Washington Dept. of Fish and Wildlife SPECIES OF CONCERN

Washington State Request for Intent Forms and Proposals for the
2007 Cooperative Endangered Species Conservation Fund

  • Recovery Land Acquisition Grants

  • Habitat Conservation Plan Land Acquisition Grants
  • Introduction

    This is the State of Washington announcement of a joint federal-state Request for Intent Forms and Proposals for land acquisition grants under the 2007 Cooperative Endangered Species Conservation Fund.  This national fund is established pursuant to Section 6 of the Endangered Species Act, which calls for federal government cooperation with states to conserve threatened and endangered species.

    Parties interested in obtaining grant funds to protect lands in perpetuity for habitat conservation may apply for a Recovery Land Acquisition grant or a Habitat Conservation Plan (HCP) Land Acquisition grant, briefly described in the following table.

    Grant program

    Recovery Land Acquisition

    HCP Land Acquisition

     $ available

    nationwide in 2006

    $12.1M

    $44.1M

    $ awarded to WA state in 2005

    $650,000 awarded to 1 proposal

    $11M awarded to 5 proposals

    Purpose

    Purchase lands or conservation easements that support approved recovery plans for listed species

    Not for management or planning,

    not for HCP-associated lands,

    not for mitigation

    Purchase lands or conservation easements that complement conservation provided by a permitted HCP, provide species and ecosystem conservation benefits

    Not for management or planning, not for mitigation

     USFWS contact

     

    Joanne Stellini   (360) 753-4323
    joanne_stellini@fws.gov

    Contact for general information about this program if you are not already working closely with the USFWS or either state agency’s contacts (listed below) on your grant proposal.

    WDFW contact

    Elizabeth Rodrick  (360) 902-2696
    rodriear@dfw.wa.gov

    DNR contact

    Omroa Bhagwandin   (360) 902-1059
    omroa.bhagwandin@wadnr.gov

    The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS), together with Washington’s Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) and Department of Natural Resources (DNR), have developed a joint federal-state process for developing and reviewing grant proposals in Washington State.  So, parties in Washington state interested in applying for these grants must follow state guidance in this website AND federal guidance at http://endangered.fws.gov/grants/section6/index.html 

    If you have never applied for one of these grants, first determine if your project has the ability to meet basic grant program criteria by reading through the federal website indicated above.  Remember:

    • Projects should be submitted by entities that will help acquire or conserve the land
    • Land must be conserved and managed in perpetuity for the species intended to benefit
    • A minimum 25% non-federal cost share/match must be provided for each project
    • These grants are highly competitive and projects submitted may not be funded

    Then, if you believe your project meets the criteria, call the USFWS contact indicated in the table above.

    Whether or not you have applied for a grant under one of the two land acquisition programs above, in the State of Washington you must first submit a 2007 Intent Form (download form from this site) to have the state consider sponsoring your proposal. Intent forms are due by noon on Friday, September 1, 2006, and should be submitted electronically to: joanne_stellini@fws.gov 

    If WDFW or DNR chooses to sponsor your project, you will then have to submit a full proposal. Full proposals are due by 5 p.m. on Monday, October 16, 2006.

    More information about the grant programs and how to apply for a grant follows:

    Information & Links

    • This Washington state announcement contains partial grant program information, so you MUST also access the USFWS website at http://endangered.fws.gov/grants/section6/index.html for national grant program information, evaluation factors, and scoring criteria.  The national information is current for the 2006 grant competition and will be updated for the 2007 grant competition.  However, few changes are expected.
       
    • Both land acquisition grant programs are intended to benefit USFWS-listed (threatened and endangered) species through permanent protection of their habitat.  Projects focused on salmon recovery may not be competitive, since salmon are not listed by USFWS.  These grants are NOT for, and cannot be used to pay for: ground-moving activities, habitat restoration or enhancement, or compensatory or required mitigation.
       
    • Points will be given to proposals that benefit species the USFWS has listed as endangered or threatened, has designated as proposed or candidate species, and/or are covered by a USFWS-permitted habitat conservation plan, and/or have a completed federal recovery plan. 
    • Points will be given to proposals that benefit Washington State-listed species.  See http://wdfw.wa.gov/wlm/diversty/soc/concern.htm for Washington State-listed species.
       
