Proposed Programmatic Statewide Red-Cockaded Woodpecker Safe Harbor Agreement, North Carolina, 29350-29351 [E6-7731]
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29350
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 98 / Monday, May 22, 2006 / Notices
The applicant requests a permit to
take the Indiana bat (Myotis sodalis)
throughout Missouri. The scientific
research is aimed at enhancement of
survival of the species in the wild.
Permit Number TE120231
Applicant: John Timpone, Ballwin,
Missouri
The applicant requests a permit to
take the Indiana bat (Myotis sodalis)
throughout Maryland, Missouri, Ohio,
Pennsylvania, and West Virginia. The
scientific research is aimed at
enhancement of survival of the species
in the wild.
Authority: This notice is provided
pursuant to section 10(c) of the Endangered
Species Act of 1973, as amended (16 U.S.C.
1531, et seq.).
Dated: April 28, 2006.
Wendi Weber,
Assistant Regional Director, Ecological
Services, Region 3, Fort Snelling, Minnesota.
[FR Doc. E6–7728 Filed 5–19–06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–55–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
Proposed Programmatic Statewide
Red-Cockaded Woodpecker Safe
Harbor Agreement, North Carolina
Fish and Wildlife Service,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice of availability.
cchase on PROD1PC60 with NOTICES
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: This notice advises the public
that the North Carolina Wildlife
Resources Commission (NCWRC, or
Applicant) has applied to the Fish and
Wildlife Service (Service) for an
enhancement of survival permit (ESP)
under section 10(a)(1)(A) of the
Endangered Species Act of 1973, as
amended (Act). The ESP application
includes a proposed Safe Harbor
Agreement (SHA) for the endangered
Red-cockaded Woodpecker (Picoides
borealis) (RCW) for a period of 99 years,
along with a supporting Environmental
Assessment (EA). We announce the
opening of a 30-day comment period
and request comments from the public
on the proposed SHA and the
supporting EA.
DATES: Written comments should be
sent to the Service’s Regional Office (see
ADDRESSES) and must be received on or
before June 21, 2006.
ADDRESSES: To obtain copies of the
proposed SHA and the supporting EA
for review, write to the Service’s
Southeast Regional Office, 1875 Century
Boulevard, Suite 200, Atlanta, Georgia
VerDate Aug<31>2005
20:16 May 19, 2006
Jkt 208001
30345 (Attn: Endangered Species
Permits). Send your comments to this
address as well. For commenting
guidelines, see ‘‘Public Comments’’
under SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION.
Documents will also be available for
public inspection by appointment
during normal business hours at the
Regional Office in Atlanta, or at the
Field Office at 551–F Pylon Drive,
Raleigh, North Carolina, 27636. Do not
write to this address.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr.
Rick Gooch, Regional Safe Harbor
Coordinator, at the Atlanta address
above, 404–679–7124 (phone), or 404–
679–7081 (facsimile), or John
Hammond, Fish and Wildlife Biologist,
at the Raleigh address above or 919–
856–4556 (phone).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
Applicant has applied to the Service for
an ESP under section 10(a)(1)(A) of the
Endangered Species Act of 1973, as
amended (Act) (16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.).
The application includes a proposed
SHA for the endangered RCW for a
period of 99 years, along with a
supporting EA. We announce the
opening of a 30-day comment period
and request comments from the public
on the proposed SHA and the
supporting EA. If approved, the SHA
would allow the Applicant to issue
certificates of inclusion throughout
certain areas of North Carolina to
eligible non-Federal landowners that
complete an approved Safe Harbor
Management Agreement (SHMA).
Background
The EA identifies and describes
several alternatives. All comments
received, including names and
addresses, will become part of the
official administrative record and may
be made available to the public, subject
to the requirements of the Privacy Act
and Freedom of Information Act. For
further information and instructions on
reviewing and commenting on this
application, see ADDRESSES and, in this
section, ‘‘Public Comments.’’
