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NSSH Part 606
Working Agreements
Definition (606.00)
Working agreements are a basis of understanding for cooperative work
with other agencies and organizations. These agreements include
memoranda of understanding (MOU), contribution agreements, interagency
agreements, and trust fund agreements. The Natural Resources
Conservation Service (NRCS) or any public agency may initiate working
agreements relating to soil survey activities. If another Federal agency
initiates a working agreement, the name of the document and the format
may be different from those used by the NRCS. Cooperators operate within
their own sphere of authority. Guidelines are in subpart 104I-73.101 of
the NRCS Property Management Regulations. A memorandum of understanding
is not a contract, nor are the plans and specifications agreed upon and
contained therein legally binding for the agencies that sign it. The MOU may
provide for other working agreements such as contribution agreements,
interagency agreements, or trust fund agreements for transfer of funds,
services, space, or equipment.
Policy and Responsibilities (606.01)
Memoranda of understanding record the intent of the NRCS and one or
more cooperators to join together in updating soil survey information,
making a soil survey of a specific area, or in performing related soil
survey work. The NCSS requires that each MLRA Soil Survey Regional Office (MO) has a
memorandum of understanding covering all of the land in the region
(referred to as an MLRA Region-wide MOU). Other MOUs can be developed
(but are not required) as deemed necessary for areas beginning an
initial soil survey or for areas undergoing normal updating activities.
Examples include: (1) a project soil survey of an individual area such
as county or parish (often referred to as an “initial soil survey”), (2)
an entire state (through a statewide memorandum of understanding), and
(3) an MLRA Soil Survey Project Area. Any standards, specifications, or
other guidance included in optional MOUs must be compatible with the
MLRA Region-wide MOU.
When developing MOUs or other working agreements, consider the potential need
to restrict access to information that may be considered sensitive to national
security. This may include information such as background imagery, labels on
maps, or other ancillary information. When directed by Department of Defense,
Homeland Security, or other responsible Federal officials to restrict the
distribution of any information, this directive is to be incorporated into the
MOU or other applicable working agreements. See General Manual Title
430.402.6(e) at:
http://policy.nrcs.usda.gov/.
Part 104I-73 of the Property Management Regulations (issued 1984) gives
specific instructions and authority concerning working agreements such as
memoranda of understanding, contribution agreements, and interagency agreements.
Other guidance is found in the NRCS Grants and Cooperative Agreements Handbook,
and Contribution Agreements Handbook.
When NRCS is to receive outside funds, services, or office space, the state
conservationist ensures the preparation of a contribution agreement, interagency
agreement, or trust fund agreement in addition to a memorandum of understanding.
- Memoranda of Understanding.
- MLRA Region-wide Memorandum of Understanding.
- Each of the NRCS MLRA Soil Survey Regional Offices (MOs) must have a
region-wide memorandum of understanding that covers all the
land within the MO region. The memorandum of understanding
includes information about the region, the purpose for doing
the work, responsibilities of cooperators, and other
information that would require signatures of cooperators.
New cooperators that did not sign the original MOU can be
added by signing at any time.
- The MLRA Soil Survey Regional Office leader prepares the MLRA
region-wide memorandum of understanding for approval by the
state conservationists, state agricultural experiment
station leaders, and other cooperating agencies as
appropriate. The MLRA region-wide memorandum of
understanding is an umbrella document necessary to help
ensure that maintenance of soil information, soil mapping,
and soil interpretation are conducted according to common
technical standards within physiographic regions.
- The Outline for a Memorandum of Understanding for a MLRA
Region.
- Heading. Identify the document as a memorandum of
understanding between the Natural Resources Conservation
Service and the other cooperating organizations that will be
signatories, relative to the making and modernization of all
soil surveys within the region.
- Authority. State the authority for doing the work. It is
usually Public Law 74-46, 49 Stat. 163 (16 U.S.C. 590 a-f)
and Public Law 89-560. 80 Stat. 706 (42 U.S.C. 3271-3274).
- Purpose. Describe the purpose for establishing the MOU.
This will generally include general information about the
National Cooperative Soil Survey partnership and it’s
mission, and the need to complete remaining initial soil
survey projects and to improve and coordinate existing soil
surveys.
