US Army Corps of Engineers

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US Army Corps of Engineers

Colonel Philip T. Feir Commander, New England District Engineers on point for the Army and the Nation!

Agenda • Corps of Engineers Overview • Environmental Work in New England • Business Opportunities

The World of the Chief of Engineers Dual Roles Chief of Engineers, Army Staff

Commander, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers

Vision: • The world’s premier public engineering organization responding to our Nation’s needs in peace and war • A full spectrum engineer force of high quality, dedicated soldiers and civilians:  Trained and Ready  Vital Part of The Army  Dedicated to Public Service  Army Values-Based

Global Engagement USACE Construction Support EUROPE RUSSIA UKRAINE KOSOVO BOSNIA GERMANY ITALY BELGIUM

CENTRAL AMERICA HONDURAS EL SALVADOR

SOUTH AMERICA COLUMBIA ECUADOR PERU BOLIVIA ARGENTINA

ASIA GEORGIA TURKEY ISRAEL JORDAN SAUDI ARABIA KUWAIT BAHRAIN QATAR UAE JAPAN SOUTH KOREA

PUERTO RICO

WEST AFRICA

EAST AFRICA

SENEGAL GHANA MALI NIGER CAMEROON CENT. AFR. REP.

EGYPT ERITREA CHAD KENYA RWANDA MOZAMBIQUE

OCEANIA REP. OF PALAU GUAM ANTARCTICA

Global Engagement USACE Technical Assistance EUROPE UNITED KINGDOM NETHERLANDS DENMARK NORWAY SWEDEN FINLAND ESTONIA LITHUANIA POLAND HUNGARY MOLDAVIA ROMANIA BULGARIA MACEDONIA ALBANIA

NORTH AMERICA CANADA GREENLAND HAITI JAMAICA MEXICO HONDURAS GUATEMALA EL SALVADOR NICARAGUA COSTA RICA PANAMA

SOUTH AMERICA ECUADOR BRAZIL PARAGUAY CHILE URUGUAY ARGENTINA

OCEANIA EAST TIMOR REP. OF PALAU N. MARIANA ISL. MICRONESIA MARSHALL ISL.

AFRICA NIGERIA SUDAN MOZAMBIQUE

ASIA SAUDI ARABIA U.A.E. OMAN KAZAKHSTAN INDIA THAILAND CHINA PHILIPPINES JAPAN

AUSTRALIA

NEW ZEALAND

>$2.7B in FY-09

>$2B in FY-09

Research & Development • Military engineering • Terrain & Geospatial • Installations & Environment • Water Resources • DOD, Federal • State & Local • International

Plus:Homeland HomelandSecurity Security Plus:

Civil Works

• Acquire, manage & dispose • DOD recruiting facilities • Contingency operations

Interagency Support

•Military construction •Base operations •Environmental restoration •Geospatial Engineering

Real Estate

Military Programs

Support to the Army and the Nation USACE Missions

• Navigation, Hydropower • Flood control, Shore Protection • Disaster response • Environmental restoration • Water Supply • Regulatory • Recreation

Support to the Army and the Nation Engineer Research and Development Center   2014 2014Employees Employees  1029 Scientists  1029 Scientists&&Engineers Engineers  533 Master’s Degrees  533 Master’s Degrees  266 266Doctorate DoctorateDegrees Degrees   $1.2 $1.2Billion BillionininResearch ResearchFacilities Facilities&& Equipment Equipment  $568  $568Million MillionAnnual AnnualProgram Program

Cold Regions Research Engineering Hanover, NH

Construction Engineering Research Champaign, IL

Topographic Engineering Center Alexandria, VA

Coastal and Hydraulics Environmental Geotechnical and Structures Information Technology Vicksburg, MS

USACE Terrain Walk Civil Works Value to the Nation

Recreation areas

¼ of Nation’s Hydropower: $500 M + in power sales

376 M Visitors/yr Generate $15 B in economic activity, 500,000 jobs

11,000 miles of Commercial Inland Waterways: ½ the cost of rail 1/10 the cost of trucks

