A-weighted
scale (dBA) Noise intensity as measured with devices that have the
same sensitivity to sound frequencies as the human ear. Yosemite
National Park, Merced Wild and Scenic River Revised Comprehensive
Management Plan and Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement (SEIS)
Chapter VIII: Glossary http://www.nps.gov/yose/planning/mrp/html/14_rmrp_ch8.htm AA
Access Agreement AA
Accountable Area AA
Adjacent Area AA
Adverse Action AA
Alternative Agriculture AA Alternative Approach AA
Alternatives Analysis AA
Analysis Area AA
Approval Application AA
Acquisition Account AA
Assembly Appropriations (Congress) AA
Associated Area AAA
Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1933 AAA
American Arbitration Association Arbitration, Mediation and other
forms of Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR) http://www.adr.org
AAA
Architecture And Appearance AAA
Army Audit Agency http://www.hqda.army.mil/aaaweb/
AAAS
American Association for the Advancement of Science http://www.aaas.org
AAC
Arbitrary And Capricious AACC
American Association of Community Colleges http://www.aacc.nche.edu/
AACS
American Association of Christian Schools http://www.aacs.org
AACU
Association of American Colleges and Universities http://www.aacu.org
A
& E Activation and Evaluation A
& E Allocation and Engineering A
& E Appropriation and Expense A
& E Arts and Entertainment AAEA
American Agricultural Economics Association http://www.aaea.org
AAEE
American Academy of Environmental Engineers http://www.enviro-engrs.org/
AAES
American Association of Engineering Societies http://www.aaes.org
AAF
Americans for the Ancient Forests, 1850 M Street NW, Washington, DC
20036. 202-289-5900 (no website) AAFC
Agriculture and Agrifood Canada http://www.agf.ca
AAFCO
American Association of Feed Control Officials http://www.aafco.org
A
& H Access and Habitat; also Access and Habitat Program http://www.dfw.state.or/us/AH/
AAH
Adopt-A-Highway http://www.adoptahighway.com
AAHE
The American Association for Higher Education http://www.infolit.org/members/aahe.htm
AAHP
Americas Agricultural Heritage Partnership (Silos &
Smokestacks) http://www.silosandsmokestacks.org
AAI
The Agribusiness Accountability Initiative http://www.agribusinessaccountability.org
AALU
Association for Advanced Life Underwriting http://www.aalu.org
AAM
American Agriculture Movement http://www.aaminc.org
AAM Annual Arithmetic Mean (used in all Historical District reports) http://www.aqmd.gov/aqmp/cvves/cvsip_2.doc
(when prompted for a password, just click x to close and document
will continue loading) 19 pages AAMQM Annual Arithmetic Mean of Quarterly Means (specified for
determination of attainment of the federal standards) http://www.aqmd.gov/aqmp/cvves/cvsip_2.doc
(when prompted for a password, just click x to close and document
will continue loading) 19 pages AAOCD
The Arizona Association of Conservation Districts http://aaocd.org/
AAP
Administrative Agency Processes AAP
Administrative Appeal Process AAP
American Academy of Pediatrics http://www.aap.org
AAP
Agribusiness Accountability Project http://www.agribusinessaccountability.org
Co-sponsored
by the Center of Concern http://www.coc.org
and the National Catholic Rural Life Conference http://www.ncrlc.com
the Agribusiness Accountability Initiative is a growing international
network of academics, activists and food system experts who recognize
that corporate concentration and vertical integration among
transnational agro-food companies threaten the sustainability of the
most important industry on earth -- the global food system.
Control
over how our food is produced is in the hands of a handful of
multinational corporations. Corporations that own factory farms are
increasingly powerful, politically connected and globalized. They often
own or control the entire process -- from the raising of animals to
processing and distribution.
Source of quotes: http://www.factoryfarm.org/topics/agribusiness/
AAP
Association of American Publishers AAPE
An Alliance for People and the Environment (TNC) AAPF
Aquatic Animal Production Facility AAPG
The Association of Petroleum Geologists http://www.aapg.index.html AAPL
American Association of Professional Landmen AAQ
Ambient Air Quality AAQS
Ambient Air Quality Standards AAR
Annual Accomplishment Report AAR
Association of American Railroads AARCC
Alternative Agriculture Research and Commercialization Corporation AARP
American Association of Retired Persons AAS
Adopt-A-Stream AAS
Assessment of Academic Skills AASCU
American Association of State Colleges and Universities AASHTO
American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officers AASPO
American Association of Small Property Owners http://www.aaspo.org
AAST
Assessment of Academic Skills Test AAU
Association of American Universities AAUW
American Association of University Women AAW
American Agri-Women AAY
Average Annual Yield (water) AB Absaroka Beartooth Wilderness AB
Aquatic biodiversity, watershed, including water issues. Source:
Spotlight on Conservation http://legacy.ca.gov/pub_docs/final_central_coast-DWR.pdf
Abandoned mineland reclamation The process of cleaning up environmental hazards associated with such abandoned minelands and returning the land to more productive uses. http://www.dep.state.pa.us/hosting/efp2/reports/NWRO/team35/Oil%20Creek%20report.pdf Abandoned
mine land watershed initiative activities (non-CERCLA sites) This
measure involves the inventory and reclamation of mines causing damage
to the environment or posing risks to public health and safety. The
program includes sites that clearly do not involve the Comprehensive,
Emergency Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA). Forest
Service http://www.fs.fed.us/pl/pdb/98report/11_glossary.html
Abandoned Mineral Lands
Includes the remains of any activity relating to the exploration or
development for any mineral resource including hard rock minerals,
mineral materials, industrial minerals, coal, oil shale, oil and gas,
geothermal energy or topsoil. Abandoned mineral lands include mining or
other extraction sites, mill and smelter sites, access roads, processing
facilities, and associated disturbed land. Abandoned Property Property that is found on premises owned or leased by the Government and subject to the filing of a claim thereof by the former owner(s) within three years from the vesting of title in the United States. Glossary is a feature of Know Net, a knowledge management, e-learning and performance support system sponsored by the Government of the United States of America. Know Net can be accessed at http://www.knownet.hhs.gov http://knownet.hhs.gov/log/propmanDR/PPMGloss/definitions.htm#Property%20Management%20 Abandoned
water right A water right that was not put to beneficial use for a
number of years, generally five to seven years. USGS http://water.nv.gov/Water%20Planning/dict-1/wwords-f.pdf
Abandonment
An action involving relinquishment of rights in real property, by an
owner, for the sole purpose of permanently terminating his ownership.
Land cannot be abandoned in favor of a specific party. The act of
abandonment must be voluntary and intentional. Cadastral Data
glossary http://www.fairview-industries.com/standardmodule/glossary.htm
Abandonment and destruction Part of Phase IV: Utilization and Disposal, abandonment and destruction occur when the property has reached the end of its useful life. Glossary is a feature of Know Net, a knowledge management, e-learning and performance support system sponsored by the Government of the United States of America. Know Net can be accessed at http://www.knownet.hhs.gov http://knownet.hhs.gov/log/propmanDR/PPMGloss/definitions.htm#Property%20Management%20 Abatement
The reduction or cancellation of an assessed tax. U.S. Treasury
OTS (Office of Thrift Supervision, in charge of banks, savings and loan
associations, etc.) http://www.ots.treas.gov/glossary/gloss-n.html Abatement
(water) The process of reducing pollutant levels in a water
resource, termed abatement, can be accomplished by modifying or
eliminating the production of the pollutant, and controlling the
transport of the pollutant to the resource. Both the implementation of
BMPs and remediation of non-point source problems are used in the
pollution abatement process. The remediation process for non-point
source water problems involves the analysis, design, evaluation and
implementation of measures, structural or non-structural, to address or
correct a water quality problem or concern, or reduce the impact of the
problem on the environment. Examples of remediation activities include:
evaluation and clean-up operations at a chemical-spill location;
removal, disposal and replacement of soil at a site where hazardous
wastes have contaminated the soil; treatment of leachate from a leaking
landfill; and reclamation of strip-mined areas. (UN) 2. A reduction in
the degree or amount of pollution. Great Lakes glossary Abatement of Nuisance Extinction or termination of a nuisance.
DRE (The California Department of Real Estate) Reference Book: Chapter
29, Glossary http://www.dre.ca.gov/pdf_docs/ref29.pdf The
Abby Dodge 223
U.S. 166 (1912) The
Court barred Federal regulation of the harvest of sponges in Florida's
territorial waters on the ground that the regulation of such harvest was
exclusively within the power of the State. This was the Supreme Court's first, only and last statement that the
state ownership doctrine actually precluded federal wildlife regulation.
The preeminence of this doctrine was short-lived, surviving less than a
decade. The Supreme Court held that states retained public trust
ownership of wildlife within their borders, thus precluding federal
regulation. http://policy.fws.gov/101fw2.html ABC
Acceptable biological catch ABC
American Bird Conservancy ABC
Anti-Bias Curriculum ABC
Area-based collaborations ABC
Aspin-Brown Commission ABC
Association of Boards of Certification ABC
soil A soil having an A, a B, and a C horizon. - USDA ABCPF
Association of B.C. Professional Foresters (Canada) ABEB
The Abandoned Buildings Enforcement Board (West Virginia) ABEL
EPAs computer model for analyzing a violators ability to pay a
civil penalty. ABEP American Bottom Ecosystem Partnership Aberrant
Atypical, departing from the normal type or structure. ABET Accreditation Board for Engineering and Technology ABI
The Association for Biodiversity Information http://www.abi.org
When this URL connects/loads, it becomes: http://www.natureserve.org --
whose offices are located: 1101 Wilson Boulevard, 15th Floor, Arlington,
VA 22209. From its website, at the "Partners / Conservation
Organizations" button: "The
Nature Conservancy. NatureServe works in close
partnership with The Nature Conservancy http://www.nature.org
and continues the Conservancy's long tradition of science-based
conservation. NatureServe was jointly established by the Conservancy and
the network of natural heritage programs and conservation data centers
in 1999, with the majority of NatureServe's staff transferring from the
Conservancy's Conservation Science program. Although new as an
organization, NatureServe's expertise, databases, standards, and tools
thus incorporate more than a quarter-century of experience with the
natural heritage methodology developed under the auspices of the
Conservancy. One of the first products of the collaboration between
NatureServe and the Conservancy was the book-length study, Precious
Heritage: The Status of Biodiversity in the United States [was]
published in 2000. NatureServe and the Conservancy are currently working
together on a number of projects, including the development of an
ecological systems classification, systems for managing biodiversity
information, and ecoregional planning. The Conservancy also provides
substantial ongoing logistical and financial support. The
H. John Heinz III Center for Science, Economics, and the Environment. A
new report issued by the Heinz Center in September 2002 -- The State of
the Nation's Ecosystems: Measuring the Lands, Waters, and Living
Resources of the United States -- introduces a set of environmental
indicators designed to take the pulse of America's lands and waters.
NatureServe scientists worked with the Heinz Center staff to develop a
set of scientifically credible indicators on the condition of native
plant and animal species. Relying on NatureServe conservation status
data, these indicators include a core national-level species-at-risk
indicator, as well as ecosystem-specific indicators for forests,
grasslands and shrublands, and freshwater. See http://www.heinzctr.org/ecosystems/index.htm."
http://www.natureserve.org/aboutUs/conserorgan.jsp
Abiotic
The nonliving
physical and chemical aspects of an organisms environment. Abiotic
refers to such factors as light, temperature, and topography. (DOI/NPS)
Long-Term Monitoring Plan National Capital Region Network, September
30, 2005. Submitted by: Inventory and Monitoring Program, National
Capital Region Network, Center for Urban Ecology, 4598 MacArthur
Boulevard NW, Washington, D.C. 20007. http://science.nature.nps.gov/im/monitor/plans/NCRN_MonitoringPlan.pdf
(Pages G-1 through G-8 - Glossary or pages 150 through 156 of 156
pages) 2. Non-living. Climate is an abiotic
component of ecosystems. 3. Non-living, not associated with life.
Although the term does refer to non-living, it may still be associated
with life. http://www.fs.fed.us/ngp/draft/plan/pdf_plan_draft/Dakota_Prairie_Plan/Appendices/appendix_g.pdf ABK
Anything But Knowledge Ablation
Removal of a part by melting or vaporization. USDA glossary ABMS
American Bureau of Metal Statistics ABN The American Broadcasting Network ABO
Agreed Board Order Aboveground release Any release to the surface of the land or
to surface water. This includes, but is not limited to, releases from
the aboveground portion of an UST system and aboveground releases
associated with overfills and transfer operation as the regulated
substance moves to or from an UST system. RCRA/40CFR280.12 ABS
Areas of Biodiversity Significance Absolute
advantage An advantage that a country has in producing certain goods
or services relative to all or many other countries due to specific
factors of production at its disposal- such as rich farmland and a
favorable climate for agricultural production or a highly educated labor
force for high-tech manufacturing. A country's absolute advantage means
that it can produce certain goods or services at a lower cost than would
be possible for other countries. Thus it is clearly beneficial for this
country to specialize in producing and exporting these goods and
services. But even countries that do not have any absolute advantages
can benefit from international trade; see comparative advantage.
World Bank Glossary Absorption
The uptake of water
or dissolved chemicals by a cell or an organism (as tree roots absorb
dissolved nutrients in the soil). http://www.epa.gov/ogwdw/pubs/gloss2.html
2. Photosynthetic interception of light. 3.
Capacity of environmental media to dispose of wastes and residuals. (2
and 3: UN) Absorption
factor The fraction of a chemical making contact with an organism
that is absorbed by the organism. http://www.epa.gov/ogwdw/pubs/gloss2.html Abstract of Bids The official document upon which all bids are recorded, including "no bids" and "non-responsive" bids. Glossary is a feature of Know Net, a knowledge management, e-learning and performance support system sponsored by the Government of the United States of America. Know Net can be accessed at http://www.knownet.hhs.gov http://knownet.hhs.gov/log/propmanDR/PPMGloss/definitions.htm#Property%20Management%20 Abstract
of Title A statement
usually prepared by an attorney that traces the history of ownership of
real property to determine the status of its present title, and includes
all items of record that might impair the title, such a liens, charges
or encumbrances. U.S. Treasury OTS (Office of Thrift Supervision, in
charge of banks, savings and loan associations, etc.) http://www.ots.treas.gov/glossary/gloss-n.html
2. A compilation of abstracts of deeds and
other pertinent data that affect the title to a piece of real property,
all bound together in chronological order. It is a form of title
evidence made for the purpose of title examination. Cadastral Data
glossary http://www.fairview-industries.com/standardmodule/glossary.htm Abutment
The
sides of the valley against which the dam bears, further classified as
right abutment and left abutment when viewing downstream. U.S.
