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HomeMy WebLinkAbout20170359 Ver 2_WRC Comments_201910169 North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission 0 Gordon Myers, Executive Director October 16, 2019 Ms. Amanda Fuemmeler U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Regulatory Branch 151 Patton Avenue, Room 208 Asheville, North Carolina 28801-5006 SUBJECT: Loch Dornie Dredging, Island Enhancements, and Linville River Stabilization Project Linville River, Avery County Action ID#: SAW-2019-01616 Dear Ms. Fuemmeler: Biologists with the North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission (NCWRC) reviewed an individual permit application for Grandfather Golf and Country Club (GGCC) to permanently impact 279 ft of the Linville River and 8.1 acres of Loch Dornie (an in -line impoundment on the Linville River), and in addition temporarily impact 71 ft of the Linville River and 4.6 acres of Loch Dorney in Avery County. This project was proposed in 2017 but has been modified substantially in the present application. I attended an agency site visit on October 9, 2019. Our comments on this application are offered for your consideration under provisions of the Clean Water Act of 1977 (33 U.S.C. 466 et. seq.) and Fish and Wildlife Coordination Act (48 Stat. 401, as amended; 16 U.S.C. 661-667d). There are Brown Trout and Rainbow Trout in the Linville River downstream of the project. To allow the applicant to achieve this work during their off-season, we will allow work to proceed during the second half of the Brown Trout moratorium. Project activities should be avoided between October 15 and December 31. The Linville River also supports the endemic and rare Grandfather Mountain Crayfish (Cambarus eeseeohensis, US Federal Species of Concern, NC Significantly Rare). The application proposes to mechanically dredge sediment from 5.9 acres of Loch Dornie, remove/modify 6 islands and create 2 larger islands, and stabilize 262 feet of the Linville River stream bank and 1.1 acres of shoreline on Loch Dornie. The lake will be lowered 8 ft with a siphon over the dam to dewater the upper area of Loch Dornie that is to be dredged. The river will be alternately routed to the western and eastern sides of the upper lake area to allow the other side of the lake to dry out. This dewatered side of the lake will be mechanically dredged and the spoil used to build the new islands and stabilize the lake shoreline. A set of three rock sills is proposed for the free -flowing portion of the Linville River upstream of the lake. This section of the river is natural and is characterized by cobble, boulder, and some bedrock. Mailing Address: Habitat Conservation • 1721 Mail Service Center • Raleigh, NC 27699-1721 Telephone: (919) 707-0220 • Fax: (919) 707-0028 Loch Dornie Dredging 2 October 16, 2019 Linville River, Avery County We strongly recommend against placing these structures in the river, as they could result in barriers to aquatic animals. Turbidity curtains will be set up in the lake at two locations downstream of the work areas to minimize turbidity loss from the work areas to the lake. According to the applicant, equipment will be pulled out of the project footprint before big storms hit the area. As dredging activity is so extensive and will be implemented during the trout moratorium, we request that the applicant monitor turbidity at the lake outfall during lake drawdown, dredging, and refill. We recommend that the applicant work with the NC Division of Water Resources and NCWRC to develop turbidity monitoring methods, turbidity benchmarks, and actions to be taken if excessive turbidity does occur. Flows must be maintained within the Linville River at all times per discussions between McGill Associates and NCWRC in the fall of 2015 regarding GGCC dam maintenance activities and our comments on the 2017 Individual Permit. NCWRC stipulated that a minimum flow of 2 cfs is to be maintained at all times, including during pond refill. However, it is our understanding that the NC GGCC must maintain 1.9 cfs below Loch Dornie per a 1998 NC Department of Natural Resources letter, and NCWRC supports this slightly lower minimum flow limit for the project. We offer the following additional recommendations to minimize impacts to terrestrial and aquatic resources from the project: 1. Project activities should be accomplished as quickly as possible and vigilance used in sediment and erosion control during site preparation, construction, and clean up. We recommend that areas be surrounded by silt fence and/or other measures used to retain sediment at the dredge site. 2. Disturbed areas at the lake and stream bank stabilization areas should be seeded, mulched and/or matted as soon as possible. Any erosion control matting used should be free of plastic or nylon mesh, as this type of mesh netting frequently entangles wildlife and is slow to degrade, resulting in a hazard that may last for years. 3. Polyacrylimide and coir log rolls are proposed for placement within the environmental release channel; these structures should not be placed in flowing streams. 4. The planting list provided in the plans is specifies native wildflowers, shrubs, and trees. All stream bank and lakeshore stabilization areas should be planted with native herbaceous and woody plants. 5. A planting list should be provided for wetlands that will be created as part of this project. Thank you for the opportunity to review and comment on this project. Please contact me at (828) 803-6054 if you have any questions about these comments. Sincerely, Andrea Leslie Mountain Region Coordinator, Habitat Conservation Program cc: Keven Arrance, Hazen and Sawyer Andrew Moore, Fred Tarver, and Sue Homewood, NC Division of Water Resources David Goodfred, Chris Wood, and TR Russ, NCWRC