The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) regulates work and structures that are located in, under, or over navigable waters of the United States under Section 10 of the Rivers and Harbors Act of 1899; the discharge of dredged or fill material into waters of the United States under Section 404 of the Clean Water Act; and the transportation of dredged material for the purpose of disposal in the ocean (regulated by the Corps under Section 103 of the Marine Protection, Research and Sanctuaries Act). “Waters of the United States” are navigable waters, tributaries to navigable waters, wetlands adjacent to those waters, and/or isolated wetlands that have a demonstrated interstate commerce connection.
Graphs, charts and mapping at this new dashboard reveal USACE permitting actions that have occurred as well as the cumulative impacts resultant, mitigation activities, and other data.
This dashboard is included in all EcoBlu Analyst 5.0 Data Licensesand provides the key to understanding patterns, trends, and insights previously locked away in unrelated, incompatible databases.
The powerful interactive system converts more than 35 million relevant data points into practical, useful information for industry, engineering/environmental firms, mitigation providers, environmental non-profits, government resource agencies and others.
WASHINGTON, DC – January 15, 2024, The National Environmental Banking Association and EcoBlu Analyst™ announce the release of a viewable/downloadable GIS ArcGIS layer of U.S. Mitigation and Conservation Banks, locations, contacts and more for the community of Esri users. This collection of geographic information and associated maps, apps, and data layers are additional resources for
With government agencies and private companies adding vast amounts of routinely-isolated data in unrelated databases and still churning paper reports every day – databases, spreadsheets, and reports now exist in different formats, on different servers, and each with their own metadata and codes. Gathering and analyzing this data has become so expensive and time consuming