Analytical Methods and Approaches for Water Resources Project PlanningNational Research Council, Division on Earth and Life Studies, Ocean Studies Board, Water Science and Technology Board, Committee to Assess the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Methods of Analysis and Peer Review for Water Resources Project Planning, Panel on Methods and Techniques of Project Analysis National Academies Press, 2004. gada 30. aug. - 165 lappuses Analytical Methods and Approaches for Water Resources Project Planningis part of a larger study that was conducted in response to a request from the U.S. Congress in the Water Resources Development Act of 2000 for the National Academy of Sciences to review the U.S. Army Corps of Engineer's peer review methods and analytical approaches. This report reviews the Corps' analytical procedures and planning methods, largely in the context of the federal Economic and Environmental Principles and Guidelines for Water and Related Land Resources Implementation Studies, also known as the Principles and Guidelines or "P and G" (P&G), as well as the Corps' Planning Guidance Notebook (PGN). |
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... Staff JEFFREY W. JACOBS, Study Director ELLEN A. DE GUZMAN, Research Associate ∗The Panel on Methods and Techniques of Project Analysis was one of four panels, operating under the auspices of a coordinating committee that was convened ...
... staff members who spoke with us include Colonel Robert Ball, Buddy Arnold, Robert Lindner, Ed McNally, Marsha Mose, and Susan Smith. Several other Corps staff members, including several from the Corps St. Paul District who hosted a ...
... staff for its dedication and diligence in organizing the committee's activities and in helping bring this report to fruition. Our work would not have been possible without the excellent staff of the Water Science and Technology Board ...
... ............142 G Biographical Information of Panel Members and Staff...........................................................................147 The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has long constructed civil Contents xiv.
... staff was on detail from federal agencies or had served on agency staff, and because meetings of the council members or their representatives involved high level members of the administration, the WRC staff became a clearinghouse for ...
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3 Assessing Benefits and Costs of Corps Projects | 38 |
4 Stakeholder Participation | 73 |
5 Engineering | 87 |
6 A New National Water Management Framework | 98 |
7 Revising Corps of Engineers Planning Studies | 109 |
Appendixes | 127 |
Appendix A Water Resources Development Act 2000 Public Law No 106541 of the 106th Congress | 129 |
Appendix B Corps Divisions and Districts | 132 |
Appendix C Office of Management and Budgets Guidance on Nonmarket Valuation Techniques | 134 |
Appendix D Analysis of Nonstructural Flood Damage Reduction | 136 |
Appendix E Army Corps of Engineers Planning Center of Expertise | 138 |
Appendix F Rosters | 142 |
Appendix G Biographical Information of Panel Members and Staff | 147 |