Bureau of Reclamation Glossary http://www.usbr.gov/uc/envdocs/eis/navajo/pdfs/deis_glossary.pdf
2. That part of the valley wall against which
the dam is constructed. The part of a dam that contacts the riverbank. A
structure that supports the ends of a dam or bridge. An artificial
abutment is sometimes constructed, as a concrete gravity section, to
take the thrust of an arch dam where there is no suitable natural
abutment. Action or place of abutting; the part of a structure that is
the terminal point or receives thrust or pressure. Defined in terms of
left and right as looking away from the reservoir, looking downstream
(i.e. left abutment, right abutment). Abyssal
Pertaining to zones of great depth in the oceans or lakes into which
light does not penetrate; occasionally restricted to depths below 2,000
meters but more usually used for depths between 4,000 and 6,000 meters. http://biology.usgs.gov/s+t/SNT/noframe/zy198.htm AC
Abatement Competitors AC
Abatement and Control AC
Activity Center (for ESA habitat) AC
The Ad Council AC
Adirondack Council AC
Adit Closing AC
Adjusted Compensation AC
Administrative Compliance AC
Agriculture Canada AC
Agricultural Coordinator AC
Agriculture Communications AC
Agro Chemicals AC
Alley Cropping AC
Anorthosite Complex AC
Anti-Corporatism AC
Arbitrary and Capricious AC Archaeological compliance AC Area conservationalist AC
Articles of Confederation AC
Asset Consumption AC
Athletic Complex AC
Atlanta Compromise AC Auriferous Channel ACA
Alabama Coal Association ACA
Alaska Coal Association ACA
Alta California Alliance ACA
American Chain Association ACA
American Conservation Association ACA American Crystallographic Association ACA
Appalachian Corridor Appalachien Our long-term vision is to
restore an ecological balance to the greater Northern Appalachians,
which includes: New York, Vermont, New Hampshire, and Maine and the
Canadian provinces of Ontario, Quebec, Nova Scotia and New Brunswick. We
believe that by working together with a broad spectrum of individuals
and groups from across the region, we can protect the land, air, water,
plants, and animals of this magnificent region for generations to come. What's the Problem? Despite
its predominantly wooded condition, the forests and fields of the
greater northern Appalachian region suffer from a wide range of
ecological problems. The forests we see today are far younger and less
diverse than those that used to dominate the landscape, and the pockets
of natural habitat that remain are too small, too isolated and represent
too few types of ecosystems to maintain native biodiversity at all
levels. In Vermont, for example, a state recognized for its natural
beauty, five mammals and eleven birds are listed as threatened or
endangered. In Maine, at least thirty-two native species no longer exist
in the state with several keystone species, most notably large
carnivores, considered extinct. Compounding the problem is the
increasingly rapid turnover in ownership of massive tracts of forestland
brought on by changes in the global forest products industry. In many
cases, quick action by conservationists has resulted in the long-term
protection of thousand of acres of land. At the same time, however,
these transactions have not always protected the most ecologically
important lands because no overarching, science-based strategy exists to
inform the conservation community on what lands area most in need of
protection. Wildlands
Project Steps In: Recognizing
both the need and opportunity to move large-scale, transboundary
conservation planning forward, the Wildlands
Project is currently developing a large-
scale conservation plan a Wildlands Network Design -- for the
Adirondacks, Northern New England and ecologically linked portions of
eastern Canada. Our science-based proposal focuses on the ecological
needs of several important species including wolf, lynx, and marten. By
focusing in on these particular species, we also guarantee that most
other flora and fauna in the region will have the room they need to
survive and thrive. We are also studying critical natural communities to
ensure that the widest possible range of ecosystem types are protected,
as well as the unique characteristics that make an area particularly
important, such as forested wetlands, steep slopes, and floodplains. Networks of People Protecting
Networks of Land: In
addition to our scientific work, we are actively working on the ground
to educate and inspire a broad-based coalition of wildlands supporters
and advocates from both sides of the border. These supporters include
researchers at several universities and colleges, including Middlebury
College, Dalhousie University, and the University of New Brunswick,
conservation groups like the Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society,
Wildlife Conservation Society of Canada, The Nature Conservancy, land
trusts, and several government agencies and donor organizations. The
Wildlands Project also works closely with key networks of conservation
groups: Two Countries One Forest (2C1F), the Northern Forest Alliance (NFA)
and the Coalition to Restore the Eastern Wolf (CREW). Links: Appalachian Corridor Appalachien http://www.apcor.ca;
Association for the Protection of the Adirondacks http://www.protectadks.org;
Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society-New Brunswick Chapter http://http://www.cpaws.org/grassroots-chapters/nb.html;
Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society-Nova Scotia Chapter http://www.cpaws.org/grassroots-chapters/ns.html;
Forest Watch http://www.forestwatch.org;
Northeast Wilderness Trust http://www.newildernesstrust.org;
Northern Forest Alliance http://www.northernforestalliance.org;
Wildlife Conservation Society Canada http://www.wcs.org/sw-around_the_globe/northamerica/WCSCanada;
Vermont Wilderness Association http://www.vermontwilderness.org
Source: http://www.twp.org/cms/page1115.cfm
and http://www.apcor.ca/engl/start.htm
ACAA
American Coal Ash Association ACC
Ad Council Campaigns ACC
American Copper Council ACC
Architectural Control Committee http://www.nps.gov/wrst/Compliance/mccarthywestsideEA1.pdf
(NPS) ACC
Artificial Cloud Cover ACC
AssociationCentral.com ACC Automatic Control Council ACCA
American Cave Conservation Association ACCC
Ad Council Campaign Criteria Accelerated Erosion
Soil loss that is more severe than natural levels and that results
directly from human activities. Because soil is not produced as
quickly as it is eroded, accelerated erosion can lead to a permanent
reduction in plant productivity. Acceptable
biological catch (ABC) The allowable catch for a species or species
group, based on its estimated abundance. The ABC is used to set the
upper limit of the annual total allowable catch and is calculated by
applying the estimated or proxy harvest rate that produces maximum
sustainable yield to the estimated exploitable stock biomass.
Environmental Assessment/Regulatory Impact Review/Regulatory Flexibility
Analysis for A Program to Monitor Time-Area Closures in the Pacific
Coast Groundfish Fishery, NOAA Northwest Region, Seattle, WA, June 2003 http://www.nwr.noaa.gov/1sustfsh/groundfish/vms/vms_ea_final.pdf Acceptable Management Practices Those farming techniques
recommended by the State Agriculture Development Committee and includes
but not limited to practices for the following purposes: 1) the
production of agricultural and horticultural crops, trees and forest
products, livestock, and poultry and other commodities as described in
the Standard Industrial Classification for agriculture, forestry,
fishing and trapping; 2) the processing and packaging of the
agricultural output of the farm; 3) the wholesale and retail marketing
of the agricultural output of the farm and related products that
contribute to farm income; 4) the replenishment of soil nutrients; 5)
the control of pests, predators and diseases of plants and animals; 6)
the clearing of woodlands, the installation and maintenance of
vegetative and terrain alterations and other physical facilities for
water and soil conservation and surface water control in wetlands areas;
and 7) the on-site disposal of organic agricultural wastes. Acceptable
Management System (AMS) A combination of conservation practices and
management that meets resource quality criteria established in the FOTG
by the State Conservationist that is feasible within the social,
cultural, or economic constraints identified for the resource
conditions. It is expected that some degradation may continue to occur
for the resource after the AMS is applied (Part 506, Glossary, SCS
General Manual). The EPAs Management Measures for
Agricultural Sources Glossary http://www.epa.gov/owow/nps/MMGI/Chapter2/ch2-3.html
Acceptance A formal certification that the goods or services have been received and that they conform to the terms of the contract. Glossary is a feature of Know Net, a knowledge management, e-learning and performance support system sponsored by the Government of the United States of America. Know Net can be accessed at http://www.knownet.hhs.gov http://knownet.hhs.gov/log/propmanDR/PPMGloss/definitions.htm#Property%20Management%20 Acceptance and Approval
The instruments of "acceptance" or "approval" of a
treaty have the same legal effect as ratification and consequently
express the consent of a state to be bound by a treaty. In the practice
of certain states acceptance and approval have been used instead of
ratification when, at a national level, constitutional law does not
require the treaty to be ratified by the head of state. [Arts.2 (1) (b)
and 14 (2), Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties 1969] (UN) Access A means of approach or admission. http://inetdocs.loudoun.gov/b&d/docs/1972ordinance_/article10defini/article10defini.doc
2. The right of an owner to go from and return
to his land. Cadastral Data glossary http://www.fairview-industries.com/standardmodule/glossary.htm
3. The opportunity to approach, enter and make use of public or
private land. http://www.fs.fed.us/ngp/draft/plan/pdf_plan_draft/Dakota_Prairie_Plan/Appendices/appendix_g.pdf Access Agreement (AA) One of the documents necessary to implement a Restoration Project. (DOI/USFWS) Page 12: http://www.usdoj.gov/enrd/ChevronCD.pdf 2. Access Agreement/Order - The EPA is given authority in CERCLA to obtain access to property that is contaminated or threatened with contamination for implementing response actions. The access agreement should describe the activities that will occur and the planned restoration of the property, if any, upon completion. Access agreements are valid only for the current landowner whose signature is on the agreement and do not transfer to future property owners. Access agreements containing residential information, which is considered confidential under the Privacy Code, are coded to this keyword code. However, if a "releasable" access agreement is generated during the Site Assessment (SA) phase, the agreement should be filed in the SA phase [10.17]. If a "releasable" access agreement is generated during the Emergency Response (EM) phase, the agreement should be filed in the EM phase [13.29]. If a "releasable" access agreement is generated during the Remedial phases, it is filed in the Enforcement, Legal Documents (NL) phase [30.04]. http://www.epa.gov/earth1r6/6sf/filestru/pc.htm 3. (a) Generally construed to mean a Reciprocal ROWs agreemen. It is an exchange of grants between the United States and a Permittee that provides for each party using the others roads or constructing roads over the others lands; (b) the rights granted to the United States through the purchase of a ROWs easement. (DOI/BLM) http://www5.or.blm.gov/burns/Planning/AndrewsSteensRMP/ProposedRMP/Appendices/14. Appendix%20M%20PRMP.pdf 4. Term-limited public use and access agreements / easement[s] would temporarily fulfill the goal of compensating the public. However, it will be difficult to compensate the public once access privileges have been terminated. http://southdakotafieldoffice.fws.gov/CONCEPTUAL%20NATURAL%20RESOURCE%20 RESTORATION%209-15-2004%20backup.pdf
(page 43) Access Control An aspect of security that utilizes hardware
systems and specialized procedures to control and monitor the movement
of individuals, vehicles, or materials into, out of, or within secured
areas. Access to various points may be a function of authorization level
or time, or a combination of the two. 2. The use of physical security as
a means of controlling movement into or out of secured areas. USGS Access density A measure of the total number of access points
in both travel directions. The National Cooperative Highway Research
Program (NCHRP) http://www.accessmanagement.gov/pdf/420NCHRP.pdf
Access Management Plan A plan, showing the design of access for
every lot on a given road or highway segment. http://www.nj.gov/dca/osg/plan/stateplan/appendices_glossary.shtml
Access Road A temporary or permanent road over which timber is transported from a loading site to a public road. Also known as a haul road. http://www.epa.gov/OWOW/NPS/MMGI/Chapter3/ch3-3.html 2. A road constructed to facilitate the use and management of the land. Access roads are designed for limited traffic and typically consist of a cut slope, a roadbed, and a fill outslope. Soil Survey of McDowell County, West Virginia, Issued 2004. http://soildatamart.nrcs.usda.gov/Manuscripts/WV047/ 1/WVMcDowell9_2005.pdf
(page 69 of 115) Access to Safe Water Measured by the number of people who have a reasonable means of
getting an adequate amount of clean water, expressed as a percentage of
the total population. It reflects the health of a country's people and
the country's ability to collect, clean, and distribute water. In urban
areas "reasonable" access means there is a public fountain or
water spigot located within 200 meters of the household. In rural areas,
it implies that members of the household do not have to spend excessive
time each day fetching water. Water is safe or unsafe depending on the
amount of bacteria in it. An adequate amount of water is enough to
satisfy metabolic, hygienic, and domestic requirements, usually about 20
liters (about 4 gallons) per person per day. (WB-UN) http://www.worldbank.org/depweb/english/modules/glossary.html
Access to Sanitation Refers to the share of the population with
at least adequate excreta disposal facilities that can effectively
prevent human, animal, and insect contact with excreta. Suitable
facilities range from simple but protected pit latrines to flush toilets
with sewerage. To be effective, all facilities must be correctly
constructed and maintained. (WB-UN) Accessible Environment The atmosphere, the land surface,
oceans, and the portion of the lithosphere that is outside the
controlled area. 10CFR60.2. The atmosphere; land surfaces; surface
waters; oceans; and all of the lithosphere that is beyond the controlled
area. 40CFR191.12 Accession A sample of a crop variety collected at a specific
location and time; may be of any size. UNDP/WRI 2. The process by
which a country becomes a member of an international agreement, such as
the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) or the European
Community. Accession to the GATT involves negotiations to determine the
specific obligations a nonmember country must undertake before it will
be entitled to full GATT membership benefits. Accession is the act
whereby a state accepts the offer or the opportunity to become a party
to a treaty already negotiated and signed by other states. It has the
same legal effect as ratification. Accession usually occurs after the
treaty has entered into force. The Secretary-General of the United
Nations, in his function as depositary, has also accepted accessions to
some conventions before their entry into force. The conditions under
which accession may occur and the procedure involved depend on the
provisions of the treaty. A treaty might provide for the accession of
all other states or for a limited and defined number of states. In the
absence of such a provision, accession can only occur where the
negotiating states were agreed or subsequently agree on it in the case
of the state in question. [Arts.2 (1) (b) and 15, Vienna Convention on
the Law of Treaties 1969] (UN) Accessory
Building A building subordinate to, and located on the same lot with
a main building, the use or which is clearly incidental to that of the
main building or to the use of the land, and which is not attached by
any part of a common wall or roof to the main building. http://inetdocs.loudoun.gov/b&d/docs/1972ordinance_/article10defini/article10defini.doc Accessory
Use A use of land or of a building, or portion thereof, customarily
incidental to the principal use of the land or building and located on
the same lot with such principal use. [For the purpose of zoning
ordinances] accessory uses [may] include swimming pools and game
courts
http://www.greenvilleplanning.com/land_development/zoning_ordinance/article4.htm
2. A use of a building, lot, or portion thereof, which is customarily
incidental and subordinate to the principal use of the main building or
lot. http://inetdocs.loudoun.gov/b&d/docs/1972ordinance_/article10defini/article10defini.doc Accessory Uses and Structures Zoning regulations governing land
uses and structures incidental to the districts primary permitted
uses, dwelling units and structures. Accommodate
(from the Grizzly Bear Recovery in the Bitterroot Ecosystem EIS)
Allowing grizzly bears that move outside the Recovery Area onto public
land in the Experimental Population Area to remain undisturbed unless
they demonstrate a real and imminent threat to human safety or
livestock. Account Balances Net of debits and credits at the end of a reporting period. Glossary is a feature of Know Net, a knowledge management, e-learning and performance support system sponsored by the Government of the United States of America. Know Net can be accessed at http://www.knownet.hhs.gov http://knownet.hhs.gov/log/propmanDR/PPMGloss/definitions.htm#Property%20Management%20 Accountability The act of maintaining an account or record for personal property by providing a complete audit trail for personal property transactions from receipt to final disposition. Also, the obligation imposed by law, lawful order, or regulation, accepted by a person for keeping accurate records, to ensure control of property, documents or funds, with or without physical possession. The obligation, in this context, refers to a person's fiduciary duties, responsibilities and obligations to protect the public interest, but does not necessarily impose personal liability on that person. Glossary is a feature of Know Net, a knowledge management, e-learning and performance support system sponsored by the Government of the United States of America. Know Net can be accessed at http://www.knownet.hhs.gov http://knownet.hhs.gov/log/propmanDR/PPMGloss/definitions.htm#Property%20Management%20 Information%20System
2. Responsibility for the deterioration of the
natural environment, implying the allocation of environmental costs to
the economic activities that cause such deterioration. (UN) Accountable Responsible for something (i.e. a function, area of a building, property). Glossary is a feature of Know Net, a knowledge management, e-learning and performance support system sponsored by the Government of the United States of America. Know Net can be accessed at http://www.knownet.hhs.gov http://knownet.hhs.gov/log/propmanDR/PPMGloss/definitions.htm#Property%20Management%20 Accountable Area (AA) An area defined by organizational or geographical limits, for which a discrete set of formal property accountability records is maintained under the jurisdiction of a designated Accountable Property Officer (APO) [also known as the Property Accountable Officer/Accountable Property Officer, or PAO/APO]. In the Asset Management System (AMS), accountable area constitutes a business unit. The Food and Drug Administration accountable areas are as follows: 1) FDA Centers, 2) ORA Headquarters, 3) ORA Regional and District Offices, and 4) FDA Non-Center Headquarters (NCHQ). Food and Drug Administration Staff Manual Guide, Guide FDA 2620.2, February 13, 2002. http://knownet.hhs.gov/log/propmanDR/PPMDocs/Doc7.doc 2. An area specifically defined by organizational or geographic limits, which is assigned to a designated Property Accountable Officer. It is larger than a property custodial area and maintains accountable records for a number of property custodial areas, which have physical responsibility for personal property. Glossary is a feature of Know Net, a knowledge management, e-learning and performance support system sponsored by the Government of the United States of America. Know Net can be accessed at http://www.knownet.hhs.gov http://knownet.hhs.gov/log/propmanDR/PPMGloss/definitions.htm#Property%20Management%20 Accountable Property Accountable personal property as: items that are classified as non-expendable property (2 years or longer expected life), and have an acquisition cost of $5,000 or greater, and items that are classified as sensitive regardless of acquisition value; items that are recorded in a formal property management or accounting system. This definition of accountable property pertains to the items, which will appear on the property custodial area's inventory, it is not to say that since an item is not accountable by this definition that it is not important to the Government. Glossary is a feature of Know Net, a knowledge management, e-learning and performance support system sponsored by the Government of the United States of America. Know Net can be accessed at http://www.knownet.hhs.gov http://knownet.hhs.gov/log/propmanDR/PPMGloss/definitions.htm#Property%20Management%20 Accountable Property Officer See Property Accountable Officer (PAO). Glossary is a feature of Know Net, a knowledge management, e-learning and performance support system sponsored by the Government of the United States of America. Know Net can be accessed at http://www.knownet.hhs.gov http://knownet.hhs.gov/log/propmanDR/PPMGloss/definitions.htm# Accountable Property Records Formal records of personal property which assign specific responsibility for control to an individual. Such records may control single items or aggregates of similar property. Glossary is a feature of Know Net, a knowledge management, e-learning and performance support system sponsored by the Government of the United States of America. Know Net can be accessed at http://www.knownet.hhs.gov http://knownet.hhs.gov/log/propmanDR/PPMGloss/definitions.htm# Accounting
for Property Plant, and Equipment See SFFAS 6 Accretion
The gradual and imperceptible accumulation of alluvion (soil) by
natural causes. It is created by operation of natural causes. Accretion
is the act, while alluvion is the deposit itself. It differs from
avulsion, which is a sudden and perceptible loss or addition to land by
the action of water. NOAA Coastal Services Center (CSC) Public Trust
Doctrine Glossary http://www.csc.noaa.gov/ptd/glossary.htm
2. The process, driven by plate tectonics, whereby the continental
margin grows by addition of ocean crust and sediments at a subduction
zone. The Forest Ecosystem Management Assessment Team (FEMAT) http://pnwin.nbii.gov/nwfp/FEMAT/
Chapter 9 Glossary http://pnwin.nbii.gov/nwfp/FEMAT/Chapter_9.htm
3. Deposition
of material by sedimentation, which increases land area. http://biology.usgs.gov/s+t/SNT/noframe/zy198.htm