    • Points will not be given for listed salmon.  However, additional consideration may be given to proposals that benefit threatened or endangered salmon under the jurisdiction of the National Marine Fisheries Service (NOAA Fisheries).  For listed salmon information, see http://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/species/fish/ 
       
    • Proposals will be reviewed, scored, and ranked by a joint state-federal process.  A prioritized list of proposals for Washington State will then be forwarded for consideration at higher federal review levels.  Awards for Recovery Land Acquisition will be determined by USFWS at the regional level; awards for HCP Land Acquisition will be determined by USFWS at the national level. 
       
    • USFWS is expected to announce the 2007 award selection no later than October 1, 2007.  Due to the State’s spending authority limitations, availability of awarded funds should be planned for no sooner than December 1, 2007, but potentially as late as July 1, 2008.
       
    • If a proposal successfully competes for funding, federal money will be awarded to the proposal proponent through the sponsoring state agency.  That state agency (WDFW or DNR) will add a “project coordination cost” (similar to an administrative fee), into your proposal budget before submission.  A budget sheet template will be provided by the state agency sponsoring your proposal.  Contact agency staff indicated on the budget sheet template in order to finalize your proposal’s budget.
       
    • Federal land acquisition grant programs only fund the purchase of land at fair market value, from willing sellers.  Fair market value must be determined by appraisals performed in accordance with the Uniform Appraisal Standards for Federal Land Acquisitions.  We recommend that landowners --particularly forest owners-- determine an accurate estimate of such fair market value for their properties prior to submitting a grant request, to more closely align value and expectations.

    How to Submit a Proposal in Washington State

    After you have submitted your Intent Form and been informed that a state agency will sponsor your land acquisition project, you will need to develop a full proposal. To develop and submit a proposal in the State of Washington, for a 2007 Cooperative Endangered Species Conservation Fund grant, follow these steps.

    • Review each grant program’s description, eligibility criteria, and ranking factors at the federal website at http://endangered.fws.gov/grants/section6/index.html
       
    • Prepare documents specified under “Information Required in a Proposal in Washington State” at this website for the grant program that best fits with your proposal.  Only Word format can be accepted for text, and budgets should be prepared in Excel on templates provided by the state agency sponsoring your proposal.
       
    • For each proposal, submit 5 identical paper originals in person or by mail.  Also, electronically mail the cover sheet, project statement, and budget sheet to:  joanne_stellini@fws.gov. Do not email maps or photographs.

    Proposals must be received by 5 p.m. on Monday, October 16, 2006.

    Proposals may be delivered to the reception desk at the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Western Washington office, located on St. Martin’s campus, 510 Desmond Drive SE, Lacey, WA.

    OR

    Proposals may be mailed to U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, 510 Desmond Drive SE, #102, Lacey, WA  98503-1263.   Attention: Joanne Stellini.   (Be sure to allow ample mailing time, postmarks will not be considered.)

    Late proposals will not be considered.  Proposals will not be accepted by fax.      

     

    Information Required in a Proposal in Washington State

    General

    Proposals must be on standard size (8.5" x 11") paper, using 12-point font, except as noted below. 

    All pages should be single-sided.  Sequentially number your project statement and attachments.   Attachments should contain information integral to your project proposal.  Do not include your own cover letter.  Pages in excess of the number allowed below will be discarded.

    Only the following items should be submitted, in the order listed. 

    • Cover Sheet  (required, 1 page only)   [updated format this year, from this website]
    • Project Statement  (required, up to 5 pages)  [from this website or see federal website]
    • Attachments  (optional, up to 4 pages, on standard size paper, no font requirement)
    • Budget Sheet  (required, 1 page only)  [updated format this year, from state agencies]
    • Maps  - required, in color, up to 3 pages, do not exceed 11” x 17” paper, need to show project location in relation to nearby ownerships/designations (identify federal, state, protected, private lands), and need to show specific parcels proposed for acquisition

      Optional: show project site relative to habitat/species info, habitat management designations, overall project/project phases, and location within Washington state.

    Your budget sheet must be accurate and must be coordinated with the sponsoring state agency contact listed on the budget sheet before submission.  Be sure your budget sheet figures are consistent with figures on your cover sheet and in your Project Statement.  If your proposal is awarded funds, you may be asked to supply additional budget detail, so be sure costs and cost share/match are supportable.

