Or. Admin. Code § 690-600-0050 - Eligible Project Planning Studies
(1) Project planning studies eligible for
funding under the Program may include:
(a)
Analyses of hydrological refill capacity;
(b) Water needs analyses;
(c) Refined hydrological analyses;
(d) Engineering and financial feasibility
studies;
(e) Geologic
analyses;
(f) Water exchange
studies;
(g) Analyses of by-pass,
optimum peak, flushing and other ecological flows of the affected stream and
the impact of a proposed water conservation, reuse or storage project on those
flows;
(h) Comparative analyses of
alternative means of supplying water, including but not limited to the costs
and benefits of conservation and efficiency alternatives and the extent to
which long-term water supply needs may be met using those
alternatives;
(i) Analyses of
environmental harm or impacts from a proposed water conservation, reuse or
storage project;
(j) Analyses of
public benefits accruing from a proposed water conservation, reuse or storage
project;
(k) Fiscal analyses of a
proposed water conservation, reuse or storage project, including estimated
project costs, financing for the project and projected financial returns from
the project;
(l) Hydrological
analyses of a proposed water conservation, reuse or storage project, including
the anticipated effects of climate change on hydrological refill capacity;
and
(m) Analyses of potential water
quality impacts of the project.
(2) If a planning study concerns a proposed
storage project that would impound surface water on a perennial stream or
divert water from a stream that supports sensitive, threatened or endangered
fish or divert more than 500 acre-feet of surface water annually; grant funding
may be provided only if the study contains:
(a) Analyses of by-pass, optimum peak,
flushing and other ecological flows of the affected stream and the impact of
the storage project on those flows;
(b) Comparative analyses of alternative means
of supplying water, including but not limited to the costs and benefits of
conservation and efficiency alternatives and the extent to which long-term
water supply needs may be met using those alternatives;
(c) Analyses of environmental harm or impacts
from the proposed storage project;
(d) Evaluation of the need for and
feasibility of using stored water to augment in-stream flows to conserve,
maintain and enhance aquatic life, fish life and any other ecological values;
and
(e) For a proposed storage
project that is for municipal use, analysis of local and regional water demand
and the proposed storage projects relationship to existing and planned water
supply projects.
Notes
Stat. Auth.: ORS 536.027
Stats. Implemented: 2008 OL Ch. 13
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