Under a SHA, participating property
owners voluntarily undertake
management activities on their property
to enhance, restore, or maintain habitat
benefiting species listed under the Act.
SHAs encourage private and other nonFederal property owners to implement
conservation efforts for listed species by
assuring property owners they will not
be subjected to increased property use
restrictions if their efforts attract listed
species to their property or increase the
numbers or distribution of listed species
already on their property. Application
requirements and issuance criteria for
PO 00000
Frm 00064
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
enhancement of survival permits
through SHAs are found in 50 CFR
17.22 and 17.32.
NCWRC’s proposed Statewide SHA is
designed to encourage voluntary RCW
habitat restoration or enhancement
activities by relieving a landowner who
enters into a landowner-specific
agreement (i.e., the SHMA) from any
additional responsibility under the Act
beyond that which exists at the time he
or she enters into the program. The
SHMA will identify any existing RCWs
and any associated habitat (the baseline)
and will describe the actions that the
landowner commits to take (e.g.,
hardwood midstory removal, cavity
provisioning) or allows to be taken to
improve RCW habitat on the property,
and the time period within which those
actions are to be taken and maintained.
A participating landowner must
maintain the baseline on his/her
property (i.e., any existing RCW groups
and/or associated habitat), but may be
allowed the opportunity to incidentally
take RCWs at some point in the future
if above-baseline numbers of RCWs are
attracted to that site by the proactive
management measures undertaken by
the landowner. It is important to note
that the SHA does not envision, nor will
it authorize, incidental take of existing
RCW groups, with one exception. This
exception is incidental take related to a
baseline shift; in this circumstance, the
baseline will be maintained but redrawn
or shifted on that landowner’s property.
Among the minimization measures
proposed by the Applicant are no
incidental taking of RCWs during the
breeding season, consolidation of small,
isolated RCW populations at sites
capable of supporting a viable RCW
population, and measures to improve
current and potential habitat for the
species. Further details on the topics
described above are found in the
aforementioned documents available for
review under this notice.
The geographic scope of the
Applicant’s SHA is the State of North
Carolina, with the exception of six
counties (Cumberland, Harnett, Hoke,
Moore, Richmond, and Scotland)
located in the Sandhills Region that are
already covered in an existing SHA
(U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Permit
Number TE798839–12)). Lands
potentially eligible for inclusion include
all privately owned lands, State lands,
and public lands owned by cities,
counties, and municipalities with
potentially suitable RCW habitat.
We have evaluated several
alternatives to the proposed action, and
these are described at length in the
accompanying EA. The alternative of
our paying landowners for desired
E:\FR\FM\22MYN1.SGM
22MYN1
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 98 / Monday, May 22, 2006 / Notices
management practices is not being
pursued because we are presently
unable to fund such a program. An
alternative by which interested private
or non-Federal property owners would
prepare an individual permit
application/Agreement with us also was
evaluated. Under that alternative, we
would process each permit application/
Agreement individually. This would
increase the effort, cost, and amount of
time it would take to provide safe
harbor assurances to participating
landowners and also cause such benefits
to be applied on a piecemeal, individual
basis. We have determined the
previously identified alternatives,
which would result in delays and lack
of a coordinated effort, would likely
result in a continued decline of the
RCWs on private lands due to habitat
fragmentation, lack of beneficial habitat
management, and the effects of
demographic isolation.
A no-action alternative was also
explored, but this alternative is not
likely to increase the number of RCW
groups or RCW habitat, nor would it
alleviate landowner conflicts. Instead,
the action proposed here, although it
authorizes future incidental take, is
expected to attract sufficient interest
among North Carolina landowners to
generate substantial net conservation
benefits to the RCW on a landscape
level. The proposed SHA was developed
in an adaptive management framework
to allow changes in the program based
on new scientific information, including
but not limited to biological needs and
management actions proven to benefit
the species or its habitat.
