Receipt of an Application for an Incidental Take Permit for Florida Scrub-jays Resulting From the Proposed Construction of a Combination Single-Family Home Subdivision and Commercial Facilities in the City of Melbourne, Brevard County, FL, 76065-76066 [E5-7664]
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 245 / Thursday, December 22, 2005 / Notices
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[FR Doc. E5–7684 Filed 12–21–05; 8:45 am]
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16:55 Dec 21, 2005
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DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
Receipt of an Application for an
Incidental Take Permit for Florida
Scrub-jays Resulting From the
Proposed Construction of a
Combination Single-Family Home
Subdivision and Commercial Facilities
in the City of Melbourne, Brevard
County, FL
Fish and Wildlife Service,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: Riverside Development
Group, Inc. (Applicant) requests an
incidental take permit (ITP) for a
duration of two years, pursuant to
section 10(a)(1)(B) of the Endangered
Species Act of 1973 (Act) as amended
(U.S.C. 1531 et seq.). The Applicant
anticipates the loss of about 1.57 acres
of occupied Florida scrub-jay
(Aphelocoma coerulescens) (scrub-jay)
habitat in Section 8, Township 27
South, Range 37 East, in the City of
Melbourne, Brevard County, Florida.
Habitat loss would occur as a result of
vegetation clearing and the subsequent
construction of a 126 unit single-family
home subdivision and commercial
facilities on the 36-acre project site. The
loss of one scrub-jay family could occur
as a result of the Applicant’s proposed
project.
The Applicant’s Habitat Conservation
Plan (HCP) describes the mitigation and
minimization measures proposed to
address the effects of the project on the
Florida scrub-jay. These measures are
also outlined in the Service’s
Environmental Assessment (EA) and in
the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section
below. The Service announces the
availability of the ITP application, HCP,
and EA. Copies of the application, HCP,
and EA may be obtained by making a
request to the Southeast Regional Office
(see ADDRESSES). Requests must be in
writing to be processed. This notice is
provided pursuant to section 10 of the
Act and National Environmental Policy
Act regulations (40 CFR 1506.6).
DATES: Written comments on the ITP
application, EA, and HCP should be
sent to the Service’s Southeast Regional
Office (see ADDRESSES) and should be
received on or before February 21, 2006.
ADDRESSES: Persons wishing to review
the application, EA, and HCP may
obtain a copy by writing the Service’s
Southeast Regional Office, U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service, 1875 Century
Boulevard, Suite 200, Atlanta, Georgia
30030 (Attn: Endangered Species
Permits). Please reference permit
PO 00000
Frm 00047
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
76065
number TE102635–0 in such requests.
Documents will also be available for
public inspection by appointment
during normal business hours at either
the Southeast Regional Office or at the
Jacksonville Field Office, U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service, 6620 Southpoint Drive
South, Suite 310, Jacksonville, Florida
32216–0912 (Attn: Field Supervisor).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr.
David Dell, Regional HCP Coordinator,
Southeast Regional Office (see
ADDRESSES above), telephone: 404/679–
7313, facsimile: 404/679–7081; or Mr.
Michael Jennings, Fish and Wildlife
Biologist, Jacksonville Field Office (see
ADDRESSES above), telephone: 904/232–
2580, ext. 113.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: If you
wish to comment, you may submit
comments by any one of several
methods. Please reference permit
number TE102635–0 in such comments.
You may mail comments to the
Service’s Southeast Regional Office (see
ADDRESSES). You may also comment via
the Internet to david_dell@fws.gov.
Please submit comments over the
Internet as an ASCII file, avoiding the
use of special characters and any form
of encryption. Please also include your
name and return address in your e-mail
message. If you do not receive a
confirmation from us that we have
received your e-mail message, contact
us directly at either telephone number
listed above (see FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT). Finally, you may
hand deliver comments to either Service
office listed above (see ADDRESSES).
