WRAPS definition

WRAPS means watershed restoration and protection strategy, which consists of a planning and management framework intended to engage stakeholders in a process to identify watershed restoration. The process documents stakeholder goals, strategies to achieve the goals, and the resources required to implement the strategies. (Authorized by and implementing K.S.A. 2017 Supp. 2-1915; effective June 1, 2018.)

Examples of WRAPS in a sentence

  • YOU MAY NOT CREATE A DYNAMIC LINK LIBRARY (DLL) THAT EXPOSES OR WRAPS FUNCTIONALITY OF THE SDK TO A NON-LICENSED DEVELOPER.

  • Conduct in-field land application inspections within a formally designated area such as WRAPS or BWSR 1W1P.

  • Management in consultation with Human Resources Management will explore alternatives to successfully minimize downsizing or avoid RIF such as through the development of a pre- WRAPS plan where movement of employees into the new organization can be accomplished by reassignment and where the plan allows for the placement of most (if not all) of the potentially affected employees.

  • Sites within shoreland, a Drinking Water Supply Management Area (DWSMA), Watershed Restoration and Protection Strategy (WRAPS), BWSR One Watershed One Plan (1W1P), or other prioritized impaired waters (see Appendix A for 1W1P link).

  • Input from not only local governmental units, but also citizens, is integral to the process of creating the WRAPS reports.

  • When Management decides to implement a RIF, the Parties agree that RIF and Workforce Restructuring and Placement System (WRAPS) will be implemented simultaneously and that WRAPS is the procedure and appropriate arrangement for internal agency placement outside the competitive area.

  • MPCA also requires that an approved Watershed Restoration and Protection Strategy (WRAPS) report or TMDL Implementation Plan (former plans recently replaced by WRAPS in most cases) be completed for the project area.

  • Ownership by the local stakeholders of the WRAPS report is the central ▇▇▇▇▇ of the process: with that ownership, the right conservation practices are more likely to be implemented in the areas where they’re most effective.

  • Placement will be in accordance with current Agency guidance (i.e. WRAPS).

  • This information is gathered in a WRAPS report that uses the collected data to create a table of strategies (generally BMPs) needed to achieve clean surface water in that major watershed.