Preparation of a Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement/Environmental Impact Report in Support of an Application for the Issuance of an Incidental Take Permit to the Imperial Irrigation District, Imperial County, California, 44309-44310 [E6-12593]
Download as PDF
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 150 / Friday, August 4, 2006 / Notices
build and close the existing landfill,
which would result in the loss of
special-status plant species and suitable
habitat for covered animal species.
Groundwater monitoring activities
could also adversely affect vegetation
and wildlife. No conservation areas
would be protected.
A number of other project alternatives
that would meet the County’s need to
provide increased refuse disposal were
also considered and eliminated for
reasons described in the Environmental
Assessment.
This notice is provided pursuant to
section 10(a) of the Act and the
regulations of the National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) of
1969 (40 CFR 1506.6). All comments
that we receive, including names and
addresses, will become part of the
official administrative record and may
be made available to the public. We will
evaluate the application, associated
documents, and comments submitted
thereon to determine whether the
application meets the requirements of
NEPA regulations and section 10(a) of
the Act. If we determine that those
requirements are met, we will issue a
permit to the Applicant for the
incidental take of the covered species.
We will make our final permit decision
no sooner than 60 days from the date of
this notice.
Dated: July 31, 2006.
Ken McDermond,
Deputy Manager, California/Nevada
Operations Office, Sacramento, California.
[FR Doc. E6–12592 Filed 8–3–06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–55–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
Preparation of a Supplemental
Environmental Impact Statement/
Environmental Impact Report in
Support of an Application for the
Issuance of an Incidental Take Permit
to the Imperial Irrigation District,
Imperial County, California
Fish and Wildlife Service,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice of intent.
gechino on PROD1PC61 with NOTICES
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: Pursuant to the National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), the
Fish and Wildlife Service (Service)
advises the public that we intend to
gather information necessary to prepare
a Supplemental Environmental Impact
Statement/Environmental Impact Report
(EIS/EIR) for the consideration of a
Habitat Conservation Plan and
application for an incidental take
VerDate Aug<31>2005
22:39 Aug 03, 2006
Jkt 208001
permit, pursuant to section 10(a)(1)(B)
of the Endangered Species Act of 1973
as amended (ESA), including
consideration of conservation measures
for State-listed species to address the
effects of the conservation and transfer
of water from Imperial Irrigation District
(IID) to the San Diego County Water
Authority (SDCWA) and Coachella
Valley Water District (CVWD). The
Habitat Conservation Plan will cover a
broad array of activities including: water
conservation, water conveyance and
drainage, operation and maintenance of
the water conveyance system, system
improvements, miscellaneous activities,
and third party activities required to
achieve the conservation and transfer of
up to 200,000 acre-feet of water per year
to the SDCWA and 100,000 acre-feet per
year to the CVWD, and to meet the
voluntary cap on IID’s water use of 3.1
million acre-feet per year from the
Colorado River. The IID (Applicant)
intends to request an incidental take
permit for up to 96 listed and unlisted
species of concern under specific
provisions of the permit. In the case of
unlisted species, the permit would
provide coverage should these species
be listed in the future.
The Service provides this notice
pursuant to the Council on
Environmental Quality Regulations for
Implementing the Procedural Provisions
of the NEPA. The purpose of the
Supplemental EIS/EIR is to provide any
additional environmental assessment
required to evaluate additions and
changes to the Water Conservation and
Transfer Project (Project) that have
occurred since the approval of the Final
EIS/EIR by the Bureau of Reclamation
(Federal lead agency for the Project) and
to support the application for an
incidental take permit pursuant to
section 10(a)(1)(B) of the ESA by the
Service. The Service is seeking
suggestions and information from other
agencies, affected tribes, and the public
on the scope of issues to be considered
in preparation of the Supplemental EIS/
EIR. To satisfy both Federal and State
environmental policy requirements, the
Service as Federal lead agency and the
IID as State lead agency under the
California Environmental Quality Act
(CEQA) are conducting this joint
scoping process for the preparation of
the supplemental environmental
document.
