under section (3) of this rule. The
commission shall approve the plan as submitted or modified within 24 months
from the date the species listed as endangered.
(7) Once the commission approves an agency's
endangered species management plan, the agency's plan shall supersede the
survival guidelines for the species for purposes of implementing ORS
496.182(3).
Notes
Stat. Auth.: ORS 496.004, 496.171, 496.172, 496.182, 496.192 & 498.026
Stats. Implemented: ORS 496.004, 496.171, 496.172, 496.182, 496.192 & 498.026
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