Our practice is to make comments,
including names and home addresses of
respondents, available for public review
during regular business hours.
Individual respondents may request that
we withhold their home addresses from
the administrative record. We will
honor such requests to the extent
allowable by law. There may also be
other circumstances in which we would
withhold from the administrative record
a respondent’s identity, as allowable by
law. If you wish us to withhold your
name and address, you must state this
prominently at the beginning of your
comments. We will not, however,
consider anonymous comments. 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 inspection in their entirety.
The Florida scrub-jay (scrub-jay) is
geographically isolated from other
species of scrub-jays found in Mexico
and the western United States. The
scrub-jay is found exclusively in
E:\FR\FM\22DEN1.SGM
22DEN1
cchase on PROD1PC60 with NOTICES
76066
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 245 / Thursday, December 22, 2005 / Notices
peninsular Florida and is restricted to
xeric uplands (well-drained, sandy soil
habitats supporting a growth of oakdominated scrub). Increasing urban and
agricultural development has resulted in
habitat loss and fragmentation which
has adversely affected the distribution
and numbers of scrub-jays. The total
estimated population is between 7,000
and 11,000 individuals.
The decline in the number and
distribution of scrub-jays in east-central
Florida has been exacerbated by
agricultural land conversions and urban
growth in the past 50 years. Much of the
historic commercial and residential
development has occurred on the dry
soils that previously supported scrubjay habitat. Based on existing soils data,
much of the historic and current scrubjay habitat of coastal east-central Florida
occurs proximal to the current shoreline
and larger river basins. Much of this
area of Florida was settled early because
few wetlands restricted urban and
agricultural development. Due to the
effects of urban and agricultural
development over the past 100 years,
much of the remaining scrub-jay habitat
is now relatively small and isolated.
What remains is largely degraded, due
to interruption of natural fire regime
that is needed to maintain xeric uplands
in conditions suitable for scrub-jays.
From 2000 through 2002, one family
of scrub-jays was found using 7.22 acres
within the project site. Scrub-jays using
the project site are part of a larger
complex of scrub-jays located in a
matrix of urban and natural settings in
areas of central and south Brevard
County. Scrub-jays in urban areas are
particularly vulnerable and typically do
not successfully produce young that
survive to adulthood. Persistent urban
growth in this area will likely further
reduce the amount of suitable habitat for
scrub-jays. Increasing urban pressures
are also likely to result in the continued
degradation of scrub-jay habitat, as the
lack of naturally occurring fires slowly
results in vegetative overgrowth. Thus,
over the long-term, scrub-jays are
unlikely to persist in urban settings, and
conservation efforts for this species
should target acquisition and
management of large parcels of land
outside the direct influence of
urbanization. The retention of small
patches of habitat similar to the onsite
mitigation proposed by the Applicant,
however, could provide benefits to
scrub-jays by creating ‘‘stepping stones’’
used by scrub-jays dispersing between
larger parcels of conservation lands in
Brevard County.
Construction of the project’s
infrastructure and facilities would result
in harm to scrub-jays, incidental to the
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:55 Dec 21, 2005
Jkt 208001
carrying out of these otherwise lawful
activities. Specifically, habitat alteration
associated with the proposed residential
and commercial construction and
associated infrastructure would reduce
the availability of foraging, sheltering,
and possible nesting habitat for one
family of scrub-jays.
The Applicant proposes to minimize
impacts to scrub-jays by reducing the
project’s footprint and avoiding active
nest sites during the breeding season.
The Applicant proposes to mitigate the
take of scrub-jays by removing 5.65
acres of occupied scrub-jay habitat from
the project’s development footprint. In
addition, the Applicant proposes to set
aside and manage an additional 0.77
acres of unoccupied, but restorable
onsite habitat as a buffer to the adjacent
occupied habitat. Fee title to the entire
onsite mitigation area would be
transferred to Brevard County, and its
Environmentally Endangered Lands
Program would subsequently assume
management responsibilities for the
mitigation property. The Applicant
proposes to establish an escrow account
in the amount of $7,704 to pay for the
costs of initial land restoration and
management activities that would be
undertaken prior to fee title transfer to
Brevard County.