- Description of the area. Provide general information
about the region such as its physiography, cropping and land
use patterns, and land ownership.
- Responsibilities. For each of the agencies signing the
MOU, list their responsibilities relative to soil survey in
the region.
- Specifications. Describe the expected products to be
produced. Reference the adherence to relevant NCSS standards
for describing, classifying, and mapping soils. This section
should be general enough to allow for flexibility within the
region as appropriate for order of soil surveys, design of
map units, kinds of interpretations to be provided , etc.,
but detailed enough to ensure that NCSS standards will be
adhered to for all soil survey activities.
- Provide the current non-discrimination statement.
- Signatures.
- Exhibit 606-1 is an example of an MLRA Region-wide
Memorandum of Understanding.
- Project Soil Survey Area Memorandum of Understanding
(optional). A project soil survey (initial soil survey or
update soil survey requiring extensive revision) is a
progressive survey that is governed by project management
procedures which ensure that all activities (including field
work, correlation, digital map preparation, digital map
finishing, and the final manuscript draft, for the survey)
is completed in 5 years or less from the date of the initial
quality assurance review.
- The State Soil Scientist prepares the MOU for a project
soil survey area. The Memorandum of Understanding records
the purpose of the survey, describes the area, lists
cooperators and their responsibilities, and records the
specifications for making, documenting, interpreting, and
publishing a soil survey for a specific area. The details
included within this MOU must be compatible with the MLRA
Region-wide MOU.
- All soil survey projects are to be managed in the
context of a major land resource area. This approach
maintains a consistent scale and level of detail among all
of the surveys within the major land resource area and
enables exact joins among the surveys. All project soil
surveys are conceptual subsets of the larger Major Land
Resource Area Soil Survey Area of which they are a part.
Quality control activities are performed by the MLRA soil
survey office. The
goal is to produce a geographically coordinated soils
legend, map, and database irrespective of political
boundaries. This assures consistent soil information for
each soil across the region, and also facilitates equitable
soil-related applications in conservation programs across
political boundaries.
- The Outline for a Memorandum of Understanding for a
Project Soil Survey Area.
- Heading. Identify the document as a memorandum of
understanding between the Natural Resources Conservation
Service and the other cooperating organizations that will be
signatories, relative to the making a soil surveys.
Coordinate the name and unique identification code with the
National Soil Survey Center (Hotline staff).
- Authority. State the authority for doing the work. It is
usually Public Law 74-46, 49 Stat. 163 (16 U.S.C. 590 a-f)
and Public Law 89-560. 80 Stat. 706 (42 U.S.C. 3271-3274).
- Purpose. Determine the purpose, needs, and objectives of a
soil survey in consultation with local users and
cooperators. Identify the principal potential users. Give
specific purposes and uses of the survey, such as for
intensive land development, irrigated cropland, commercial
timber production, assessment of agricultural land,
community development, or multipurpose public recreation.
Cite the MLRA region-wide memorandum of understanding, and
ensure that objectives of the project soil survey area meet
the objectives outlined in the region-wide memorandum.
- Description. Give a brief description of the work area,
describing location, size, and physiographic composition. If
more than one intensity of field operations is planned for
the same soil survey area and the extent is significant,
show the approximate acreage of each field operation. List
the acreage of Federal lands, if significant, that each
agency administers. Such agencies are Forest Service,
National Park Service, Bureau of Land Management, and
Department of Defense, and such lands as Indian Tribal
Lands.
- Responsibilities. Identify the agencies and their
responsibility for the work. Describe the specific kind and
amount of work to be done by each cooperating agency that
signs the memorandum of understanding. Include field work,
laboratory analyses, and special studies. Reference the MLRA
region-wide MOU and, if applicable, the state-wide MOU.
State clearly that quality control activities are
performed by the MLRA soil survey office.
- Specifications. List the specifications necessary for
conducting the work. For example:
- Specify the minimum standard or documentation to be used
for quality control.
- Indicate whether or not small areas of contrasting soils
or miscellaneous areas will be shown on the maps using point
and/or line features.
- Give general guidance on how the field work will be
conducted.
