HomeMy WebLinkAbout2001-02540
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INDIAN RIVER COUNTY
PROFESSIONAL SERVICES AGREEMENT -
BEACH PRESERVATION PLAN
National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA)
Environmental Assessment (EA) Preparation
THIS AGREEMENT, entered into this 30tiday of January , 2001 by and between
INDIAN RIVER COUNTY, a political subdivision of the State of Florida, hereinafter referred to as
the COUNTY, and DIAL CORDY AND ASSOCIATES, INC. 490 OSCEOLA AVE.,
JACKSONVILLE BEACH, FLORIDA, hereinafter referred to as the CONSULTANT,
WITNESSETH
The COUNTY and the CONSULTANT, in consideration of their mutual covenants, herein
agree with respect to the performance of professional services in environmental consulting, and other
related services by the CONSULTANT and the payment for those services by the COUNTY as set
forth below.
The CONSULTANT shall provide professional environmental consulting and related services
nbed in the scope of services; serve as the COUNTY'S
to the COUNTY in all phases as desc
professional representative and shall give professional advice to the COUNTY during the
performance of the services to be rendered.
SECTION I - PROJECT LIMITS
The project limits shall include, but is not limited to, the entire County and associated
municipalities, as it relates to the Beach Preservation Plan. Basic services required of the
CONSULTANT for the project will be described in other appropriate sections of this Agreement.
SECTION 1I - COUNTY OBLIGATIONS
{I The COUNTY agrees to provide the following material, data, or services as required in
connection with the work to be performed under this Agreement:
1. Provide the CONSULTANT with copies of the Beach Preservation Plan, other related
reports, survey data, aerial photography and related documents.
2. Provide the CONSULTANT with all available drawings, maps, and other documents
in the possession of the COUNTY pertinent to the project.
3. The COUNTY shall be responsible for acquiring all easements, right-of-ways, and
other rights of land as necessary for the prujcc,.
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4. The COUNTY slurp make provisions for the CONSULTANT to enter upon public
or private property as required.
SECTION III - SCOPE OF SERVICES
The CONSULTANT agrees to perform professional services, and other related services in
connection with the project as required and set forth in the following:
1. A detailed description of the scope of consulting services can be found in Exhibit "A" The
CONSULTANT shall be responsible for completing all services described in Exhibit "A".
2. The CONSULTANT will endeavor not to duplicate any previous work done related to the
project. After issuance of the notice -to -proceed, the CONSULTANT shall meet with the
COUNTY to clarify and define the COUNTY'S requirements for the project and review all
available data.
3. The CONSULTANT will attend with the COUNTY public hearings, workshops and any other
related meetings pertinent to the project.
4. In order to accomplish the work set forth under this Agreement in the time frames and
conditions described, the CONSULTANT will observe the following requirements:
a. The CONSULTANT will complete the work on the project within the time allowed
by maintaining an adequate staff at all times qualified to perform such work.
b. The CONSULTANT will comply with all Federal, State and Local laws applicable to
this project. The CONSULTANT will complete the project in such a manner as to
be in conformance with all applicable Federal, State & Local laws.
C. The CONSULTANT will prepare and complete all necessary documents, reports, and
other related information pertinent to the project.
d. The CONSULTANT will provide a complete copy of the report(s) to any City,
County, State or Federal regulatory agency from which approval is required.
e. The CONSULTANT will cooperate fully with the COUNTY through all phases of
work.
f. The CONSULTANT shall advise the COUNTY of the status of this project and hold
calculations, reports, and related work open to the inspection of the County Coastal
Engineer or his authorized representative at any time, upon reasonable request.
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Any and all work performed other than that specifically listed in Section III, "Scope of
Services", shall be considered Additional Services. Compensation for Additional Service work shall
be at a lump sum price to be negotiated between CONSULTANT and the COUNTY, or at the
COUNTY'S option. Additional service work may be performed on an hourly basis, plus reimbursable
expenses, per the Schedule of Rate and Fees as contained herein.
SECTION VI - ADDITIONAL SERVICES
In the event changes are requested from the COUNTY to the contract after execution,
such work shall be the subject of a mutually executed Addendum to this Contract approved by the
Board of County Commissioners.