The Service has made a preliminary
determination that the issuance of the
ITP is not a major Federal action
significantly affecting the quality of the
human environment within the meaning
of section 102(2)(C) of the National
Environmental Policy Act. This
preliminary information may be revised
due to public comment received in
response to this notice and is based on
information contained in the EA and
HCP.
The Service will evaluate the HCP
and comments submitted thereon to
determine whether the application
meets the requirements of section 10(a)
of the Act. If it is determined that those
requirements are met, the ITP would be
issued for the incidental take of the
Florida scrub-jay. The Service will also
evaluate whether issuance of the section
10(a)(1)(B) ITP complies with section 7
of the Act by conducting an intraService section 7 consultation. The
results of this consultation, in
combination with the above findings,
will be used in the final analysis to
determine whether or not to issue the
ITP.
Dated: December 1, 2005.
Cynthia K. Dohner,
Acting Regional Director, Southeast Region.
[FR Doc. E5–7664 Filed 12–21–05; 8:45 am]
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PO 00000
Frm 00048
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DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Indian Affairs
Draft Environmental Impact Statement
for the Proposed Cordova Oil Spill
Response Facility, Cordova, AL
Bureau of Indian Affairs,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: This notice advises the public
that the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA)
intends to file a Draft Environmental
Impact Statement (DEIS) with the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency for a
proposed oil spill response facility at
Shepard Point, near Cordova, Alaska,
and that the DEIS is now available for
public review. The purpose of the
proposed project is to provide a
deepwater staging facility for the rapid
deployment of equipment to the site of
an oil spill. This notice also announces
a hearing for the public to provide
comments on the DEIS.
DATES: Written comments on the DEIS
must arrive by February 6, 2006.
Public hearings will be held on the
following dates and times:
1. January 11, 2006, 5:30 p.m. to 9
p.m., Anchorage, Alaska.
2. January 12, 2006, 5:30 p.m. to 9
p.m., Cordova, Alaska.
ADDRESSES: You may mail written
comments to Kristin K’eit, Bureau of
Indian Affairs, Alaska Regional Office,
Division of Environmental and Cultural
Resource Management, P.O. Box 25520,
Juneau, Alaska 99802–5520. You may
also fax your comments to (907) 586–
7044, or submit them electronically at
the project Web site, https://
www.cordovarf@urscorp.com.
Note: BIA cannot receive electronic
comments directly via e-mail at this time.
Please include your name, return
address, and the caption, ‘‘DEIS
Comments, Proposed Cordova Oil Spill
Response Facility, Cordova, Alaska,’’ on
the first page of your written comments.
To obtain a copy of the DEIS, please
contact Kristen K’eit by mail at the
above mailing address or by telephone
at the number provided below. Copies
of the DEIS are available for public
review at the above mailing address.
Copies of the DEIS have also been sent
to agencies and individuals who
participated in the scoping process and
to all others who have previously
requested copies of the document.
The locations of the public hearings
are as follows:
1. Anchorage—Alaska Pacific
University, Carr Gottstein Building,
4101 University Drive, Room 102,
Anchorage, Alaska.
E:\FR\FM\22DEN1.SGM
22DEN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 70, Number 245 (Thursday, December 22, 2005)]
[Notices]
[Pages 76065-76066]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E5-7664]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
Receipt of an Application for an Incidental Take Permit for
Florida Scrub-jays Resulting From the Proposed Construction of a
Combination Single-Family Home Subdivision and Commercial Facilities in
the City of Melbourne, Brevard County, FL
AGENCY: Fish and Wildlife Service, Interior.