299 Deep Draft Harbors

627 Shallow Draft Harbors 8500 Miles of Levees Emergency Operations Stewardship of 11.7 Million Acres Public Lands Environmental Restoration

• US Ports & Waterways convey > 2B Tons Commerce • Foreign Trade alone creates > $160 B Tax Revenues

Regulatory Responsibilities

USACE Terrain Walk MACOM Overview

North Atlantic Div

(Civil Works Boundaries) Alaska Seattle

Walla Walla

Portland

Northwestern Div

Great Lakes & Ohio River Div

St. Paul

New England

Buffalo Detroit New York Rock Island

Omaha Sacramento San Francisco

South Pacific Div

Little Rock

Tulsa

Los Angeles Albuquerque Honolulu

Pacific Ocean Div

St. Louis

Kansas City

Southwestern Div Ft. Worth

Philadelphia Baltimore

Pittsburgh Chicago Cincinnati Huntington

Norfolk Louisville Nashville

Atlanta Vicksburg

Wilmington

Memphis Charleston Savannah Mobile Jacksonville

Dallas New Orleans

8 Divisions 41 Districts 2 Centers ERDC 1 Engineer Battalion

Mississippi Valley Div

Galveston

Districts outside the United States: Europe (Germany) Far East (Korea) Japan

South Atlantic Div

USACE Terrain Walk MACOM Organization HQUSACE Humphreys Engineer Center Support Activity (FOA)

Great Lakes and Ohio River Division

Mississippi Valley Division

North Atlantic Division

Northwestern Division

Civilians: 35,033 Uniformed: 610

Pacific Ocean Division

South Atlantic Division

South Pacific Division

Kansas City Vicksburg

Baltimore

Memphis

New England

New Orleans

New York

St Paul

Norfolk

Rock Island

Philadelphia

St Louis

Europe

Buffalo

Southwestern Division

Alaska

Charleston

Albuquerque

Far East

Jacksonville

Sacramento

Omaha Portland

Chicago Detroit

Seattle

Huntington

Fort Worth Galveston Little Rock

Honolulu

Mobile

Los Angeles

Japan

Savannah

San Francisco

Tulsa

Walla Walla Wilmington

Louisville Nashville Pittsburgh

Finance Center (FOA)

Marine Design Center (FOA)

Institute for Water Resources (FOA)

249th Prime Power Battalion (FOA)

TransAtlantic Programs Center

Huntsville Engineering and Support Center

Engineer Research and Development Center (7 Labs)

North Atlantic Division At a Glance

• 14 Governors • 28 Senators • 105 Congressional Districts •Population: 60 million (over 21% of U.S. Population) New England • Oldest Cities and Harbors •Flood Damage Reduction •Military Construction

New York

61 Army Installations 13 States, District of Columbia Europe/Asia Minor/ Greenland/Labrador

Philadelphia

Baltimore

•Division Workforce Norfolk Europe

3,763 Civilian Employees 34 Military Personnel

Current Situation / Mission Overview •• 66,000 66,000 square square miles miles •• 6,100 6,100 miles miles of of coastline coastline (7% (7% of of U.S. U.S. Total) Total) •• 31 31 Flood Flood Control Control Dams Dams (8% (8% of of USACE USACE Total) Total) •• 13 13 major major river river basins basins •• 171 171 Federal Federal Harbors Harbors (19% (19% of of USACE USACE Total) Total) •• 3 3 Hurricane Hurricane Barriers Barriers (Stamford (Stamford CT CT & & New New Bedford Bedford MA, MA, Fox Fox Point, Point, RI) RI) •• Cape Cape Cod Cod Canal Canal –– 17 17 mile mile channel channel (with (with 77 mile mile land land cut) cut) –– Only Only highway highway (2 (2 bridges) bridges) and and rail rail (1 (1 bridge) bridge) access access to to the the Cape Cape or or ground ground evacuation evacuation from from the the Cape Cape –– 17,300 17,300 annual annual transits transits (about (about 1,000 1,000 are are recreational) recreational) –– 2.2 2.2 billion billion gallons gallons of of petroleum petroleum annually annually •• Over Over 2500 2500 Permit Permit Applications Applications Annually Annually Includes 2 Active Duty Bases: $45 Million in •Hanscom Air Force Base O&M (1.5% of •Natick Labs FY09 Program: $202 Million USACE Total)