SECTION VII - PARTIAL PAYMENTS
The COUNTY shall make partial payments to the CONSULTANT of each task, in
accordance with this agreement.
The CONSULTANT shall submit duly certified invoices to the County Coastal Engineer.
The contract shall be divided into units of deliverables, which shall include, but not be limited
to, reports, findings, and drafts, that must be received and accepted by the County Coastal Engineer
prior to payment.
The COUNTY will withhold a 10% retainage until the work is complete and accepted by
the County Coastal Engineer.
SECTION VIII - EXTRA WORK
In the event extra work is necessary from the CONSULTANT due to a change in scope of
the project, such work shall be the subject of a mutually executed Addendum to this Contract
approved by the Board of County Commissioners.
SECTION IX - RIGHT OF DECISIONS
All services shall be performed by the CONSULTANT to the satisfaction of the County
Coastal Engineer who shall decide all questions, difficulties, and disputes of whatever nature which
may arise under or by reason of this Agreement and according to the prosecution and fulfillment of
the service hereunder, and the character, quality, amount and value thereof, and the County Coastal
Engineer's decision upon all claims questions and disputes shall be final, conclusive and binding upon
the parties hereto unless such determination is clearly arbitrary or unreasonable.
Adjustments of compensation and contract time because of any major changes in the work
that might become necessary or be deemed desirable as the work progresses shall be reviewed by the
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County Coastal Engineer. In the event that the CONSULTANT does not concur in the judgment of
the County Coastal Engineer as to any decisions made by him he/she shall present his/her written
objections to the County Public Works Director; and the County Coastal Engineer and the
CONSULTANT shall abide by the decision of the Public Works Director of Indian River County,
unless the decision is clearly arbitrary or unreasonable.
SECTION X - OWNERSHIP ANIS REUSE OF DOCUMENTS
A. Ownership
All reports, tracings, plans, specifications, field books, survey information, maps,
contract documents, and other data developed by the CONSULTANT for the purpose
of this Agreement shall become the property of the COUNTY and shall be made
available by the CONSULTANT at any time upon request of the COUNTY. When
all work contemplated under this Agreement is complete, all of the above data shall
be delivered to the County Coastal Engineer.
B. Reuse of Documents
All documents, including but not limited to drawings, reports, and specifications,
prepared by the CONSULTANT pursuant to this Agreement are related exclusively
to the services described herein. Compensation will not be required for reuse of the
documents for any purpose by the COUNTY. The CONSULTANT shall not be held
liable for any reuse of the Documents and shall not be held liable for any modifications
made to the documents by others.
SECTION XI - NOTICES
Any notices, reports or other written communications from the CONSULTANT to the COUNTY
shall be considered delivered when posted by certified mail or delivered in person to the County
Coastal Engineer at 1840 25"' Street, Vero Beach, FL 32960. Any notices, reports or other
communications from the COUNTY to the CONSULTANT shall be considered delivered when
posted by certified mail to the CONSULTANT at DIAL CORDY AND ASSOCIATES, INC. 490
OSCEOLA AVE., JACKSONVILLE BEACH, FLORIDA, or the last address left on file with the
COUNTY or delivered in person to said CONSULTANT or his authorized representative. In person
712 deliveries shall be evidence by signed receipts.
SECTION XII - TERMINATION
The obligation to provide further services under this Agreement may be terminated by either
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party upon seven (7) days written notice in the event of substantial failure by the other party to
perform in accordance with the terms hereof through no fault of the terminating party. In the event
of any terminations, the CONSULTANT will be paid for all services rendered to the date of
termination, all expenses subject to reimbursement hereunder, and other reasonable expenses incurred
by the CONSULTANT as a result of such termination.
SECTION XIII - AUDIT RIGHTS
The COUNTY reserves the right to audit the records of the CONSULTANT related to this
Agreement at any time during the prosecution of the work included herein and for a period of one
year after final payment is made.
SECTION XIV - SUBLETTING
The CONSULTANT shall not sublet, assign, or transfer any work under this Agreement
without the written consent of the COUNTY. When applicable and upon receipt of such consent in
writing, the CONSULTANT shall cause the names of the firms responsible for the major portions of
each separate specialty of the work to be inserted on the reports or other data.
