NBN Online for the week of June 18, 2007

(Plain Text Version) for full graphical version, click here.

In This Issue:

Front Page
Builders Sharpen Attack on Flawed Immigration Bill
Builders March on Capitol Hill With Housing Priorities
‘Buy Now’ Campaign Moves Fence Sitters in Upstate New York Market
Coast to Coast
Subprime Crash Squeezes Out First-Time Home Buyers
Politics & Government
Changes for Disabled Veterans Housing Program Sought
Tax Issues in the Hopper Could Hit Home Builders
Southern Arizona Builders See Major Impact Fee Reform
Oregon Builders Find Alternative to Development Fees
Reforms Give Florida a Fighting Chance Against No-Growth Bids
North Dakota Eases Restrictions on Marketing Out-of-State Homes
Economics & Finance
Housing Upturn Will Be ‘Solid’ But ‘Not Rapid’
Builder Confidence Slides More in June
Mortgage Rate Spike May Slow Housing Recovery
Home Price Growth Continues to Slow on OFHEO Index
California Sees Buy-Now Market Ready to Wind Down
California Markets Stabilizing, But Home Prices Raise Questions
Eye on the Economy: Housing Upswing May Be Long Climb Back
Useful Links to Monitor Economic and Housing Trends
Tips
Builders’ Tip: A Temporary Extension for Table-Saw Tops
Green Building
NAHB to Launch Green Home Certification Program
Voluntary Programs Certify Nearly 100,000 Green Homes
MIT Team Envisions Home Made From Living Materials
Research
NAHB Lab to Help Move New Products Into Housing Market
Business Management
Last Chance to Get Free 'Cost of Doing Business' Study
Help NAHB Help You With Software and Technology Issues
50Plus Housing
Best Of 50+ Housing Honored at Symposium in Denver
Environment
Agencies Provide Guidance on Wetlands Jurisdiction
Legal
NAHB Sues Over Equipment Exhaust Air Pollution Rule
NAHB Sues Corps Over Rules for Upland Ditches
Register for Upcoming Construction Law Seminar
Codes and Standards
NAHB Members Encouraged to Join ICC Process
Multifamily
Excess Inventory Takes a Toll on Condo Market
HUD Endorses Accessibility Requirement Safe Harbor
Texas Developer Honored for Affordable Housing Achievements
Remodelers
NAHB Remodelers Unveil New Logo to Go With New Name
Building Systems
Enter the 2007 Brick in Home Building Competition
Custom
Register for Custom Builder Symposium in Naples, Fla.
Design
Sustainable Communities on Design Institute Tour
Enter the 2007 Best in American Living Competition
Apply for HUD Secretary’s Award for Excellence
Women
Online Learning Tool Bridges Technology Use Gap
Federal Contracting Program Urged for Women-Owned Businesses
Education
Education Calendar
Safety
NAHB Extends OSHA Alliance for Two More Years
BuilderBooks to Give Away DVD Player for Safety Month
Labor
Disaster Mitigation Course Debuts in New Orleans
Building Products
Retractable Screens Let Custom Windows Shine
TV
NAHB-Produced Programs on HGTV and DIY This Week
Endowment
Lewis Ranieri Gives $1 Million to Endowment
Echo Valley, Inc. Renovates Home Ravaged by Katrina
Association News
James Shimberg, Sr., 84, Created Tampa's Suburbs
Drive Away With a Shiny New $500 GM Offer
Get One Month Free Credit Card Processing With Solveras
Get Free CD of Customer Service Forms From Biz Forms and Checks
Willams Scotsman: First-Month Storage Container Deals
NAHB Career Center: For a True Competitive Edge
Calendar of Events
NAHB Career Center

Agencies Provide Guidance on Wetlands Jurisdiction

New guidance from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers gives builders a little more clarity when it comes to deciding the places where the agencies can claim jurisdiction under the Clean Water Act.

NAHB Environmental Issues Committee members and regulatory staff are studying the new guidance, which was effective immediately when it was released June 5. EPA and the Corps will take public comments until December.

The guidance was spurred by the U.S. Supreme Court's decision in June 2006 when it handed down its opinion in the Rapanos and Carabell Clean Water Act cases. Justices asked the EPA to issue the document to give both their field staff and the regulated community a better idea of what the agencies consider their jurisdictions to be.

The year-long wait for guidance resulted in further delays for builders seeking permits, even though the Corps’ district offices were told to continue business as usual in a July 2006 memo.

Developer Bard Rozelle, of Rozelle Construction in Appleton, Wis., told NAHB he’s been waiting three years for a permit to do work on a multifamily construction site. While the Corps has cut down the number of jurisdictional determinations awaiting a final decision to 6,000, it is unknown how many permits are still pending.

The guidance outlines three typical circumstances for a prospective building site and what might happen:

  • Areas that will always be subject to jurisdiction include traditional navigable waters, wetlands adjacent to traditional navigable waters and non-navigable tributaries that feed into navigable waters and have at least seasonal (three months’) flow.

  • Areas that are likely not subject to jurisdiction include swales and water bodies that exist solely because of erosion (gullies and small washes), ditches without a permanent flow of water and that drain into uplands, and any water body or wetland that has already been determined non-jurisdictional in previous court cases.

  • Areas that may be subject to jurisdiction if they have a “significant nexus to a traditionally navigable water,” such as water features that don’t fit one of the other jurisdictional categories and have a “demonstrated and documented” relationship and significantly affect the chemical, physical or biological integrity of the traditional navigable water downstream. When that happens, the agencies can claim jurisdiction over all “similarly situated” land in that area.


NAHB issued a Wetlands Issue Alert June 6 with more detail about the new guidance.

“In the end, for certain areas, the guidance will help to clarify what areas can and cannot be deemed jurisdictional,” NAHB said in the alert. The guidance, however, asserts an expanded oversight role for EPA, which could make matters worse. For those areas that are subjected to the significant nexus test (estimated to encompass 60% of all determinations), EPA has the opportunity to participate in the decision-making.

“At the same time, it will subject other wet spots to what could be a lengthy and onerous process to determine whether the federal agencies can regulate them, not to mention the lengthy permitting process that will follow,” the alert said. While the guidelines suggest deadlines and timelines intended to ensure that the process is efficient, time will tell whether suggested timelines alone are sufficient to meet this result.”

For more information, e-mail Calli Schmidt at NAHB, or call her at 800-368-5242 x8132.


 

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