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: Riverside Development Group, Inc. (Applicant) requests an
incidental take permit (ITP) for a duration of two years, pursuant to
section 10(a)(1)(B) of the Endangered Species Act of 1973 (Act) as
amended (U.S.C. 1531 et seq.). The Applicant anticipates the loss of
about 1.57 acres of occupied Florida scrub-jay (Aphelocoma
coerulescens) (scrub-jay) habitat in Section 8, Township 27 South,
Range 37 East, in the City of Melbourne, Brevard County, Florida.
Habitat loss would occur as a result of vegetation clearing and the
subsequent construction of a 126 unit single-family home subdivision
and commercial facilities on the 36-acre project site. The loss of one
scrub-jay family could occur as a result of the Applicant's proposed
project.
The Applicant's Habitat Conservation Plan (HCP) describes the
mitigation and minimization measures proposed to address the effects of
the project on the Florida scrub-jay. These measures are also outlined
in the Service's Environmental Assessment (EA) and in the SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION section below. The Service announces the availability of
the ITP application, HCP, and EA. Copies of the application, HCP, and
EA may be obtained by making a request to the Southeast Regional Office
(see ADDRESSES). Requests must be in writing to be processed. This
notice is provided pursuant to section 10 of the Act and National
Environmental Policy Act regulations (40 CFR 1506.6).
DATES: Written comments on the ITP application, EA, and HCP should be
sent to the Service's Southeast Regional Office (see ADDRESSES) and
should be received on or before February 21, 2006.
ADDRESSES: Persons wishing to review the application, EA, and HCP may
obtain a copy by writing the Service's Southeast Regional Office, U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service, 1875 Century Boulevard, Suite 200, Atlanta,
Georgia 30030 (Attn: Endangered Species Permits). Please reference
permit number TE102635-0 in such requests. Documents will also be
available for public inspection by appointment during normal business
hours at either the Southeast Regional Office or at the Jacksonville
Field Office, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, 6620 Southpoint Drive
South, Suite 310, Jacksonville, Florida 32216-0912 (Attn: Field
Supervisor).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr. David Dell, Regional HCP
Coordinator, Southeast Regional Office (see ADDRESSES above),
telephone: 404/679-7313, facsimile: 404/679-7081; or Mr. Michael
Jennings, Fish and Wildlife Biologist, Jacksonville Field Office (see
ADDRESSES above), telephone: 904/232-2580, ext. 113.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: If you wish to comment, you may submit
comments by any one of several methods. Please reference permit number
TE102635-0 in such comments. You may mail comments to the Service's
Southeast Regional Office (see ADDRESSES). You may also comment via the
Internet to david_dell@fws.gov. Please submit comments over the
Internet as an ASCII file, avoiding the use of special characters and
any form of encryption. Please also include your name and return
address in your e-mail message. If you do not receive a confirmation
from us that we have received your e-mail message, contact us directly
at either telephone number listed above (see FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT). Finally, you may hand deliver comments to either Service
office listed above (see ADDRESSES).
Our practice is to make comments, including names and home
addresses of respondents, available for public review during regular
business hours. Individual respondents may request that we withhold
their home addresses from the administrative record. We will honor such
requests to the extent allowable by law. There may also be other
circumstances in which we would withhold from the administrative record
a respondent's identity, as allowable by law. If you wish us to
withhold your name and address, you must state this prominently at the
beginning of your comments. We will not, however, consider anonymous
comments. 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 inspection in their entirety.
The Florida scrub-jay (scrub-jay) is geographically isolated from
other species of scrub-jays found in Mexico and the western United
States. The scrub-jay is found exclusively in
[[Page 76066]]
peninsular Florida and is restricted to xeric uplands (well-drained,
sandy soil habitats supporting a growth of oak-dominated scrub).
Increasing urban and agricultural development has resulted in habitat
loss and fragmentation which has adversely affected the distribution
and numbers of scrub-jays. The total estimated population is between
7,000 and 11,000 individuals.