SECTION XV - WARRANTY
The CONSULTANT warrants that he/she has not employed or retained any company or
person other than bona fide employee working solely for the CONSULTANT to solicit or secure this
contract and that he has not paid or agreed to pay any company or person other than a bona fide
employee working solely for the CONSULTANT any fee, commission, percentage fee, gifts or any
other considerations, contingent upon or resulting from the award or making of this contract. For
breach violation of this warranty, the COUNTY shall have the right to annul this contract without
liability.
SECTION XVI - DURATION OF AGREEMENT
This Agreement shall remain in full force and effect for a period of three years after the date
of execution thereof or until completion of all project phases as specified by the County Coastal
Engineer, whichever occurs first, or unless otherwise terminated by mutual consent of the parties
j hereto or pursuant to Section XII of this contract.
SECTION XVII - INSURANCE AND INDEMNIFICATION
During the performance of the work covered by this Agreement, the CONSULTANT shall
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provide the COUNTY with evidence that the CONSULTANT has obtained and maintains the
insurance listed in the Agreement.
1. CONSULTANT shall procure and maintain for the duration of the contract, insurance
against claims for injuries to persons or damages to property which may arise from
or in connection with the performance of the work hereunder by the CONSULTANT,
his agents, representatives, employees or sub -contractors. The cost of such insurance
shall be included in the CONSULTANT'S fee.
2. Minimum Scope of Insurance
A. Worker's Compensation as required by the State of Florida. Employers
Liability of $100,000 each accident, $500,000 disease policy limit, and
$100,000 disease each employee.
B. General Liability $1,000,000 combined single limit per accident for bodily
injury and property damage. COUNTY shall be an additional insured.
C. Auto Liability $1,000,000 combined single limit per accident for bodily injury
and property damage for owned and non -owned vehicles. COUNTY shall be
an additional insured.
D. Professional Liability Insurance providing coverage for negligent acts, errors,
or omissions committed by CONSULTANT with a limit of $500,000 per
claimlannual aggregate. This insurance shall extend coverage to loss of
interest, earning, profit, use and business interruption, cost of replacement
power, and other special, indirect and consequential damages.
3. Any deductibles or self insured retentions greater than $5,000 must be approved by
the Risk Manager for Indian River County with the ultimate responsibility for same
going to the CONSULTANT.
4. CONSULTANT'S insurance coverage shall be primary.
5. All above insurance policies shall be placed with insurers with a Best's rating of no less
that A VII. The insurer chosen shall also be licensed to do business in Florida.
6. The insurance policies procured shall be occurrence forms, not claims made policies.
7. The insurance companies chosen shall provide certificates of insurance prior to signing
of contracts to the Indian River County Risk Management Department.
8. The insurance companies selected shall send written verification to the Indian River
County Risk Management Department that they will provide 30 days written notice
to the Indian River County Department of Risk Management of its intent to cancel or
terminate said policies of insurance.
9. CONSULTANT shall include all sub -contractors as insured under its policies or shall
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furnish separate certificates and endorsements for each sub -contractor. All coverages
for sub -contractors shall be subject to all of the requirements stated herein.
10. The consultant or firm shall hold harmless the COUNTY and representatives thereof
from all suits, actions, or claims of any kind brought on account of any injuries or
damages sustained by any person or property arising out of any negligent act or
omission by the consultant or firm or its employees, or from any claims or amounts
arising or uncovered under any law, bylaw, ordinance, regulation, or decree. The
consultant or firm shall be responsible for all reasonable defense costs incurred as a
result of any suits, actions, or claims of any kind brought in connection with this
llproject to the extent arising out of any negligent error omission or act of
CONSULTANT.
SECTION XVIII - ENTIRETY OF AGREEMENT
This writing embodies the entire Agreement and understanding between the parties hereto, and there
are no other Agreements and understandings, oral or written, with reference to the subject matter
hereof that are not merged herein and superseded hereby.
No alteration, change, or modification of the terms of this Agreement shall be valid unless
made in writing and signed by both parties hereto.
This Agreement, regardless of where executed, shall be governed by and construed according
to the laws of the State of Florida.
IN WITNESS WHE OF the parties hereto have executed these presents this
�� day of , 2001.