4. The gradual addition of new material to existing material.
Everglades Plan glossary ACC-SWR
The Sub-committee on Water Resources of the UN Administrative
Committee for Coordination (UN) Acculturation Cultural modification resulting from intercultural
borrowing. In cultural geography, the term is used to designate the
change that occurs in the culture of indigenous peoples when contact is
made with a society that is technologically more advanced. A one-way
transfer of cultural traits. Accumulation Accumulation Definition under development. Glossary is a feature of Know Net, a knowledge management, e-learning and performance support system sponsored by the Government of the United States of America. Know Net can be accessed at http://www.knownet.hhs.gov http://knownet.hhs.gov/log/propmanDR/PPMGloss/definitions.htm# Information%20System
2. The build-up of a substance in a plant or animal due to repeated
exposure to and uptake of that substance from the environment. See
"bioaccumulation." Great Lakes glossary ACDI Agricultural Cooperative Development International ACE
Agricultural Conservation Easements ACE
Agriculture in Concert with the Environment ACE
American Council on Education (Tulloch Rule) ACE
Army Corps of Engineers ACE
Assets and Character Education ACE
The Automated Commercial Environment ACEC Ad Council Endorsed Campaign ACEC
American Consulting Engineers Council http://www.acec.org/
ACEC
Area of Critical Environmental Concern ACEEE The American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy http://www.aceee.org
ACF
Alaska Conservation Foundation ACF
American Coal Foundation ACF
Association of Consulting Foresters Achene
A small, usually single-seeded, dry fruit, which remains closed at
maturity. The achene is the simplest of any fruit. http://biology.usgs.gov/s+t/SNT/noframe/zy198.htm ACHP
Advisory Council on Historic Preservation http://www.achp.gov/
http://www.achp.gov/book/case131.html
ACI
Absaroka Conservation Initiative (Wyoming) http://www.wyormef.org/absarokainitiative.asp
ACI
Access Communications Information ACI
Access Control Information ACI
Actual Cost Incurred ACI
Alloy Casting Institute ACI
American Concrete Institute ACIC
Agricultural Conservation Innovation Center Acid Contaminated Property Property that may cause burns or toxicosis when improperly handled due to acid residues adhering to or trapped within the material. Glossary is a feature of Know Net, a knowledge management, e-learning and performance support system sponsored by the Government of the United States of America. Know Net can be accessed at http://www.knownet.hhs.gov http://knownet.hhs.gov/log/propmanDR/PPMGloss/definitions.htm#Property%20Management%20 Acid
Deposition / acid rain Abnormally acidic (low pH) precipitation (or
dry deposition) resulting from emissions of sulfur and nitrogen
compounds that transform during chemical processes in the atmosphere.
Acid deposition can affect the chemistry of soils and acidify lakes,
adversely affecting forests and fish. It does not adversely affect
cropland. The Clean Air Act includes a program focused on controlling
precursor emissions of acid deposition -- primarily sulfur oxides from
coal-fired electric utilities. http://agriculture.house.gov/info/glossary/a.htm
2. Any form of deposition on water, land and other surfaces, that
increases their acidity by contamination with acid pollutants, such as
sulphur dioxide, nitrates and other acids. The deposition can be either
dry (as in the adsorption of acid pollutants to particles) or wet (as in
acid precipitation or acid rain). (United Nations) 3. The total
amount of pollutants that make up what is commonly referred to as acid
rain. This includes both the wet deposition and dry deposition
components that settle out of the atmosphere. See "acid rain."
Great Lakes glossary Acid
mine drainage Drainage of water from areas that have been mined for
coal of other mineral ores; the water has low pH, sometimes less than
2.0 (is acid), because of its contact with sulfur bearing material; acid
drainage is harmful because it often kills aquatic organisms. http://www.epa.gov/ogwdw/pubs/gloss2.html Acid
Precipitation Any form of precipitation (rain, snow, hail or fog)
whose acidity has been increased through the uptake of acid pollutants
from the air. (UN) Acid
Rain Abnormally acidic (low pH) precipitation (or dry deposition)
that results from emissions of sulfur and nitrogen compounds that
transform during chemical processes in the atmosphere. Acid deposition
can affect the chemistry of soils and acidify lakes, adversely affecting
forest and fish. It does not adversely affect cropland. The Clean Air
Act includes a program focused on controlling precursor emissions of
acid deposition -- primarily sulfur oxides from coal-fired electric
utilities. 2. Precipitation, which has been rendered (made) acidic by
airborne pollutants. http://www.epa.gov/ogwdw/pubs/gloss2.html
3. Occurs when sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxide emissions are
transformed in the atmosphere and return to the earth in rain, fog, or
snow. Acid rain can damage lakes, forests, and buildings, contribute to
reduced visibility, and may harm human health. Regulations have been
implemented at the federal and state level to reduce acid rain. See
"Clean Air Act." Great Lakes glossary Acid
Rock Drainage (ARD) (Acid Mine Drainage) The exposure, usually as a
result of mining, of sulfide-bearing minerals to air and water, forming
sulfuric acid. This acid dissolves metals such as lead, zinc, copper,
arsenic, selenium, mercury, and cadmium, into ground and surface water.
Acid rock/mine drainage can poison ground and drinking water and destroy
aquatic life and habitat. Commonly mined ore bodies that pose the risk
of acid rock drainage include gold, silver, copper, iron, zinc, and
lead. BLM Surface Mgmt. Regs. Acidic
The condition of water or soil, which contains a sufficient amount
of acid substances to lower the pH below 7.0. http://www.epa.gov/ogwdw/pubs/gloss2.html Acidification
Increase of hydrogen ions, usually expressed as the pH value of
environmental media. (UN) Acidified
The addition of an acid (usually nitric or sulfuric) to a sample to
lower the pH below 2.0. The purpose of acidification is to
"fix" a sample so it won't change until it is analyzed. http://www.epa.gov/ogwdw/pubs/gloss2.html ACLJ
American Center for Law and Justice ACLU
American Civil Liberties Union ACM
Agency Coordination Meeting ACO
Administrative Consent Order ACORN The Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now (opposed to Wal-Mart stores) ACP Agricultural Conservation Plan ACP Agriculture Conservation Practice ACP Agricultural Conservation Program ACP Agriculture Conservation Plan ACP
Agriculture Control Program (EPA - Water Quality Management) ACP
Air Carcinogen Policy (EPA) ACP
AmeriCorps Program ACP
Architectural and Conservation Planning ACP
Countries Africa, Caribbean and Pacific (UN) http://www.acpsec.org/
ACPA
American Crop Protection Association ACPC
Association of Coffee Producing Countries ACPO
Administrative Compliance and Penalty Order ACPPA
American Concrete Pressure Pipe Association Acquire To obtain personal property in any manner, including: purchase, lease, transfer, donation, manufacture, construction, condemnation or production at Government-owned plants or facilities. Glossary is a feature of Know Net, a knowledge management, e-learning and performance support system sponsored by the Government of the United States of America. Know Net can be accessed at http://www.knownet.hhs.gov http://knownet.hhs.gov/log/propmanDR/PPMGloss/definitions.htm# Acquired Land Land originally purchased by DOE or its predecessors. In
contrast, see other land and withdrawn land. Acquired Lands Lands in Federal ownership that were obtained by the
Federal government through purchase, condemnation, gift, or exchange.
One category of public lands. http://agriculture.house.gov/info/glossary/a.htm
Acquisition Acquiring goods and services (including construction) by contract with appropriated and non-appropriated funds for the use of the Federal Government. Using appropriated and non-appropriated funds to acquire supplies or services (including construction) by contract by and for the Federal Government through purchase or lease. Acquisition begins at the point when Agency needs are established and includes the description of requirements to satisfy Agency needs, solicitation and selection of sources, award of contracts, contract financing, contract performance, contract administration, and those technical and management functions directly related to the process of fulfilling Agency needs by contract. Glossary is a feature of Know Net, a knowledge management, e-learning and performance support system sponsored by the Government of the United States of America. Know Net can be accessed at http://www.knownet.hhs.gov http://knownet.hhs.gov/log/propmanDR/PPMGloss/definitions.htm#Property%20Management%20 Information%20System
Also: http://knownet.hhs.gov/log/propmandr/PPMGloss/definitions.htm#acquisition
Acquisition
and Procurement Goals Executive Order (E.O.) 12586, Federal
Compliance with Right-to-Know Laws and Pollution Prevention
Requirements, requires the Department of Energy (DOE) and other
Federal Agencies to establish a plan and goals for eliminating or
reducing the unnecessary acquisition of products containing extremely
hazardous substances or toxic chemicals and to establish a plan and goal
for voluntarily reducing its own manufacturing, processing, and use of
extremely hazardous substances and toxic chemicals. DOE Acquisition Cost The original cost to the Government of an item of personal property. Acquisition cost typically includes delivery and installation charges. Glossary is a feature of Know Net, a knowledge management, e-learning and performance support system sponsored by the Government of the United States of America. Know Net can be accessed at http://www.knownet.hhs.gov http://knownet.hhs.gov/log/propmanDR/PPMGloss/definitions.htm#Property%20Management%20 Acquisition Cycle A three-phase process that consists of steps and which describes the actions necessary to complete a procurement. The phases are: Phase I Presolicitation The tasks in the acquisition process that take place prior to notifying vendors of an existing requirement. Phase II Solicitation-Award A phase in the acquisition process that contains the functions necessary to notify vendors of an existing requirement, evaluate their proposals and award a contract for supplies or services. Phase III Contract Administration The management of all facets of a contract to ensure that the contractor's total performance is in accordance with its contractual commitments and that the obligations of the Government are fulfilled. Includes the oversight of a contractor's (supplier's) performance pursuant to the fulfillment of the terms, conditions and specifications of a contract. Glossary is a feature of Know Net, a knowledge management, e-learning and performance support system sponsored by the Government of the United States of America. Know Net can be accessed at http://www.knownet.hhs.gov http://knownet.hhs.gov/log/propmanDR/PPMGloss/definitions.htm# Acquisition
of the Equivalent Refers to obtaining ownership or other rights to
natural resources or services that are comparable to those injured. DOI/USFWS
http://www.fws.gov/midwest/FoxRiverNEPA/documents/AppendixA.pdf ACR
Acreage conservation reserve ACR Acronym ACR Alliance for Citizens Rights (Alabama) ACR
Association for Conflict Resolution http://www.acrnet.org
and http://acresolution.org ACRA
American Cultural Resources Association ACRE
Active Citizens for Responsible Environmentalism Acre
A tract of land
containing 43,560 square feet, or 0.0016 square miles of land. An acre
measures 208.71 feet on each side. In the metric system, one acre equals
0.4047 hectare or 40.47 ares. U.S. Treasury OTS (Office of Thrift
Supervision, in charge of banks, savings and loan associations, etc.) http://www.ots.treas.gov/glossary/gloss-n.html
640 acres equals 1 square mile (called a section). 2. A quantity of land
containing 43,560 square feet or .4047 hectares of land. Cadastral
Data glossary http://www.fairview-industries.com/standardmodule/glossary.htm
3. 1 acre=43,560 sq. ft.=208.7 ft.2 =0.405 hectares;
or 640 acres=1 sq. mile (called a section). http://agriculture.house.gov/info/glossary/a.htm
Acre-Foot
The volume of water that would cover one acre of land (43,560 square
feet) to a depth of one foot, equivalent to 325,851 gallons of water. An
acre-foot is the basic measure of agricultural water use. On average,
irrigators apply almost 2 feet of water on each acre through the
crop-growing season; the amount ranges from 4 feet in the Southwest to a
half foot in some eastern states. Irrigation accounts for about 85 maf
(million acre-feet) of water use annually. http://agriculture.house.gov/info/glossary/a.htm
2. 325,851 gallons of water. The volume (as of irrigation water) that
would cover 1 acre to a depth of 1 foot (43,560 cubic feet). BLM (DOI)
Grand Escalante Staircase National Monument DEIS Glossary 3. A
volume of water that covers one acre to a depth of one foot, or 43,560
cubic feet (1233.5 cubic meters). http://www.epa.gov/ogwdw/pubs/gloss2.html
4. The amount of water covering an area of one acre to a depth of one
foot (43,560). National Grassland Plan (USDA Forest Service) http://www.fs.fed.us/ngp/draft/plan/pdf_plan_draft/Dakota_Prairie_Plan/Appendices/appendix_g.pdf Acreage
Allotment Under provisions of permanent commodity price support law,
a farms acreage allotment is its share, based on its previous
production, of the national acreage needed to produce sufficient
supplies of a particular crop. Under the FAIR Act of 1996, acreage
allotments are not applicable to the contract commodities, peanuts or
sugar. However, acreage allotments still apply to tobacco. http://agriculture.house.gov/info/glossary/a.htm
Acreage
Base (or Base Acres) A farms average planted acreage for a
specific crop over the previous five years (for wheat or feed grains) or
three years (for cotton or rice), plus land not planted because of
certain acreage reduction or diversion programs. Commodity acreage bases
were eliminated by the FAIR Act of 1996. http://agriculture.house.gov/info/glossary/a.htm
Acreage
conservation reserve The cropland acreage diverted from production
under the acreage reduction program. http://agriculture.house.gov/info/glossary/a.htm Acreage
diversion programs Historically, commodity programs included
provisions to reduce commodity supplies by diverting acreage to non-crop
uses. Examples include paid diversion, unpaid diversion, set-aside, and
acreage reduction programs. The FAIR Act of 1996 eliminated authority
for the USDA to implement annual acreage reduction programs. The
Conservation Reserve Program pays farmers for the long-term conversion
of fragile cropland land to conserving uses and is not considered to be
an acreage diversion program. http://agriculture.house.gov/info/glossary/a.htm Acreage
Limitation With respect to commodity policy, acreage limitation
might refer to planting constraints under an acreage reduction program,
set-aside, or paid land diversion. In relation to water policy, it is
the maximum number of acres that may be irrigated with less than
full-cost water from Bureau of Reclamation projects. Generally, the
acreage limitation for individuals or legal entities representing 25
people or fewer is 960 acres; however, amounts vary depending on a
landowners legal status. Also referred to as ownership limitation,
ownership entitlement, or non- full-cost entitlement. http://agriculture.house.gov/info/glossary/a.htm
Acreage
reduction program (ARP) A voluntary land retirement system for
wheat, feed grains, cotton, or rice in which participating farmers idled
a crop-specific, nationally set portion of their crop acreage base.
