Office of Community Oriented Policing Services; FY 2005 Community Policing Discretionary Grants, 21442-21443 [05-8239]
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21442
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 79 / Tuesday, April 26, 2005 / Notices
a Final Environmental Impact Statement
(EIS) for the Folsom Dam Road
Restricted Access action. The action
would entail a long-term decision on the
closure of Folsom Dam Road to public
access.
A Notice of Availability of the Draft
EIS was published in the Federal
Register on Friday, December 3, 2004
(69 FR 70278). The written comment
period on the Draft EIS ended on
Tuesday, January 18, 2005. The Final
EIS contains responses to all comments
received and reflects comments and any
additional information received during
the review period.
DATES: Reclamation will not make a
decision on the proposed action until at
least 30 days after release of the Final
EIS. At the end of the 30-day period,
Reclamation will complete a Record of
Decision (ROD). The ROD will state the
action that will be implemented and
will discuss all factors leading to the
decision.
A compact disk or copy of
the Final EIS may be requested from Ms.
Lynnette Wirth, Reclamation, by mail at
2800 Cottage Way, Sacramento, CA
95825; by e-mail at lwirth@mp.usbr.gov
or by calling 916–978–5102. The final
document is available online at https://
www.usbr.gov/mp/ccao/roadeis. See the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section for
locations where copies of the Final EIS
are available for review and inspection.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Robert Schroeder, Project Manager,
Bureau of Reclamation, at 916–989–
7274.
ADDRESSES:
The Final
EIS addresses impacts from restricted
access across Folsom Dam Road based
on security issues and potential disaster
flood inundation. The Preferred
Alternative is the Restricted Access
Alternative number two. The EIS also
addresses a No-Action alternative that
would reopen the road to public use
similar to pre-2003 conditions, an
alternative to keep the Road closed
permanently to public access and two
restricted access alternatives that
includes the preferred alternative, and
that restrict Folsom Dam Road access
using a combination of vehicle
inspections and restrictions on type and
number of vehicles, and time of use.
The Final EIS has identified the key
issues to include traffic and circulation,
socioeconomics, air quality, and
recreation. In addition to the key issues
listed above, Reclamation has identified
other items that have also been included
in the EIS. These include biology, water
quality, cultural resources, ground
water, water supply, power supply,
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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11:52 Apr 25, 2005
Jkt 205001
municipal and industrial land uses,
demographics, visual resources, public
health, social well-being, power
consumption and production, and
cumulative effects.
Public hearings were held on the
following dates and locations: Tuesday,
January 4, 2005, in Sacramento, CA and
Wednesday, January 5, 2005, in Folsom,
CA.
Copies of the final documents are
available for public inspection and
review at the following locations:
• Sacramento Public Library, 828 I
Street, Sacramento, CA 95814.
• Folsom Public Library, 300 Persifer
Street, Folsom, CA 95630.
• Rancho Cordova Community
Library, 9845 Folsom Blvd.,
Sacramento, CA 95827.
• Arden-Dimick Community Library,
891 Watt Avenue, Sacramento, CA
95864.
• Fair Oaks Community Library,
11601 Fair Oaks Boulevard, Fair Oaks,
CA 95628.
• Orangevale Neighborhood Library,
8820 Greenback Lane, Suite L,
Orangevale, CA 95662.
• Granite Bay Branch Library, 6475
Douglas Boulevard, Granite Bay, CA
95746.
• Cameron Park Library, 2500
Country Club Drive, Cameron Park, CA
95682.
• U.S. Bureau of Reclamation, Denver
Office Library, Building 67, Room 167,
Denver Federal Center, 6th and Kipling,
Denver, CO 80225.
• U.S. Bureau of Reclamation, Office
of Public Affairs, 2800 Cottage Way,
Sacramento, CA 95825–1898; telephone:
916–978–5100.
• Natural Resources Library, U.S.
Department of the Interior, 1849 C Street
NW., Main Interior Building,
Washington, DC 20240–0001.
Our practice is to make comments,
including names and home addresses of
respondents, available for public
review. Individual respondents may
request that we withhold their home
address from public disclosure, which
we will honor to the extent allowable by
law. There may also be circumstances in
which we would withhold a
respondent’s identity from public
disclosure, as allowable by law. If you
wish us to withhold your name and/or
address, you must state this
prominently at the beginning of your
comment.