DIAL CORDY AND ASS CIATES, INC. INDIAN RIVER COUNTY, FLORIDA
490 OSCEOLA AVE., BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSION
JACKSONVILLE BEACH, FLORIDA
BY:
BY: 3zt'G1%itc,i(SJ,x��
R. Steve Dial, P esident Caroline D. Ginn, Chairman
BCC Approved: January 0, 2001
WITNESS: (� �� Attest: -
Jefffey K. Barton
Clerk of Court
WITNESS: —
(Corporate se 's acceptable in
place of wbesses)
2v4F"w%cowSTAL%�w xw
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Exhibit "A" Scope of Service
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Indian River County Erosion Control Program
NEPA Documentation Service Contract
Scope of Services
Task Descriptions
Task 1 Kick Off Meeting and Data Collection. The contractor will attend a kickoff meeting with
County staff to discuss content, schedule, and approach to the project. The contractor will review
available information and identify any additional information required for document preparation and
collect available information from local sources, including Harbor Branch Foundation, Florida Institute of
Technology and various state and federal agencies. Other items such as agency contacts, mailing list
preparation, and individual responsibilities will be discussed. The County will provide all available
information to the consultant in a timely manner.
Task 2 Informal Scoping Meetings. The contractor will conduct informal coordination meetings with
various resource agencies (i.e., Corps, NMFS, USFWS) to determine potential areas of controversy or
relevant issues regarding the proposed project. An topical element outline for the EA and Cumulative
Impact Assessment will be prepared and forwarded to the agencies prior to attending any meetings.
Potential mitigation for project impacts will also be discussed. Minutes of each meeting will be prepared
and distributed electronically to all attending parties.
Task 3 Prepare Preliminary Draft Environmental Assessment for Segment 1 and 2. The contractor
will prepare a preliminary Draft Environmental Assessment for review by the County (3 copies) based on
the attached outline. The contractor will attend a review meeting with the County to address comments
by County staff. The contractor will incorporate any comments agreed upon by the County and prepare a
revised preliminary Draft Environmental Assessment for submittal to the Corps of Engineers. The
county's engineering consultant shall provide relevant plans and text regarding the preferred alternative
and other engineering and economic information that may be required. Relevant sections to be prepared
by the county or their coastal engineering consultant are designated on the attached outline. Draft text and
appropriate materials for these sections of the EA will be electronically provided to the contractor.
Task 4 Review Meeting and Prepare Draft Environmental Assessment. The contractor will submit
the revised preliminary Draft Environmental Assessment to the Corps of Engineers for their review (2
copies) and will also attend a review meeting with the Corps to discuss comments on the document. The
contractor will incorporate any comments agreed upon by the County, Corps, and prepare the Draft
Environmental Assessment for distribution and comment. One original and 30 copies will be prepared for
distribution. It is assumed the county will handle distribution.
Task 5 Prepare Notice of Availability of DEA. The contractor will prepare a Notice of Availability of
the Draft Environmental Assessment to be published in the Federal Register by the Corps of Engineers
and in the local newspaper to be submitted by the county.
Task b Prepare Draft Final Environmental Assessment. The contractor will review all comment
letters received on the Draft Environmental Assessment and will incorporate revisions in response to
relevant comments within the Draft Final Environmental Assessment.
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Task 7 Final Review Meeting with County Staff and Corps of Engineers. The contractor will submit
the Draft Final Environmental Assessment to the County and Corps for review. The contractor will meet
with the County and Corps to discuss the document and incorporate any final comments.
Task 8 Prepare Final Environmental Assessment. The contractor will prepare the Final Environmental
Assessment and FONSI for use by the Corps to issue the Section 404 permit. One original, five hard
copies, and an electronic copy in Adobe Acrobat will be provided to the Corps for posting on their web
site. One original, 10 copies and an electronic copy will be provided to the county.
