Notice of Availability of Draft Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS) for the Smoky Canyon Mine, Panels F and G, 77181-77182 [05-24630]
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 249 / Thursday, December 29, 2005 / Notices
southern California. Qualified
individuals also may nominate
themselves.
Nominations must include the name
of the nominee; work and home
addresses and telephone numbers; a
biographical sketch that includes the
nominee’s work and public service
record; any applicable outside interests
or other information that demonstrates
the nominees qualifications for the
position; and the specific category of
interest in which the nominee is best
qualified to offer advice and council.
Nominees may contact the BLM
California Desert District External
Affairs staff at (909) 697–5220 or write
to the address below and request a copy
of the nomination form.
All nominations must be
accompanied by letters of reference
from represented interests,
organizations, members of the public, or
elected officials supporting the
nomination. Individuals nominating
themselves must provide at least one
letter of recommendation. Advisory
Council members are appointed by the
Secretary of the Interior, generally in
late December or early January.
Nominations should be sent to the
District Manager, Bureau of Land
Management, California Desert District
Office, 22835 Calle San Juan De Los
Lagos, Moreno Valley, California 92553.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr.
Doran Sanchez, BLM California Desert
District External Affairs (951) 697–5220.
Dated: November 3, 2005.
Robert D. Roudabush,
Acting District Manager.
[FR Doc. E5–8029 Filed 12–28–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–40–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Land Management
[ID 320 7122 EO 7979]
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Forest Service
Notice of Availability of Draft
Environmental Impact Statement
(DEIS) for the Smoky Canyon Mine,
Panels F and G
DOI Bureau of Land
Management, Lead Agency; USDA
Forest Service, Co-lead Agency; and the
Idaho Department of Environmental
Quality, Cooperating Agency.
ACTION: Notice of Availability of the
Draft Environmental Impact Statement
for the Smoky Canyon Mine, Panels F
and G mine Expansion Project.
wwhite on PROD1PC65 with NOTICES
AGENCIES:
VerDate Aug<31>2005
18:56 Dec 28, 2005
Jkt 208001
SUMMARY: In accordance with the
National Environmental Policy Act of
1969 (NEPA, 102(2) (C)) and the Federal
Land Policy and Management Act of
1976, the USDOI Bureau of Land
Management (Lead Agency) and the
USDA Forest Service (Co-lead Agency)
announce the availability of the DEIS for
the Smoky Canyon Mine, Panels F and
G mine expansion.
DATES: The DEIS is now available for
public review. Written and electronic
comments regarding the DEIS should be
submitted within 60 days of the date of
publication of the EPA’s Notice in the
Federal Register. Public meetings are
currently scheduled at the following
locations at the following times:
Bureau of Land Management, 4350
Cliffs Drive, Pocatello, Idaho 83204;
January 17, 2006; 7 p.m.
Soda Springs, City Hall, 9 West 2nd
South, Soda Springs, Idaho 83276;
January 18, 2006; 7:30 p.m.
Star Valley High School, 445 West Swift
Creek Lane, Afton, Wyoming 83110;
January 19, 2006; 7 p.m.
These dates may be subject to change.
Final dates will be announced in local
newspapers two weeks prior. Dates can
also be confirmed by contacting the
BLM or CTNF as shown below.
ADDRESSES: In addition to a mass
mailing, the DEIS will be available at
the Bureau of Land Management,
Pocatello Field Office, 4350 Cliffs Drive,
Pocatello, Idaho 83204, phone (208)
478–6340 and the Caribou-Targhee
National Forest, Soda Springs Ranger
District, 410 E. Hooper Ave, Soda
Springs, Idaho 83276, phone (208) 547–
4356. It will also be available on the
BLM Web site at https://www.id.blm.gov/
planning/scmdeis.
Written comments can be sent to:
Smoky Canyon Mine DEIS, C/O The
Shipley Group, P.O. Box 2000,
Bountiful, UT 84011–2000.
Electronic comments can be sent to:
scm_deis@contentanalysisgroup.com.