Public Comments
Written data or comments should be
submitted to the Regional Office at the
address listed under ADDRESSES and
must be submitted in writing to be
adequately considered our in the
Service’s decision-making process.
Please reference the ‘‘Proposed
Programmatic North Carolina Statewide
Red-cockaded Woodpecker Safe Harbor
Agreement’’ in your comments, or in
requests for the documents discussed in
this notice.
cchase on PROD1PC60 with NOTICES
Decision
We will not make our final
determination until after the end of the
30-day comment period, and we will
fully consider all comments received
during the comment period. If the final
analysis shows the SHA to be consistent
with the Service’s policies and
applicable regulations, the Service will
sign the SHA and issue the ESP.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
20:16 May 19, 2006
Jkt 208001
Authority
We are providing this notice under
section 10(c) of the Endangered Species
Act and implementing regulations for
the National Environmental Policy Act
(40 CFR part 1506).
Dated: May 16, 2006.
Jackie Parrish,
Acting Regional Director, Southeast Region.
[FR Doc. E6–7731 Filed 5–19–06; 8:45 am]
29351
Dated: May 16, 2006.
Michael D. Olsen,
Acting Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary—
Indian Affairs.
[FR Doc. E6–7773 Filed 5–19–06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–W7–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
National Park Service
BILLING CODE 4310–55–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Indian Affairs
Notice of Availability of the Draft
Environmental Impact Statement for
the Cowlitz Indian Tribe’s Proposed
151.87 Acre Fee-To Trust Transfer,
Reservation Proclamation and CasinoResort Project, Clark County, WA;
Correction
Bureau of Indian Affairs,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice; correction.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: This notice advises the public
of three corrections to the Notice of
Availability of the Draft Environmental
Impact Statement (DEIS) for the Cowlitz
Indian Tribe’s Proposed Fee-to Trust
Transfer, Reservation Proclamation and
Casino-Resort Project, Clark County,
Washington, published in the Federal
Register on April 12, 2006, 71 FR 18767
(FR Doc. E6–5383). The U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
was erroneously included among the
cooperating agencies. EPA is not a
cooperating agency for this DEIS. This
notice also corrects the name, address
and telephone number of the contact
person for the DEIS.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Gerald Henrickson, (503) 231–6927.
Correction
On page 18767, in the third column
under the SUMMARY heading, in the
first sentence, remove the words ‘‘U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA).’’
On page 18768, in the first column
under the ADDRESSES heading, correct
the last paragraph to read: To obtain a
copy of the DEIS, please write to Gerald
Henrickson, Northwest Regional Office,
Bureau of Indian Affairs, 911 N.E. 11th
Avenue, Portland, Oregon 97232, or call
him at the number provided below.
On page 18768, in the first column
under the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT heading, correct the name and
telephone number to read: Gerald
Henrickson, (503) 231–6927.
PO 00000
Frm 00065
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Notice of Boundary Revision, Big
Thicket National Preserve
SUMMARY: This notice announces the
revision to the boundary of Big Thicket
National Preserve to include the parcel
of land known as Tract 223–09. The
United States will acquire this tract
from The Conservation Fund upon the
revision of the boundary. The National
Park Service has determined that this
boundary revision is necessary and that
the acquisition of this tract would make
a significant contribution to the
purposes for which the preserve was
created.
The effective date of this
boundary revision is the date on which
this notice is published in the Federal
Register.
DATES:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Superintendent, Big Thicket National
Preserve, 6044 Farm Road 420, Kountze,
Texas 77625 or by telephone 409–951–
6700.
The Act
establishing Big Thicket National
Preserve, as amended in 1993, 16 U.S.C.
698(b), provides that, after notifying the
House Committee on Resources and the
Senate Committee on Energy and
Resources, the Secretary of the Interior
is authorized to make this boundary
revision. This action will add one parcel
composed of 200 acres of land to Big
Thicket National Preserve. The National
Park Service proposes to purchase this
parcel from The Conservation Fund.