Task 9 Complete Marine Resource Mapping for Remainder of County. The contractor will complete
marine resource mapping for the remainder of the county utilizing the same ERDAS software and
imaging analysis technique used for existing maps. This analysis will include mapping of nearshore
hardbottom along the remainder of the county's shoreline (14 miles). Since no plans presently exist for
beach restoration along the additional 14 miles of shoreline the amount of ground-truthing of aerial
signatures required can be minimized. Hardground cover types previously classified will be used for these
additional areas. Due to limited time to complete the draft EA it is anticipated that draft maps will be
prepared for analysis prior to any field verification. Field verification will be scheduled from May -August
2001. To verify aerial signatures (cover types) no more than three transects per mile (total 42 transects)
will be surveyed during the summer using an Integrated Video Mapping System. Draft and final resource
maps will be provided to the county in hard copy and electronic format. A summary of acreages of marine
cover types found throughout the county will be prepared to assist in preparation of the cumulative impact
section of the EA.
Task 10 Prepare Cumulative Impact Assessment Report. The contractor will prepare a cumulative
impact assessment report which addresses the impact of beach restoration activities in the past, present
and foreseeable future on nearshore hardground habitat and associated biological communities; sea turtle
nesting area, activities and foraging habitat; and fisheries resources. This assessment will follow
methodology recommended by the Corps of Engineers and EPA and will include a trend analysis of
resource conditions and area from 1972 to 2010 (see attached outline). The trend analysis will include
delineating the nearshore limits of hardground from 1972 survey transects and graphically comparing
them to the 1999 survey limits. Assuming erosion has lead to increased acreage of hardground habitat
throughout most of the county, this analysis should indicate the location and actual area of changes in
hardground habitat to present time. Impacts from past activities would be determined from reviewing
Inlet Tax District records and permits for the beach fill template south of Sebastian Inlet. Any other
permitted activities would be assessed to determine whether they had any impact on marine resources.
The county will provide a breakdown of proposed direct impacts for all segments which may be
nourished by 2010, as well as a summary of other structural or non-structural shoreline protection projects
either constructed since 1972 or anticipated prior to 2010.
Projecting indirect impacts of the proposed project and other segments, if funded and constructed, would
require modeling of sediment spreading for segment I and 2 and using the results of this effort as an
assumption of likely indirect impacts for the other three segments. Temporal impacts due to
renourishment events would also be analyzed. The County's engineering consultant will develop the
sediment spreading model and provide the results of the analysis to the contractor for this assessment.
Analysis of trends in sea turtle nesting area will be completed by spatially analyzing the area of dry beach
available for nesting in 1972 and 1999. It is assumed the 1972 survey data compiled by the state will be
usable in determining the area of dry beach in 1972. Nesting data will be compiled from the county and
state agencies, summarized and correlated to observed changes in beach nesting area, false crawls and
other available information.
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A draft report will be prepared with appropriate graphics, tabularized data, assessment methodology,
matrices of the analysis, and a determination as to whether there will be a significant cumulative impact
from the proposed action. Following receipt of comments on the draft report a final report will be
prepared and incorporated as an appendix in the draft EA.
Task 11. Assist County in Preparation or Review of a Mitigation Plan. The county staff will take the
lead in assembling a comprehensive mitigation plan for anticipated impacts from nourishment of all
county beach segments. This is anticipated to include enhancement of juvenile fishes through opening of
mosquito impoundments, construction of artificial reef modules, and other yet to be determined fisheries
enhancement options available within the Indian River Lagoon. The contractor will participate with the
county in screening best options for further analysis by the county, including review of existing reports
prepared by the county. In addition, we will review and comment on a draft plan assembled by the
county. The draft mitigation plan will be incorporated into the EA by the contractor.
Task 12. Assist County in Preparation and Review of Biological Monitoring Plan. The county will
take the lead in assembling a comprehensive biological monitoring plan for anticipated impacts from
nourishment of Segments I and 2. The contractor will participate with the county in reviewing and
commenting on a draft plan as well as preparation of the final plan. The monitoring plan will be
incorporated into the EA by the contractor.
Task 13. Client and Project Team Coordination Meetings. The contractor will meet with the county
and or project team members monthly to review and coordinate activities related completion of the above
tasks and other permitting issues related to Segment I and 2 and other future segments. The project
manager and senior scientist will attend all meetings. It is anticipated that three meetings will be held in
Jacksonville and two in Vero Beach.
Assumptions for Implementing Tasks
The following are assumptions for the scope of work.
• County will provide color digital aerials recently taken (hard copy and electronic format), historic
aerial photographs and survey data (1972), reports, data, design drawings, permit applications and
agency correspondence available.