The decline in the number and distribution of scrub-jays in east-
central Florida has been exacerbated by agricultural land conversions
and urban growth in the past 50 years. Much of the historic commercial
and residential development has occurred on the dry soils that
previously supported scrub-jay habitat. Based on existing soils data,
much of the historic and current scrub-jay habitat of coastal east-
central Florida occurs proximal to the current shoreline and larger
river basins. Much of this area of Florida was settled early because
few wetlands restricted urban and agricultural development. Due to the
effects of urban and agricultural development over the past 100 years,
much of the remaining scrub-jay habitat is now relatively small and
isolated. What remains is largely degraded, due to interruption of
natural fire regime that is needed to maintain xeric uplands in
conditions suitable for scrub-jays.
From 2000 through 2002, one family of scrub-jays was found using
7.22 acres within the project site. Scrub-jays using the project site
are part of a larger complex of scrub-jays located in a matrix of urban
and natural settings in areas of central and south Brevard County.
Scrub-jays in urban areas are particularly vulnerable and typically do
not successfully produce young that survive to adulthood. Persistent
urban growth in this area will likely further reduce the amount of
suitable habitat for scrub-jays. Increasing urban pressures are also
likely to result in the continued degradation of scrub-jay habitat, as
the lack of naturally occurring fires slowly results in vegetative
overgrowth. Thus, over the long-term, scrub-jays are unlikely to
persist in urban settings, and conservation efforts for this species
should target acquisition and management of large parcels of land
outside the direct influence of urbanization. The retention of small
patches of habitat similar to the onsite mitigation proposed by the
Applicant, however, could provide benefits to scrub-jays by creating
``stepping stones'' used by scrub-jays dispersing between larger
parcels of conservation lands in Brevard County.
Construction of the project's infrastructure and facilities would
result in harm to scrub-jays, incidental to the carrying out of these
otherwise lawful activities. Specifically, habitat alteration
associated with the proposed residential and commercial construction
and associated infrastructure would reduce the availability of
foraging, sheltering, and possible nesting habitat for one family of
scrub-jays.
The Applicant proposes to minimize impacts to scrub-jays by
reducing the project's footprint and avoiding active nest sites during
the breeding season. The Applicant proposes to mitigate the take of
scrub-jays by removing 5.65 acres of occupied scrub-jay habitat from
the project's development footprint. In addition, the Applicant
proposes to set aside and manage an additional 0.77 acres of
unoccupied, but restorable onsite habitat as a buffer to the adjacent
occupied habitat. Fee title to the entire onsite mitigation area would
be transferred to Brevard County, and its Environmentally Endangered
Lands Program would subsequently assume management responsibilities for
the mitigation property. The Applicant proposes to establish an escrow
account in the amount of $7,704 to pay for the costs of initial land
restoration and management activities that would be undertaken prior to
fee title transfer to Brevard County.
The Service has made a preliminary determination that the issuance
of the ITP is not a major Federal action significantly affecting the
quality of the human environment within the meaning of section
102(2)(C) of the National Environmental Policy Act. This preliminary
information may be revised due to public comment received in response
to this notice and is based on information contained in the EA and HCP.
The Service will evaluate the HCP and comments submitted thereon to
determine whether the application meets the requirements of section
10(a) of the Act. If it is determined that those requirements are met,
the ITP would be issued for the incidental take of the Florida scrub-
jay. The Service will also evaluate whether issuance of the section
10(a)(1)(B) ITP complies with section 7 of the Act by conducting an
intra-Service section 7 consultation. The results of this consultation,
in combination with the above findings, will be used in the final
analysis to determine whether or not to issue the ITP.
Dated: December 1, 2005.
Cynthia K. Dohner,
Acting Regional Director, Southeast Region.
[FR Doc. E5-7664 Filed 12-21-05; 8:45 am]
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