Subsistence Management Regulations for Public Lands in Alaska, Subpart C; Nonrural Determinations, 46416-46423 [06-6902]
Download as PDF
46416
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 156 / Monday, August 14, 2006 / Proposed Rules
Authority : 26 U.S.C. 7805 * * *
corrected to read ‘‘G. Request for
Comments’’.
Guy Traynor,
Chief, Publications and Regulations Branch,
Legal Processing Division, Associate Chief
Counsel (Procedure and Administration).
[FR Doc. E6–13118 Filed 8–11–06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4830–01–P
Par. 2. On page 31991, instructional
Par. 4. is amended by adding a new
entry at the end of the amendatory
instruction to read as follows:
Adding new paragraph (g).
§ 1.1248–1
[Corrected]
Par. 3. On page 31991, § 1.1248–1 is
amended by adding a new paragraph (g)
to read as follows:
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Internal Revenue Service
26 CFR Part 1
§ 1.1248–1 Treatment of gain from certain
sales or exchanges of stock in certain
foreign corporations.
*
[REG–135866–02]
RIN 1545–BA93
Section 1248 Attribution Principles;
Correction
Internal Revenue Service (IRS),
Treasury.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking;
correction.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: This document corrects a
notice of proposed rulemaking (REG–
135866–02) that was published in the
Federal Register on Friday, June 2, 2006
(71 FR 31985) providing guidance for
determining the earnings and profits
attributable to stock of controlled
foreign corporations (or former
controlled foreign corporations) that are
(were) involved in certain
nonrecognition transactions.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Michael Gilman, (202) 622–3850 (not a
toll-free number).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
The notice of proposed rulemaking
(REG–135866–02) that is the subject of
this correction is under section 1248 of
the Internal Revenue Code.
jlentini on PROD1PC65 with PROPOSAL
List of Subjects in 26 CFR Part 1
Income taxes, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
Correction of Publication
Accordingly, the notice of proposed
rulemaking (REG–135866–02) that was
the subject of FR Doc. E6–8551 is
corrected as follows:
Paragraph 1. The authority citation
for part 1 continues to read in part as
follows:
VerDate Aug<31>2005
17:17 Aug 11, 2006
Jkt 208001
Guy Traynor,
Chief, Publications and Regulations Branch,
Legal Processing Division, Associate Chief
Counsel (Procedure and Administration).
[FR Doc. E6–13119 Filed 8–11–06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4830–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Comments
Forest Service
Electronic filing of comments is
preferred: You may submit electronic
comments and other data to
Subsistence@fws.gov. Please submit as
MS Word or Adobe Acrobat (PDF) files,
avoiding the use of any special
characters and any form of encryption.
36 CFR Part 242
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
Background
50 CFR Part 100
RIN 1018–AT99
Subsistence Management Regulations
for Public Lands in Alaska, Subpart C;
Nonrural Determinations
AGENCIES: Forest Service, Agriculture;
Fish and Wildlife Service, Interior.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
Need for Correction
As published, REG–135866–02
contains errors that may prove to be
misleading and are in need of
clarification.
PART 1—INCOME TAXES
*
*
*
*
(g) Effective date. Paragraph (a)(4) and
paragraph (a)(5), Example 4, of this
section apply to income inclusions that
occur on or after the date that paragraph
and example are published as final
regulations in the Federal Register.
McKenzie; the Homer Area, including
Fritz Creek East (except Voznesenka)
and the North Fork Road area; and the
Ketchikan Area. We propose no other
changes in status. However, new
information could lead to changes not
proposed at this time.
DATES: We must receive your written
public comments no later than October
27, 2006.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments
electronically to Subsistence@fws.gov.
See SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION for file
format and other information about
electronic filing. You may also submit
written comments to the Office of
Subsistence Management, 3601 C Street,
Suite 1030, Anchorage, Alaska 99503.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Chair, Federal Subsistence Board, c/o
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service,
Attention: Pete Probasco, Office of
Subsistence Management; (907) 786–
3888. For questions specific to National
Forest System lands, contact Steve
Kessler, Regional Subsistence Program
Leader, USDA, Forest Service, Alaska
Region, (907) 786–3888.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY: This rule would revise the list
of nonrural areas identified by the
Federal Subsistence Board (Board, we,
us). Areas determined to be nonrural are
not eligible to participate in the Federal
Subsistence Management Program on
Federal public lands in Alaska. We
propose to change Adak’s status to rural.