The BLM and FS give reviewers
notice that comments should be
structured so that they are meaningful
and alert the agencies to a reviewer’s
position and contentions. It is very
important that those interested in this
proposed action participate by the close
of the 60-day comment period for the
DEIS so that substantive comments and
objections are available to the BLM and
FS to meaningfully consider them and
respond to them in the final EIS.
Individual respondents may request
confidentiality for comments submitted.
If you wish to withhold your name or
street address from public review or
from disclosure under the Freedom of
Information Act, you must state this
PO 00000
Frm 00064
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
77181
prominently at the beginning of your
written comment. Such requests will be
honored to the extent allowed by law.
All submissions from organizations and
businesses, and from individuals
identifying themselves as
representatives or officials of
organizations or businesses, will be
available for public inspection in their
entirety.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Bill
Stout, Bureau of Land Management,
phone (208) 478–6340; or Scott Gerwe,
Caribou-Targhee National Forest, phone
(208) 547–4356.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
following information is provided as a
convenient synopsis for the public.
However, this synopsis is not a
substitute for review of the complete
DEIS. Commenters should review and
consider the complete DEIS in
providing comments regarding the
proposed action. If there are any
inconsistencies between this posting
and the DEIS, the DEIS controls.
The DEIS was prepared to assess the
impacts of implementing a mine
expansion at Smoky Canyon Mine, thus,
disclosing those impacts to the public
and agency decision makers.
The proposed extension of mining
operations, in Panels F and G, lies
within the Caribou-Targhee National
Forest, on surface administered by the
FS and on Federal phosphate leases
administered by the BLM under
authority of the Mineral Leasing Act of
1920. Mining, as proposed, would take
place on two Federal phosphate leases;
I–27512 and I–01441 including a lease
modification (enlargement) of I–27512.
These leases are adjacent to the existing
mine and were previously issued to
Simplot by competitive bid in January
of 2001 and October of 1950
respectively. The proposed action
includes the construction of two pits,
Panels F and G, and a haul road to
transport ore and employees between
the pits and existing facilities. Mining
would take place over an estimated 14
year period, with an additional two
years to complete final reclamation. The
environmental impacts of the proposed
action, six mining alternatives, one nomining alternative, and eight
transportation alternatives are analyzed
in the DEIS. Where necessary, site
specific mitigation measures have been
developed.
The BLM Idaho State Director, or
delegated official, will make a decision
regarding approval of the proposed
Mine & Reclamation Plan and the
proposed lease modifications. Decisions
will be informed by the EIS and any
recommendations the FS may have
E:\FR\FM\29DEN1.SGM
29DEN1
wwhite on PROD1PC65 with NOTICES
77182
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 249 / Thursday, December 29, 2005 / Notices
regarding surface management of leased
National Forest System lands. The
Caribou-Targhee National Forest
Supervisor makes recommendations to
the BLM concerning surface
management and mitigation on leased
lands within the Caribou-Targhee
National Forest. For this proposal, the
Forest Supervisor will make a decision
whether to authorize off-lease facilities
such as roads and power lines.
As a cooperating agency, the IDEQ has
provided assistance and
recommendations on aspects of the
project pertaining to water quality and
on water quality rules under their
jurisdiction.
The agency Preferred Alternative
would approve mining both leases
described as Panel F and Panel G. The
preferred mining alternative would be
Alternative B—No External Seleniferous
Overburden Fills. BLM would approve
the proposed lease modifications. Based
on analysis of surface and ground water
impacts in Chapter 4, BLM would
require construction of an infiltration
barrier over seleniferous backfill,
Alternative D. A Forest Service decision
would approve power line placement on
poles along the haul road, Alternative E,
eliminating a separate power corridor.
The transportation route between Panel
F and existing mine would be
constructed according to the Proposed
Action. The preferred transportation
route between Panel G and the existing
mine is Alternative 2—East Haul/Access
Road.