We will make all submissions from
organizations or businesses, and from
individuals identifying themselves as
representatives or officials of
organizations or businesses, available
for public disclosure in their entirety.
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Dated: April 11, 2005.
Kirk C. Rodgers,
Regional Director, Mid-Pacific Region.
[FR Doc. 05–8238 Filed 4–25–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–MN–P
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
Office of Community Oriented Policing
Services; FY 2005 Community Policing
Discretionary Grants
Office of Community Oriented
Policing Services, Department of Justice.
ACTION: Notice of availability.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: The Department of Justice
Office of Community Oriented Policing
Services (COPS) announces the
availability of funds over the Tribal
Resources Grant Program. This program
is designed to meet the most serious
needs of law enforcement in Indian
communities through a comprehensive
grant program that will offer a variety of
funding options including: New,
additional police officer positions; basic
and/or specialized training for sworn
law enforcement officers; training in
community policing, grants
management and computer training;
uniforms and basic issue equipment;
department-wide technology; and police
vehicles. This program, which
complements the COPS Office’s efforts
to fund and support innovative
community policing, will enhance law
enforcement infrastructures and
community policing efforts in tribal
communities which have limited
resources and are affected by high rates
of crime and violence. Applications
should reflect the department’s most
serious law enforcement needs and
must link these needs to the
implementation or enhancement of
community policing.
All federally recognized tribes with
established police departments are
eligible to apply. Federally recognized
tribes may also apply as a consortium
with a written partnership agreement
that names a lead agency and describes
how requested resources will serve the
consortium’s population. In addition,
tribes that are currently served by
Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) law
enforcement may request funding under
this grant program to supplement their
existing police services. Tribes whose
law enforcement services are
exclusively provided by local policing
agencies through a contract agreement
are not eligible under the COPS TRGP
program.
DATES: Applications will be available in
April 2005. Federal recognized tribes or
villages that wish to apply may request
E:\FR\FM\26APN1.SGM
26APN1
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 79 / Tuesday, April 26, 2005 / Notices
an application from the COPS Office.
The deadline for the submission of
applications is May 31, 2005.
Applications must be postmarked by
May 31, 2005 to be considered eligible.
ADDRESSES: To obtain an application or
for more information, call the COPS
Office Response Center at 1–800–421–
6770. A copy of the application kit will
also be available in April on the COPS
Office Web site at https://
www.cops.usdoj.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: The
COPS Office Response Center, 1–800–
421–6770 and ask to speak with your
Tribal Grant Program Specialist.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Overview
The Violent Crime Control and Law
Enforcement Act of 1994 (Pub. L. 103–
322) authorizes the Department of
Justice to make grants to increase
deployment of law enforcement officers
devoted to community policing on the
streets and rural routes in this nation.
The Tribal Resources Grant Program
was developed to meet the most serious
needs of law enforcement in tribal
communities through a comprehensive
grant program that will offer a variety of
funding options. This program will
enhance law enforcement
infrastructures and community policing
efforts in these tribal communities,
many of which have limited resources
and are affected by high rates of crime
and violence.
The Tribal Resources Grant Program
is part of a larger federal initiative
which, over the last seven years, has
resulted in the Department of Interior
and Justice working in collaboration to
improve law enforcement in tribal
communities. Funding has been
appropriated to several DOJ agencies
including the FBI, the Bureau of Justice
Assistance (BJA), the Office of Juvenile
Justice and Delinquency Prevention
(OJJDP) and the COPS Office. COPS is
coordinating with these agencies as well
as with the Office of Law Enforcement
Services of the Bureau of Indian Affairs
to ensure that limited resources are not
spent on duplicative efforts.
Approximately $20 million in funding
will be available under the Tribal
Resources Grant Program. The grant will
cover a maximum federal share of 75%
of total project costs. A local match
requirement of at least 25% of total
project cost is included in this program.
A waiver of the local match requirement
may be requested but will be granted
only on the basis of documented
demonstrated fiscal hardship. Requests
for waivers must be submitted with the
application.