This parcel is bounded on the north,
south, and east by the preserve. The
acquisition of this parcel is required to
maintain the ecology and the present
rural character for which the preserve
was created.
The above parcel is depicted as tract
number 223–09 on land acquisition
segment map 223, having drawing
number 175–80,010 dated November,
2004. This map is on file at the National
Park Service Land Resources Program
Center, Intermountain Region, Santa Fe,
New Mexico, and at the Office of the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
E:\FR\FM\22MYN1.SGM
22MYN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 71, Number 98 (Monday, May 22, 2006)]
[Notices]
[Pages 29350-29351]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E6-7731]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
Proposed Programmatic Statewide Red-Cockaded Woodpecker Safe
Harbor Agreement, North Carolina
AGENCY: Fish and Wildlife Service, Interior.
ACTION: Notice of availability.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This notice advises the public that the North Carolina
Wildlife Resources Commission (NCWRC, or Applicant) has applied to the
Fish and Wildlife Service (Service) for an enhancement of survival
permit (ESP) under section 10(a)(1)(A) of the Endangered Species Act of
1973, as amended (Act). The ESP application includes a proposed Safe
Harbor Agreement (SHA) for the endangered Red-cockaded Woodpecker
(Picoides borealis) (RCW) for a period of 99 years, along with a
supporting Environmental Assessment (EA). We announce the opening of a
30-day comment period and request comments from the public on the
proposed SHA and the supporting EA.
DATES: Written comments should be sent to the Service's Regional Office
(see ADDRESSES) and must be received on or before June 21, 2006.
ADDRESSES: To obtain copies of the proposed SHA and the supporting EA
for review, write to the Service's Southeast Regional Office, 1875
Century Boulevard, Suite 200, Atlanta, Georgia 30345 (Attn: Endangered
Species Permits). Send your comments to this address as well. For
commenting guidelines, see ``Public Comments'' under SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION.
Documents will also be available for public inspection by
appointment during normal business hours at the Regional Office in
Atlanta, or at the Field Office at 551-F Pylon Drive, Raleigh, North
Carolina, 27636. Do not write to this address.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr. Rick Gooch, Regional Safe Harbor
Coordinator, at the Atlanta address above, 404-679-7124 (phone), or
404-679-7081 (facsimile), or John Hammond, Fish and Wildlife Biologist,
at the Raleigh address above or 919-856-4556 (phone).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Applicant has applied to the Service for
an ESP under section 10(a)(1)(A) of the Endangered Species Act of 1973,
as amended (Act) (16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.). The application includes a
proposed SHA for the endangered RCW for a period of 99 years, along
with a supporting EA. We announce the opening of a 30-day comment
period and request comments from the public on the proposed SHA and the
supporting EA. If approved, the SHA would allow the Applicant to issue
certificates of inclusion throughout certain areas of North Carolina to
eligible non-Federal landowners that complete an approved Safe Harbor
Management Agreement (SHMA).
Background
The EA identifies and describes several alternatives. All comments
received, including names and addresses, will become part of the
official administrative record and may be made available to the public,
subject to the requirements of the Privacy Act and Freedom of
Information Act. For further information and instructions on reviewing
and commenting on this application, see ADDRESSES and, in this section,
``Public Comments.''
Under a SHA, participating property owners voluntarily undertake
management activities on their property to enhance, restore, or
maintain habitat benefiting species listed under the Act. SHAs
encourage private and other non-Federal property owners to implement
conservation efforts for listed species by assuring property owners
they will not be subjected to increased property use restrictions if
their efforts attract listed species to their property or increase the
numbers or distribution of listed species already on their property.
Application requirements and issuance criteria for enhancement of
survival permits through SHAs are found in 50 CFR 17.22 and 17.32.