- Give base imagery data, including the supplying agency,
kind, and format, such as full quad or quarter quad orthophoto, and scale to be used in making the soil survey.
- Identify supplemental imagery available to assist in field
operations and the supplying agency.
- Specify latitude and longitude with stated datum for
locating information collected.
- Identify major soil interpretations for inclusion in the
published survey.
- Key Dates. List the key dates selected to organize,
manage, and complete the work, and analyze the workload as
necessary.
- List briefly the plans for publication.
- Provide the current non-discrimination statement.
- Signatures.
- State-Wide Memorandum of Understanding (optional).
Individual states may have a memorandum of understanding
with cooperating agencies that pertains to soil surveys in
general in the state. These statewide memoranda of
understanding are prepared by the State Soil Scientist to
recognize the joint and individual responsibilities of
cooperators for the development and utilization of soil
surveys in the state. The details included within this MOU
must be compatible with the MLRA Region-wide MOU. A
statewide MOU usually includes:
- a title block,
- definitions of terms used,
- the general purpose of the memorandum,
- items of mutual agreement,
- items of individual agency agreement, and
- signature blocks and dates.
- Other Memoranda of Understanding.
A MOU may be developed at the discretion of the State
Conservationist for any other geographic area if it is
beneficial to the parties involved. It must be compatible
with the MLRA Region-wide MOU.
- Review, Approval, and Distribution of Memorandum of
Understanding.
State conservationists of NRCS are responsible for
maintaining the adequacy of official soil survey information
for state and private lands. They coordinate NRCS
activities with others that have responsibility for the
adequacy of soil survey information on federally
administered lands.
- Review. An interdisciplinary, interagency team as
appropriate, including administrative support staff reviews
the draft (or substantially revised) memorandum of
understanding. The state conservationist sends a copy for
review and comment to:
- each cooperating signer,
- other affected state conservationists,
- National Soil Survey Center (for MLRA Region-wide MOUs
only),
- MLRA Soil Survey Regional Office,
- MLRA Soil Survey Office,
- Soil Survey Project Office (for project soil survey area MOUs),
- affected state soil scientists, and
- others, as appropriate, such as principal user groups.
- Reviewers return the draft copy of the memorandum of
understanding to the originating state for resolution of the
review comments.
- Approval. Upon resolution of all reviewer comments, the
state conservationist and the appropriate officials of
cooperating agencies approve the memorandum of understanding
by signing the document.
- Distribution. The state conservationist distributes
the original signed memorandum of understanding to the state
office administrative services file and copies to:
- the MLRA Soil Survey Regional Office,
- the MLRA Soil Survey Office,
- the Soil Survey Project Office (for project soil survey
area MOUs),
- each cooperating agency representative who signed the
MOU,
- the Director, National Soil Survey Center,
- the Director, Soil Survey Division,
- the National Cartography and Geospatial Center,
- the National Geospatial Development Center,
- Area Conservationist or Assistant State Conservationist
for Field Operations (for project soil survey area MOUs),
- District Conservationist (for project soil survey area MOUs), and
- other involved states.
- Amending an Existing Memorandum of Understanding.
- Prepare an amendment to the memorandum of understanding
if a significant change is made in the work or work area. If
the boundaries or other specifications change, issue an
amendment to a current memorandum.
- Rewrite only the section(s) for which a significant
change is being made. Examples of significant changes for
project soil surveys are:
- the area to be mapped is changed,
- the purpose for doing the survey is changed in full or in
part,
- specific plans for publishing the survey are changed, or
- specifications for map scale or format or for text format
are changed.
- Amendments follow the same review and distribution
procedures as outlined for the original memorandum of
understanding.
- An amendment is not needed if additional cooperators
want to sign the original memorandum of understanding after
it has been completed. The additional signature page(s)
should be forwarded to all the cooperators identified in the
document in addition to a new cover page and a statement of
the new cooperator’s responsibilities. The former signers do
not need to sign the document again.
- Description of a Contribution Agreement.
Initiate a contribution agreement if funds, services, or
office space from outside nonfederal sources are to be
received by the NRCS during or after the soil survey work.