The proposed Mine & Reclamation
Plan was submitted by J. R Simplot
Company in April 2003. The proposed
action consists of two open pits (Panel
F on Federal phosphate lease I–27512
and Panel G on Federal phosphate lease
I–01441), topsoil stockpiles, mine
equipment parking and service areas,
access and haul roads, a power line
extension from the existing Smoky
Canyon facilities, permanent external
overburden storage areas, and runoff/
sediment control facilities, electrical
substation, warehouse and storage areas,
repair shop, restrooms, fuel and
lubricant storage. A new haul/access
road to transport ore to the existing
Smoky Canyon mill is proposed to be
constructed from the south end of the
existing Panel E approximately 2.5
miles to the proposed Panel F. As
operations move south to Panel G,
another haul road is proposed to
transport ore 7.8 miles from Panel G
north to Panel F. Much of these
activities are proposed to occur within
the Sage Creek Inventoried Roadless
Area.
Ore would be hauled in trucks to the
existing Smoky Canyon mill facility to
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18:56 Dec 28, 2005
Jkt 208001
be concentrated. Ore concentrate from
the mill would be transported to the
existing Simplot fertilizer plant in
Pocatello, Idaho via the existing slurry
pipeline. Mill tailings would continue
to be deposited in the currently
approved and permitted tailings
disposal facility.
Initially, overburden generated from
Panel F would be trucked to the existing
Panel E open pit and used as backfill.
Remaining overburden from Panel F
would then be placed as part of a 38acre external fill and then as backfill in
Panel F as soon as practical. Overburden
generated from mining Panel G would
be permanently placed in 138 acres of
external fills at Panel G as well as
backfill in the Panel G open pit.
Disturbed lands directly resulting
from the proposed activities would total
1,340 acres. Ninety-five percent of the
project disturbance would be fully
reclaimed. This would leave
unreclaimed a total of 71 acres of
highwall, road cuts in steep terrain, pit
bottoms not filled to contour, and mine
roads left as replacements to existing
Forest Service roads. New pits would
disturb approximately 763 acres, roads
would disturb about 284 acres, external
overburden fills would cover 176 acres
and there would be 117 acres of
disturbance for other mine features such
as runoff management facilities, water
monitoring, a power line corridor and
topsoil piles.
Reclamation of mining disturbances
would include: Removal of facilities and
equipment, backfilling pits, regrading
slopes, restoring drainages, covering
seleniferous fills with at least 4 feet of
chert material, spreading 1 to 3 feet of
topsoil, stabilizing surfaces,
revegetation, testing and treatment for
any remaining hydrocarbon
contaminants, and environmental
monitoring.
Simplot has applied for a lease
modification to expand Federal
Phosphate Lease I–27512 for the Panel
F operations. The application includes a
120-acre tract to recover ore and
construct a road from Panel E on the
northern edge of the lease and a larger
400 acre tract on the southern edge of
the lease to recover ore. Subsequent to
BLM’s and Forest Service’s preparation
of the DEIS, Simplot has also applied for
a lease modification to I–01441 to
accommodate 18 acres of off-lease
external overburden fill. The
environmental impacts of mining
operations within the lease
modifications are analyzed in this EIS.
BLM will review the applications, under
the Mineral Leasing Act, and inform the
public in accordance with the
PO 00000
Frm 00065
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
requirements of NEPA prior to any
decision on these applications.
Alternatives
Issues were identified for the
proposed mining of F and G panels by
the agencies and by the public during
the scoping process. They include
potential effects on: ground water,
surface water, geology and minerals, air
quality and noise, soils, vegetation,
wetlands, wildlife, fisheries and aquatic
life, livestock grazing, recreation,
Inventoried Roadless Areas, socioeconomics, visual resources, cultural
resources, and Tribal Treaty Rights.
Alternatives to the proposed action were
developed to address issues.
The EIS analyzes the environmental
and human effects of the Proposed
Action, six different mining alternatives,
one no-action alternative, and eight
different transportation alternatives.