DATES: The Service requests all scoping
comments on this notice be received on
or before September 5, 2006.
ADDRESSES: Written comments should
be addressed to Ms. Therese O’Rourke,
Assistant Field Supervisor, Fish and
Wildlife Service, 6010 Hidden Valley
PO 00000
Frm 00056
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
44309
Road, Carlsbad, California 92011. You
may also send comments by facsimile to
telephone 760–431–5902.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ms.
Carol Roberts, Division Chief/Salton Sea
Coordinator, at the above address, or by
phone at 760–431–9440.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: IID is a
customer-owned utility that provides
irrigation water and power to the lower
southeastern portion of the California
desert. IID was established in 1911 to
deliver Colorado River water to lands
within the Imperial Valley, California,
for agricultural, domestic, industrial,
and other beneficial uses. IID maintains
a complex system of delivery canals,
laterals, and drains that serve over
450,000 acres of intensive agriculture.
Agricultural drainage flows into the
New and Alamo Rivers and into the
Salton Sea, a designated repository for
agricultural drainage.
On April 29, 1998, IID and SDCWA
executed an agreement for the
conservation and transfer of up to
300,000 acre-feet of Colorado River
water per year from IID to SDCWA.
Subsequent negotiations with other
Colorado River water rights holders in
California resulted in the transfer
amount to SDCWA being reduced to a
maximum of 200,000 acre-feet per year
with the other 100,000 acre-feet per year
going to the CVWD under the
Quantification Settlement Agreement.
As part of this agreement, IID is
implementing a conservation program
that includes the participation of
Imperial Valley landowners and tenants
so that on-farm as well as system-based
conservation can be implemented to
achieve the required level of
conservation. This transfer is a key part
of the California 4.4 Plan that will result
in California water agencies using only
their 4.4 million acre-foot
apportionment of the Colorado River.
California has been diverting up to 5.2
million acre-feet of Colorado River
water per year.
IID, as the CEQA lead agency, and the
Bureau of Reclamation, as the NEPA
lead agency, jointly issued a Draft EIR/
EIS for the Project dated January 2002.
The Bureau of Reclamation prepared
and filed with the Environmental
Protection Agency an integrated Final
EIR/EIS dated October 2002. Prior to the
Secretary of the Interior’s issuance of a
Record of Decision on October 10, 2003,
relating to the Federal actions associated
with the Project, the Bureau of
Reclamation approved an
Environmental Evaluation dated
October 2003 that evaluated certain
changes to the Project subsequent to
their Final EIR/EIS.
E:\FR\FM\04AUN1.SGM
04AUN1
gechino on PROD1PC61 with NOTICES
44310
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 150 / Friday, August 4, 2006 / Notices
A joint Supplemental EIS/EIR is being
prepared on behalf of the Service and
IID to address the impacts associated
with permit issuance for the covered
activities included in the Habitat
Conservation Plan. The consulting firm,
CH2MHill has been selected to prepare
the document. Additional information
on the previously approved Project may
be found in the Bureau of Reclamation’s
project documents including the
amended Notice of Intent published at
65 FR 66557 (November 6, 2000), the
Notice of Availability for the Draft
Environmental Impact Report/
Environmental Impact Statement (67 FR
3732, January 25, 2002), and the Notice
of Availability for the Final
Environmental Impact Report/
Environmental Impact Statement (67 FR
68165, November 8, 2002), and the Draft
and Final EIR/EISs themselves.
Section 9 of the ESA and the Service
regulations prohibit ‘‘take’’ of
threatened or endangered fish and
wildlife (16 U.S.C. 1538). Take means
harass, harm, pursue, hunt, shoot,
wound, kill, trap, capture, or collect
listed animal species, or attempt to
engage in such conduct (16 U.S.C.
1532). Harm may include significant
habitat modification that actually kills
or injures fish and/or wildlife by
significantly impairing essential
behavior patterns including breeding,
feeding, and sheltering [50 CFR 17.3(c)].
