Work Plan Approved for
Hays County
Habitat Conservation Plan
The following is a reprint from the Hays Free Press newspaper:
Wildlife just got a little safer:
County approves initial steps towards habitat conservation plan
10/25/2006
By Jen Biundo
County – Hays County Commissioners came one step
closer Tuesday morning to making the area safe for endangered species such
as the golden-cheeked warbler and black-capped vireo, and also preserving
the juniper-oak woodlands
and oak savannas the birds call home.
Commissioners unanimously approved the work plan
presented by environmental consultants Loomis Austin, Inc., for the county’s
Habitat Conservation Plan (HCP). The work plan sets out a series of steps
to implement the HCP as early as 2008, said Clifton Ladd, senior biologist
and environmental group vice president of Loomis Austin.
“We will address all manner of environmental impacts,
not just endangered species, but socio-economics, population development, and
how this project could impact the human environment of Hays County,” Ladd
said.
The HCP, funded by a $750,000 federal grant and a
$250,000 county match, would help the rapidly-growing county preserve open
space and nurture endangered species in the face of residential and
commercial development.
“It will give you a way [to] manage endangered species
on a local level, with a local solution,” Ladd said.
Habitat Conservation Plans were congressionally
authorized in 1983 as an amendment to the Endangered Species Act. HCPs
allow landowners and local governments to apply for an “Incidental Take
Permit” for development that may harm endangered species or their habitats,
in exchange for mitigating the impact of that development in some other
manner.
Currently, those permits are doled out through the
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, a time-consuming and expensive effort for
developers. Under the regional HCP, Hays County would be able to issue
its
own permits and work with developers on habitat remediation.
“I think it’s ambitious, but all goals should be
ambitious,” said Pct. 4 Commissioner Will Conley, who spear-headed the
project.
This April, commissioners also contracted Austin law
firm Smith-Robertson, LLP, to guide the
county through the one to two year
process of gathering public input and structuring the HCP.
Reprinted courtesy of the Hays Free Press -
www.haysfreepress.com.
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