Colorado: Filing of Plats of Survey, 8406-8407 [05-3149]
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8406
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 33 / Friday, February 18, 2005 / Notices
Program—Other Needs, 97.036, Public
Assistance Grants; 97.039, Hazard Mitigation
Grant Program.)
Michael D. Brown,
Under Secretary, Emergency Preparedness
and Response, Department of Homeland
Security.
[FR Doc. 05–3129 Filed 2–17–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 9110–10–P
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
SECURITY
Federal Emergency Management
Agency
[FEMA–1578–DR]
Kentucky; Major Disaster and Related
Determinations
AGENCY: Federal Emergency
Management Agency, Emergency
Preparedness and Response Directorate,
Department of Homeland Security.
ACTION: Notice.
SUMMARY: This is a notice of the
Presidential declaration of a major
disaster for the Commonwealth of
Kentucky (FEMA–1578–DR), dated
February 8, 2005, and related
determinations.
EFFECTIVE DATE: February 8, 2005.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Magda Ruiz, Recovery Division, Federal
Emergency Management Agency,
Washington, DC 20472, (202) 646–2705.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Notice is
hereby given that, in a letter dated
February 8, 2005, the President declared
a major disaster under the authority of
the Robert T. Stafford Disaster Relief
and Emergency Assistance Act, 42
U.S.C. 5121–5206 (the Stafford Act), as
follows:
I have determined that the damage in
certain areas of the Commonwealth of
Kentucky resulting from a severe winter
storm and record snow on December 21–23,
2004, is of sufficient severity and magnitude
to warrant a major disaster declaration under
the Robert T. Stafford Disaster Relief and
Emergency Assistance Act, 42 U.S.C. 5121–
5206 (the Stafford Act). Therefore, I declare
that such a major disaster exists in the
Commonwealth of Kentucky.
In order to provide Federal assistance, you
are hereby authorized to allocate from funds
available for these purposes such amounts as
you find necessary for Federal disaster
assistance and administrative expenses.
You are authorized to provide all
categories of Public Assistance in the
designated areas; emergency assistance
(Public Assistance Category B, emergency
protective measures for a period of 48 hours
in those areas designated for snow removal
assistance); Hazard Mitigation throughout the
Commonwealth; and any other forms of
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assistance under the Stafford Act you may
deem appropriate. Consistent with the
requirement that Federal assistance be
supplemental, any Federal funds provided
under the Stafford Act for Public Assistance
and Hazard Mitigation will be limited to 75
percent of the total eligible costs. If Other
Needs Assistance under Section 408 of the
Stafford Act is later requested and warranted,
Federal funding under that program will also
be limited to 75 percent of the total eligible
costs.
Further, you are authorized to make
changes to this declaration to the extent
allowable under the Stafford Act.
The Federal Emergency Management
Agency (FEMA) hereby gives notice that
pursuant to the authority vested in the
Under Secretary for Emergency
Preparedness and Response, Department
of Homeland Security, under Executive
Order 12148, as amended, Jesse Munoz,
of FEMA is appointed to act as the
Federal Coordinating Officer for this
declared disaster.
I do hereby determine the following
areas of the Commonwealth of Kentucky
to have been affected adversely by this
declared major disaster:
Ballard, Bracken, Breckinridge, Caldwell,
Carlisle, Crittenden, Franklin, Fulton, Grant,
Grayson, Hancock, Harrison, Hart, Hickman,
Hopkins, Larue, Livingston, Lyon, McLean,
Muhlenberg, Nelson, Owen, Pendleton,
Robertson, Shelby, Union, and Webster
Counties for Public Assistance.
Ballard, Breckinridge, Caldwell, Carlisle,
Crittenden, Fulton, Hancock, Hickman,
Hopkins, Livingston, McLean, Muhlenberg,
Union, and Webster Counties for emergency
protective measures (Category B) under the
Public Assistance program for a period of 48
hours.
All counties within the Commonwealth of
Kentucky are eligible to apply for assistance
under the Hazard Mitigation Grant Program.
(The following Catalog of Federal Domestic
Assistance Numbers (CFDA) are to be used
for reporting and drawing funds: 97.030,
Community Disaster Loans; 97.031, Cora
Brown Fund Program; 97.032, Crisis
Counseling; 97.033, Disaster Legal Services
Program; 97.034, Disaster Unemployment
Assistance (DUA); 97.046, Fire Management
Assistance; 97.048, Individuals and
Households Housing; 97.049, Individuals and
Households Disaster Housing Operations;
97.050 Individuals and Households ProgramOther Needs, 97.036, Public Assistance
Grants; 97.039, Hazard Mitigation Grant
Program.)
Michael D. Brown,
Under Secretary, Emergency Preparedness
and Response, Department of Homeland
Security.
[FR Doc. 05–3130 Filed 2–17–05; 8:45 am]
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DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Land Management
Colorado: Filing of Plats of Survey
February 9, 2005.