NCWRC's proposed Statewide SHA is designed to encourage voluntary
RCW habitat restoration or enhancement activities by relieving a
landowner who enters into a landowner-specific agreement (i.e., the
SHMA) from any additional responsibility under the Act beyond that
which exists at the time he or she enters into the program. The SHMA
will identify any existing RCWs and any associated habitat (the
baseline) and will describe the actions that the landowner commits to
take (e.g., hardwood midstory removal, cavity provisioning) or allows
to be taken to improve RCW habitat on the property, and the time period
within which those actions are to be taken and maintained. A
participating landowner must maintain the baseline on his/her property
(i.e., any existing RCW groups and/or associated habitat), but may be
allowed the opportunity to incidentally take RCWs at some point in the
future if above-baseline numbers of RCWs are attracted to that site by
the proactive management measures undertaken by the landowner. It is
important to note that the SHA does not envision, nor will it
authorize, incidental take of existing RCW groups, with one exception.
This exception is incidental take related to a baseline shift; in this
circumstance, the baseline will be maintained but redrawn or shifted on
that landowner's property. Among the minimization measures proposed by
the Applicant are no incidental taking of RCWs during the breeding
season, consolidation of small, isolated RCW populations at sites
capable of supporting a viable RCW population, and measures to improve
current and potential habitat for the species. Further details on the
topics described above are found in the aforementioned documents
available for review under this notice.
The geographic scope of the Applicant's SHA is the State of North
Carolina, with the exception of six counties (Cumberland, Harnett,
Hoke, Moore, Richmond, and Scotland) located in the Sandhills Region
that are already covered in an existing SHA (U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service Permit Number TE798839-12)). Lands potentially eligible for
inclusion include all privately owned lands, State lands, and public
lands owned by cities, counties, and municipalities with potentially
suitable RCW habitat.
We have evaluated several alternatives to the proposed action, and
these are described at length in the accompanying EA. The alternative
of our paying landowners for desired
[[Page 29351]]
management practices is not being pursued because we are presently
unable to fund such a program. An alternative by which interested
private or non-Federal property owners would prepare an individual
permit application/Agreement with us also was evaluated. Under that
alternative, we would process each permit application/Agreement
individually. This would increase the effort, cost, and amount of time
it would take to provide safe harbor assurances to participating
landowners and also cause such benefits to be applied on a piecemeal,
individual basis. We have determined the previously identified
alternatives, which would result in delays and lack of a coordinated
effort, would likely result in a continued decline of the RCWs on
private lands due to habitat fragmentation, lack of beneficial habitat
management, and the effects of demographic isolation.
A no-action alternative was also explored, but this alternative is
not likely to increase the number of RCW groups or RCW habitat, nor
would it alleviate landowner conflicts. Instead, the action proposed
here, although it authorizes future incidental take, is expected to
attract sufficient interest among North Carolina landowners to generate
substantial net conservation benefits to the RCW on a landscape level.
The proposed SHA was developed in an adaptive management framework to
allow changes in the program based on new scientific information,
including but not limited to biological needs and management actions
proven to benefit the species or its habitat.
Public Comments
Written data or comments should be submitted to the Regional Office
at the address listed under ADDRESSES and must be submitted in writing
to be adequately considered our in the Service's decision-making
process. Please reference the ``Proposed Programmatic North Carolina
Statewide Red-cockaded Woodpecker Safe Harbor Agreement'' in your
comments, or in requests for the documents discussed in this notice.
Decision
We will not make our final determination until after the end of the
30-day comment period, and we will fully consider all comments received
during the comment period. If the final analysis shows the SHA to be
consistent with the Service's policies and applicable regulations, the
Service will sign the SHA and issue the ESP.
Authority
We are providing this notice under section 10(c) of the Endangered
Species Act and implementing regulations for the National Environmental
Policy Act (40 CFR part 1506).
Dated: May 16, 2006.
Jackie Parrish,
Acting Regional Director, Southeast Region.
[FR Doc. E6-7731 Filed 5-19-06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310-55-P