Farmers participating in this program were eligible for benefits such as
Commodity Credit Corporation (CCC) loans and deficiency payments,
although no payments were made on the idled ARP land. The Federal
Agriculture Improvement and Reform Act of 1996 (1996 Act) did not
reauthorize ARP's. USDA-Economic Research Service Farm and Commodity
Policy Glossary of Policy Terms. Also see: http://agriculture.house.gov/info/glossary/a.htm
Acres
U.S.A. A Voice for Eco-Agriculture http://www.acresusa.com/magazines/magazine.htm
Acridids
A family of orthopterous insects including the grasshopper. All the
species of this family can leap. USDA glossary ACRM
Adaptive Coastal Resource Management Acronym
A word formed from
the initial letters or groups of letters of words in a set phrase, as
WAC from Women's Army Corps. From The Random House College Dictionary,
1980 Revised Edition. 2. A word formed from the initial letters or
groups of letters of words in a phase or series of words. http://iaspub.epa.gov/sor/glossary$.startup
3. Refers to a normalized shortened name. (UN) ACRP
The Airport Cooperative Research Program
(National Academy of Sciences NAS) http://www4.trb.org/trb/crp.nsf
ACS
Alternative conservation system ACS
American Colonization Society ACS Aquatic Conservation Strategy (DOI/BLM)
http://www.reo.gov/acs/ ACS
The Automated Commercial System - See The Automated Commercial
Environment. ACSA
American Council of Snowmobile Associations ACSH
American Council on Science and Health ACSI
The Appalachian Clean Streams Initiative ACSO
Arizona Cowpunchers Scholarship Organization http://allaboutacso.com/default.asp
AC
soil A soil having only an A and a C horizon. Commonly, such soil
formed in recent alluvium or on steep rocky slopes. USDA ACSP
Appalachian Clean Streams Program. See Appalachian Clean Streams
Initiative http://www.osmre.gov/acsihome.htm
ACT
The Adirondack Community Trust, Lake Placid, NY http://www.GenerousACT.org
Act Granting the Right of Way to Ditch and Canal Owners Over the Public
Lands, Section 8 In Section 8 of the Act Granting the Right of
Way to Ditch and Canal Owners Over the Public Lands of July 26, 1866,
14 Stat. 253, the U.S. Congress sanctioned the local customs of
appropriating range for raising livestock wherein Congress stated
That the right of way for the construction of highways over public
lands, not reserved for public uses, is hereby granted. The U.S.
Supreme Court has held that this provision granted an absolute right of
livestock grazing access over land later withdrawn as a federal
reservation (Curtin v. Benson, 222 U.S. 78 (1911)). This enactment
worked in harmony with state or territorial laws and custom to validate
livestock range rights. Source: Angus
McIntosh, New Mexico State University Extension Service, [email protected]
or 505-646-5316 ACT
or RCRA The Solid Waste Disposal Act, as amended by the Resource
Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976, as amended, 42U.S.C. Section 6901
et seq. RERA/40CFR260.10 Act of Formal Confirmation
"Act of formal confirmation" is used
as an equivalent for the term "ratification" when an
international organization expresses its consent to be bound to a
treaty. [Arts.2 (1) (b bis) and 14, Vienna Convention on the Law of
Treaties between States and International Organizations or between
International Organizations 1986] (UN) Act of God [CERCLA 101 §(1)] An
unanticipated grave natural disaster or other natural phenomenon of an
exceptional, inevitable, and irresistible character, the effects of
which could not have been prevented or avoided by the exercise of due
care or foresight. EPA Superfund glossary Action
Construction, land management, or other activities that are
authorized, funded, or performed in whole or in part by agencies of
State and local governments and that will result in a change to the
existing environmental conditions or may affect listed endangered or
threatened species or their essential habitat or Natural Areas.
http://www.ilga.gov/commission/jcar/admincode/017/017010750000200R.html
2. An activity or program of any kind authorized, funded, or carried
out, in whole or in part, by a Federal agency in the United States or
upon the high seas, such as: (a) an action intended to conserve listed
species or their habitat; (b) the promulgation of a regulation; (c) the
granting of a license, contract, lease, easement, right-of-way, permit,
or grant-in-aid; or (d) an action directly or indirectly causing
modification to the land, water, or air. (DOI/USFWS) This glossary
is intended to give the meaning of key words, but does not necessarily
provide a legal definition or thorough description. Legal definitions
can be found in the Endangered Species Act, and throughout its
implementing regulations in the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR). Title
50 of the CFR is called Wildlife and Fisheries and its shorthand
designation is written as: 50 CFR. Title 50 contains the regulations
governing all programs of the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service and NOAA
Fisheries. The 50 CFR is subdivided into nearly 700 parts, with each
part covering a different general topic. For example, part 17 covers
endangered and threatened wildlife and plants. Its shorthand designation
is written as: 50 CFR 17. Part 17 is further subdivided into sections,
with each section covering a different specific topic. For example,
section 3 contains definitions and its shorthand designation is written
as: 50 CFR 17.3. This is just one of many sections in the 50 CFR that
contain definitions. The list of endangered and threatened wildlife is
found at 50 CFR 17.11. The corresponding list of endangered and
threatened plants is found at 50 CFR 17.12. Revised April 2005 http://www.fws.gov/endangered/glossary.pdf
3. Any activity, program project or
undertaking or the approval, sanction, assistance, or support of any
activity, policy, program, project, or undertaking, including but not
limited to: (a) recommendations or reports relating to legislation,
including requests for appropriations; (b) new and continuing
activities, programs, projects, or undertakings directly engaged in by
agencies or supported in whole or in part through state contracts,
grants, subsidies, loans, or other forms of funding assistance, or
involving a state lease, permit, license, certificate, or other
entitlement of use; (c) the sale or transfer of state properties; (d)
comprehensive or areawide planning in which provision may be made for
any actions or which may result in a proposed action. SPRPMA 2. A
highway or transit project proposed for FHWA or FTA funding. It also
includes activities such as joint and multiple use permits, changes in
access control, etc., which may or may not involve a commitment of
Federal funds. 23 CFR § 771.107(b). Action
Alternative Any alternative that is not the 'no action' alternative.
DOI/NPS http://www.nps.gov/cuva/management/rmprojects/ruraleis/ Action
area All areas to be affected directly or indirectly by the Federal
action and not merely the immediate area involved in the action. (DOI/USFWS)
This glossary is intended to give the meaning of key words, but does
not necessarily provide a legal definition or thorough description.
Legal definitions can be found in the Endangered Species Act, and
throughout its implementing regulations in the Code of Federal
Regulations (CFR). Title 50 of the CFR is called Wildlife and Fisheries
and its shorthand designation is written as: 50 CFR. Title 50 contains
the regulations governing all programs of the U.S. Fish & Wildlife
Service and NOAA Fisheries. The 50 CFR is subdivided into nearly 700
parts, with each part covering a different general topic. For example,
part 17 covers endangered and threatened wildlife and plants. Its
shorthand designation is written as: 50 CFR 17. Part 17 is further
subdivided into sections, with each section covering a different
specific topic. For example, section 3 contains definitions and its
shorthand designation is written as: 50 CFR 17.3. This is just one of
many sections in the 50 CFR that contain definitions. The list of
endangered and threatened wildlife is found at 50 CFR 17.11. The
corresponding list of endangered and threatened plants is found at 50
CFR 17.12. Revised April 2005 http://www.fws.gov/endangered/glossary.pdf Action
Levels As opposed to tolerances (which are established from
pesticide residues occurring as a direct result of proper usage), action
levels are set for inadvertent residues resulting from previous legal
use or accidental contamination. At the action level set by EPA, FDA and
USDA are required to take enforcement action against the contaminated
food or agricultural commodity. The term is also used in other
regulatory programs. http://agriculture.house.gov/info/glossary/a.htm Action
Levels (ALs) Als are health- and environmentally-based levels of
hazardous constituents in ground water, surface water, soil, or air,
determined to be indicators for protection of human health and the
environment (55FR30814et seq.; July 27, 1990). In the corrective action
process, the regulator uses ALs to determine if the owner/operator of a
treatment, storage, and disposal facility is required to perform a
corrective measure study. Action levels are media-specific, health
and environmentally-based contaminant concentration determined by EPA to
be protective of human health and the environment. Action levels are
established for each environmental medium, including ground water, and
serve as the trigger for the requirement to conduct a RCRA Corrective
Measures Study (CMS). Action
Memorandum The internal EPA document that serves as a written record
of Regional or HQ approval of Superfund financing of a removal action.
The Action Memorandum describes site conditions, including the nature of
the release, actual or potential threats, enforcement strategy and
proposed costs and actions. An Action Memorandum is also the appropriate
format within EPA for requesting and obtaining Superfund ceiling
increases, exemptions to the twelve-month and $2 million limits, and
redistribution of funds because of changes in the scope of work. DOE Action Plan for the Future (Cultural Landscapes)
The Action Plan for the Future (Cultural Landscapes) was prepared by
the UNESCO "Expert Meeting on Cultural Landscapes of Outstanding
Universal Value" held in Templin, Germany in October 1993 (See von
Droste et al 1995: Annex 1). The Action Plan outlines recommendations
concerning the provision of "Guidance to States Parties on the
Identification, Assessment, Nomination and Management of Cultural
Landscapes for Inclusion in the World Heritage List" and on the
preparation of a "Thematic Study on Cultural Landscapes. The
World Heritage Committee adopted the Action Plan at its seventeenth
session in 1993 (UNESCO 4 February 1994:55-56 and Annex VII). See
Cultural landscapes Glossary
of World Heritage Terms Action-Specific
ARARS Action-specific applicable or relevant and appropriate
requirements (ARARs) restrict or regulate remediation, treatment, or
disposal activities. DOE Action
Tracking System A database that tracks the development of major
regulations, guidance, and policy for all EPA programs. DOE ACTIS
Automated Client Tracking Information System Activated
Carbon Adsorptive
particles or granules of carbon usually obtained by heating carbon (such
as wood). These particles or granules have a high capacity to
selectively remove certain trace and soluble materials from water. http://www.epa.gov/ogwdw/pubs/gloss2.html
2. Highly absorbent form of carbon used to
remove odors and toxic substances from liquid or gaseous emissions. In
industrial wastewater treatment, it is used to remove dissolved organic
matter from wastewater. It is also used in motor vehicle evaporative
control systems. (UN) Activated
Sludge Sludge containing a high degree of active bacterial mass that
is mixed with primary effluent or raw waste water and kept in suspension
by aeration and/or agitation to eliminate organic material from the
waste water. After decantation, the sludge is recycled into the aeration
tank. (UN) Activation
Generation of an appropriate bacterial mass in sludge, under aerobic
conditions, that is capable of eliminating and/or adsorbing organic
matter from sewage. (UN) Activation
Notification by telephone or other expeditious manner or, when
required, the assembly of some or all appropriate members of the
Regional Response Team or National Response Team. CERCLA/40CFR300.5 Active
cracking Cracking showing recent movement.- NPS Architecture,
Fortifications, and Preservation glossary Active
cavity A completed cavity or start exhibiting fresh pine resin
associated with cavity maintenance, cavity construction, or resin well
excavation by red-cockaded woodpeckers. DOI/USFWS http://rcwrecovery.fws.gov/finalrecoveryplan.pdf Active
cavity tree Any tree containing one or more active cavities. DOI/USFWS
http://rcwrecovery.fws.gov/finalrecoveryplan.pdf Active
cluster A cluster containing one or more active cavity trees.
DOI/USFWS http://rcwrecovery.fws.gov/finalrecoveryplan.pdf Active
Fault A fault which, because of its present tectonic setting, can
undergo movement from time to time in the immediate geologic future. A
fault, which has moved during the recent geologic past (Quaternary) and,
thus, may move again. It may or may not generate earthquakes. Active
Ingredient (AI) The chemical or substance component of a pesticide
product that can kill, repel, attract, mitigate or control a pest or
that acts as a plant growth regulator, desiccant, or nitrogen
stabilizer. The remainder of a formulated pesticide product consists of
one or more inert ingredients (such as water, solvents,
emulsifiers, surfactants, clay and propellants), which are there for
reasons other than pesticidal activity. EPA Office of Pesticide
Programs Glossary 2. (In pesticides) Specific chemical that kills or
controls target pests. Pesticides are regulated primarily on the basis
of active ingredients. 3. In
any pesticide product, the component that kills, or otherwise controls,
target pests. Pesticides are regulated by the Environmental Protection
Agency primarily on the basis of active ingredients. http://agriculture.house.gov/info/glossary/a.htm Active Inventory That portion which is carried to satisfy average expected demand. Glossary is a feature of Know Net, a knowledge management, e-learning and performance support system sponsored by the Government of the United States of America. Know Net can be accessed at http://www.knownet.hhs.gov http://knownet.hhs.gov/log/propmanDR/PPMGloss/definitions.htm#Property%20Management%20 Active
layer A seasonally thawed surface layer of soil in arctic or alpine
regions that lies above permanently frozen ground and is between a few
centimeters and about 3 meters thick. http://biology.usgs.gov/s+t/SNT/noframe/zy198.htm Active
management Management actions that are currently in operation or
effect. DOI/NPS http://www.nps.gov/cuva/management/rmprojects/ruraleis/
2. Management approach in which humans actively manipulate ecosystems
through timber harvesting and thinning to improve forest health and to
reduce fire hazard. KIPZ Kootenai and Idaho Panhandle National
Forests http://www.fs.fed.us/kipz/documents/reference/glossary.shtml Active
Preference The total number of animal unit months of forage that can
be licensed. BLM (DOI) Grand Escalante Staircase National Monument
DEIS Glossary Active
Recreation Moderate to high intensity structured recreational use,
in many cases requiring some modification of natural landforms and the
provision of service facilities (parking areas, restrooms, visitor
centers, etc.). Typical activities include individual and team sports,
picnicking and fishing. Active
remediation The use of active ground water remediation methods such
as gradient manipulation, ground water extraction and treatment, or in
situ ground water treatment to restore ground water quality to
acceptable levels. U.S. Department of Energy (DOI) Remediation of
the Moab Uranium Mill Tailings, Grand and San Juan Counties, Utah Draft
Environmental Impact Statement http://www.eh.doe.gov/nepa/docs/deis/eis0355d/vol_1/chap10.pdf Active storage See also "minimum pool." The amount of
storage within a reservoir used for storage and release under normal
operating parameters. U.S. Bureau of Reclamation Glossary http://www.usbr.gov/uc/envdocs/eis/navajo/pdfs/deis_glossary.pdf Active
Use The current authorized use, including livestock grazing and
conservation use. Active use may constitute a portion, or all, of
permitted use. Active use does not include temporary nonuse or suspended
use of forage within all or a portion of an allotment. (BLM-DOI) Activism
A doctrine or practice that emphasizes direct vigorous action
especially in support of or opposition to one side of a controversial
issue. Activist - noun or adjective. Source: Merriam-Webster Online. http://www.m-w.com/dictionary/activist Activity A
measure, course of action, or treatment that is undertaken to directly
or indirectly produce, enhance, or maintain forest and rangeland outputs
or achieve administrative or environmental quality objectives.