The Service, however, may issue
permits to take endangered and/or
threatened species of fish and wildlife
incidental to, and not the purpose of,
otherwise lawful activities [50 CFR
17.22 and 17.32]. Take authorization
addressing water conservation and
transfer activities for the federally-listed
species only was previously provided
through the Service’s Biological
Opinion on the Bureau of Reclamation’s
Voluntary Fish and Wildlife
Conservation Measures and Associated
Conservation Agreements with the
California Water Agencies.
Take of listed plant species is not
prohibited under the ESA and cannot be
authorized under an incidental take
permit. We propose to include plant
species on the permit in recognition of
the conservation benefits provided for
them under the plan. All species
included on the permit would receive
assurances under the Service’s ‘‘No
Surprises’’ regulation [50 CFR
17.22(b)(5) and 17.32(b)(5)].
We propose to issue a permit to IID
authorizing the take of listed species to
the otherwise lawful conservation and
transference of up to 200,000 acre-feet of
Colorado River water per year to the
SDCWA, conservation and transference
of up to 100,000 acre-feet of Colorado
VerDate Aug<31>2005
22:39 Aug 03, 2006
Jkt 208001
River water per year to the CVWD,
additional conservation necessary to
achieve IID’s cap of 3.1 million acre-feet
per year on their use of Colorado River
water, and operations and maintenance
activities required to keep the water
conveyance and drainage system
functioning within the approximately
450,000 acres of agriculture in their
Imperial Valley water service area.
The permit application will include a
Habitat Conservation Plan and an
Implementing Agreement that define the
responsibilities of all parties under the
Plan. IID’s Habitat Conservation Plan
will include measures to minimize and
mitigate impacts to covered species
resulting from the covered activities.
These measures are provided in a suite
of conservation strategies designed to
address the various vegetation
communities and aquatic habitats used
by covered species in the Plan area. In
the Supplemental EIS/EIR we will
consider IID’s proposed Habitat
Conservation Plan (Proposed Action
Alternative) and the No Action
Alternative (no permit issuance). The
Bureau of Reclamation’s Draft and Final
EIR/EIS previously considered the
impacts of a range of water conservation
and transfer alternatives on federally
listed species. The Supplemental EIS/
EIR will address specific changes that
have been incorporated since the
issuance of the Bureau of Reclamation’s
Final EIR/EIS and any anticipated
changes in environmental impacts on
biological resources, land use, air
quality, water quality, and other
environmental resources that could
occur directly or indirectly with the
implementation of the Habitat
Conservation Plan.
Currently, the IID intends to request a
permit authorizing the incidental take of
86 animal species including the
following nine federally listed species:
desert pupfish (Cyprinodon
macularius), razorback sucker
(Xyrauchen texanus), desert tortoise
(Gopherus agassizii), bald eagle
(Haliaeetus leucocephalis),
southwestern willow flycatcher
(Empidonax traillii extimus), brown
pelican (Pelecanus occidentalis), Yuma
clapper rail (Rallus longirostris
yumanensis), California least tern
(Sterna antillarum browni), and least
Bell’s vireo (Vireo bellii pusillus). The
permit also would cover ten plant
species including one federally listed
species, Peirson’s milk-vetch
(Astragalus magdalenae var. peirsonii).
We will evaluate the permit application,
the Habitat Conservation Plan,
Implementing Agreement,
Supplemental EIS/EIR, associated
documents, and comments submitted
PO 00000
Frm 00057
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
thereon to determine whether the
application meets the requirements of
section 10(a)(1)(B) of the ESA. If we
determine that the requirements have
been met, we will issue a permit for the
incidental take of covered listed species.