VerDate jul<14>2003
11:52 Apr 25, 2005
Jkt 205001
Tribes whose law enforcement
services are exclusively provided by
local policing agencies through contract
arrangements are not eligible under this
COPS program.
Receiving an award under the Tribal
Resources Grant Program will not
preclude grantees from future
consideration under other COPS grant
programs for which they are eligible.
The Catalog of Federal Domestic
Assistance (CFDA) reference for this
program is 16.710.
Dated: April 17, 2005.
Carl Peed,
Director.
[FR Doc. 05–8239 Filed 4–25–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4410–AT–M
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
Antitrust Division
Notice Pursuant to the National
Cooperative Research and Production
Act of 1993—DVD Copy Control
Association
Notice is hereby given that, on March
29, 2005, pursuant to section 6(a) of the
National Cooperative Research and
Production Act of 1993, 15 U.S.C. 4301
et seq. (‘‘the Act’’), DVD Copy Control
Association (‘‘DVD CCA’’) has filed
written notifications simultaneously
with the Attorney General and the
Federal Trade Commission disclosing
changes in its membership. The
notifications were filed for the purpose
of extending the Act’s provisions
limiting the recovery of antitrust
plaintiffs to actual damages under
specified circumstances. Specifically,
Advanced Driver Information
Technology Corporation, Aichi-ken,
Japan; Condor CD S.L., Calatayud,
Spain; Coretek Limited, Hong Kong,
Hong Kong-China; D-Link Systems, Inc.,
Fountain Valley, CA; Dyntec Disc
Production Co., Ltd., Nakhon Pathom,
Thailand; Hing Lung Technology (HK)
Company Limited, Hong Kong, Hong
Kong-China; Hitachi High Technologies
Corporation, Tokyo, Japan; Honest
Technology Co., Ltd., Daejeon, Republic
of Korea; Kiss Technology A/S,
Horsholm, Denmark; L&M Optical Disc
West, LLC, Valencia, CA; Laser Disc
Argentina S.A., Buenos Aires,
Argentina; OptiDisk Corporation,
Anaheim, CA; Princeton Technology
Corp., Taipei, Taiwan; Seripress SAS,
Bulgneville, France; Shin Heung
Precision Co., Ltd., Kyunggi-Do,
Republic of Korea; Ultra Source
Technology Corp., Hong Kong, Hong
Kong-China; Video Without Boundaries,
Inc., Fort Lauderdale, FL; and World
PO 00000
Frm 00055
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
21443
Electronic (Shenzhen) Co., Ltd.,
Guangdong, People’s Republic of China
have been added as parties to this
venture.
Also, Accesstek, Inc., Hsin-Chu,
Taiwan; Digipak Optical Disc, SA,
Beriain, Spain; Enlight Corporation,
Taoyuan, Taiwan; Flextronics
International Denmark A/S, Pandrup,
Denmark; Jiangsu Syber Electronic Co.,
Ltd., Jiangsu, People’s Republic of
China; and Shinwa Industries (China),
Ltd., Xiamen, People’s Republic of
China have withdrawn as parties to this
venture. Also, Malata Seeing & Hearing
Equipment Co., Ltd. has changed its
name to Nanjing Wanlida Seeing &
Hearing Equipment Co., Ltd., Xiamen,
People’s Republic of China.
No other changes have been made in
either the membership or planned
activity of the group research project.
Membership in this group research
project remains open, and DVD CCA
intends to file additional written
notification disclosing all changes in
membership.
On April 11, 2001, DVD CCA filed its
original notification pursuant to section
6(b) of the Act. The Department of
Justice published a notice in the Federal
Register pursuant to section 6(b) of the
Act on August 3, 2001 (66 FR 40727).
The last notification was filed with
the Department on December 29, 2004.
A notice was published in the Federal
Register pursuant to section 6(b) of the
Act on February 2, 2005 (70 FR 5483).
Dorothy B. Fountain,
Deputy Director of Operations, Antitrust
Division.
[FR Doc. 05–8255 Filed 4–25–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4410–11–M
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
Antitrust Division
Notice Pursuant to the National
Cooperative Research and Production
Act of 1993—Globus Consortium, Inc.