National Grassland Plan (USDA Forest Service) http://www.fs.fed.us/ngp/draft/plan/pdf_plan_draft/Dakota_Prairie_Plan/Appendices/appendix_g.pdf
2. What visitors do at a National Wildlife
Refuge. In some studies, visitor activities are grouped into hunting,
fishing, and non-consumptive uses. Activity Address Code Also known as ACC, an Activity Address Code is required to access GSA FEDSTRIP, GSA Advantage and ROCS. This code is assigned to the organization. Glossary is a feature of Know Net, a knowledge management, e-learning and performance support system sponsored by the Government of the United States of America. Know Net can be accessed at http://www.knownet.hhs.gov http://knownet.hhs.gov/log/propmanDR/PPMGloss/definitions.htm# Activity
Analysis The analysis and measurement (in terms of time, cost, and
throughput) of distinct units of work (activities) that make up a
process. Forest Service
http://svinet2.fs.fed.us/recreation/permits/final1.htm
Activity area
A land area affected by a management activity to which soil quality
standards are applied. Activity areas must be feasible to monitor and
include harvest units within timber sale areas, prescribed burn areas,
grazing areas or pastures within range allotments, riparian areas,
recreational areas, and alpine areas. KIPZ Kootenai and Idaho
Panhandle National Forests http://www.fs.fed.us/kipz/documents/reference/glossary.shtml
2. An area of land impacted by a management activity or activities. An
activity area can range from a few acres to an entire watershed
depending on the type of monitoring being conducted. National
Grassland Plan (USDA Forest Service) http://www.fs.fed.us/ngp/draft/plan/pdf_plan_draft/Dakota_Prairie_Plan/Appendices/appendix_g.pdf Activity-Based
Costing A set of accounting methods used to identify and describe
costs and required resources for activities within processes. Forest
Service http://svinet2.fs.fed.us/recreation/permits/final1.htm Activity Fuel Debris generated by a Forest activity such as firewood gathering, pre-commercial thinning, timber harvesting, and road construction. http://permanent.access.gpo.gov/websites/fsfedus/www.fs.fed.us/r1/gallatin/projects/ Activity
Fuels Debris generated by an activity that increases fire potential,
such as firewood gathering, pre-commercial thinning, timber harvesting,
and road construction. National Grassland Plan (USDA Forest Service)
http://www.fs.fed.us/ngp/draft/plan/pdf_plan_draft/Dakota_Prairie_Plan/Appendices/appendix_g.pdf
2. Fuels generated during implementation of various projects.
Umatilla National Forest (Washington/Oregon) http://www.fs.fed.us/r6/uma/projects/monitor/01glossary.pdf Activity
Plan A detailed and
specific plan for managing a single resource program or plan element
undertaken as needed to implement the more general resource management
plan decisions. An activity plan is prepared for specific areas to reach
specific resource management objectives within stated time frames.
McGregor Range Draft Resource Management Plan Amendment and
Environmental Impact Statement, Prepared for United States Department of
the Interior Bureau of Land Management, Las Cruces (New Mexico) Field
Office, January 2005. http://www.nm.blm.gov/lcfo/mcgregor/docs/Draft%20RMPA_EIS_01_05_low.pdf
(DOI/BLM) Glossary
(Pages 259-268 of 282) 2. An Activity plan is a Bureau of Land
Management document that describes management objectives, actions, and
projects to implement decisions of the resource management plan or other
planning documents. Usually prepared for one or more resources in a
specific area.
The Forest Ecosystem Management Assessment Team (FEMAT) http://pnwin.nbii.gov/nwfp/FEMAT/
Chapter 9 Glossary http://pnwin.nbii.gov/nwfp/FEMAT/Chapter_9.htm Actor in World Politics
An actor in world politics has been defined as 'any entity, which plays
an identifiable role in international relations.' (UN) ACTPN
Advisory Committee for Trade Policy and Negotiations http://agriculture.house.gov/info/glossary/a.htm Actual
production history (APH) A measure of an individual farmers
annual production of a commodity over a multi-year period. The APH
serves as the basis for the farmers "normal" crop yield in
the crop insurance program. When the actual crop yield deviates by more
than a certain percentage from the APH, an insured producer is be
eligible for an indemnity (loss) payment. http://agriculture.house.gov/info/glossary/a.htm Actuarially
Sound The financial goal of any insurance program (including the
federal crop insurance program) is to operate on an actuarially sound
basis; that is, total premiums collected should more than offset total
indemnities paid out. ACUB Army Compatible Use Buffer (Camp Ripley, Minnesota http://www.dma.state.mn.us/cpripley/envir/envir.htm,
plus locations in North Carolina and Hawaii, all with help from The
Nature Conservancy and other partners like USFWS
) The Fort Bragg (North Carolina) Private Lands
Initiative (PLI) is part
of the Armys conservation program. The Army has developed the
Army Compatible Use Buffers (ACUB) Program to help address encroachment
issues. This program is based on the successful Fort Bragg Private Lands
Initiative. The Private Lands Initiative involves a cooperation
agreement between the Army and non-governmental organizations to
cost-share the purchase of land titles or conservation easements from
willing land owners (at fair market value) to minimize incompatible land
use. ACUBs are defined as formal agreements between Army and eligible
entities for acquisition by the entities of land or an interest in land
and/or water rights from willing sellers. Formal agreements may provide
for limiting encroachment through acquisition of development rights,
cooperative agreements, conservation easements, and other means in
accordance with applicable laws. Eligible entities are established
conservation groups such as The Nature Conservancy, Trust for Public
Lands, Land Trust Alliance, Conservation Fund, or state and political
subdivisions. Many eligible entities have expressed interest in
partnering with the Army. The objectives of the ACUB program are: Reduce training and
testing restrictions; Increase available
maneuver space; Prevent development
along the installation boundary; Reduce
Army's time and financial investment in natural resource management;
Meet Endangered Species
Act recovery responsibilities by preserving habitat, watersheds, and
open space;
Prevent future
threatened and endangered species listings. The Assistant Chief of Staff
for Installation Management (ACSIM) is responsible for the ACUB and
conveyance programs. http://srp.army.mil/public/lm/natcult/lesson4.jsp
ACUNS
Academic Council for United Nations Systems Acute
concentration The concentration of a contaminant in a medium (air,
water, and soil) that would produce an acute exposure. Acute exposure is
a single, short-term exposure (usually a day or less) to radiation, a
toxic substance, or other stressors that may result in severe biological
harm or death. U.S. Department of Energy (DOI) Remediation of the
Moab Uranium Mill Tailings, Grand and San Juan Counties, Utah Draft
Environmental Impact Statement http://www.eh.doe.gov/nepa/docs/deis/eis0355d/vol_1/chap10.pdf Acute
Toxicity The ability of a substance to cause harmful effects soon
after a single exposure or dose. Also, any severe poisonous effects
resulting from a single short-term exposure to a toxic substance. Acute
Toxicity Adverse effects to a plant or animal that result from an
acute exposure to a stimulant, such as a pollutant. The exposure usually
does not constitute a substantial portion of the life span of the
organism. In standard laboratory toxicity tests with aquatic organisms,
an effect observed in 96 hours or less is typically considered acute.
Also described as a stimulus severe enough to induce an effect.
Great Lakes glossary ACWA Association of California Water Agencies http://www.acwanet.com
ACWG The Asian Carp Working Group http://asiancarp.org/default.asp ACZ Atlantic Coastal Zone http://www.dal.ca/aczisc/aczisc ACZISC
The Atlantic Coastal Zone Information Steering Committee. The ACZISC
was established in January 1992 to promote regional cooperation in Atlantic Canada with regards to coastal
mapping and Integrated Coastal Management (ICM). The ACZISC is
multi-disciplinary and multi-sectoral with representation from eight
federal departments, four Atlantic provincial governments, community
organizations, academia and the private sector. http://www.dal.ca/aczisc
or http://www.dal.ca/aczisc/mandate
[UN/GLOBAL] 2. In 1992, the Council of Maritime Premiers gave rise to the
Atlantic Coastal Zoning Information Steering Committee (ACZISC); it was
initially set up to ensure that provincial departments had access to the
zonal information that they required for decision-making, and to
facilitate information management and resource mapping. Soon thereafter,
membership in ACZISC was opened up to seven interested federal
departments. Later, membership was also extended to the private sector
and to First Nations. ACZISC continues to operate. The current purpose
of ACZISC is that of "information sharing" in respect of
coastal zoning issues. Related projects deal with: database directory;
inventory of coastal mapping projects; information on how to share data;
and, maps and imagery on-line. The Steering Committee for ACZISC is a
committee of equals; a particular department did not initiate it and no
department has taken the lead. The Steering Committee -- which meets
about three to four times each year -- has representation from all of
the member departments, private industry and First Nations
organizations. The Steering Committee has terms of reference, by-laws
and operational protocols, and decides what activities ACZISC will
undertake. There are a number of working groups that report to the
Steering Committee. There is a small, two-member Secretariat that
carries out the work for ACZISC. The Secretariat is located in the
International Oceans Institute of Canada on the Dalhousie University
campus. The Secretariat reports to the Steering Committee and takes
direction from it. When the Steering Committee is not meeting, direction
to the Secretariat on time-sensitive issues is provided by an Executive
Council, which has four members -- one each for the Provinces, the
federal departments, the private sector and First Nations. Together the
provincial departments contribute $65,000 to ACZISC; the seven federal
departments match that funding. There is no enabling agreement currently
in place. Recently the Regional Directors General of the federal
departments developed a federal MOU to set out their funding
responsibilities for the next three years. However, the pooling of funds
is complicated by the different methods employed by federal departments
to transfer the operating money: some request an invoice from ACZISC, so
that they can provide payment for services rendered; others prefer their
contribution to flow to a designated department, which is then in charge
of transferring the funds to the ACZISC. http://www.dal.ca/aczisc/aczisc
and http://www.iucn.org/places/canada/link.htm AD
Aerial Dispersant AD
Aerosol Distribution AD
After Divinity AD Appraisal District (taxation) AD
Aquatic Diversity AD
Associations Directories Ad
Valorem Duty A tariff expressed as a fixed percentage of the value
of the imported commodity or product. Generally,
by contrast, a specific duty is applied as a charge on each unit or
specified quantity of an imported item (i.e., $5 per ton). http://agriculture.house.gov/info/glossary/a.htm
ADA
American Dairy Association ADA
Americans with Disabilities Act ADAAG
Americans with Disabilities Act Accessibility Guidelines ADAMHTP
Alcohol, Drugs And Mental Health Treatment Program Adams
Outdoor Advertising of Charlotte v. North Carolina Department of
Transportation, 112 N.C.
App. 120 (1993) A statutory inverse condemnation action may not be
maintained to recover damages when DOT plants trees in the right-of-way
that obstruct a billboard. Adams owns eleven billboards located on
private property along a state maintained road. After the billboards
were erected, Adams alleged that DOT planted trees and vegetation within
the state owned right-of-way adjacent to the leased property on which
the billboards are located. Adams claimed that, since the vegetation has
obscured or will eventually obscure the billboards, the billboards have
been rendered economically useless and, therefore, Adams is entitled to
compensation for inverse condemnation. After the trial court dismissed
the action for failure to state a claim, Adams appealed. The Court of
Appeals first indicated that, since the complaint did not raise
constitutional issues, it was considering the claim solely under G.S.
136-111. In order to state a claim under that statute, a plaintiff has
to show a taking of private property for public use or purpose. It is
not, however, necessary to show an actual occupation of the land, as a
taking of private property occurs when there is "a substantial
interference with elemental rights growing out of the ownership of the
property." The interference must result in injuries that are not
"merely consequential or incidental." Relying on dictionary
definitions of "consequential" and "incidental," the
Court held that any damages suffered by Adams were consequential or
incidental. Specifically, the Court noted that the trees were planted as
part of a beautification project and any obstruction was a consequential
or incidental result. Furthermore, DOT's use of its right-of-way was
consistent with its statutory powers. The Court also acknowledged that
case law supports the notion that the obstruction of the right to view
does not constitute a taking of property. Finally, Adams failed to
provide any statutory basis or authority for a taking based upon the
"right to be seen." http://128.121.172.88/Legal/Digest/93-94cl.html
[Land
Use; Signs; Inverse Condemnation] Adaptation A
genetically determined characteristic that enhances an organisms
chances for survival and reproduction. National Grassland Plan (USDA
Forest Service) http://www.fs.fed.us/ngp/draft/plan/pdf_plan_draft/Dakota_Prairie_Plan/Appendices/appendix_g.pdf
2. Adjustment to environmental conditions.
Changes in an organisms structure or habits that help it to adjust to
its surroundings. (UN) 3. A genetically determined characteristic that
enhances an organism's ability to cope with its environment. UNDP/WRI Adapted
Products Products that are less polluting, at the time of their
consumption and/or scrapping, than equivalent traditional products. In
most cases, such products are more costly, and their production and
consumption are usually encouraged by fiscal and other incentives. (UN) Adaptive
Assessment Team (AAT) An interagency, interdisciplinary task team of
the RECOVER Leadership Group, which is responsible for design and
revision of conceptual models and regional monitoring, preparation of
the Annual Adaptive Assessment Report and coordination of science peer
reviews. Everglades Plan glossary Adaptive Harvest Management (AHM) The annual process of setting duck-hunting regulations in the United States is based on a system of resource monitoring, data analyses, and rule making. Each year, monitoring activities such as aerial surveys and hunter questionnaires provide information on harvest levels, population size, and habitat conditions. Data collected from this monitoring program are analyzed each year, and proposals for duck-hunting regulations are developed by the Flyway Councils, States, and the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service (USFWS). After extensive public review, the USFWS announces a regulatory framework within which States can set their hunting seasons. In 1995, the USFWS adopted the concept of adaptive resource management for regulating duck harvests in the United States. The adaptive approach explicitly recognizes that the consequences of hunting regulations cannot be predicted with certainty, and provides a framework for making objective decisions in the face of that uncertainty. Inherent in the adaptive approach is an awareness that management performance can be maximized only if regulatory effects can be predicted reliably. Thus, adaptive management relies on an iterative cycle of monitoring, assessment, and decision making to clarify the relationships among hunting regulations, harvests, and waterfowl abundance. In regulating waterfowl harvests, managers face four fundamental sources of uncertainty: (1) environmental variation - the temporal and spatial variation in weather conditions and other key features of waterfowl habitat; an example is the annual change in the number of ponds in the Prairie Pothole Region, where water conditions influence duck reproductive success; (2) partial controllability - the ability of managers to control harvest only within limits; the harvest resulting from a particular set of hunting regulations cannot be predicted with certainty because of variation in weather conditions, timing of migration, hunter effort, and other factors; (3) partial observability -- the ability to estimate key population attributes (e.g., population size, reproductive rate, harvest) only within the precision afforded by existing monitoring programs; and (4) structural uncertainty - an incomplete understanding of biological processes; a familiar example is the long-standing debate about whether harvest is additive to other sources of mortality or whether populations compensate for hunting losses through reduced natural mortality. Structural uncertainty increases contentiousness in the decision-making process and decreases the extent to which managers can meet long-term conservation goals. Adaptive Harvest Management (AHM) was developed as a systematic process for dealing objectively with these uncertainties. The key components of AHM include: (1) a limited number of regulatory alternatives, which describe Flyway-specific season lengths, bag limits, and framework dates; (2) a set of population models describing various hypotheses about the effects of harvest and environmental factors on waterfowl abundance; (3) a measure of reliability (probability or "weight") for each population model; and (4) a mathematical description of the objective(s) of harvest management (i.e., an "objective function"), by which alternative regulatory strategies can be evaluated. These components are used in a stochastic optimization procedure to derive a regulatory strategy, which specifies the appropriate regulatory alternative for each possible combination of breeding population size, environmental conditions, and model weights. The setting of annual hunting regulations then involves an iterative process: (1) each year, an optimal regulatory alternative is identified based on resource and environmental conditions, and on current model weights; (2) after the regulatory decision is made, model-specific predictions for subsequent breeding population size are determined; (3) when monitoring data become available, model weights are increased to the extent that observations of population size agree with predictions, and decreased to the extent that they disagree; and (4) the new model weights are used to start another iteration of the process. By iteratively updating model weights and optimizing regulatory choices, the process should eventually identify which model is most appropriate to describe the dynamics of the managed population. The process is optimal in the sense that it provides the regulatory choice each year necessary to maximize management performance. It is adaptive in the sense that the harvest strategy "evolves" to account for new knowledge generated by a comparison of predicted and observed population sizes. http://migratorybirds.fws.gov/mgmt/ahm/ahm-intro.htm 2. A protocol for making a sequence of decisions about hunting regulations, in the face of uncertainty, that are optimal with respect to specified management objectives and constraints. Sources of uncertainty include (1) environmental variation in things like rainfall; (2) variability in how hunting regulations actually translate into mortality rates; (3) competing hypotheses about what drives the population dynamics of a species; and (4) imprecision in measurements of attributes of the population or harvest, such as population size or harvest rate. Monitoring the results of each decision permits the reduction of uncertainty over time. See http://duckcentral.com/MANAGEMENT_AND_REGULATION_OF_WATE.583.0.html http://www.pwrc.usgs.gov/educatnl/glossary/index.cfm Adaptive Management Formalizes
a monitoring process and provides for redirection of projects and
programs based on new information. Adaptive management may be carried
out according to the following steps: participants determine measurable
goals for management and then: (1) outline their understanding of system
functions and outputs, (2) establish quantified objectives and controls,
(3) initiate the action, (4) monitor and evaluate the outcomes, (5)
review goals and objectives, and (6) redirect the action, if necessary.