Environmental review of the
Supplemental EIS/EIR will be
conducted in accordance with the
requirements of NEPA (42 U.S.C. 4321
et seq.), its implementing regulations
(40 CFR parts 1500–1508), other
applicable regulations, and Service
procedures for compliance with those
regulations. We are publishing this
notice pursuant to section 10(a) of the
ESA and Service regulations for
implementing the NEPA (40 CFR
1501.7). The purpose of this notice is to
obtain suggestions and information from
other agencies, affected tribes, and the
public regarding the proposed action.
Written comments are invited to ensure
that the full range of issues related to
the proposed action is identified. All
comments received, including names
and addresses, will become part of the
official administrative record and may
be made available to the public.
Dated: July 31, 2006.
Ken McDermond,
Deputy Manager, California/Nevada
Operations Office, Sacramento, California.
[FR Doc. E6–12593 Filed 8–3–06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–55–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Land Management
[AZ–420–06–1640–BH–AZZG; 8364]
Modification of Closure of Selected
Public Lands in Pima County, AZ
Bureau of Land Management,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: This order restricts all public
use on a year-round basis on
approximately 289 acres of public lands
in the Saginaw Hill area administered
by the Bureau of Land Management
(BLM), Tucson Field Office, Arizona.
Existing management designations
established in the Phoenix Resource
Management Plan and Final
Environmental Impact Statement, dated
September 1989, remain unchanged.
This order modifies the restriction order
published in the Federal Register, Vol.
70, No. 68, Monday, April 11, 2005,
page 18420. This order is issued under
the authority of 43 CFR 8364.1 and
affects the following public lands:
Gila and Salt River Meridian, Arizona
T. 15 S., R. 12 E.,
E:\FR\FM\04AUN1.SGM
04AUN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 71, Number 150 (Friday, August 4, 2006)]
[Notices]
[Pages 44309-44310]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E6-12593]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
Preparation of a Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement/
Environmental Impact Report in Support of an Application for the
Issuance of an Incidental Take Permit to the Imperial Irrigation
District, Imperial County, California
AGENCY: Fish and Wildlife Service, Interior.
ACTION: Notice of intent.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: Pursuant to the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), the
Fish and Wildlife Service (Service) advises the public that we intend
to gather information necessary to prepare a Supplemental Environmental
Impact Statement/Environmental Impact Report (EIS/EIR) for the
consideration of a Habitat Conservation Plan and application for an
incidental take permit, pursuant to section 10(a)(1)(B) of the
Endangered Species Act of 1973 as amended (ESA), including
consideration of conservation measures for State-listed species to
address the effects of the conservation and transfer of water from
Imperial Irrigation District (IID) to the San Diego County Water
Authority (SDCWA) and Coachella Valley Water District (CVWD). The
Habitat Conservation Plan will cover a broad array of activities
including: water conservation, water conveyance and drainage, operation
and maintenance of the water conveyance system, system improvements,
miscellaneous activities, and third party activities required to
achieve the conservation and transfer of up to 200,000 acre-feet of
water per year to the SDCWA and 100,000 acre-feet per year to the CVWD,
and to meet the voluntary cap on IID's water use of 3.1 million acre-
feet per year from the Colorado River. The IID (Applicant) intends to
request an incidental take permit for up to 96 listed and unlisted
species of concern under specific provisions of the permit. In the case
of unlisted species, the permit would provide coverage should these
species be listed in the future.
The Service provides this notice pursuant to the Council on
Environmental Quality Regulations for Implementing the Procedural
Provisions of the NEPA. The purpose of the Supplemental EIS/EIR is to
provide any additional environmental assessment required to evaluate
additions and changes to the Water Conservation and Transfer Project
(Project) that have occurred since the approval of the Final EIS/EIR by
the Bureau of Reclamation (Federal lead agency for the Project) and to
support the application for an incidental take permit pursuant to
section 10(a)(1)(B) of the ESA by the Service. The Service is seeking
suggestions and information from other agencies, affected tribes, and
the public on the scope of issues to be considered in preparation of
the Supplemental EIS/EIR. To satisfy both Federal and State
environmental policy requirements, the Service as Federal lead agency
and the IID as State lead agency under the California Environmental
Quality Act (CEQA) are conducting this joint scoping process for the
preparation of the supplemental environmental document.