Refer to subpart 104I-73.103 of the NRCS Property Management
Regulations and to 104I-73.300 for a sample of a soil survey
contribution agreement. Send a signed copy to the parties of
the agreement and to the Director, Soil Survey Division. If
the NRCS enters a reimbursable agreement with another
federal agency and NRCS receives reimbursement for doing
soil surveys for that agency, ensure that all costs are
covered, including overhead. A current memorandum of
understanding must be in effect prior to the development of
a contribution agreement.
- Description of a Trust Fund Agreement.
Initiate a trust fund agreement if funds from outside
sources are to be received by the NRCS in advance of the
soil survey work (refer to subpart 104I-73.200 of the NRCS
Property Management Regulations). Send a copy of the signed
agreement to the parties of the agreement and to the
Director, Soil Survey Division.
- Description of an Interagency Agreement.
Interagency Agreements or “Joint Agreements” with federal
agencies -- federal agencies use their own authorities,
however there are times when federal agencies co-mingle
funds with one agency taking the lead to carry out a mutual
undertaking. The program funding authority for each of the
agencies must provide specific authority to carry out the
undertaking; otherwise they cannot co-mingle funds. The
agencies may have to enter into a joint agreement using
separate program authorities with no lead agency.
- Other Documents Required for Planning and Managing Soil
Survey Projects.
- MLRA Soil Survey Offices are required to have:
- a long-range plan describing what
is needed throughout the assigned area to bring all previous
work up to a common, modern standard. The highest priority
needs are identified and used to develop specific project plans.
- a project plan describing the work to be accomplished in
addressing one or more priority needs over about a 2 to 5 year period, and
- an annual plan of operations.
- Soil Survey Project Offices (those conducting initial
soil surveys, or update soil surveys requiring extensive
revision) must have:
- a long-range plan detailing all activities needed to
complete the work within about a 5-year period, and
- an annual plan of operations.
- See Parts 608 and 610 for additional information about
these documents.
MLRA Region-wide Memorandum of
Understanding
(Exhibit 606-1)
UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
NATIONAL COOPERATIVE SOIL SURVEY
MEMORANDUM OF UNDERSTANDING
between the
NATURAL RESOURCES CONSERVATION SERVICE
and the
FOREST SERVICE
and the
U. S. DEPARTMENT OF INTERIOR
BUREAU OF INDIAN AFFAIRS
and the
BUREAU OF LAND MANAGEMENT
and the
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
in IDAHO, MONTANA, OREGON, WASHINGTON, AND
WYOMING
and the
COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURE
UNIVERSITY OF IDAHO
and the
IDAHO SOIL CONSERVATION COMMISSION
and the
MONTANA AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION
MONTANA STATE UNIVERSITY
and the
OREGON AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION
OREGON STATE UNIVERSITY
and the
WASHINGTON AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH CENTER
WASHINGTON STATE UNIVERSITY
and the
WYOMING AGRICULTURAL EXPERIMENT STATION
UNIVERSITY OF WYOMING
RELATIVE TO THE MAKING AND MODERNIZATION OF ALL SOIL SURVEYS
WITHIN MAJOR LAND RESOURCE AREA SOIL SURVEY REGION 4 - NORTHERN ROCKY
MOUNTAIN REGION
AUTHORITY: Public Law 74-46, 49 Stat. 163 (16 U.S.C. 590 a-f) and
Public Law 89-560, 80 Stat. 706 (42 U.S.C. 3271-3274).
PURPOSE: The Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) and the
National Cooperative Soil Survey (NCSS) partnership have a common
objective of providing service to soil survey program participants in an
effective and efficient manner.
The purpose of this memorandum of understanding (MOU) is to encourage
cooperation and to outline how the NCSS partnership will work together
within MLRA Soil Survey Region 4 to bring soil surveys to a common
maintenance level. Effective cooperation among participants will improve
their respective abilities to provide service to the soil survey program
as well as significantly advance the individual partnership mission.