Notice is hereby give that, on April 1,
2005, pursuant to section 6(a) of the
National Cooperative Research and
Production Act of 1993, 15 U.S.C. 4301
et seq. (‘‘the Act’’), Globus Consortium,
Inc. has filed written notifications
simultaneously with the Attorney
General and the Federal Trade
Commission disclosing changes in its
membership. The notification were filed
for the purpose of extending the Act’s
provisions limiting the recovery of
antitrust plaintiffs to actual damages
under specified circumstances.
Specifically, International Business
Machines Corporation, Armonk, NY;
E:\FR\FM\26APN1.SGM
26APN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 70, Number 79 (Tuesday, April 26, 2005)]
[Notices]
[Pages 21442-21443]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 05-8239]
=======================================================================
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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.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Department of Justice Office of Community Oriented
Policing Services (COPS) announces the availability of funds over the
Tribal Resources Grant Program. This program is designed to meet the
most serious needs of law enforcement in Indian communities through a
comprehensive grant program that will offer a variety of funding
options including: New, additional police officer positions; basic and/
or specialized training for sworn law enforcement officers; training in
community policing, grants management and computer training; uniforms
and basic issue equipment; department-wide technology; and police
vehicles. This program, which complements the COPS Office's efforts to
fund and support innovative community policing, will enhance law
enforcement infrastructures and community policing efforts in tribal
communities which have limited resources and are affected by high rates
of crime and violence. Applications should reflect the department's
most serious law enforcement needs and must link these needs to the
implementation or enhancement of community policing.
All federally recognized tribes with established police departments
are eligible to apply. Federally recognized tribes may also apply as a
consortium with a written partnership agreement that names a lead
agency and describes how requested resources will serve the
consortium's population. In addition, tribes that are currently served
by Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) law enforcement may request funding
under this grant program to supplement their existing police services.
Tribes whose law enforcement services are exclusively provided by local
policing agencies through a contract agreement are not eligible under
the COPS TRGP program.
DATES: Applications will be available in April 2005. Federal recognized
tribes or villages that wish to apply may request
[[Page 21443]]
an application from the COPS Office. The deadline for the submission of
applications is May 31, 2005. Applications must be postmarked by May
31, 2005 to be considered eligible.
ADDRESSES: To obtain an application or for more information, call the
COPS Office Response Center at 1-800-421-6770. A copy of the
application kit will also be available in April on the COPS Office Web
site at https://www.cops.usdoj.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: The COPS Office Response Center, 1-
800-421-6770 and ask to speak with your Tribal Grant Program
Specialist.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Overview
The Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994 (Pub. L.
103-322) authorizes the Department of Justice to make grants to
increase deployment of law enforcement officers devoted to community
policing on the streets and rural routes in this nation. The Tribal
Resources Grant Program was developed to meet the most serious needs of
law enforcement in tribal communities through a comprehensive grant
program that will offer a variety of funding options. This program will
enhance law enforcement infrastructures and community policing efforts
in these tribal communities, many of which have limited resources and
are affected by high rates of crime and violence.
The Tribal Resources Grant Program is part of a larger federal
initiative which, over the last seven years, has resulted in the
Department of Interior and Justice working in collaboration to improve
law enforcement in tribal communities. Funding has been appropriated to
several DOJ agencies including the FBI, the Bureau of Justice
Assistance (BJA), the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency
Prevention (OJJDP) and the COPS Office. COPS is coordinating with these
agencies as well as with the Office of Law Enforcement Services of the
Bureau of Indian Affairs to ensure that limited resources are not spent
on duplicative efforts.
Approximately $20 million in funding will be available under the
Tribal Resources Grant Program. The grant will cover a maximum federal
share of 75% of total project costs. A local match requirement of at
least 25% of total project cost is included in this program. A waiver
of the local match requirement may be requested but will be granted
only on the basis of documented demonstrated fiscal hardship. Requests
for waivers must be submitted with the application.
Tribes whose law enforcement services are exclusively provided by
local policing agencies through contract arrangements are not eligible
under this COPS program.
Receiving an award under the Tribal Resources Grant Program will
not preclude grantees from future consideration under other COPS grant
programs for which they are eligible.
The Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance (CFDA) reference for
this program is 16.710.
Dated: April 17, 2005.
Carl Peed,
Director.
[FR Doc. 05-8239 Filed 4-25-05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4410-AT-M