An adaptive management program is developed in coordination and
collaboration with other governmental agencies, stakeholders, and
interest groups, as appropriate. U.S. Bureau of Reclamation Glossary
http://www.usbr.gov/uc/envdocs/eis/navajo/pdfs/deis_glossary.pdf
2. The rigorous application of management, research, and monitoring to
gain information and experience necessary to assess and modify
management activities; a process that uses feedback from refuge research
and monitoring and evaluation of management actions to support or modify
objectives and strategies at all planning levels. U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service Manual, Refuge
Planning Overview http://www.fws.gov/policy/602fw1.html
3. The process of implementing flexible
management and policy that is responsive to results of continuous
biological monitoring and scientific experimentation. DOI/USFWS
http://rcwrecovery.fws.gov/finalrecoveryplan.pdf
4. A type of natural resource management in
which decisions are made as part of an ongoing science-based process.
Adaptive management involves testing, monitoring, and evaluating applied
strategies, and incorporating new knowledge into management approaches
that are based on scientific findings and the needs of society. Results
are used to modify management policy, strategies, and practices. National
Grassland Plan (USDA Forest Service) http://www.fs.fed.us/ngp/draft/plan/pdf_plan_draft/Dakota_Prairie_Plan/Appendices/appendix_g.pdf
and http://cleanwater.gov/ufp/glossary.html
5. The process of implementing policy decisions as scientifically driven
management experiments that test predictions and assumptions in
management plans, and using the resulting information to improve the
plans.
The Forest Ecosystem Management Assessment Team (FEMAT) http://pnwin.nbii.gov/nwfp/FEMAT/
Chapter 9 Glossary http://pnwin.nbii.gov/nwfp/FEMAT/Chapter_9.htm
6. The systematic process for
continually improving management policies and practices by learning from
the outcomes of operational programs. Its most effective form,
"active" adaptive management, employs management programs that
are designed to experimentally compare selected policies or practices,
by implementing management actions explicitly designed to generate
information useful for evaluating alternative hypotheses about the
system being managed. (DOI/NPS) Long-Term Monitoring Plan
National Capital Region Network, September 30, 2005. Submitted by:
Inventory and Monitoring Program, National Capital Region Network,
Center for Urban Ecology, 4598 MacArthur Boulevard NW, Washington, D.C.
20007. http://science.nature.nps.gov/im/monitor/plans/NCRN_MonitoringPlan.pdf
(Pages G-1 through G-8 - Glossary or pages 150 through 156 of 156
pages) 7. A type of natural resource
management that implies making decisions as part of an on-going process.
Monitoring the results of actions will provide a flow of information
that may indicate the need to change a course of action. Scientific
findings and the needs of society may also indicate the need to adapt
resource management to new information. What Do You Mean By That?
Ever wonder about the meaning of Ecosystem Management (EM) and all the
unfamiliar terms associated with it? If so, this is the page for you. We
provide you with a dynamic list of EM terms and intend to add terms to
it as appropriate and upon request. You can help us with our glossary
construction by letting us know what terms you'd like defined. Please
submit suggestions to Janie Canton-Thompson [email protected]
or 406-542-4150 (Disclaimer Definitional terms sometimes vary
slightly, depending on who is using them and for what purpose. Terms
defined here are intended for the general interest reader and will
usually suffice for most EM uses.) Bitterroot Ecosystem Management
Research Project Glossary http://www.fs.fed.us/rm/ecopartner/bemrp_glossary.shtml
8. A systematic process for continually improving management policies
and practices by learning, through monitoring and evaluation, of the
outcomes of actions over time. McGregor Range Draft Resource
Management Plan Amendment and Environmental Impact Statement, Prepared
for United States Department of the Interior Bureau of Land Management,
Las Cruces (New Mexico) Field Office, January 2005. http://www.nm.blm.gov/lcfo/mcgregor/docs/Draft%20RMPA_EIS_01_05_low.pdf
(DOI/BLM) Glossary
(Pages 259-268 of 282) 9. Refers to a process in which policy decisions
are implemented within a framework of scientifically driven experiments
to test predictions and assumptions inherent in management plan.
Analysis of results helps managers determine whether current management
should continue as is or whether it should be modified to achieve
desired conditions. http://pacific.fws.gov/planning/LPOccp/v2.pdf
10. A process that allows the development of a plan when some degree of
biological and socioeconomic uncertainty exists. It requires a continual
learning process, a reiterative evaluation of goals and approaches, and
redirection based on an increased information base and changing public
expectations. Yosemite National Park, Merced Wild and Scenic River
Revised Comprehensive Management Plan and Supplemental Environmental
Impact Statement (SEIS) Chapter VIII: Glossary http://www.nps.gov/yose/planning/mrp/html/14_rmrp_ch8.htm
11. A type of natural resource management that
implies making decisions as part of an on-going process. Monitoring the
results of actions will provide a flow of information that may indicate
the need to change a course of action. Scientific finding and the needs
of society may also indicate the need to adapt resource management to
new information. Adaptive
management areas Landscape units designated for development and
testing of technical and social approaches to achieving desired
ecological, economic, and other social objectives. The Forest Ecosystem Management Assessment Team (FEMAT) http://pnwin.nbii.gov/nwfp/FEMAT/
Chapter 9 Glossary http://pnwin.nbii.gov/nwfp/FEMAT/Chapter_9.htm Adaptive
management process Adaptive management promotes an environment for
testing hypotheses and exploring promising changes based on sound
scientific data and analyses. For the Master Manual process this means
monitoring and evaluating actual physical and biological responses to
changes in management of the system and then adapting new management
strategies based on the additional information. (USGS)
http://www.rma.usda.gov/policies/ Adaptive
migration strategy An approach that balances the passage of fish
between in-river and transport methods. This strategy addresses concerns
about risks and effectiveness associated with bypass-only and
transport-only approaches. It allows flexibility for implementing
operational changes within a migration season, if necessary.
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Lower Snake River Juvenile Salmon
Migration Feasibility Report and Environmental Impact Statement, Chapter
10, Glossary http://www.nww.usace.army.mil/lsr/final_fseis/study_kit/Main_Report/chap10.htm Adaptive
radiation The evolutionary diversification of a taxon into a number
of different forms, usually as a result of encounters with new resources
or habitats. Adaptive radiation generally occurs over a relatively short
period of time. http://biology.usgs.gov/s+t/SNT/noframe/zy198.htm Adaptive reuse Contemporary reuse for an existing historic structure, often with an updating of infrastructure and added amenities, and, typically with few sustained ties to the original historic function. NPS Architecture, Fortifications, and Preservation glossary ADARD Acid Deposition and Atmospheric Research Division ADB Agricultural Development Board ADB Asian Development Bank http://www.adb.org ADC Alternative Development Concepts ADC Analog to Digital Converter ADC Animal Damage Control Program (federal agency now known as Wildlife Services) ADCNR The Alabama Department of Conservation and Natural Resources http://www.outdooralabama.com ADCP Acoustic Doppler Current Profilers "Acoustic
profilers are routinely used in the USGS to make measurements of
velocity and discharge in rivers, estuaries, and coastal environments.
Currently, there are approximately 130 profilers used by the USGS for
streamflow and velocity measurements throughout the country. Many more
horizontal or side-looking profilers are being used for index-velocity
and other kinds of in-situ measurements." http://www-il.usgs.gov/adcp/ ADCR
Automated Document Control Register ADD
Attention Deficit Disorder "Add-On"
Spark Arresters See Spark Arrester. Additional peanuts Peanuts sold from a farm in any marketing year in excess of the amount of the farm's peanut poundage quota. The higher of two price support loan rate levels applies only to the quantity of peanuts within the annually determined poundage quota. Additional peanuts are eligible only for the lower price-support loan rate, the level of which is determined by the Secretary, taking into consideration the demand for peanut oil and meal, expected prices of other vegetable oils and protein meals, and the demand for peanuts in foreign markets. Under the 1996 Act, the support level for additional peanuts must be set low enough to ensure no losses to the Commodity Credit Corporation. USDA-Economic Research Service Farm and Commodity Policy Glossary of Policy Terms and http://agriculture.house.gov/info/glossary/a.htm ADEM Alabama Department of Environmental Management ADF acid detergent fiber (hay nutritive value) http://www.nass.usda.gov ADF
Alliance Defense Fund (National Campaign to Stop the American Civil
Liberties Union) Adfluvial
Fish that live in the Great Lakes and use tributaries for spawning.
Great Lakes glossary ADG
Activist Doctor Groups ADG
Advance Development Group ADHD
Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder Adhesion
Shearing resistance between soil and another material under zero
externally applied pressure. ADI Acceptable daily intake ADI
Aerial Dispersion Incident The
Adirondack Community Trust (ACT) What
Is ACT? ACT is a simple way to create a legacy for your community.
The Adirondack Community Trust (ACT) was established in 1997 as a new
community foundation formed to receive gifts and bequests from the
public and to administer them as a permanent endowment for the broad
charitable needs of the Adirondack region. Many people want to give, but
they are not quite sure how they can best make a difference. As
experienced grant makers in our region, we know the many and varied
needs of local non-profit organizations and their capacities to deliver
quality programs and services to the community. We review financial
information, audits and budgets. How we can help donors: Simplicity:
Named endowments can be created within a matter of minutes and at
no cost. Flexibility: There is virtually no limit to the type of charitable
activity that can be achieved through a named endowment within ACT.
Family members and donors can be involved. Grants can be made to
organizations within and outside our region. Security:
You can be sure that ACT will be true to your charitable intent
for generations to come. A professional investment management firm makes
ACT investments. ACT Trustees oversee their activities and performance. Tax Benefits: As a public charity, ACT offers the highest level of
tax benefits; higher than a gift to a private foundation. Cost
Effectiveness: A named endowment within ACT pays no tax on
investment income, unlike a private foundation. A single audit covers
all of our funds and our pooled investments achieve significantly lower
investment management fees. The end result is a higher stream of income
available to local charities. Donor Services: Should they wish, donors could identify general
areas of interest and ask ACT to seek out worthy projects for their
consideration. We can help donors remain anonymous, or generate
increased publicity for their philanthropy. The Adirondack Legacy
Society, Lake Placid, NY http://www.GenerousACT.org The Adirondack Park Agency (APC) Created in 1971 by the New York State Legislature to develop long-range land use plans for both public and private lands within the boundary of the Park. The APA is a New York State governmental agency with an eleven-member board, and a staff consisting of 60 people. The APA is responsible for maintaining the protection of the forest preserve, and overseeing development proposals of the privately owned lands. The Agency prepared the State Land Master Plan, which was signed into law in 1972, followed by the Adirondack Park Land Use and Development Plan in 1973. Both plans are periodically revised to reflect the changes and current trends and conditions of the Park. The mission of the APA is to protect the public and private resources of the Park through the exercise of the powers and duties provided by law. This mission is rooted in three statutes administered by the Agency in the Park, they are: The Adirondack Park Agency Act; The New York State Freshwater Wetlands Act and The New York State Wild, Scenic, and Recreational Rivers System Act. http://www.apa.state.ny.us APA's EPA wetland and watershed projects: http://www.apa.state.ny.us/Research/epa_projects.htm Adit
A horizontal or nearly horizontal passage driven from the surface
for the working or dewatering of a mine. If driven through the hill or
mountain to the surface on the opposite side, it would be a tunnel. Adjacency
requirements Management restrictions to regulate the creation of
harvest openings. An opening created by harvest must close through a new
timber stand growing to a certain height before another harvest unit can
be placed next to it. This requirement has led to the "staggered
setting approach to timber harvest in which clear-cut units, usually of
20-60 acres, are scattered over the landscape. (See Staggered setting.) The Forest Ecosystem Management
Assessment Team (FEMAT) http://pnwin.nbii.gov/nwfp/FEMAT/
Chapter 9 Glossary http://pnwin.nbii.gov/nwfp/FEMAT/Chapter_9.htm Adjacent Lying near to or neighboring, but not necessarily in contact with another property. "Close to, "contiguous with, "in the vicinity of. and "adjoining" are all phrases and terms which can mean the same as adjacent. Cadastral Data glossary http://www.fairview-industries.com/standardmodule/glossary.htm 2. Bordering, contiguous, or neighboring. Wetlands separated from other waters of the United States by manmade dikes or barriers, natural river berms, beach dunes and the like are adjacent wetlands. 33 CFR § 328.3(c). Adjoining
The word "adjoining" in a description means "next
to" or "in contact with" and excludes the idea of
intervening space. Cadastral Data glossary http://www.fairview-industries.com/standardmodule/glossary.htm Adjudication
The apportionment of grazing use on public rangelands among eligible
applicants. BLM Rangeland
Program Glossary http://www.nv.blm.gov/range/Glossary.htm
2. A court proceeding to determine all rights
to the use of water on a particular stream system or ground water basin.
USGS Adjusted Cost Base This is usually the cost of a property, plus any expenses
to acquire it, such as commissions and legal fees. The cost of the
property also includes capital expenditures, such as the cost of
additions and improvements to the property. Adjusted
Gross Revenue (AGR) Pilot Program A pilot revenue insurance program
first implemented in 1999 by USDA on a limited basis. It allows farmers
to receive a guarantee of a percentage of their revenue for multiple
commodities, including some livestock revenue, rather than just the
revenue from an individual commodity. http://agriculture.house.gov/info/glossary/a.htm
Adjusted
Position An adjusted value for the horizontal or vertical position
of a survey station in which discrepancies, due to errors in observed
data, are removed. Cadastral Data glossary http://www.fairview-industries.com/standardmodule/glossary.htm Adjusted
world price (AWP) As part of the upland cotton and the rice
marketing assistance loan programs, USDA calculates and publishes, on a
weekly basis, what is known as the adjusted world price (AWP). The AWP
is the prevailing world price for upland cotton, adjusted to account for
U.S. quality and location. Producers who have taken out USDA marketing
assistance loans may choose to repay them at either the lesser of the
established loan rate for upland cotton, plus interest, or the announced
AWP for that week. The AWP for cotton also is used for determining Step
2 payments. http://agriculture.house.gov/info/glossary/a.htm Adjustment
Change in animal numbers, seasons of use, kinds or classes of
animals, or management practices as warranted by specific conditions.
National Grassland Plan (USDA Forest Service) http://www.fs.fed.us/ngp/draft/plan/pdf_plan_draft/Dakota_Prairie_Plan/Appendices/appendix_g.pdf ADK The Adirondack Mountain Club (former acronym was AMC); has employed former Darby Riverkeeper Steven Flint, who referred to the Darby Creeks as her and claims a quarter-century-long intimate relationship with her. http://www.adk.org ADL Activities of Daily Living ADL Agricultural Dominated Landscape http://www.snr.missouri.edu/SPF/reports/2002%20-%20Progress%20Report.pdf ADL Anti-Defamation League ADM Archer Daniels Midland http://www.admworld.com ADM Area Development Management (UN) ADMB The Animal Damage Management Board (Wyoming) http://www.wyadmb.com See: The Wyoming Animal Damage Management Board (WYADMB) Administration for Children and Families (ACF) This administration is responsible for some 60 programs, which provide services and assistance to needy children and families. ACF administers the state-federal welfare program, Aid to Families with Dependent Children, providing assistance to an estimated 14 million persons, including 9.7 million children, oversees national child support enforcement system, collecting some $10 billion per year in payments from non-custodial parents; administers the Head Start program, serving about 750,000 pre-school children, provides funds to assist low-income families in paying for child care, and supports state programs to support foster care and provide adoption assistance; funds programs to prevent child abuse and domestic violence. Established: 1991, bringing together several already-existing programs. Headquarters: Washington, D.C. Glossary is a feature of Know Net, a knowledge management, e-learning and performance support system sponsored by the Government of the United States of America. Know Net can be accessed at http://www.knownet.hhs.gov http://knownet.hhs.gov/log/propmanDR/PPMGloss/definitions.htm#Property%20Management%20 Administration on Aging (AoA) Established by the The Older Americans Act in 1965. This administration supports a nationwide aging network, providing services to the elderly, especially to enable them to remain independent. AoA: supports some 230 million meals for the elderly each year, including home-delivered "meals on wheels," helps provide transportation and at-home services, supports ombudsman services for elderly, and provides policy leadership on aging issues. AoA is headquartered in Washington, D.C. Glossary is a feature of Know Net, a knowledge management, e-learning and performance support system sponsored by the Government of the United States of America. Know Net can be accessed at http://www.knownet.hhs.gov http://knownet.hhs.gov/log/propmanDR/PPMGloss/definitions.htm#Property%20Management%20 Administrative Consent Order (ACO) A binding legal agreement between a government agency and a responsible party. It is an order voluntarily entered into by the responsible party that specifies actions or obligations of the responsible party, which may include site remediation. http://www.nj.gov/dep/srp/publications/site_status/1999/pdf/glossary.pdf Administrative Facilities Those facilities, such as a ranger station or work center, that are used by the Forest Service in the management of a national forest or national grassland. National Grassland Plan (USDA Forest Service) http://www.fs.fed.us/ngp/draft/plan/pdf_plan_draft/Dakota_Prairie_Plan/Appendices/appendix_g.pdf Administrative Law Rules, regulations, and decisions made by instrumentalities of the Federal Government that have the force and effect of law. Glossary is a feature of Know Net, a knowledge management, e-learning and performance support system sponsored by the Government of the United States of America. Know Net can be accessed at http://www.knownet.hhs.gov http://knownet.hhs.gov/log/propmanDR/PPMGloss/definitions.htm#Property%20Management%20 Administrative Procedure Act
(July 11, 1946) Public Law 79-404 as amended: Establishes, among
other things, minimum procedural requirements or models for federal
agency rulemaking and certain types of hearings. For instance, the APA
establishes procedures for informal rulemaking, which may include
notice-and-comment requirements, or formal rulemaking, which includes
trial-type hearings. Exemptions
from rulemaking requirements are included in the Act. The APA
provides standards for judicial review of final agency action. The
provisions of the APA apply to USDA rulemaking, unless exempted under
the provisions of another statute. For example, the APA does not govern
hearings conducted by the USDAs National Appeals Division (NAD). The
final determination of the NAD is reviewable and enforceable by a U.S.
