How REPI Supports Military and Community Compatible Use

The Readiness and Environmental Protection Integration (REPI) Program, authorized by Congress, 10 U.S.C. § 2684a, allows communities and military installations to address land use encroachments and preserve military base operations by avoiding or eliminating conflicts. The REPI Program is further focused on making installations more resilient to climate change and land use conversion, both of which can restrict critical military testing and training operations. Encroachment management partnerships, called REPI Projects, are central to conservation and natural resource restoration efforts that happen to also facilitate REPI's goals. These partnerships, facilitated differently by each service branch, help sustain military capabilities by preserving land adjacent to military installations and sharing easement acquisition costs.

Created in 2003, the REPI Program has diversified its toolkit and grown the number of projects and partnership types. To date, it has worked with more than 500 partners, including many private organizations, resulting in $1.05 billion in cost savings. Partner contributions have accounted for 47 percent of the dollars spent on the program, which has saved valuable DoD assets. Many, identified as national defense strategy priorities, have been protected for a fraction of what it would cost to build, modernize, or replace them. The REPI program is now almost 20 years old and has moved beyond just encroachment issues, addressing military readiness and environmental protection in a broader, more holistic way.

The REPI Program's interactive guide, REPI 101, describes how the program is important to communities, land trusts, and other stakeholders. It also outlines the process to create a REPI partnership, implement a project, and facilitate stakeholder discussions, collaboration, and understanding about compatible land use issues. REPI regularly publishes primers to advance information to all stakeholders, including resources about community involvement, collaborative land use planning, and resiliency. Additionally, the REPI Webinar Series regularly provides information about the program, highlights best practices, and provides further guidance on the partnership process. Through FY21, DoD and its partners have spent more than $86 million on REPI projects at six Maryland installations. Learn more about the projects in these REPI Project Profiles.

Compatibility Factors relevant to the REPI Program: Resilience, Land/Air/Sea Spaces, Water Quality, Natural Features, Land Use

Relevant Programs and Plans

Southeast Regional Partnership for Planning and Sustainability

 

Southeast Regional Partnership for Planning and Sustainability (SERPPAS) is a six-state, state and federal agency partnership that collaborates on resource-use decisions in support of national defense, resource conservation, and sustainable working lands across the southeast. Participating states include North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Florida, and Mississippi. SERPPAS recognizes that long-term sustainability issues cross geographic and jurisdictional borders and solutions must promote collaboration to achieve 2021+ SERPPAS Strategic Plan objectives.


Western Regional Partnership

 

The Western Regional Partnership (WRP) includes the DoD, federal and state agencies, and tribal entities from Arizona, California, Colorado, Nevada, New Mexico, and Utah. The WRP promotes collaboration between members to identify common issues and goals related to military readiness, homeland security, sustainability, and natural and cultural resource protection. Working together, the WRP has developed strategies to address some of the region's key issues, including the sustainability of land, wildlife corridors, and border management


Sentinel Landscape Partnership

 

The U.S. Departments of Agriculture, Defense, and Interior created the Sentinel Landscapes Partnership through a Memorandum of Understanding in 2013, which was renewed in 2022. According to the MOU, the Sentinel Landscapes Partnership enhances collaboration among federal agencies, state and local governments, and non-governmental organizations on “...measures and actions that will protect military lands and airspace from incompatible development, regulatory restrictions, threats to military installation resilience, and other forms of encroachment, while also promoting conservation, agriculture, forestry, outdoor recreation, and the health of both our natural resources and of the rural economy.”1 The partnership is led at the national level by the Sentinel Landscape Federal Coordinating Committee (SL-FCC), with representatives from each of the three founding agencies. Other SL-FCC include USDA's Natural Resource Conservation Service (NRCS), the U.S. Forest Service (USFS), the Farm Service Agency (FSA), the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS), and the Bureau of Land Management (BLM).

The MOU defines Sentinel Landscapes as “...areas in which natural and working lands are well suited to protect defense facilities from land use that is incompatible with the military's mission.”2 The partnership works with interested landowners to advance sustainable land management practices within sentinel landscapes by connecting them with voluntary state and federal assistance programs in support of these practices. The programs offer landowners assistance such as tax reductions, agricultural loans, disaster relief, educational opportunities, technical aid, and funding for conservation easements. Learn more about federal agency support and priorities of the Sentinel Landscape Program in this interactive diagram.

As of FY21, 10 Sentinel Landscapes have been approved across the country, including the Middle Chesapeake Sentinel Landscape, which was established in 2015. It protects more than 50,000 critical acres in support of wildlife, agricultural production, and the Navy's mission along the Chesapeake Bay and Nanticoke River, in southern Maryland. Learn more about the Middle Chesapeake Sentinel Landscape or use the Interactive Landscape Map to explore other Sentinel Landscapes across the country.


1 MOU: Memorandum of Understanding between the Department of Defense Department of the Interior and Department of Agriculture Establishing Governing Principles for the Sentinel Landscapes Partnership. 2022.
2 Ibid. ​

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