DATES: The Service requests all scoping comments on this notice be
received on or before September 5, 2006.
ADDRESSES: Written comments should be addressed to Ms. Therese
O'Rourke, Assistant Field Supervisor, Fish and Wildlife Service, 6010
Hidden Valley Road, Carlsbad, California 92011. You may also send
comments by facsimile to telephone 760-431-5902.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ms. Carol Roberts, Division Chief/
Salton Sea Coordinator, at the above address, or by phone at 760-431-
9440.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: IID is a customer-owned utility that
provides irrigation water and power to the lower southeastern portion
of the California desert. IID was established in 1911 to deliver
Colorado River water to lands within the Imperial Valley, California,
for agricultural, domestic, industrial, and other beneficial uses. IID
maintains a complex system of delivery canals, laterals, and drains
that serve over 450,000 acres of intensive agriculture. Agricultural
drainage flows into the New and Alamo Rivers and into the Salton Sea, a
designated repository for agricultural drainage.
On April 29, 1998, IID and SDCWA executed an agreement for the
conservation and transfer of up to 300,000 acre-feet of Colorado River
water per year from IID to SDCWA. Subsequent negotiations with other
Colorado River water rights holders in California resulted in the
transfer amount to SDCWA being reduced to a maximum of 200,000 acre-
feet per year with the other 100,000 acre-feet per year going to the
CVWD under the Quantification Settlement Agreement. As part of this
agreement, IID is implementing a conservation program that includes the
participation of Imperial Valley landowners and tenants so that on-farm
as well as system-based conservation can be implemented to achieve the
required level of conservation. This transfer is a key part of the
California 4.4 Plan that will result in California water agencies using
only their 4.4 million acre-foot apportionment of the Colorado River.
California has been diverting up to 5.2 million acre-feet of Colorado
River water per year.
IID, as the CEQA lead agency, and the Bureau of Reclamation, as the
NEPA lead agency, jointly issued a Draft EIR/EIS for the Project dated
January 2002. The Bureau of Reclamation prepared and filed with the
Environmental Protection Agency an integrated Final EIR/EIS dated
October 2002. Prior to the Secretary of the Interior's issuance of a
Record of Decision on October 10, 2003, relating to the Federal actions
associated with the Project, the Bureau of Reclamation approved an
Environmental Evaluation dated October 2003 that evaluated certain
changes to the Project subsequent to their Final EIR/EIS.
[[Page 44310]]
A joint Supplemental EIS/EIR is being prepared on behalf of the
Service and IID to address the impacts associated with permit issuance
for the covered activities included in the Habitat Conservation Plan.
The consulting firm, CH2MHill has been selected to prepare the
document. Additional information on the previously approved Project may
be found in the Bureau of Reclamation's project documents including the
amended Notice of Intent published at 65 FR 66557 (November 6, 2000),
the Notice of Availability for the Draft Environmental Impact Report/
Environmental Impact Statement (67 FR 3732, January 25, 2002), and the
Notice of Availability for the Final Environmental Impact Report/
Environmental Impact Statement (67 FR 68165, November 8, 2002), and the
Draft and Final EIR/EISs themselves.
Section 9 of the ESA and the Service regulations prohibit ``take''
of threatened or endangered fish and wildlife (16 U.S.C. 1538). Take
means harass, harm, pursue, hunt, shoot, wound, kill, trap, capture, or
collect listed animal species, or attempt to engage in such conduct (16
U.S.C. 1532). Harm may include significant habitat modification that
actually kills or injures fish and/or wildlife by significantly
impairing essential behavior patterns including breeding, feeding, and
sheltering [50 CFR 17.3(c)]. The Service, however, may issue permits to
take endangered and/or threatened species of fish and wildlife
incidental to, and not the purpose of, otherwise lawful activities [50
CFR 17.22 and 17.32]. Take authorization addressing water conservation
and transfer activities for the federally-listed species only was
previously provided through the Service's Biological Opinion on the
Bureau of Reclamation's Voluntary Fish and Wildlife Conservation
Measures and Associated Conservation Agreements with the California
Water Agencies.