District Court in accordance with the judicial review provisions of the
APA. http://agriculture.house.gov/info/glossary/a.htm
The
Administrative Procedure Act (APA) (USC Annotated, Title 5, paragraph
555) This law allows non-attorney representation at federal agency
hearings. Congress left it to the agencies to decide whether each will
allow non-attorney representation. Among them are the Immigration and
Naturalization Service, the Civil Aeronautics Board, the Consumer
Products Safety Commission, the IRS, and many more. Administrative
Protective Order (APO) An Administrative Protective Order, or APO,
is used to protect proprietary data that is obtained during an
administrative proceeding. Within Commerce, APO is most frequently used
in connection with Antidumping and Countervailing Duty investigations to
prohibit opposing counsel from releasing data. The term is also applied
in connection with civil enforcement of export control laws to protect
against the disclosure of sensitive national security information and
information provided by companies being investigated for violations.
USDA Administrative
Record The official file containing the Remedial Investigation
report, Feasibility Study report, Risk Assessment, and other
site-related documents [that] provide the basis for EPA's selection of a
remedial (long-term cleanup) alternative at a Superfund site. EPA
Community Relations Plan Glossary Administrative
Site Work center or other area reserved for administrative purposes.
National Grassland Plan (USDA Forest Service) http://www.fs.fed.us/ngp/draft/plan/pdf_plan_draft/Dakota_Prairie_Plan/Appendices/appendix_g.pdf Administrative
Unit All the National Forest System lands, including national
grasslands, for which one forest supervisor is responsible. National
Grassland Plan (USDA Forest Service) http://www.fs.fed.us/ngp/draft/plan/pdf_plan_draft/Dakota_Prairie_Plan/Appendices/appendix_g.pdf Administrative
units The organizational unit used in this report for divisions in
the Forest Service, the Bureau of Land Management, and the Fish and
Wildlife Service.
The Forest Ecosystem Management Assessment Team (FEMAT) http://pnwin.nbii.gov/nwfp/FEMAT/
Chapter 9 Glossary http://pnwin.nbii.gov/nwfp/FEMAT/Chapter_9.htm Administrative
Use Use authorized by Forest Service officials to complete
management functions and activities. National Grassland Plan (USDA
Forest Service) http://www.fs.fed.us/ngp/draft/plan/pdf_plan_draft/Dakota_Prairie_Plan/Appendices/appendix_g.pdf Administratively Withdrawn Areas Areas removed from the suitable timber base through agency direction and land management plans. The Forest Ecosystem Management Assessment Team (FEMAT) http://pnwin.nbii.gov/nwfp/FEMAT/ Chapter 9 Glossary http://pnwin.nbii.gov/nwfp/FEMAT/Chapter_9.htm ADMS Accessibility Data Management System Adobe
A sun-dried, unburned brick of clay and straw. The clay of which the
brick is made is also referred to as adobe clay and used as the
mortar for cementing the blocks together.
Forest Service FS-710, The
Built Environment Image Guide for the National Forests and Grasslands,
glossary. http://www.fs.fed.us/recreation/programs/beig/beig6d.htm
2. Sun-dried (unburnt),
clay-soil brick; the clay was often mixed with chaff, straw, chopped
weeds, tule reeds, or sometimes manure for historic adobe bricks in
California, with the individual brick sizes approximately eleven by
twenty-five inches and of two-to-five inches thickness; each brick
weighed about sixty pounds; Spanish word derived from Arabic atob (mud).
NPS Architecture, Fortifications, and Preservation glossary Adoption "Adoption" is the formal act by which the form and content of a proposed treaty text are established. As a general rule, the adoption of the text of a treaty takes place through the expression of the consent of the states participating in the treaty-making process. Treaties that are negotiated within an international organization will usually be adopted by a resolution of a representative organ of the organization whose membership more or less corresponds to the potential participation in the treaty in question. A treaty can also be adopted by an international conference which has specifically been convened for setting up the treaty, by a vote of two thirds of the states present and voting, unless, by the same majority, they have decided to apply a different rule. [Art.9, Vienna Convention of the Law of Treaties 1969] (UN) ADP Agricultural Diversification Program (currently in place in Belize and Kentucky) http://permanent.access.gpo.gov/lps35389/1995/wf950027.htm http://kentucky.gov/Newsroom/ kyagpolicy/051021_kadf_release.htm ADR Alternative Dispute Resolution http://www.compliance.gov/reports-studies/sec102b/sec102b_12-98.pdf, http://mits.doi.gov/cadr/main/main.cfm and http://mits.doi.gov/cadr/main/IBLA_ADRPilotProgram.cfm ADS
Agricultural Data Statement ADS All Deliberate Speed ADS Applied Digital Solutions (has Digital Angel, an implanted human tracking device) Adsorbed The accumulation of gases, liquids, or solutes on the surface of a solid or liquid. (DOI/NPS) Long-Term Monitoring Plan National Capital Region Network, September 30, 2005. Submitted by: Inventory and Monitoring Program, National Capital Region Network, Center for Urban Ecology, 4598 MacArthur Boulevard NW, Washington, D.C. 20007. http://science.nature.nps.gov/im/monitor/plans/NCRN_MonitoringPlan.pdf (Pages G-1 through G-8 - Glossary or pages 150 through 156 of 156 pages) Adsorption The adhesion of one substance to the surface of another. EPAs Management Measures for Agricultural Sources Glossary http://www.epa.gov/owow/nps/MMGI/Chapter2/ch2-3.html 2. Process in which a special solid surface is able to collect gases or vapors. In adsorption, the molecules of gas or liquid adsorbed contract and adhere to the surface of the solid in an extremely thin layer. ADT
American Discovery Trail ADT
Average Daily Traffic Adult
An individual Indian who is 18 years of age or older. DOI-BIA
Glossary Adult Illiteracy Rate The proportion of the population over age fifteen who
cannot, with understanding, read and write a simple statement about
their everyday life and do simple mathematical calculations. (WB-UN) Advance
Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (published in the Federal Register)
Proposed Rules (Separated by Department) A proposed rule is an
announcement to the public that a change to the Code of Federal
Regulations is under consideration. The purpose of publishing proposed
rules is to enable interested persons to participate in the rule making
process by submitting comments prior to adoption of the final rule. Most
proposed rules suggest changes to agency regulations in the Code of
Federal Regulations (CFR) and request public comment on those suggested
changes. Many agencies voluntarily publish proposed changes for the
expressed purpose of soliciting comments. The heading and preamble
format are the same for both proposed and final rules. Within the
preamble for proposed rules, an address and deadline date are generally
provided for submission of comments. The terms "rules" and
"regulations" are used interchangeably throughout the FR. Advanced
Materials Metals, metallic alloys, ceramics, plastics, composites,
and organics, which are a broad technology category based on a rapidly
evolving area of science, with applications ranging from aircraft to
computer chips. Advanced structural materials can make products strong,
lighter, and more effective as well as enable the development of totally
new products. The materials can increasingly be designed and tailored to
specific applications. A material is said to be "advanced" if
it is a new material for the application. Advanced
Treatment Technology (wastewater) Process capable of reducing
specific constituents in wastewater not normally achieved by other
treatment options. It covers all unit operations that are not considered
to be mechanical or biological, for example, chemical coagulation,
flocculation and precipitation, break-point chlorination, stripping,
mixed-media filtration, micro-screening, selective ion exchange,
activate carbon adsorption, reverse osmosis, ultra-filtration and
electro-flotation. Advanced treatment processes may be used in
conjunction with mechanical and biological treatment operations. (UN) Advanced
Very High Resolution Radiometer (AVHRR) AVHRR is a broad-band, 4 or
5 channel scanner (depending on the model), sensing in the visible,
near-infrared, and thermal infrared portions of the electromagnetic
spectrum. This sensor is carried on NOAA's Polar Orbiting Environmental
Satellites (POES), beginning with TIROS-N in 1978. USDA glossary Advance
Reproduction Advance reproduction means the young trees in the
understory of a forest stand that will grow when the overstory trees are
cut and removed. USDA/FS Adventive
plant A species of plant that is not native and has been introduced
into the area, but has not become permanently established. http://biology.usgs.gov/s+t/SNT/noframe/zy198.htm Adverse
Determinations Please refer to the definition as found in the
Biological Assessment and Evaluation appendix. National Grassland
Plan (USDA Forest Service) http://www.fs.fed.us/ngp/draft/plan/pdf_plan_draft/Dakota_Prairie_Plan/Appendices/appendix_g.pdf Adverse
Effect (Cultural Resources) Alteration of the characteristics which
contribute to the use(s) determine appropriate for a cultural resource
or which qualify a cultural resource property for the National Register
of Historic Places to such a degree that the appropriate use(s) are
reduced or precluded, or the cultural property is disqualified from
National Register of Historic Places eligibility. Criteria in the
regulations of the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation (36 CFR
Part 800) guide the process for making the determination of effect.
BLM Adverse
Effects (Heritage Resources) Any effect on a heritage resource that
would be considered harmful to those characteristics that qualify the
property for inclusion in the National Register of Historic Places.
National Grassland Plan (USDA Forest Service) http://www.fs.fed.us/ngp/draft/plan/pdf_plan_draft/Dakota_Prairie_Plan/Appendices/appendix_g.pdf Adverse
Impact A direct or indirect alteration of the physical or
biological features of the air, land or water which may affect the
survival, reproduction or recovery of a listed species or that may
diminish the viability of a Natural Area. http://www.ilga.gov/commission/jcar/admincode/017/017010750000200R.html
Adverse
possession A claim to acquire the title to another owner's property
by an occupant who has openly and peaceably occupied that property
continuously for a period of time (usually 20 years) without being
challenged by the original owner. U.S. Treasury OTS (Office of
Thrift Supervision, in charge of banks, savings and loan associations,
etc.) http://www.ots.treas.gov/glossary/gloss-n.html Advisory bodies Article 8(3) of the World Heritage Convention establishes the
International Centre for the Study of the Preservation and Restoration
of Cultural Property (Rome Centre), now known as ICCROM, the
International Council of Monuments and Sites (ICOMOS) and the
International Union for the Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources
(IUCN), now known as the World Conservation Union as advisory bodies to
the World Heritage Committee. The Operational Guidelines outline the
various roles of the advisory bodies in relation to the implementation
of the Convention (UNESCO February 1996). The advisory bodies are also
referred to as advisory organisations in the Operational Guidelines
(UNESCO February 1996: Paragraphs 49, 50 and 84). See IUCN, ICOMOS and
ICCROM Glossary of World
Heritage Terms Advisory
Council on Historic Preservation (ACHP) Executive agency responsible
for ensuring requirements of National Historic Preservation Act and 36
CFR Part 800 are met. Advisory
Council A citizen group appointed by the Secretary of the Interior
to advise on matters relating to a particular plan or proposed action. (DOI) AE
Additional Explanation AE
Affected Environment AE Agro Environmental AE American Ecology AEA The Agriculture Energy Alliance AEC Advanced Environmental Corporation AEC Areas of Environmental Concern (a term defined in the Coastal Areas Management Act, or CAMA), Areas of Environmental Concern are the foundation of the Coastal Resources Commissions permitting program for coastal development. An AEC is an area of natural importance: It may be easily destroyed by erosion or flooding; or it may have environmental, social, economic or aesthetic values that make it valuable The CRC classifies areas as AECs to protect them from uncontrolled development, which may cause irreversible damage to property, public health or the environment. AECs cover almost all coastal waters and about 3 percent of the land in the 20 coastal counties [referencing North Carolina, though the restrictions apply nationwide]. The CRC has established four categories of AECs: The Estuarine and Ocean System; The Ocean Hazard System; Public Water Supplies; Natural and Cultural Resource Areas. If you're planning any sort of development -- from a sandbag structure to a bridge to a condominium -- in the coastal area, and your project is in an Area of Environmental Concern, you're probably going to need a CAMA permit. You'll also need to follow development rules specific to that AEC. You're probably in an AEC if your project is: in or on navigable waters within the 20 CAMA counties; on a marsh or wetland; within 75 feet of the mean high water line along an estuarine shoreline; near the ocean beach; near an inlet; within 30 feet of the normal high water level of areas designated as inland fishing waters by the N.C. Marine Fisheries Commission; near a public water supply. [NOTE: Near is not defined.] If your project is in one of these areas, contact the Division of Coastal Management office nearest you. Permit exemptions: Section 103(5)(b) of the Coastal Area Management Act exempts the following activities from permitting requirements: road maintenance within a public right-of-way; utility maintenance on projects that already have CAMA permits; energy facilities covered by other laws or N.C. Utilities Commission rules; agricultural or forestry production that doesn't involve the excavation or filling of estuarine or navigable waters or coastal marshland (Note: these activities are not exempt from permitting requirements under the state's Dredge and Fill Law); agricultural or forestry ditches less than 6 feet wide and 4 feet deep; emergency maintenance and repairs when life and property are in danger; the construction of an accessory building usually found with an existing structure, if no filling of estuarine or navigable waters or coastal marshland is involved. In addition, CAMA allows the Coastal Resources Commission to exempt some types of minor maintenance and improvements. These types of projects are those with successful track records in protecting the resources around them. In all cases, you should check with the Division of Coastal Management to make sure that your project qualifies for an exemption. http://dcm2.enr.state.nc.us/Permits/aecs.htm AEC U.S. Army Environmental Center, located at Fort Bragg, North Carolina, aka USAEC. (AEC/USACE is officially partnered with The Nature Conservancy; a site search yields 36 results for Nature Conservancy, including http://aec.army.mil/usaec/publicaffairs/update/sum04/sum0408.html) http://aec.army.mil/usaec/ http://aec.army.mil/usaec/aboutus.html AECF
Annie E. Casey Foundation AECL
Atomic Energy of Canada Limited AECOM
Albert Einstein College of Medicine Human Genome Research Center AEDE
Agriculture, Environmental and Developmental Economics AEE
Association of Energy Engineers AEF
American Expeditionary Force AEG Association of Exploration Geochemists AEI Alliance for Environmental Innovation AEI American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research http://www.aei.org AEMC The Alabama Environmental Management Commission (did
not let the public speak at its meetings; only just changed this
'policy' in late June 2003) AEIPPR
American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research Aeolian
Pertaining to the action or effect of the wind; wind-borne. http://biology.usgs.gov/s+t/SNT/noframe/zy198.htm AEP
Ag Environmental Products http://www.agp.com
or http://www.soygold.com AEP
Aggressive Exotic Plant AEP
American Electric Power AEPI
The Army Environmental Policy Institute AEPP
The Agricultural Easement Purchase Program http://www.ohioagriculture.gov/aepp/
AERA
Automotive Engine Rebuilders Association Aeration
The process of
adding air to water. Air can be added to water by either passing air
through water, or passing water through air. http://www.epa.gov/ogwdw/pubs/gloss2.html
2. Addition of air to water resulting in a
rise of its dissolved oxygen level. Specifically, aeration is applied in
wastewater treatment. In that case, aeration is used to maintain an
appropriate oxygen concentration in the wastewater in order to promote
biological oxidation and to keep the activated sludge in suspension.