This memorandum of understanding serves as a blanket memorandum of
understanding for Major Land Resource Area Soil Survey Region 4. It
provides the guidance needed for the Northern Rocky Mountain Region 4
MLRA Soil Survey Regional Office to be able to conduct business, such as the
completion of an initial soil inventory and continued modernization
efforts of the 82 soil surveys within the business area. Work will be
done in accordance with National Cooperative Soil Survey (NCSS)
standards at a scale of 1:24,000 or 1:12,000. The intent of this
memorandum of understanding is to ensure that the soil survey work in
the area provides scientifically sound, up-to-date, coordinated soil
survey information. The mission of the cooperative soil survey is to
assist humankind in understanding and wisely using soil resources to
achieve and sustain a desirable quality of life. This mission is
achieved by maintaining a strong scientific basis for defining and
describing soil landscape relationships important to the use and
management of soils; by providing scientific expertise to identify,
classify, characterize, correlate, and interpret soils; by making field
investigations, remote sensing and laboratory information and its
interpretation readily available through texts, maps, digital products,
and other databases; and by assisting people in the use of soil survey
information.
There is a need to complete the initial soil inventory. There is also
a need to maintain soil survey information that builds on existing soil
surveys and develop a coordinated database that addresses local,
regional, and national concerns. These projects will enable decision
makers to make more informed environmental assessments and resource
management decisions. They will also provide more comprehensive soil and
site data for (1) managing public and private land, (2) protecting water
quality and conserving water quantity, (3) improving and maintaining
cropland, rangeland, and forestland, (4) developing wildlife habitat,
(5) preparing watershed and urban plans, and (6) providing community and
rural development soil interpretations and potentials.
This memorandum of understanding will help to ensure that soil
mapping and interpretation are conducted according to common standards
within the Northern Rocky Mountain Region. Consequently it serves as the
guidance document for developing individual soil survey work load
analysis and project plans of operations within the Region. Project
plans of operations contain the technical standards, specifications,
publication plans, staffing plans, and schedules for completing the
remaining initial soil surveys in the region, as well as specific
priority activities that have been identified for MLRA soil survey
office staffs. They also include any specific responsibilities of
cooperators as related to these projects. Any trust fund agreements or
reimbursements between agencies or local units of governments for
projects would also be covered by separate contribution, interagency, or
trust fund agreements.
This memorandum of understanding supersedes all previous MLRA
region-wide memoranda of understanding within this region upon the
signature of the last person signing the document.
DESCRIPTION OF THE WORK AREA: The Northern Rocky Mountain Major Land
Resource Area Soil Survey Region 4 consists of seven MLRAs. These areas
cover parts of Idaho, Montana, Oregon, Washington, and Wyoming. The area
consists of approximately 86,274,451 acres. Approximately sixty percent
of these acres are federal land.
MLRAs in Soil Survey Region 4 are: Northern Intermountain Desertic
Basins (32), Semiarid Rocky Mountains (33), Northern Rocky Mountains
(43A), Central Rocky Mountains (43B), Blue Mountains-Seven Devils (43C),
Northern Rocky Mountain Valleys (44), and Northern Rocky Mountain
Foothills (46). The region varies from rugged mountains to broad valleys
to semi desert plateaus and basins. Grazing is the leading land use
throughout the region but logging is important in some of the forested
mountain areas. Irrigation is practiced in some of the valleys and
dryland farming in others. Grain and forage for livestock are the main
crops. Beans, peas, sugar beets, and seed crops are also grown in places
where soils, climate, and markets are favorable.
LAND AREA
ACREAGE TOTALS*
There are about 86,274,451 acres in the region
About 24,796,509 in Idaho
About 36,676,300 in Montana
About 2,178,304 in Oregon
About 2,459,190 in Washington
About 20,164,148 in Wyoming
The US Forest Service Manages about 45,995,992 acres or about 53% of the
area
Native American Land is about 3,940,361 acres or about 5%of the area
Other nonfederal land is about25,286,871 acres or about 29% of the area
Bureau of Land Management manages about 6,239,587 acres or about 7% of
the area
National Park Service manages about 3,311,906 acres or about 4 % of the
area
Other Federal Land about 674,881 or less than 1% of the area
Census water is about 824,853 or about 1% of the area
* Acreage adjusted to coincide with MLRA Soil Survey Region 4 boundary.
Acreage values are close approximations.
RESPONSIBILITIES: Technical responsibilities are identified in this
section. Administrative responsibilities for acquisition of monies,
personnel, equipment, office space, and other in-kind services are also
indicated. However, they are contingent upon separate cooperative
agreements and trust fund agreements developed by states or units of
government.