Mining alternatives include mining
without one or any lease modifications,
no external seleniferous overburden
fills, no external overburden fills at all,
construction of an infiltration barrier
over seleniferous material, constructing
the power line only within proposed
disturbance, and using generators in
Panel G instead of a power line. The
transportation alternatives include one
variation on the haul road between
Panel F and the existing Panel E, two
variations of a haul road from Panel G
located east of the project area, a more
direct—middle—haul road from Panel G
to Panel F, a variation of the proposed
West Haul Road, and using a conveyor
system to transport ore from Panel G to
the existing mill. If the conveyor
transportation alternative is chosen then
one of two different variations on
moving people and equipment between
Panel G and the existing mine were
analyzed.
Dated: December 8, 2005.
Joe Kraayenbrink,
District Manager, Idaho Falls District, Bureau
of Land Management.
Larry Timchak,
Forest Supervisor, Caribou-Targhee National
Forest.
[FR Doc. 05–24630 Filed 12–28–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–GG–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Land Management
[WY–100–05–1310–DB]
Notice of Meeting of the Pinedale
Anticline Working Group
AGENCY:
Bureau of Land Management,
Interior.
E:\FR\FM\29DEN1.SGM
29DEN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 70, Number 249 (Thursday, December 29, 2005)]
[Notices]
[Pages 77181-77182]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 05-24630]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Land Management
[ID 320 7122 EO 7979]
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Forest Service
Notice of Availability of Draft Environmental Impact Statement
(DEIS) for the Smoky Canyon Mine, Panels F and G
AGENCIES: DOI Bureau of Land Management, Lead Agency; USDA Forest
Service, Co-lead Agency; and the Idaho Department of Environmental
Quality, Cooperating Agency.
ACTION: Notice of Availability of the Draft Environmental Impact
Statement for the Smoky Canyon Mine, Panels F and G mine Expansion
Project.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: In accordance with the National Environmental Policy Act of
1969 (NEPA, 102(2) (C)) and the Federal Land Policy and Management Act
of 1976, the USDOI Bureau of Land Management (Lead Agency) and the USDA
Forest Service (Co-lead Agency) announce the availability of the DEIS
for the Smoky Canyon Mine, Panels F and G mine expansion.
DATES: The DEIS is now available for public review. Written and
electronic comments regarding the DEIS should be submitted within 60
days of the date of publication of the EPA's Notice in the Federal
Register. Public meetings are currently scheduled at the following
locations at the following times:
Bureau of Land Management, 4350 Cliffs Drive, Pocatello, Idaho 83204;
January 17, 2006; 7 p.m.
Soda Springs, City Hall, 9 West 2nd South, Soda Springs, Idaho 83276;
January 18, 2006; 7:30 p.m.
Star Valley High School, 445 West Swift Creek Lane, Afton, Wyoming
83110; January 19, 2006; 7 p.m.
These dates may be subject to change. Final dates will be announced
in local newspapers two weeks prior. Dates can also be confirmed by
contacting the BLM or CTNF as shown below.
ADDRESSES: In addition to a mass mailing, the DEIS will be available at
the Bureau of Land Management, Pocatello Field Office, 4350 Cliffs
Drive, Pocatello, Idaho 83204, phone (208) 478-6340 and the Caribou-
Targhee National Forest, Soda Springs Ranger District, 410 E. Hooper
Ave, Soda Springs, Idaho 83276, phone (208) 547-4356. It will also be
available on the BLM Web site at https://www.id.blm.gov/planning/
scmdeis.
Written comments can be sent to: Smoky Canyon Mine DEIS, C/O The
Shipley Group, P.O. Box 2000, Bountiful, UT 84011-2000.
Electronic comments can be sent to: scm_
deis@contentanalysisgroup.com.
The BLM and FS give reviewers notice that comments should be
structured so that they are meaningful and alert the agencies to a
reviewer's position and contentions. It is very important that those
interested in this proposed action participate by the close of the 60-
day comment period for the DEIS so that substantive comments and
objections are available to the BLM and FS to meaningfully consider
them and respond to them in the final EIS.
