Difference between revisions of "Portal:Desired Future Conditions -DFCs"
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• Maximize the environmental benefits of hydropower generation at Glen Canyon Dam.<br> | • Maximize the environmental benefits of hydropower generation at Glen Canyon Dam.<br> | ||
• Minimize carbon emissions through hydropower generation at Glen Canyon Dam.<br> | • Minimize carbon emissions through hydropower generation at Glen Canyon Dam.<br> | ||
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+ | ''' | ||
+ | == Why the Power DFC is Important == | ||
+ | ''' | ||
+ | • Hydropower is an authorized purpose of Glen Canyon Dam.<br> | ||
+ | • Hydropower produced by Glen Canyon Dam is under long-term contract to not-for-profit entities and 57 tribal entities.<br> | ||
+ | • Power revenues are a significant funding source (est. $20 million/year) for the AMP, Upper Colorado River and San Juan River Endangered Fish Recovery Programs, and the Colorado River Salinity Control Program.<br> | ||
+ | • Hydropower is a renewable resource that is an important component in the Western Electricity Coordinating Council (WECC). Hydropower production is a national objective to help meet the Nation’s needs for reliable, affordable, and environmentally sustainable electricity.<br> | ||
+ | • Glen Canyon generation has the ability to “ramp up” to meet system reliability obligations that are important when regional power shortages or power/transmission system disruptions occur.<br> | ||
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+ | ! <h2 style="margin:0; background:#cef2e0; font-size:120%; font-weight:bold; border:1px solid #a3bfb1; text-align:left; color:#000; padding:0.2em 0.4em;">Cultural Resources DFCs</h2> | ||
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+ | ''' | ||
+ | == Prehistoric Archaeological Sites and Historic Sites: == | ||
+ | ''' | ||
+ | To the extent feasible, maintain significance and integrity through preservation in place.<br> | ||
+ | • If preservation in place is not feasible or reasonable, then implementation of appropriate preservation treatments will be implemented to ensure reduction or elimination of threats consistent with NPS management policies, tribal traditional values and historic preservation law.<br> | ||
+ | • Public access to historic properties on tribal lands is managed by the respective tribes. On lands administered by the NPS, access to some sites for users of the river corridor is maintained as long as integrity of the sites in not compromised.<br> | ||
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+ | ''' | ||
+ | == Traditional Cultural Properties (TCPs): == | ||
+ | ''' | ||
+ | • Attributes are maintained such as National Register eligibility is not compromised. These attributes will be specific to the traditionally associated peoples and will need to be identified by the federal agencies in consultation with those groups. Attributes may include aspects of location or physical integrity, as well as be intangible elements that link the resource to ongoing traditional cultural practices.<br> | ||
+ | • The ability of traditionally associated people to maintain access to and use of the resources is preserved, in accordance with applicable law.<br> | ||
+ | Culturally appropriate conditions of resources are maintained based on traditional ecological knowledge; integration of the desired condition is included in relevant monitoring and management programs.<br> | ||
+ | • Maintain ongoing consultation with the groups for whom the resource has traditional value. Because the desired condition of a TCP needs to be determined by the group for whom it has the traditional value, ongoing consultation is necessary to assess the condition of the resource.<br> | ||
+ | • Mitigate impacts that affect the integrity of the TCPs. How and if effects can be mitigated will need to be developed in conjunction with the traditionally associated peoples for whom the resource holds value.<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | Preservation and appropriate management of cultural resources are vital at many levels. At the most basic level, cultural resources are our history; they define and reaffirm us, and provide a tangible record of who we are and where we have been. Their importance may be to the nation as a whole, to a local community, or to a group traditionally associated with the area. This includes resources within the Grand Canyon region, including resources along the river corridor in Glen and Grand Canyons. | ||
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+ | ''' | ||
+ | == Resources of Traditional Cultural Significance but not NRHP Eligible: == | ||
+ | ''' | ||