SUMMARY: The plats of survey of the
following described land will be
officially filed in the Colorado State
Office, Bureau of Land Management,
Lakewood, Colorado, effective 10 a.m.,
February 10, 2005. All inquiries should
be sent to the Colorado State Office,
Bureau of Land Management, 2850
Youngfield Street, Lakewood, Colorado
80215–7093.
The field notes of the
remonumentation of certain corners in
Township 2 North, Range 43 West,
Sixth Principal Meridian, Group 750,
Colorado, was accepted October 18,
2004.
The Plat, representing the dependent
resurveys and surveys in section 34,
Township 36 North, Range 7 West, New
Mexico Principal Meridian, Group 1401,
Colorado, was accepted October 20,
2004.
The plat (in 2 sheets), of the entire
record, representing the dependent
resurvey and survey, in Township 22
South, Range 71 West, Sixth Principal
Meridian, Group 1275, Colorado, was
accepted November 5, 2004.
The Plat, representing the dependent
resurveys and surveys in Township 2
South, Range 80 West, Sixth Principal
Meridian, Group 1402, Colorado, was
accepted November 15, 2004.
The Plat, representing the dependent
resurveys and surveys in Township 1
North, Range 80 West, Sixth Principal
Meridian, Group 1402, Colorado, was
accepted November 15, 2004.
The Plat, representing the dependent
resurvey in Township 8 South, Range 76
West, Sixth Principal Meridian, Group
1409, Colorado, was accepted December
9, 2004.
The Supplemental Plat, creating new
lots 86 and 87, in section 30, Township
1 North, Range 71 West, Sixth Principal
Meridian, Colorado, was accepted
December 27, 2004.
These plats and remonumentation
notes were requested by the Bureau of
Land Management for administrative
and management purposes.
The Supplemental Plat, creating lot 1
in section 30, Township 3 South, Range
74 West, Sixth Principal Meridian,
Colorado, was accepted November 30,
2004.
The Plat (in 6 sheets), representing the
segregation of mineral surveys in
section 30, Township 1 North, Range 71
West, Sixth Principal Meridian, Group
1008, Colorado, was accepted December
21, 2004.
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 33 / Friday, February 18, 2005 / Notices
These plats were requested by the U.
S. Forest Service, to facilitate a land
exchange, and for administrative and
management purposes.
Randall M. Zanon,
Chief Cadastral Surveyor for Colorado.
[FR Doc. 05–3149 Filed 2–17–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–JB–P
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
Office of Community Oriented Policing
Services FY 2005 Community Policing
Discretionary Grants
AGENCY: Office of Community Oriented
Policing Services, Department of Justice.
ACTION: Notice of availability of the
Finding of No Significant Impact and
the Environmental Assessment.
SUMMARY: The Environmental
Assessment, which is available to the
public, concludes that the
methamphetamine investigation and
clandestine laboratory closure activities
of the Methamphetamine Initiative will
not have significant impact on the
quality of the human environment given
adherence to all applicable laws and
regulations.
ADDRESSES: For copies of the
Environmental Assessment, please
contact: COPS Grants Administration
Division, 1100 Vermont Avenue, NW.,
Washington, DC 20530; phone: (202)
616–3031 or 1–800–431–6770.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: The
U.S. Department of Justice Response
Center, 1–800–421–6770 and ask to
speak with your Grant Program
Specialist.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: In Fiscal
Year 2003, the COPS Office prepared an
Environmental Assessment for its
methamphetamine law enforcement
programs, with specific application for
the Methamphetamine Initiative. This
Environmental Assessment was
prepared as required by the Council on
Environmental Quality’s regulations (40
CFR parts 1500 through 1508),
implementing the National
Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (42
U.S.C. 4321, et al.) The Environmental
Assessment is current and accurate,
since the underlying science on which
it was based has not changed. The
Methamphetamine Initiative addresses a
broad array of law enforcement
initiatives pertaining to the
investigation of methamphetamine
trafficking in many heavily impacted
areas of the country. For the purposes of
this program, funded items may include
training of law enforcement officers in
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methamphetamine-related issues;
collection and maintenance of
intelligence and information relative to
methamphetamine trafficking and
traffickers; investigation, arrest and
prosecution of producers, traffickers and
users of methamphetamine; interdiction
and removal of laboratories, finished
products, and precursor chemicals and
other elements necessary to produce
methamphetamine; transportation and
storage of finished products, and
precursor chemicals, and other elements
necessary to produce
methamphetamine; and preventive
efforts to reduce the spread and use of
methamphetamine. Individual projects
will reflect a concentration on program
areas consistent with Congressional
appropriations.
Among the many challenges faced by
law enforcement agencies in the
Methamphetamine Initiative will be
discovery, interdiction, and dismantling
of clandestine drug laboratories. These
lab sites, as well as other
methamphetamine crime venues must
be comprehensively dealt with in
compliance with a variety of health,
safety and environmental laws and
regulations. The COPS Office requires
that recipients, when encountering
illegal drug laboratories, use grant funds
to effect the proper removal and
disposal of hazardous materials located
at those laboratories and directly
associated sites in accordance with all
applicable laws and regulations.