Lead agencies responsible for project soil surveys will prepare
memoranda of understanding (work plans); develop sampling plans and
conduct soil investigations; provide the controlled base imagery and
supporting cartographic materials for field mapping and publication;
prepare the soil survey manuscript(s); and complete the map compilation,
digitizing, and map finishing for those surveys.
- The USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) will:
- Characterize the soils by laboratory analyses where appropriate.
- Where NRCS is the lead agency, conduct quality assurance reviews,
prepare trip reports, quality assurance reports, correlation documents,
and provide field technical assistance for soil surveys in the region.
- Cooperate with other agencies in providing public relations regarding
progress of surveys, uses of soil survey information, and distribution
of soil survey data.
- Provide technical leadership for soil survey attribute (NASIS) and
spatial (SSURGO) data development and provide access to that information
for the development of agency products.
- Coordinate all soil survey activities across the soil survey region
and between other regions for exact joins.
- The USDA Forest Service (FS) will:
- Participate in quality assurance reviews, field studies, and soil
correlation for project soil surveys containing FS lands.
- Cooperate in the conduct of the National Cooperative Soil Survey by
allowing access to intermingled lands and by conducting soil surveys on
the lands under the jurisdiction of the Forest Service.
- Share available soil moisture and temperature, forestland and
rangeland data.
- Cooperate in ensuring exact joins between soil survey areas.
- Provide guidance and assistance in other phases of the soil survey
program.
- The USDI Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) will:
- Participate in quality assurance reviews, field studies, and soil
correlation for project soil surveys containing Native American lands.
- Cooperate in the dissemination of information regarding soil survey
progress and the value, use, and availability of soil survey
information.
- Provide guidance and assistance in other phases of the soil survey
program.
- The USDI Bureau of Land Management (BLM) will:
- Participate in quality assurance reviews, field studies, and soil
correlation for project soil surveys containing BLM lands.
- Share available soil moisture and temperature, forestland, and
rangeland data.
- Cooperate in the conduct of the National Cooperative Soil Survey by
allowing access to intermingled lands and by conducting soil surveys on
the lands under the jurisdiction of BLM.
- Provide guidance and assistance in other phases of the soil survey
program.
- Cooperate in ensuring exact joins between soil survey areas.
- The USDI National Park Service (NPS) will:
- Participate in quality assurance reviews, field studies, and soil
correlation for project soil surveys containing NPS lands.
- Cooperate in the conduct of the National Cooperative Soil Survey by
allowing access to intermingled lands.
- Share available soil moisture and temperature, forestland, and
rangeland data.
- Cooperate in ensuring exact joins between soil survey areas.
- Provide guidance and assistance in other phases of the soil survey
program.
- Reimburse NRCS for the full cost of conducting soil surveys on the
lands under the jurisdiction of NPS.
- The Idaho Soil Conservation Commission will:
- Contribute necessary personnel and equipment to help complete
fieldwork of project soil surveys as agreed upon.
- Participate in quality assurance reviews, field studies, and soil
correlation.
- Cooperate in information and education programs regarding the value,
use, and availability of soil survey information.
- Provide guidance and assistance in other phases of the soil survey
program.
- The College of Agriculture, University of Idaho; the Washington
Agricultural Research Center, Washington State University; and the
Agricultural Experiment Stations in Montana, Oregon, and Wyoming will:
- Perform research in genesis, morphology, and classification of soils.
- Participate in quality assurance reviews, field studies, and soil
correlation.
- Cooperate in information and education programs regarding the value,
use, and availability of soil survey information.
- Provide guidance and assistance in other phases of the soil survey
program, including the development of appropriate soil survey products.
SPECIFICATIONS: The products expected are coordinated, joined, digitized
soil surveys at 1:24,000 or 1:12,000 scales with accompanying attribute
soil data in the National Soil Information System (NASIS). Digitizing
specifications will be in accordance with the National Soil Survey
Handbook Part 647 Map Digitizing Standards for SSURGO and Digital Map
Finishing. Digitized data will not be copyrighted. NRCS reserves the
right to archive and distribute data generated under the terms of this
Memorandum of Understanding.