+ | These are resources of cultural significance to traditional peoples, often Native American Tribes which do not meet some aspect for eligibility for inclusion in the National Register of Historic Places. A common reason that a resource does not meet National Register eligibility is that the resource lacks a clearly defined boundary or does not remain in a fixed location.<br> | ||
+ | Resources that have the potential to be considered of traditional cultural significance in the Grand Canyon include:<br> | ||
+ | • Animal resources<br> | ||
+ | • Geologic materials<br> | ||
+ | • Landscapes<br> | ||
+ | • Plant resources<br> | ||
+ | • Soundscapes<br> | ||
+ | • Viewscapes<br> | ||
+ | • Water<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | '''Objectives'''<br> | ||
+ | • Maintain the ability of traditionally associated peoples to access and use the resource in accordance with applicable law.<br> | ||
+ | • Maintain culturally appropriate resource conditions based on traditional ecological knowledge, and integrate this desired condition into monitoring and management programs.<br> | ||
+ | • Maintain effective consultation with the groups for whom the resource has traditional cultural significance.<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | '''Metrics'''<br> | ||
+ | Because culture defines the roles that resources play in that culture, only members of that culture can assess the status or health of the resources. Therefore, measures for resource status or health and appropriate management will need to be determined individually by the federal agencies in consultation with the traditionally associated peoples. | ||
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+ | ''' | ||
+ | == Why the Cultural Resources DFC is Important == | ||
+ | ''' | ||
+ | The cultural resources of the Grand Canyon provide a record of human history in the area. They also encompass the traditional cultural use and significance of the Grand Canyon. Maintaining these resources is important to the nation as a whole so we can better understand the long history of the people who came before us and to the traditional groups that consider this area to have traditional significance to them. A number of Native American groups believe the Grand Canyon is their place of origin. These DFCS will help: maintain compliance with relevant cultural resource laws; maintain traditional cultural linkage with the Grand Canyon; and maintain traditional cultural access to and use of resources in the Grand Canyon in accordance with applicable law. | ||
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Revision as of 14:02, 28 April 2016
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The following Desired Future Conditions (DFCs) are intended to be used within the Adaptive Management Program (AMP), including by the Adaptive Management Work Group (AMWG), to help guide the development of recommendations concerning management of Glen Canyon Dam operations and related activities, and dam impacts on Grand Canyon National Park (Grand Canyon) and Glen Canyon National Recreation Area (Glen Canyon). The focus of this document is to identify DFCs that can be accomplished through dam operations. However, for the sake of completeness, this document also includes DFCs that might be achieved through non-operational measures. |
Justification The Secretary is authorized to consider and implement both operational and non-operational measures to address downstream effects of Glen Canyon Dam if those measures meet the Grand Canyon Protection Act’s goal of protecting, mitigating adverse impacts to, and improving the resources downstream of the dam (see Section 1802 of the Grand Canyon Protection Act) |
Scope of the DFCs The Colorado River ecosystem (CRE) which is defined as the Colorado River mainstream corridor and interacting resources in associated riparian and terrace zones, located primarily from the fore bay of Glen Canyon Dam to the western boundary of Grand Canyon National Park. It includes the area where the dam operations impact physical, biological, recreational, cultural, and other resources. The scope of GCDAMP activities may include limited investigations into some tributaries (e.g. the Little Colorado and Paria Rivers). |
DFC Organization These DFCs are divided into four categories, including the Colorado River Ecosystem, Power, Cultural Resources, and Recreation. There are many direct and indirect, short-term and long-term ecosystem responses to dam existence and operations. These DFCs are directly or indirectly linked on short and long-term bases through dam-related flows, sediment retention and distribution, hydropower production, fish and wildlife populations, recreation, and visitor experience. |
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"Before the Adaptive Management Program can measure its success, it must first develop a clear statement of what it is trying to accomplish."
"You can't control what you can't measure."
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