Military - $65m

Civil Works - $76m

IIS - $61m One Corps Serving the Army and the Nation

Includes $24 Million EPA and $20M VA support

DECOMMISIONED REACTOR AT WATERTOWN, MA

UXO’s

Military Environmental/ Hazardous Toxic & Radiological Waste UST REMOVAL AT DEVENS RFTA

• Operation & Maintenance (environmental) •DERP/FUDS D efense E nv. R estoration P rogram/Formerly U sed Defense S ites Defense Env. Restoration Program/Formerly Used Sites • Underground Storage Tank (UST) Removal • Soil and Ground Water Remediation • Emergency Response • Firing Range Clean -up Clean-up

1990 to 2008 >$50Million Decommissioned Nuclear Reactor PAH, PCB’s Pesticides and Radiological Contaminants

Watertown Arsenal Base Closure and Remediation

Eastland Woolen Mill, ME

Interagency and International Support Significant HTRW work for EPA under Superfund Have worked for VA, FEMA, HUD, INS, Coast Guard, National Park Service, Commonwealth of Massachusetts and others

Jackman, ME Border Patrol Station

District provides inherently Governmental Services - most work accomplished by contract

New Bedford Harbor Superfund Dredging

1985 – 2035+ (at 25,000 cy/year)* $190 Million to date PCBs in sediments * Stimulus Funds Candidate

Eastern Woolen Mills, Corinna, ME 1997 – 2008 (fall) $50 Million to date Chlorobenzenes

Mill Demolition, soil and riverbed removal and groundwater treatment.

US EPA Superfund IIS

Eastern Woolen Mills, Corinna, ME

US EPA Superfund IIS

Eastern Woolen Mills, Corinna, ME

Navigation MV CURRITUCK

CAPE COD CANAL

Deep Draft Harbors

Shallow Draft Harbors

171 Ports Mostly Recreational 11 Deep Draft Commercial Waterways Maintenance and Improvement Dredging: • Deep Draft

• Shallow Draft •Breakwaters and Jetties • Offshore Disposal Sites • Cape Cod Canal

Navigation Improvement Dredging

Boston Harbor, MA Searsport, ME Piscataqua River, NH

Marine Sediments Physical testing Chemical testing Bioassay Bioaccumulation Water Column Toxicity

Improvements to Small Harbors Section 107 of USACE Continuing Authorities Program (CAP)

Operation and Maintenance (Aerial photograph of Cape Cod Canal from west to east.)

Cape Cod Canal

SALISBURY BEACH 40,000 CY

SALISBURY

ERODING BEACH AREAS TO BE NOURISHED

NEWBURYPORT PLUM ISLAND BEACH 120,000 CY FEDERAL PROJECT FEATURES 15-Foot Entrance Channel 9-Foot Inner Channel Stone Jetties Early 1800’s Dikes

NEWBURY NEWBURYPORT HARBOR AND PLUM ISLAND BEACH MASSACHUSETTS RECOMMENDED PLAN

Ecosystem Restoration Initiatives SMELT HILL DAM REMOVAL SALT MARSH RESTORATION

LONSDALE DRIVE IN, RI

• Coastal America • The Nature Conservancy • Corporate Wetlands Restoration Partnership PUBLIC LANDS DAY AT BUFFUMVILLE DAM

• Public Involvement and Outreach

Watershed Studies Merrimack River Basin • ~5000 mi2 basin in NH (76%) and MA (24%) • Roughly 75% forested • Significant economic and natural resource in New England – Drinking water – Recreational opportunities – Aquatic life/ habitat – Hydropower

1.1.