    Have several others proofread your application for mistakes, redundancies, and to ensure that you have addressed each of the evaluation criteria in your narrative.

    There is no need to include Standard Form 424 with your proposal (per the federal website).  This will be handled by the appropriate state agency.

    Specific

    • Proposals for both Recovery Land Acquisition and HCP Land Acquisition grants must show, in table format: parcels to be purchased in their order of priority; parcel name and/or parcel number; parcel location by township, range, and section; parcel acreage; estimated or known parcel cost; and amount of federal funding requested to purchase the parcel.  This information may be used to determine awards if proposals are partially funded.

    Acquisition
    Priority

    Parcel Name
    and/or Number

    Township,
    Range,
    Section

    Acres

    Estimated
    Cost

    Federal $ Requested
    (Estimated Cost minus
    Cost Share)

    1

    Smith parcel   #0489971

    T18N, R7E, S22

    200

    $360,000

    $270,000

    • Only proposals for Recovery Land Acquisition grants must show, in table format, items listed below and illustrated in table header below:

      a) common and scientific names of species counted in your land acquisition proposal;

      b) each species’ federal and state status (must at least be a federal threatened, endangered, proposed, or candidate species);

      c) the species recovery priority number assigned to the species by the USFWS;

      d) whether or not species are using habitat in the project area and for what life history stage;  and

      e) whether acquisition is expected to result in a low, medium, or high benefit to recovery for the species, a brief rationale for that level of benefit, and the source of that information (documentation).

     

    Species Common
    Name
    ---
    Scientific Name

    Federal,
    State Status

    Species Recovery
    Priority Number

    Species Use of
    Suitable Habitat within Project Area?

     

    Low, Medium, or High
    Benefit to Recovery?
    ---
    Rationale for Benefit
    ---
    Documentation

    1

    Golden paintbrush

    Castilleja levisecta

    FT, ST

    2

    Yes:  reproducing population of 800 plants onsite

    Major: 1 of 11 populations remaining in species range necessary for recovery; protection necessary for delisting*

    * USFWS, 2000 federal recovery plan
    • Only proposals for HCP Land Acquisition grants must show, in table format, items listed below and illustrated in table header below:

      a) common and scientific names of species counted in your land acquisition proposal and covered by the HCP associated with your proposal;

      b) each species’ federal and state status (threatened, endangered, species of concern, etc);

      c) whether or not species are using habitat in the project area and for what life history stage;  and

      d) whether a minor or major benefit is expected for the species, the rationale for that level of benefit, and the source of that information (documentation).

     

    Species Common Name
    ---
    Scientific Name

    Federal,
    State
    Status

    Species Use of
    Suitable Habitat within Project Area

    Minor or Major Benefit to Species?
    ---
    Rationale for Benefit
    ---
    Documentation

    1

    Bald eagle

    Halieaeetus luecocephalus

    FT, ST

    Yes:  Nesting, roosting, foraging, wintering

    Major: 4 nest territories, up to 150 eagles feed and winter in project area*

    *XXXXX, 2002 survey
    What's going on now?
    May 2008
    Request for proposals for the 2009 Cooperative Endangered Species Conservation Fund
    More >>>
    What's already happened?
    April 2008
    2008 Grant Awards
    More >>>
    September 2007
    2008 Proposals Received

    More >>>
    July 2007
    2008 Request for Intent
    Forms and Proposals
    More >>>
    May 2007
    Grants Awarded
    More >>>
    April 2007
    Cooperative Endangered Species Conservation Fund 2007 Proposals Received More >>>
    December 2006
    Request for proposals for the 2007 Cooperative Endangered Species Conservation Fund More >>>
    August 2006
    Land Acquisition Projects Requested
    More >>>
    March 2006
    2006 Proposals Received
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    December 2005
    Request for 2006 Proposals
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    December 2005
    2006 Intent Forms Received
    More >>>
    November 2005
    Call for Intent Forms for 2006
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    September 2005
    Funding decisions are
    made and grant awards announced More >>>
    April - May 2005
    Proposals received for land acquisition and HCP development are under review More >>>

    March - April 7, 2005
    Proposals being accepted for land acquisition and HCP development
    More >>>

    January - Febuary 2005
    Review and Consider Potential 2005 Land Acquisition Projects
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    Related Links
    WDFW Species of Concern Website


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