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
Overview
8407
BILLING CODE 4410–01–P
Foreign Claims Settlement
Commission
[F.C.S.C. Meeting Notice No. 1–05]
Sunshine Act; Meeting
The Foreign Claims Settlement
Commission, pursuant to its regulations
(45 CFR part 504) and the Government
in the Sunshine Act (5 U.S.C. 552b),
hereby gives notice in regard to the
scheduling of meetings for the
transaction of Commission business and
other matters specified, as follows:
DATE AND TIME: Wednesday, March 2,
2005, at 10 a.m.
SUBJECT MATTER: (1) Issuance of
Proposed Decisions in claims against
Albania; (2) Oral hearing on objection to
the Commission’s Proposed Decision in
the Claim of Selahedin Velaj, Claim No.
ALB–328.
STATUS: Open.
All meetings are held at the Foreign
Claims Settlement Commission, 600 E
Street, NW., Washington, DC. Requests
for information, or advance notices of
intention to observe an open meeting,
may be directed to: Administrative
Officer, Foreign Claims Settlement
Commission, 600 E Street, NW., Room
6002, Washington, DC 20579.
Telephone: (202) 616–6988.
Dated in Washington, DC on February 16,
2005.
Mauricio J. Tamargo,
Chairman.
[FR Doc. 05–3388 Filed 2–16–05; 3:13 pm]
Environmental Assessment
The COPS Office will award grants to
State and local criminal justice agencies
for the FY 2005 COPS
Methamphetamine Initiative. The
Environmental Assessment concludes
that the funding of this program will not
have a significant impact on the quality
of the human environment given
adherence to all applicable laws and
regulations. Therefore, an
Environmental Impact Statement will
not be prepared for the funding of this
program.
Dated: January 26, 2005.
Carl R. Peed,
Director, Office of Community Oriented
Policing Services.
[FR Doc. 05–3150 Filed 2–17–05; 8:45 am]
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DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Employment Standards
Administration; Wage and Hour
Division
Minimum Wages for Federal and
Federally Assisted Construction;
General Wage Determination Decisions
General wage determination decisions
of the Secretary of Labor are issued in
accordance with applicable law and are
based on the information obtained by
the Department of Labor from its study
of local wage conditions and data made
available from other sources. They
specify the basic hourly wage rates and
fringe benefits which are determined to
be prevailing for the described classes of
laborers and mechanics employed on
construction projects of a similar
character and in the localities specified
therein.
The determinations in these decisions
of prevailing rates and fringe benefits
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 70, Number 33 (Friday, February 18, 2005)]
[Notices]
[Pages 8406-8407]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 05-3149]
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DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Land Management
Colorado: Filing of Plats of Survey
February 9, 2005.
SUMMARY: The plats of survey of the following described land will be
officially filed in the Colorado State Office, Bureau of Land
Management, Lakewood, Colorado, effective 10 a.m., February 10, 2005.
All inquiries should be sent to the Colorado State Office, Bureau of
Land Management, 2850 Youngfield Street, Lakewood, Colorado 80215-7093.
The field notes of the remonumentation of certain corners in
Township 2 North, Range 43 West, Sixth Principal Meridian, Group 750,
Colorado, was accepted October 18, 2004.
The Plat, representing the dependent resurveys and surveys in
section 34, Township 36 North, Range 7 West, New Mexico Principal
Meridian, Group 1401, Colorado, was accepted October 20, 2004.
The plat (in 2 sheets), of the entire record, representing the
dependent resurvey and survey, in Township 22 South, Range 71 West,
Sixth Principal Meridian, Group 1275, Colorado, was accepted November
5, 2004.
The Plat, representing the dependent resurveys and surveys in
Township 2 South, Range 80 West, Sixth Principal Meridian, Group 1402,
Colorado, was accepted November 15, 2004.
The Plat, representing the dependent resurveys and surveys in
Township 1 North, Range 80 West, Sixth Principal Meridian, Group 1402,
Colorado, was accepted November 15, 2004.
The Plat, representing the dependent resurvey in Township 8 South,
Range 76 West, Sixth Principal Meridian, Group 1409, Colorado, was
accepted December 9, 2004.
The Supplemental Plat, creating new lots 86 and 87, in section 30,
Township 1 North, Range 71 West, Sixth Principal Meridian, Colorado,
was accepted December 27, 2004.
These plats and remonumentation notes were requested by the Bureau
of Land Management for administrative and management purposes.
The Supplemental Plat, creating lot 1 in section 30, Township 3
South, Range 74 West, Sixth Principal Meridian, Colorado, was accepted
November 30, 2004.
The Plat (in 6 sheets), representing the segregation of mineral
surveys in section 30, Township 1 North, Range 71 West, Sixth Principal
Meridian, Group 1008, Colorado, was accepted December 21, 2004.
[[Page 8407]]
These plats were requested by the U. S. Forest Service, to
facilitate a land exchange, and for administrative and management
purposes.
Randall M. Zanon,
Chief Cadastral Surveyor for Colorado.
[FR Doc. 05-3149 Filed 2-17-05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310-JB-P