Take of listed plant species is not prohibited under the ESA and
cannot be authorized under an incidental take permit. We propose to
include plant species on the permit in recognition of the conservation
benefits provided for them under the plan. All species included on the
permit would receive assurances under the Service's ``No Surprises''
regulation [50 CFR 17.22(b)(5) and 17.32(b)(5)].
We propose to issue a permit to IID authorizing the take of listed
species to the otherwise lawful conservation and transference of up to
200,000 acre-feet of Colorado River water per year to the SDCWA,
conservation and transference of up to 100,000 acre-feet of Colorado
River water per year to the CVWD, additional conservation necessary to
achieve IID's cap of 3.1 million acre-feet per year on their use of
Colorado River water, and operations and maintenance activities
required to keep the water conveyance and drainage system functioning
within the approximately 450,000 acres of agriculture in their Imperial
Valley water service area.
The permit application will include a Habitat Conservation Plan and
an Implementing Agreement that define the responsibilities of all
parties under the Plan. IID's Habitat Conservation Plan will include
measures to minimize and mitigate impacts to covered species resulting
from the covered activities. These measures are provided in a suite of
conservation strategies designed to address the various vegetation
communities and aquatic habitats used by covered species in the Plan
area. In the Supplemental EIS/EIR we will consider IID's proposed
Habitat Conservation Plan (Proposed Action Alternative) and the No
Action Alternative (no permit issuance). The Bureau of Reclamation's
Draft and Final EIR/EIS previously considered the impacts of a range of
water conservation and transfer alternatives on federally listed
species. The Supplemental EIS/EIR will address specific changes that
have been incorporated since the issuance of the Bureau of
Reclamation's Final EIR/EIS and any anticipated changes in
environmental impacts on biological resources, land use, air quality,
water quality, and other environmental resources that could occur
directly or indirectly with the implementation of the Habitat
Conservation Plan.
Currently, the IID intends to request a permit authorizing the
incidental take of 86 animal species including the following nine
federally listed species: desert pupfish (Cyprinodon macularius),
razorback sucker (Xyrauchen texanus), desert tortoise (Gopherus
agassizii), bald eagle (Haliaeetus leucocephalis), southwestern willow
flycatcher (Empidonax traillii extimus), brown pelican (Pelecanus
occidentalis), Yuma clapper rail (Rallus longirostris yumanensis),
California least tern (Sterna antillarum browni), and least Bell's
vireo (Vireo bellii pusillus). The permit also would cover ten plant
species including one federally listed species, Peirson's milk-vetch
(Astragalus magdalenae var. peirsonii). We will evaluate the permit
application, the Habitat Conservation Plan, Implementing Agreement,
Supplemental EIS/EIR, associated documents, and comments submitted
thereon to determine whether the application meets the requirements of
section 10(a)(1)(B) of the ESA. If we determine that the requirements
have been met, we will issue a permit for the incidental take of
covered listed species.
Environmental review of the Supplemental EIS/EIR will be conducted
in accordance with the requirements of NEPA (42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.),
its implementing regulations (40 CFR parts 1500-1508), other applicable
regulations, and Service procedures for compliance with those
regulations. We are publishing this notice pursuant to section 10(a) of
the ESA and Service regulations for implementing the NEPA (40 CFR
1501.7). The purpose of this notice is to obtain suggestions and
information from other agencies, affected tribes, and the public
regarding the proposed action. Written comments are invited to ensure
that the full range of issues related to the proposed action is
identified. All comments received, including names and addresses, will
become part of the official administrative record and may be made
available to the public.
Dated: July 31, 2006.
Ken McDermond,
Deputy Manager, California/Nevada Operations Office, Sacramento,
California.
[FR Doc. E6-12593 Filed 8-3-06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310-55-P