• County will provide summary of acreage of direct and indirect impacts for all future proposed
restoration segments.
• Meetings will be held in Vero Beach (2), Jacksonville (3), Tallahassee (2), and St Petersburg (1)
for project team and agency consultation.
• County coastal engineering consultant will be available to provide consultation during
NEPA process and will be responsible for preparing specific sections of the EA and Cumulative
Impact Assessment.
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• County will provide electronic copy and documentation methodology of hardground resource
mapping completed by the county's consultant.
Schedule
Kick Off Meeting and Data Collection
Informal Agency Consultation Meetings
Prepare Preliminary Draft EA
Complete Draft Cumulative Impact Report
Prepare Draft EA
Public Comment Period
Corps Review Meeting
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Prepare Final EA and FONSI
7 days following notice to proceed
21 days following notice to proceed
75 days following notice to proceed
90 days following notice to proceed
90 days following notice to proceed
120 days following notice to proceed
t35 days following notice to proceed
150 days following notice to proceed
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PROPOSED OUTLINE FOR INDIAN RIVER COUNTY EA
Unless indicated below the contractor is responsible for preparation of all elements of the EA.
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EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
1.0 PROJECT PURPOSE AND NEED
1.1 Project Authority
1.2 Project Location
1.3 Project Need or Opportunity(County consultation)
1.4 Project Goals and Objectives
2.0 ALTERNATIVES
2.1 Description of Alternatives (Draft text and graphics -ATM)
2.1.1 No -Action Alternative (Results in Seawall and Revetment Construction)
2.1.2 Beach Fill with Periodic Nourishment
2.1.2.1 Technical — Performance of fill
2.1.2.2 Economic Analysis — Benejit
2.1.2.3 Project Costs — Long Term
2.1.2.3.1 Maintenance 30 -Year
2.2 Alternatives Eliminated from Detailed Evaluation (ATM)
2.3 Comparison of Alternatives(Consultation with ATM)
3.0 AFFECTED ENVIRONMENT
3.1 Coastal Environment
3.1.1 Tides
3.1.2 Winds
3.1.3 Currents
3.2 Beach and Inlet Geology and Geomorphology (ATM)
3.2.1 Sediment Budget
3.2.2 Littoral Processes and Sediment Interaction with Sebastian Inlet
3.2.3 Influence of Nearshore Hardbottom Resources on Sediment Pathways
3.2.4 Inlet Sand Bypassing Practices
3.3 Sediment Characteristics of Borrow Area and Native Beach(ATM)
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3.3.1 Native Beach
3.3.1.1 Sand Quality
3.3.1.2 Chemical Composition (silica or carbonate)
3.3.1.3 Color
3.3.2 Offshore Borrow Area
3.3.2.1 Sand Quality
3.3.2.2 Sand Quantity
3.3.2.3 Chemical Composition
3.3.2.4 Color
3.3.2.5 Compatibility with Native Beach
3.4 Water Quality (ATM)
3.4.1 Ambient Water Quality
3.4.2 Variance Requirements
3.5 Vegetation
3.5.1 Dune Communities
3.6 Threatened and Endangered Species
3.6.1 Sea Turtles
3.6.1.1 Nesting Habitat
3.6.1.2 Offshore Habitat
3.6.1.3 Nearshore Foraging Habitat (Juvenile Green Sea Turtle)
3.6.2 West Indian Manatee
3.6.3 Southeastern Beach Mouse
3.6.4 Right Whale
3.6.5 Piping Plover
3.7 Hardgrounds
3.8 Fish and Wildlife Resources
3.9 Essential Fish Habitat
3.10 Coastal Barrier Resources
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3.11 Hazardous, Toxic, and Radioactive Waste
3.12 Air Quality
3.13 Noise
3.14 Aesthetic Resources
3.15 Recreation Resources
