TONY KNOWLES
GOVERNOR |
STATE
OF ALASKA
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
JUNEAU |
October 2, 2002
|
ADMINISTRATIVE ORDER NO. 200
I, Tony Knowles,
Governor of the State of Alaska, under the authority vested in
me by art. III, secs. 1 and 24, of the Alaska Constitution, establish
an Alaska's Clean Water Actions (ACWA) policy of unifying and
strengthening state natural resource agency efforts to protect,
assess, and restore Alaska's waters and aquatic habitat.
PURPOSE
AND FINDINGS
Clean, abundant
water and healthy aquatic habitat are critical to Alaska's social
and economic well-being. Alaska's waters and resources are the
backbone of Alaska's economy, from fisheries to tourism. These
same resources are the heart of the traditional subsistence lifestyle
and are vitally important for nutrition, cultural integrity, spiritual
well-being, and the quality of life Alaskans treasure.
Alaska has a
tremendous diversity of water resources, including 365,000 miles
of rivers and streams, at least 170 million acres of wetlands,
more than a million lakes larger than five acres, and over 44,000
miles of coastal shoreline.
Alaskans use
approximately 90 million gallons of water each and every day.
About 60 million gallons comes from surface waters and 30 million
from groundwater.
The vast majority
of Alaska's waters are healthy. However, 58 waterbodies have been
identified as having localized pollution problems, some of them
from multiple sources. Fifty-two of these waterbodies are polluted
by run-off from roads, parking lots, construction activities,
landfills, failing septic systems, or erosion due to intensive
streamside recreation and other community uses.
Alaska must
step up and focus its efforts to assess the health of our waters
and to maintain vigilant stewardship, as well as act to restore
polluted waters.
Alaska's three
natural resource agencies--the Departments of Environmental Conservation,
Fish and Game, and Natural Resources--and the Division of Governmental
Coordination in the Office of the Governor administer various
programs to protect water quality, water quantity, and aquatic
habitat. Historically, there has been no common understanding
of the condition of Alaska's waters, what waterbodies have problems
or are at risk of having problems, or how and when the problems
can be fixed. There has been no coordinated approach for the state's
resource agencies or others to agree on what constitutes a water
problem, how to establish priorities for preventing water problems,
and priorities for correcting those problems that exist now.
A statewide
prioritization and master plan was needed. The state's natural
resource agencies developed ACWA to effectively coordinate state
water resource and aquatic habitat programs, to establish water
stewardship as a priority, and to ensure the State of Alaska's
resources are focused on conservation and, where appropriate,
the restoration of Alaska's rivers, lakes, and other waterbodies.
It is in the
best interest of Alaska that the natural resource agencies co-manage
Alaska's water resources based on a common set of priorities to
prevent water and aquatic habitat degradation, and correct existing
problems threatening the health of Alaska's waters. Also, each
year, local communities, state and federal agencies, private companies,
nongovernmental organizations, and individual citizens spend a
significant amount of time and money to protect and restore Alaska's
streams, lakes, rivers, bays, and inlets. It is in the best interest
of Alaska that these efforts also be coordinated and directed
to the most important conservation, assessment, and restoration
needs of Alaska's waterbodies. ACWA provides that approach.
The goal of
ACWA is to preserve Alaska's precious water resources and ensure
that they remain drinkable, fishable, swimmable, and workable
waters for future generations of Alaskans. ACWA is not a new regulatory
program. ACWA is a more efficient, more effective way of meeting
the State of Alaska's responsibility as steward of Alaska's water
resources. To maintain and enhance Alaska's stewardship, ACWA
establishes the means for the relevant state agencies and the
public to:
· Direct
state resources to waters of greatest need for stewardship, assessment,
and restoration.
· Enhance, promote, and encourage local watershed activities
on priority waters.
· Assess the health of Alaska's waters using local and
scientific information.
AGENCY DIRECTIVES
The Alaska's
Clean Water Actions policy is the cornerstone of long-term conservation,
assessment, restoration, and overall co-management of Alaska's
water resources. Effective administration will ensure the continued
and long-term success of ACWA. Therefore, I direct the Departments
of Environmental Conservation (DEC), Fish and Game (DF&G),
and Natural Resources (DNR) and the Division of Governmental Coordination
in the Office of the Governor (DGC) ("the agencies")
as follows:
The agencies
are directed to coordinate water resource management at both the
policy and technical levels. The director of DGC shall chair the
ACWA Team. Each natural resource agency will designate an ACWA
team member. Each agency may also designate an ACWA coordinator
from each department program that addresses water quantity, quality,
or aquatic habitat to work with the ACWA team member.
1. The state's
natural resource agencies, through the ACWA Team, are directed
to jointly categorize waterbodies for monitoring, protection,
and restoration and to prioritize and rank the needs of waterbodies
within each of the categories. Additional categories (or subsets
of these categories) may be included, as established by the ACWA
Team.
2. The agencies,
through the ACWA Team, are directed to develop and maintain a
common ACWA waters database that will:
a) serve as
an inventory and categorize, rank, and determine appropriate next
steps for waterbodies,
b) be kept current by the agencies,
b) guide agency work plans,
c) be accessible to agencies and the public, and
d) produce reports that track progress and show the current status
of waterbodies.
3. The agencies,
through the ACWA Team, are directed to develop an initial ACWA
waterbodies report, identifying waterbodies by condition, needs,
and priority ranking (high, medium, or low). In conjunction with
the database and report, there will be an open and ongoing solicitation
for additional information about the waterbodies in the database,
and for information about additional waterbodies that should be
added to the database.
4. The agencies,
through the ACWA Team, are directed to periodically and jointly
evaluate the existing agency stewardship programs authorized under
Alaska laws to protect and preserve water quantity, quality, and
aquatic habitat. The goal of this is to maximize the collective
statewide effectiveness of the state's water resource stewardship
programs and to apply resources to the highest needs. The agencies
are directed to develop annually an integrated funding proposal
for water programs to be included in the governor's budget.
5. In order
to achieve ACWA priorities, to correct agency stewardship gaps,
and to build local solutions and capacity to solve water problems,
the agencies will conduct an annual, joint solicitation for projects
to be funded with various "pass-through funding" programs
related to water quantity, quality, and aquatic habitat. To the
maximum extent possible, funding priorities and project selection
criteria will be based on the ACWA waters priorities identified
in the ACWA categorization, and on needs, priorities, and stewardship
gaps identified by the agencies. At a minimum, and the extent
possible, the pass-through funds included in the joint solicitation
are to be: Clean Water Act Section 319 funding currently administered
by DEC; Coastal Impact Assistance Program grants and the Coastal
Zone Management Act Section 6217 funding administered by DGC;
Southeast Alaska Sustainable Salmon funds currently administered
by DF&G; and any future "pass-through" funding relating
to water quantity, quality, and aquatic habitat.
6. The state's
natural resource agencies will strive to leverage other funding
sources to address state ACWA priorities and will encourage partners,
particularly federal agencies, to focus funding on ACWA priorities.
The agencies are directed to develop and maintain a database of
funding sources to attempt to match proposals, projects, and funding
sources to ACWA priorities.
7. The agencies
are directed to work extensively with local and Tribal governments,
watershed councils, federal agencies, and nongovernmental organizations
on all elements of ACWA.
This Order takes
effect immediately.
Dated at Juneau,
Alaska this 2nd day of October, 2002.
S/S Tony
Knowles
Tony Knowles
Governor |