2.2.

Whatare arethe therelative relative What contributions of contributions of pollutionby bytype typeand and pollution area? area? Whatare arethe theeffects effectsofof What pollution in the river, pollution in the river, andhow howisisriver riveruse use and affected? affected?

ScreeningModel Model Screening RiverMonitoring Monitoring River SimulationModels Models Simulation

ST. Croix IJC The International Joint Commission (IJC) established by the Boundary Waters Treaty of 1909 convened the St. Croix River Watershed Board with member from the U.S. and Canada to oversee river water levels and flows and watershed health.

Forest City Dam

Vanceboro Dam

New Brunswick

Grand Falls Dam

Milltown Dam

St. Croix River is the International Boundary between New Brunswick and Maine

St. Croix Watershed Initiatives Thematic watershed maps created from existing GIS data merging data from both countries • Watershed Base Map • Watershed Environmental Management Map • Watershed Recreation Map • Watershed Land Use/Land Cover Map Development of seamless International watershed boundary and hydrologic data set. Computer model Development • Watershed hydrology - rainfall/runoff model to simulate inflows to the reservoirs • Reservoir Simulation model to simulate reservoir levels and outflows based on inflows and operating rules State of watershed report development Workshops and public meeting annually to engage watershed stakeholders and provide for collaboration and enhance of information between Canada and U.S. Annual Board Report to IJC

Watershed Study For Restoration of Wetlands and Waterfowl Habitat

USACE General Investigation

e.g. Lonsdale Wetlands Restoration and Fisherville Dam Remediation

Blackstone River Watershed Massachusetts and Rhode Island

Coastal Salt Ponds Restoration Ninigret and Winnapaug Ponds in Charlestown, RI

$6.5 Million Ninnigret completed 2007 Winnapaug 2009/2010 Eelgrass and Anadromous Fisheries Restoration

Town Pond Salt Marsh Restoration

Section 1135 Removal Of Dredged Material

Town Pond Salt Marsh Restoration

Section 1135 Removal Of Dredged Material

Smelt Hill Dam Removal in Maine

Muddy River FDR & ER Project – Recommended Plan

Construction 2008 – 2010

$64 Million

Muddy River Planned Accomplishments Flood Damage Reduction • •

Protects against recurrence of Oct 1996 Flood (20-Year Event) Significantly reduces flood stages for all events including tributaries

Environmental Restoration • • •

Restores over 40 acres of scarce urban aquatic habitat Restores anadromous fish spawning habitat (Fed. Significant Resource) Enhances diversity & productivity of benthic and warmwater fish communities • Enhances biodiversity by eradicating extensive stands of Phragmites.

Corps Regulatory Authorities Rivers and Harbors Act of 1899. Clean Water Act of 1972 Marine Protection, Research and Sanctuaries Act of 1978 Dedicated state teams Technical support e.g. DAMOS; wetland delineation…

USACE-NAE Regulatory Program

2700 +/- Final Actions per Year 2500 General Permits 100 Individual Permits 100 Enforcement Actions 100 Compliance Actions 25 +/- “Hot” Projects: LNG’s, Highways, Interstate Pipelines and Cables, Wind Farm, Golf Courses, Subdivisions, Commercial Developments, Large Marinas…

Ball Mountain, VT

North Hartland, VT

New England District Operates and Maintains Large Flood Damage Reduction Projects Bedford New BedfordNew Hurricane Barrier, MA (Aerial of New

Colebrook, CT

Bedford hurricane barrier, preferably long-range shot showing extensive dikes associated with project.)