3.16 Navigation
3.17 Cultural Resources
4.0 ENVIRONMENTAL CONSEQUENCES OF PREFERRED ALTERNATIVE
4.1 Tides, Waves, Currents, and Storm Events
4. 1.1 No -Action
4.1.2 Preferred Alternative
4.2 Beach and Inlet Geology and Gcomorphology(ATM Consultation)
4.2.1 No -Action
4.2.2 Preferred Alternative
4.3 Sediment Characteristics of Borrow Area and Native Beach(Consult ATM)
4.3.1 No -Action
4.3.2 Preferred Alternative
4.4 Water Quality
4.4.1 No -Action
4.4.2 Preferred Alternative
4.5 Vegetation
4.5.1 No -Action
4.5.2 Preferred Alternative
4.6 Threatened and Endangered Species
4.6.1 No -Action
4.6.2 Preferred Alternative
4.7 Hardgrounds
4.7.1 No -Action
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4.7.2 Preferred Alternative
4.8 Fish and Wildlife Resources
4.8.1 No -Action
4.8.2 Preferred Alternative
4.9 Essential Fish Habitat
4.9.1 No -Action
4.9.2 Preferred Alternative
4.10 Coastal Barrier Resources
4.10.1 No -Action
4.10.2 Preferred Alternative
4.11 Hazardous, Toxic, and Radioactive Waste
4.11.1 No -Action
4.11.2 Preferred Alternative
4.12 Air Quality
4.12.1 No -Action
4.12.2 Preferred Alternative
4.13 Noise
4.13.1 No -Action
4.13.2 Preferred Alternative
4.14 Aesthetic Resources
4.14.1 No -Action
4.14.2 Preferred Alternative
4.15 Recreation Resources
4.15.1 No -Action
4.15.2 Preferred Alternative
4.16 Navigation
4.16.1 No -Action
4.16.2. Preferred Alternative
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4.17 Areas of Archeological or Historic Significance
4.17.1 No -Action
4.17.2 Preferred Alternative
4.18 Cumulative Impacts
4.18.1 No -Action
4.18.2 Preferred Alternative
4.19 Environmental Justice
4.19.1 No -Action
4.19.2 Preferred Alternative
4.20 Compatibility with Federal, State, and Local Objectives
4.20.1 No -Action
4.20.2 Preferred Alternative
4.21 Environmental Commitments (Mitigation Plan provided by county)
4.21.1 No -Action
4.21.2 Preferred Alternative
4.22 Compliance with Environmental Requirements
5.0 LIST OF PREPARERS
5.1 Preparers
6.0 PUBLIC INVOLVEMENT
6.1 Scoping and Draft Environmental Assessment
6.2 Agency Coordination
6.3 List of Recipients
6.4 Comments Received
7.0 REFERENCES
Appendix A
Section 404(b) Evaluation
Appendix B
Coastal Zone Management Consistency
Appendix C
Biological Assessment of Threatened and Endangered Species(County)
Appendix D
Cumulative Impact Assessment Report
Appendix E
Relevant Correspondence(Corps of Engineers)
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CUMULATIVE IMPACT ASSESSMENT DRAFT OUTLINE
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
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1.0 SIGNIFICANT CUMULATIVE EFFECTS AND ASSESSMENT GOALS
2.0 GEOGRAPHIC SCOPE OF ANALYSIS
3.0 TIME FRAME FOR ANALYSIS
4.0 OTHER ACTIONS AFFECTING THE RESOURCES
5.0 RESPONSES OF RESOURCES TO CHANGE AND STRESS
6.0 STRESSES AFFECTING THE RESOURCES AND THRESHOLDS
7.0 BASELINE CONDITION
8.0 CAUSE AND EFFECT RELATIONSHIP
9.0 MAGNITUDE AND SIGNIFICANCE
10.0 MITIGATION OF CUMULATIVE EFFECTS
11.0 MONITORING AND MANAGEMENT
12.0 REFERENCES
APPENDICES
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C'A
Dial Cordy and Associates Inc. Average Category Billing Rates fol
Category
Hourly Rate
Principals
$130
Steve Dial
Jerry Cordy
Technical Director
$95
Lee Swain
Annette Taylor
Senior Scientist/Project Manager
$75
Kelley Grimm
Rahlff Ingle
Mike Andersen
Kendall Cochran
Staff Scientist/Biologist
$55
Jason Croop
Mark Howell
CADD/GIS Specialist
$65
Mike Rice
Word Processor/ Clerical
$45
Christie Hall
Technical Editor
$70
Jean Beckwith