Individual respondents may request confidentiality for comments
submitted. If you wish to withhold your name or street address from
public review or from disclosure under the Freedom of Information Act,
you must state this prominently at the beginning of your written
comment. Such requests will be honored to the extent allowed by law.
All submissions from organizations and businesses, and from individuals
identifying themselves as representatives or officials of organizations
or businesses, will be available for public inspection in their
entirety.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Bill Stout, Bureau of Land Management,
phone (208) 478-6340; or Scott Gerwe, Caribou-Targhee National Forest,
phone (208) 547-4356.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The following information is provided as a
convenient synopsis for the public. However, this synopsis is not a
substitute for review of the complete DEIS. Commenters should review
and consider the complete DEIS in providing comments regarding the
proposed action. If there are any inconsistencies between this posting
and the DEIS, the DEIS controls.
The DEIS was prepared to assess the impacts of implementing a mine
expansion at Smoky Canyon Mine, thus, disclosing those impacts to the
public and agency decision makers.
The proposed extension of mining operations, in Panels F and G,
lies within the Caribou-Targhee National Forest, on surface
administered by the FS and on Federal phosphate leases administered by
the BLM under authority of the Mineral Leasing Act of 1920. Mining, as
proposed, would take place on two Federal phosphate leases; I-27512 and
I-01441 including a lease modification (enlargement) of I-27512. These
leases are adjacent to the existing mine and were previously issued to
Simplot by competitive bid in January of 2001 and October of 1950
respectively. The proposed action includes the construction of two
pits, Panels F and G, and a haul road to transport ore and employees
between the pits and existing facilities. Mining would take place over
an estimated 14 year period, with an additional two years to complete
final reclamation. The environmental impacts of the proposed action,
six mining alternatives, one no-mining alternative, and eight
transportation alternatives are analyzed in the DEIS. Where necessary,
site specific mitigation measures have been developed.
The BLM Idaho State Director, or delegated official, will make a
decision regarding approval of the proposed Mine & Reclamation Plan and
the proposed lease modifications. Decisions will be informed by the EIS
and any recommendations the FS may have
[[Page 77182]]
regarding surface management of leased National Forest System lands.
The Caribou-Targhee National Forest Supervisor makes recommendations to
the BLM concerning surface management and mitigation on leased lands
within the Caribou-Targhee National Forest. For this proposal, the
Forest Supervisor will make a decision whether to authorize off-lease
facilities such as roads and power lines.
As a cooperating agency, the IDEQ has provided assistance and
recommendations on aspects of the project pertaining to water quality
and on water quality rules under their jurisdiction.
The agency Preferred Alternative would approve mining both leases
described as Panel F and Panel G. The preferred mining alternative
would be Alternative B--No External Seleniferous Overburden Fills. BLM
would approve the proposed lease modifications. Based on analysis of
surface and ground water impacts in Chapter 4, BLM would require
construction of an infiltration barrier over seleniferous backfill,
Alternative D. A Forest Service decision would approve power line
placement on poles along the haul road, Alternative E, eliminating a
separate power corridor. The transportation route between Panel F and
existing mine would be constructed according to the Proposed Action.
The preferred transportation route between Panel G and the existing
mine is Alternative 2--East Haul/Access Road.
The proposed Mine & Reclamation Plan was submitted by J. R Simplot
Company in April 2003. The proposed action consists of two open pits
(Panel F on Federal phosphate lease I-27512 and Panel G on Federal
phosphate lease I-01441), topsoil stockpiles, mine equipment parking
and service areas, access and haul roads, a power line extension from
the existing Smoky Canyon facilities, permanent external overburden
storage areas, and runoff/sediment control facilities, electrical
substation, warehouse and storage areas, repair shop, restrooms, fuel
and lubricant storage. A new haul/access road to transport ore to the
existing Smoky Canyon mill is proposed to be constructed from the south
end of the existing Panel E approximately 2.5 miles to the proposed
Panel F. As operations move south to Panel G, another haul road is
proposed to transport ore 7.8 miles from Panel G north to Panel F. Much
of these activities are proposed to occur within the Sage Creek
Inventoried Roadless Area.