(UN) Aeration
Tank Tank in which the sewage is brought into intense contact with
activated sludge, and in which a high oxygen concentration is maintained
by means of aerators that keep the sludge in suspension. (UN) Aerenchyma
Spongy, modified cork tissue of many aquatic plants that facilitates
gaseous exchange and maintains buoyancy. http://biology.usgs.gov/s+t/SNT/noframe/zy198.htm Aerial
Logging Removing logs from a timber harvest area by helicopter.
Fewer roads are required, so the impact to an area is minimized. Aerial
Photography Field Office (AFPO) The U.S Department of Agriculture's
APFO is managed by the Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation
Service (ASCS). APFO is the repository for all of the USDA's aerial
photography. The archive contains over 50,000 rolls of film acquired
over the last 40 years and includes over 14 million frames of coverage
of the conterminous U.S., Alaska, and Hawaii. APFO provides photographic
products to local county, State and Federal offices within the U.S.
Department of Agriculture (USDA) including ASCS, Soil Conservation
Service (SCS), and the Forest Service. They also serve the general
public with similar products upon request at the cost of reproduction.
USDA glossary Aeration, soil The exchange of air in soil with air from the atmosphere. The air in a well-aerated soil is similar to that in the atmosphere; the air in a poorly aerated soil is considerably higher in carbon dioxide and lower in oxygen. Soil Survey of McDowell County, West Virginia, Issued 2004. http://soildatamart.nrcs.usda.gov/Manuscripts/WV047/1/WVMcDowell9_2005.pdf (page 69 of 115) AERF Atlas Economic Research Foundation AERMOD Modeling System A new regulatory steady-state plume modeling platform that includes: 1) air turbulence structure, scaling and concepts; 2) treatment of both surface and elevated sources; and 3) simple and complex terrain. This platform introduced these state-of-the-art modeling concepts into EPA's air quality models. The three components are AERMOD - air dispersion model: AERMET the meteorological data processor: and AERMAP The terrain data preprocessor. - http://www.deq.virginia.gov/regulations/pdf/airimpactfinal2002.pdf AERO
Alternative Education Resources Organization (Roslyn Heights, NY) Aerobic
A condition in which
free" (atmospheric) or dissolved oxygen is present in the water. http://www.epa.gov/ogwdw/pubs/gloss2.html
2. A situation in which molecular oxygen is
present in the environment. Aerobic
Biological Oxidation Waste treatment using aerobic organisms in the
presence of air or oxygen as agents for reducing the pollution load.
(UN) Aeromagnetic
Aeromagnetic is descriptive of data pertaining to the Earth's
magnetic field that has been collected from an airborne sensor. USDA
glossary AES
Abrasive Engineering Society AES
Adult Education Specialists AES Alternative Energy Solution AES Applied Earth Science AES Aquatic Ecological System Aesthetic
resources The intangible perceptions possible in parks, such as
natural quiet, solitude, and the experience of nighttime skies. (DOI/NPS) Aesthetics
Of or pertaining to the sense of beautiful. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Lower
Snake River Juvenile Salmon Migration Feasibility Report and
Environmental Impact Statement, Chapter 10, Glossary http://www.nww.usace.army.mil/lsr/final_fseis/study_kit/Main_Report/chap10.htm
2. Pertaining
to the quality of human perception of natural beauty (including sight,
sound, smell, touch, taste and movement). National Grassland Plan
(USDA Forest Service) http://www.fs.fed.us/ngp/draft/plan/pdf_plan_draft/Dakota_Prairie_Plan/Appendices/appendix_g.pdf Aesop
To develop a coherent, architectural approach to change management
including the configuration of services and systems that support and
facilitate change itself; to produce a comprehensive set of service and
applications components for the allocation of shared and dedicated
resources. http://www.cordis.lu/ist/ka2/al22.htm
(from whence the defs for Aesop and UEML came) AESP
Association of Energy Services Professionals Aesthetic Quality The relative desirability of a landscape, as determined
by the impression made on the mind, and the meaning given to this
impression. AEZ
Agroecological Zoning AF&PA American Forest & Paper Association
http://www.afandpa.org AF
Alternative Fuel AF
American Forests AF
Ancient Forests AF
Arcadia Foundation AFA
Access For All AFA
Alaska Forest Association, Incorporated AFA
Alliance For America AFA
American Facsimile Association AFA
American Family Association AFA
Ancient Forest Alliance AFA
Annual Funding Agreement AFAF
Alliance For America Foundation AFB
American Farm Bureau AFBF
American Farm Bureau Federation AFC
America First Committee AFC
American Forest Council AFC
American Freedom Coalition AFCEA
Armed Forces Communications and Electronics Association AFDC Aid to Families with Dependent Children AFDO The Association of Food and Drug Officials AFE Americans for the Environment AFE The Association for Fire Ecology http://www.ice.ucdavis.edu/afe/ AFFA Americans For Forest Access; Americans for Forest Access (AFFA) is a nonprofit coalition of outdoor recreation groups and private citizens fighting to preserve access to our public lands and waterways.
AFFA
coordinates and fosters cooperation among outdoor recreation groups and
individuals who want to preserve the right to continue their favorite
recreation activities. Well-funded and organized groups are seeking to
drastically limit access and your right to visit and use your public
lands! These same groups are also routinely suing the government to get
their way AND get HIGH dollar $ettlement$. Our home base location is
Southern California, but we work with groups nationwide. http://www.forestaccess.org
Affected Environment Existing
biological, physical, and social conditions of an area that are subject
to change, both directly and indirectly, as a result of a proposed human
action. http://www.nps.gov/yose/planning/hi/web/8glossary.htm
and Yosemite National Park, Merced Wild and Scenic River Revised
Comprehensive Management Plan and Supplemental Environmental Impact
Statement (SEIS) Chapter VIII: Glossary http://www.nps.gov/yose/planning/mrp/html/14_rmrp_ch8.htm
2. Surface or subsurface resources (including social and economic
elements) within or adjacent to a geographic area that potentially could
be affected by a proposed action or plan. The environment of the area to
be affected or created by the alternatives under consideration. (40 CFR
1502.15) McGregor Range Draft Resource Management Plan Amendment and
Environmental Impact Statement, Prepared for United States Department of
the Interior Bureau of Land Management, Las Cruces (New Mexico) Field
Office, January 2005. http://www.nm.blm.gov/lcfo/mcgregor/docs/Draft%20RMPA_EIS_01_05_low.pdf
(DOI/BLM) Glossary
(Pages 259-268 of 282) 3. The biological and physical environment that will or may be changed by
actions proposed and the relationship of people to that environment. National
Grassland Plan (USDA Forest Service) http://www.fs.fed.us/ngp/draft/plan/pdf_plan_draft/Dakota_Prairie_Plan/Appendices/appendix_g.pdf and http://permanent.access.gpo.gov/websites/fsfedus/www.fs.fed.us/r1/gallatin/projects/darroch-eagle /ea/glossary.pdf
4. The relationship of the physical
environment to the changes that will or may take place as a result of
human activity. The physical and human-related environment that is
sensitive to changes resulting from a proposed action. The natural
environment that exists at the present time in an area being analyzed. Affected Indian Tribe (10 CFR 60.2) Any Indian Tribe (1) within whose reservation boundaries a repository for high-level radioactive waste or spent fuel is proposed to be located; or (2) whose Federally defined possessory or usage rights to other lands outside of the reservation's boundaries arising out of Congressionally ratified treaties or other Federal law may be substantially and adversely affected by the locating of such a facility; Provided, that the Secretary of the Interior finds, upon the petition of the appropriate governmental officials of the Tribe, that such effects are both substantial and adverse to the Tribe. EPA Affected parties Stakeholders who are or may be impacted by EPA decisions. http://www.rachel.org/library/getfile.cfm?ID=319 Affidavit system A system where private lands, which are not included in a Forest Fire Protection District, and which the landowner has agreed to pay a standard fee through the county tax base system for wildland fire protection by the recognized protection agency. Forest Service, Big Sky Fire Management Strategy, Big Sky, Montana, February 2000. http://www.fs.fed.us/r1/gallatin/fire/bigsky_management_strategy/documents/bigsky_management_strategy.pdf Affiliated Areas In an Act of August 18, 1970, the National Park System was defined in law as any area of land or water now and hereafter administered by the Secretary of the Interior through the National Park Service for park, monument, historic, parkway, recreational, or other purposes. The same law specifically excludes miscellaneous areas administered in connection therewith: that is, those properties that are neither federally owned nor directly administered by the National Park Service but which utilize NPS assistance. The Affiliated Areas include a variety of locations in the United States and Canada that preserve significant properties outside the National Park System. Some of these areas have been recognized by acts of Congress; others have been designated national historic sites by the Secretary of the Interior under the authority of the Historic Sites Act of 1935. All draw on technical or financial aid from the National Park Service. The Ice Age National Scientific Reserve in Wisconsin is an example of an Affiliated Area. The criteria to be used for designating an Affiliated Area stipulate that the sites must: Possess resources that have national significance, and these resources must support interpretation of the story. Need some special recognition or technical assistance beyond what is available through existing NPS programs. Document that a cooperative arrangement with NPS and adequate contributions from other sources will assure long-term protection of the resource, and be able to establish and continue a standard of maintenance, operations, public service, and financial accountability consistent with requirements of NPS units. Be managed by an organization with which the NPS has a formal cooperative relationship. DOI/NPS http://www.nps.gov/iceagefloods/f.htm Affirmative
Action Action taken by a government or private institution to make
up for past discrimination in education, work, or promotion on the basis
of gender, race, ethnic origin, religion, or disability. United
Nations Charter / Human Rights Glossary Affirmative Procurement Program RCRA Section 6002 requires each procuring agency to establish an affirmative procurement program for maximizing its purchases of EPA-designated items. The program should be developed in a manner that ensures that items composed of recovered materials are purchased to the maximum extent practicable consistent with Federal procurement law. Glossary is a feature of Know Net, a knowledge management, e-learning and performance support system sponsored by the Government of the United States of America. Know Net can be accessed at http://www.knownet.hhs.gov http://knownet.hhs.gov/log/propmanDR/PPMGloss/definitions.htm#Property%20Management%20 Afforestation To establish forest cover on a non-forested land type, such as a grassland. National Grassland Plan (USDA Forest Service) http://www.fs.fed.us/ngp/draft/plan/pdf_plan_draft/Dakota_Prairie_Plan/Appendices/appendix_g.pdf 2. The establishment of forest by natural succession or by the planting of trees on land where they did not grow formerly. http://biology.usgs.gov/s+t/SNT/noframe/zy198.htm 3. Artificial establishment of forests by planting or seeding in an area of non-forest land. (UN) AFHA The Appalachian Forest Heritage Area http://ahc.caf.wvu.edu/heritage/; AFHA is a regional, grassroots effort by West Virginia Universitys Davis College of Agriculture, Forestry and Consumer Sciences and WVU Extension to integrate central Appalachian forest history, culture, natural history, products and forestry management into a multi-state heritage tourism initiative to promote rural community development. "The goal of this project is to create a sustainable heritage area based on the unified theme of forest heritage. Existing and potential forest-based historic sites, artisans, manufacturers and working forests are being developed into a network of tourist destinations that provide high-quality products, programs, educational experiences, events and visitor services." Jeremy Morris, program coordinator. [email protected] or 304-293-2941, ext. 2456. http://ahc.caf.wvu.edu/heritage/Participants.htm.htm Map of AFHA: http://ahc.caf.wvu.edu/heritage/map.jpeg.htm Documents: http://ahc.caf.wvu.edu/heritage/documents.htm Main website: http://www.appalachianforest.us Ten-year Strategic Plan: http://ahc.caf.wvu.edu/heritage/Final%20Strategic%20Plan%20Final.doc AFHAs Governing Council: http://ahc.caf.wvu.edu/heritage/AFHA_Nonprofit.htm Growth Rings, the AFHA newsletter: http://ahc.caf.wvu.edu/heritage/Vol%202%20No%202.doc. Be sure to read the list of AFHAs Project Partners: http://ahc.caf.wvu.edu/heritage/projectpartner.html AFI
Additional Financial Incentives AFL-CIO
American Federation of Labor - Congress of Industrial Organizations AFL-CIO
SWHIPF AFL-CIO Steel Workers Health Insurance Pension Fund (Cushenbury
Trust) AFM
Association of Futures Markets AFMA
American Film Marketing Association AFMG Appalachian Forest Management Group AFNCC Air Force Network Control Center AFO Animal Feeding Operation AFORE
Americans For the Environment AFOS The Association for the Foundations of Science, Language and Cognition AFP American Farm Policy AFPB Agricultural and Farmland Protection Boards AFRC
The American Forest Resource Council Afrikaners Africans of Dutch descent in South Africa. AFS Abundant Food Supply AFS American Field Service http://www.afs.org/AFSI/ AFS Statement of Purpose: AFS is an international, voluntary, non-governmental, non-profit organization that provides intercultural learning opportunities to help people develop the knowledge, skills and understanding needed to create a more just and peaceful world. Core values and attributes of AFS: AFS enables people to act as responsible global citizens working for peace and understanding in a diverse world. It acknowledges that peace is a dynamic concept threatened by injustice, inequity and intolerance. AFS seeks to affirm faith in the dignity and worth of every human being and of all nations and cultures. It encourages respect for human rights and fundamental freedoms without distinction as to race, sex, language, religion or social status. AFS activities are based on our core values of dignity, respect for differences, harmony, sensitivity and tolerance. Adopted at the 1993 World Congress. http://www.afs.org/AFSI/content/page.php?uid=10 The following two website URLs are highly recommended for additional information on the AFS: http://www.youthmovements.org/comp.htm http://www.civicus.org/new/media/e-CIVICUS%20222.pdf AFS The American Fisheries Society http://www.fisheries.org AFSA
American Foreign Service Association AFSEEE Association of Forest Service Employees for Environmental Ethics AFT American Farmland Trust AFTA ASEAN Free Trade Area http://www.undp.org.vn/projects/vie99002/globali.pdf AFTE
Americans For The Environment AFTZ
African Free Trade Zone AFTZ
Asian Free Trade Zone AFW Agriculture, Fish and Water AG Acronym Glossary AG Agriculture AG
Alternating Gradient AG
Area Government AG
Areal Geology AG
Association of Governments AG
Attorney General AGA
American Galvanizers Association AGA
American Gaming Association AGA American Gas Association Agate A kind of silica consisting mainly of chalcedony in variegated bands or other patterns. BLM (DOI) Grand Escalante Staircase National Monument DEIS Glossary AGC Annual Guideline Concentration AGC
Automatic Generation Control AGC Associated General Contractors AGCA
Associated General Contractors of America Age Class Age class is a management classification using the age of a stand of trees. The Forest Ecosystem Management Assessment Team (FEMAT) http://pnwin.nbii.gov/nwfp/FEMAT/ Chapter 9 Glossary http://pnwin.nbii.gov/nwfp/FEMAT/Chapter_9.htm 2. An age grouping of trees according to an interval of years, usually twenty years. A single age class would have trees that are within twenty years of the same age, such as 1-20 years or 21-40 years. Age specific survival rate The average proportion of individuals in a particular age group that survive for a given period. The Forest Ecosystem Management Assessment Team (FEMAT) http://pnwin.nbii.gov/nwfp/FEMAT/ Chapter 9 Glossary http://pnwin.nbii.gov/nwfp/FEMAT/Chapter_9.htm Agency
Any federal, state, or county government organization participating
with jurisdictional responsibilities. McGregor Range Draft Resource
Management Plan Amendment and Environmental Impact Statement, Prepared
for United States Department of the Interior Bureau of Land Management,
Las Cruces (New Mexico) Field Office, January 2005. http://www.nm.blm.gov/lcfo/mcgregor/docs/Draft%20RMPA_EIS_01_05_low.pdf
(DOI/BLM) Glossary
(Pages 259-268 of 282) 2. Includes all agencies, boards and commissions,
which are under the jurisdiction of State or local governments.
http://www.ilga.gov/commission/jcar/admincode/017/017010750000200R.htm |