Hodges Village, MA

Manages 55,000 acres of natural resources in New England

Corps of Engineers Flood Damage Reduction Projects in New England

NAE Operates 31 dams and 3 Hurricane Barriers

• • • • •

31 Flood Control Reservoirs 112 Local Protection Projects 3 Hurricane Barriers Total Cost - $500M Damages Prevented - $4.7B

Flood Damage Reduction Inspection of Completed Works & PL 84-99 Rehabilitation & Inspection New Hampshire • LPP - Coastal: 0 • LPP - Inland: 8 • Beach Erosion Control: 2 • Corps Dams: 6

ME Vermont • LPP - Coastal: 0 • LPP - Inland: 3 • Beach Erosion Control: 0 • Corps Dams : 5

Connecticut • LPP - Coastal: 10 • LPP - Inland: 7 • Beach Erosion Control: 22 • Corps Dams : 8

Maine • LPP - Coastal: 11 • LPP - Inland: 8 • Beach Erosion Control: 1 • Corps Dams : 0

VT NH

MA CT

Massachusetts • LPP - Coastal: 9 • LPP - Inland: 33 • Beach Erosion Control: 10 • Corps Dams : 12

RI Rhode Island • LPP - Coastal: 3 • LPP - Inland: 3 • Beach Erosion Control: 5 • Corps Dams : 0

National Levee Safety Program The program will help achieve three goals: • 1) Reduce risk and increase public safety through an informed public, empowered to take responsibility for its safety; • 2) Develop a clear national levee safety policy and standards; and • 3) Maintain a sustainable flood damage reduction system that meets public safety needs.

Basic Levee Certification Requirements Per 44 CFR 65

• Official determination by FEMA that a levee protects against base flood (1% event). • Defines flood insurance zones and rates which impacts grants, mortgages, emergency relief, and land management policies of local community. • To certify levee performance, engineering analysis by a registered professional engineer is required • Demonstrate a high degree of assurance of protection for the base flood. • Freeboard requirement: – Riverine: Minimum 3 ft., another foot by structures, up to foot less elsewhere depending on uncertainly analysis; – Coastal: 1 ft. above 1% wave or maximum run up (2 ft. minimum).

• Closures by engineered devices as part of levee system. • Embankment protection: – Erosion protection and seepage integrity from erosion; seepage analysis for base flood; foundation stability; settlement not to compromise freeboard; interior drainage.

• Operation Plans and criteria

Upcoming Opportunities for Partnering TERC – Total Environmental Restoration Contract • TERC (expires March 2012)...being used at MMR • TERC (expires May 2013)...being used at New Bedford Harbor, MMR. RAC - Remedial Action Contracts • RAC (expires September 2010)...being used at Elizabeth Mine Superfund site. • RAC (expires October 2010)...being used for FUDS/Superfund. • RAC (new $25M) – RFP Summer 2009 – for Fort Devens. • RAC (new $65M) –5 contracts (total of $65M) – RFP Summer 2009 – support all environmental programs.

Upcoming Opportunities for Partnering AE Contracts • • • •

AE (expires May 2010)...being used at the 3 mine sites (Superfund – 81% of $15M). AE (expires June 2010)... FUDS – 83% of $5M. AE (expires June 2010)... FUDS – 35% of $2.5M. AE (expires June 2010)... FUDS – 27% of $2.5M.

Professional Services •

• • •

Various Environmental Consulting Services throughout the Northeastern US and Adjacent Coastal Waters - (expires 2013 $15M)... being used for Marine Sediment Chemistry and EIS/Science investigations and at New Bedford Harbor, Long Island Sound and Centredale Manor. Historic and Archaeological Investigations (expires 2013 – $2.5M). Disposal Area Monitoring System (DAMOS) (expires 2011- $6.25M). Merrimack Watershed – Unrestricted IDIQ $3M/5yr – advertising)

QUESTIONS?

www.nae.usace.army.mil “Doing Business with Us” Recovery Act Project List: http://www.usace.army.mil/recovery/Pages/Projects.aspx