Ore would be hauled in trucks to the existing Smoky Canyon mill
facility to be concentrated. Ore concentrate from the mill would be
transported to the existing Simplot fertilizer plant in Pocatello,
Idaho via the existing slurry pipeline. Mill tailings would continue to
be deposited in the currently approved and permitted tailings disposal
facility.
Initially, overburden generated from Panel F would be trucked to
the existing Panel E open pit and used as backfill. Remaining
overburden from Panel F would then be placed as part of a 38-acre
external fill and then as backfill in Panel F as soon as practical.
Overburden generated from mining Panel G would be permanently placed in
138 acres of external fills at Panel G as well as backfill in the Panel
G open pit.
Disturbed lands directly resulting from the proposed activities
would total 1,340 acres. Ninety-five percent of the project disturbance
would be fully reclaimed. This would leave unreclaimed a total of 71
acres of highwall, road cuts in steep terrain, pit bottoms not filled
to contour, and mine roads left as replacements to existing Forest
Service roads. New pits would disturb approximately 763 acres, roads
would disturb about 284 acres, external overburden fills would cover
176 acres and there would be 117 acres of disturbance for other mine
features such as runoff management facilities, water monitoring, a
power line corridor and topsoil piles.
Reclamation of mining disturbances would include: Removal of
facilities and equipment, backfilling pits, regrading slopes, restoring
drainages, covering seleniferous fills with at least 4 feet of chert
material, spreading 1 to 3 feet of topsoil, stabilizing surfaces,
revegetation, testing and treatment for any remaining hydrocarbon
contaminants, and environmental monitoring.
Simplot has applied for a lease modification to expand Federal
Phosphate Lease I-27512 for the Panel F operations. The application
includes a 120-acre tract to recover ore and construct a road from
Panel E on the northern edge of the lease and a larger 400 acre tract
on the southern edge of the lease to recover ore. Subsequent to BLM's
and Forest Service's preparation of the DEIS, Simplot has also applied
for a lease modification to I-01441 to accommodate 18 acres of off-
lease external overburden fill. The environmental impacts of mining
operations within the lease modifications are analyzed in this EIS. BLM
will review the applications, under the Mineral Leasing Act, and inform
the public in accordance with the requirements of NEPA prior to any
decision on these applications.
Alternatives
Issues were identified for the proposed mining of F and G panels by
the agencies and by the public during the scoping process. They include
potential effects on: ground water, surface water, geology and
minerals, air quality and noise, soils, vegetation, wetlands, wildlife,
fisheries and aquatic life, livestock grazing, recreation, Inventoried
Roadless Areas, socio-economics, visual resources, cultural resources,
and Tribal Treaty Rights. Alternatives to the proposed action were
developed to address issues.
The EIS analyzes the environmental and human effects of the
Proposed Action, six different mining alternatives, one no-action
alternative, and eight different transportation alternatives. Mining
alternatives include mining without one or any lease modifications, no
external seleniferous overburden fills, no external overburden fills at
all, construction of an infiltration barrier over seleniferous
material, constructing the power line only within proposed disturbance,
and using generators in Panel G instead of a power line. The
transportation alternatives include one variation on the haul road
between Panel F and the existing Panel E, two variations of a haul road
from Panel G located east of the project area, a more direct--middle--
haul road from Panel G to Panel F, a variation of the proposed West
Haul Road, and using a conveyor system to transport ore from Panel G to
the existing mill. If the conveyor transportation alternative is chosen
then one of two different variations on moving people and equipment
between Panel G and the existing mine were analyzed.
Dated: December 8, 2005.
Joe Kraayenbrink,
District Manager, Idaho Falls District, Bureau of Land Management.
Larry Timchak,
Forest Supervisor, Caribou-Targhee National Forest.
[FR Doc. 05-24630 Filed 12-28-05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310-GG-P