Sufficient field documentation will be collected to characterize and
describe the map unit concepts as to name, composition, setting, and
interpretation. Sufficient field checking of map units in the survey
area will be made to ensure that delineations meet the map unit criteria
- i.e., the map unit delineations are as described and their components
will interpret as stated in the map unit descriptions and tables. The
taxonomic classes selected to name map unit components will be
represented and supported by a typical pedon. All surveys within this
region will be coordinated and a comprehensive digital coverage
developed through exact joins.
The program or activities conducted under this Memorandum of
Understanding will be in compliance with the non-discrimination
provisions contained in the Titles VI and VII of the Civil Rights Act of
1964, as amended; the Civil Rights Act Restoration Act of 1987 (Public
Law 100-259); and other non-discrimination statutes, namely, Section 504
of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, Title IX of the Education Amendments
of 1972, and the Age Discrimination Act of 1975. They will also be in
accordance with regulations of the Secretary of Agriculture (7 CFR-15,
Subparts A & B), which provide that no person in the United States shall
on the grounds of race, color, national origin, age, sex, religion,
marital status, or handicap be excluded from participation in, be denied
the benefits of, or be otherwise subjected to discrimination under any
program or activity receiving Federal financial assistance from the
Department of Agriculture or any agency thereof.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) prohibits discrimination in
all its programs and activities on the basis of race, color, national
origin, age, disability, and where applicable, sex, marital status,
familial status, parental status, religion, sexual orientation, genetic
information, political beliefs, reprisal, or because all or a part of an
individual's income is derived from any public assistance program. (Not
all prohibited bases apply to all programs.) Persons with disabilities
who require alternative means for communication of program information
(Braille, large print, audiotape, etc.) should contact USDA's TARGET
Center at (202) 720-2600 (voice and TDD). To file a complaint of
discrimination write to USDA, Director, Office of Civil Rights, 1400
Independence Avenue, S.W., Washington, D.C. 20250-9410 or call (800)
795-3272 (voice) or (202) 720-6382 (TDD). USDA is an equal opportunity
provider and employer.
APPROVAL
IDAHO
Signed _______________________________
State Conservationist
USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service
Boise, ID
Signed _______________________________
Director
USDI Bureau of Land Management
Boise, ID
Signed _______________________________
Regional Forester
Region 4
USDA Forest Service
Ogden, UT
Signed _______________________________
Administrator
Idaho Soil Conservation Commission
Boise, ID
Signed _______________________________
Dean
College of Agriculture
University of Idaho
Moscow, ID
MONTANA
Signed _______________________________
State Conservationist
USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service
Bozeman, MT
Signed _______________________________
Director
USDI Bureau of Land Management
Billings, MT
Signed _______________________________
Regional Forester
Region 1
USDA Forest Service
Missoula, MT
Signed _______________________________
Area Director
USDI Bureau of Indian Affairs
Billings, MT
Signed _______________________________
Superintendent
Glacier National Park
USDI National Park Service
West Glacier, MT
Signed _______________________________
Director
Montana Agricultural Experiment Station
Montana State University
Bozeman, MT
OREGON
Signed _______________________________
State Conservationist
USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service
Portland, OR
Signed _______________________________
Regional Forester
Region 6
USDA Forest Service
Portland, OR
Signed _______________________________
Area Director
USDI Bureau of Indian Affairs
Portland, OR
Signed _______________________________
Director
Oregon Agricultural Experiment Station
Oregon State University
Corvallis, OR
WASHINGTON
Signed _______________________________
State Conservationist
USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service
Spokane, WA
Signed _______________________________
Director
Washington Agricultural Research Center
Washington State University
Pullman, WA
WYOMING
Signed _______________________________
State Conservationist
USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service
Casper, WY
Signed _______________________________
Director
USDI Bureau of Land Management
Casper, WY
Signed _______________________________
Regional Forester
Region 2
USDA Forest Service
Lakewood, CO
Signed _______________________________
Superintendent
Yellowstone National Park
USDI National Park Service
Mammoth Hot Springs, WY
Signed _______________________________
Director
Wyoming Agricultural Experiment Station
University of Wyoming
Laramie, WY
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Contents
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