We also propose to add Prudhoe Bay
and the Kodiak Area, including the City
of Kodiak, the Mill Bay area, Womens
Bay, Bell’s Flats, and the Coast Guard
Station to the list of nonrural areas. The
following areas would continue to be
nonrural, but we propose changes in
their boundaries: the Kenai Area; the
Wasilla/Palmer Area, including Point
PO 00000
Frm 00006
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
In Title VIII of the Alaska National
Interest Lands Conservation Act
(ANILCA) (16 U.S.C. 3111–3126),
Congress found that ‘‘the situation in
Alaska is unique in that, in most cases,
no practical alternative means are
available to replace the food supplies
and other items gathered from fish and
wildlife which supply rural residents
dependent on subsistence uses * * *’’
and that ‘‘continuation of the
opportunity for subsistence uses of
resources on public and other lands in
Alaska is threatened * * *.’’ As a result,
Title VIII requires, among other things,
that the Secretary of the Interior and the
Secretary of Agriculture (Secretaries)
implement a program to provide rural
Alaska residents a priority for the taking
of fish and wildlife on public lands in
Alaska for subsistence uses, unless the
State of Alaska enacts and implements
laws of general applicability that are
consistent with ANILCA and that
provide for the subsistence definition,
priority, and participation specified in
sections 803, 804, and 805 of ANILCA.
E:\FR\FM\14AUP1.SGM
14AUP1
jlentini on PROD1PC65 with PROPOSAL
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 156 / Monday, August 14, 2006 / Proposed Rules
The State implemented a program that
the Department of the Interior
previously found to be consistent with
ANILCA. However, in December 1989,
the Alaska Supreme Court ruled in
McDowell v. State of Alaska that the
rural priority in the State subsistence
statute violated the Alaska Constitution.
The Court’s ruling in McDowell caused
the State to delete the rural priority from
the subsistence statute which therefore
negated State compliance with ANILCA.
The Court stayed the effect of the
decision until July 1, 1990. As a result
of the McDowell decision, the
Department of the Interior and the
Department of Agriculture
(Departments) assumed, on July 1, 1990,
responsibility for implementation of
Title VIII of ANILCA on public lands.
On June 29, 1990, the Departments
published the Temporary Subsistence
Management Regulations for Public
Lands in Alaska in the Federal Register
(55 FR 27114). Permanent regulations
were jointly published on May 29, 1992
(57 FR 22940), and have been amended
since then.
As a result of this joint process
between Interior and Agriculture, these
regulations can be found in the titles for
Agriculture and Interior in the Code of
Federal Regulations (CFR) both in title
36, ‘‘Parks, Forests, and Public
Property,’’ and title 50, ‘‘Wildlife and
Fisheries,’’ at 36 CFR 242.1–28 and 50
CFR 100.1–28, respectively. The
regulations contain the following
subparts: Subpart A, General Provisions;
Subpart B, Program Structure; Subpart
C, Board Determinations; and Subpart
D, Subsistence Taking of Fish and
Wildlife.
Consistent with Subparts A, B, and C
of these regulations, as revised May 7,
2002 (67 FR 30559), and December 27,
2005 (70 FR 76400), the Departments
established a Federal Subsistence Board
(Board) to administer the Federal
Subsistence Management Program, as
established by the Secretaries. The
Board’s composition includes a Chair
appointed by the Secretary of the
Interior with concurrence of the
Secretary of Agriculture; the Alaska
Regional Director, U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service; the Alaska Regional
Director, U.S. National Park Service; the
Alaska State Director, U.S. Bureau of
Land Management (BLM); the Alaska
Regional Director, U.S. Bureau of Indian
Affairs; and the Alaska Regional
Forester, USDA Forest Service. Through
the Board, these agencies participate in
the development of regulations for
Subparts A, B, and C, and the annual
Subpart D regulations.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
17:17 Aug 11, 2006
Jkt 208001
Rural Determination Process
With a Federal Register notice on
October 5, 1990 (55 FR 40897), the
newly established Federal Subsistence
Board initiated the preparation of an
Environmental Impact Statement as a
vehicle for widespread public review
and participation in the development of
the final temporary regulations. The
rural determination process was
included, and subsequently on
November 23, 1990 (55 FR 48877), the
Board published another notice in the
Federal Register explaining the
proposed Federal process for making
rural determinations, the criteria to be
used, and the application of those
criteria in preliminary determinations.
Public meetings were held in
approximately 56 Alaskan communities,
specifically to solicit comments on the
proposed Federal Subsistence
Management Program. On December 17,
1990, the Board adopted final rural and
nonrural determinations, which were
published on January 3, 1991 (56 FR
236). Final programmatic regulations
were published on May 29, 1992, with
only slight variations in the rural
determination process (57 FR 22940).
Federal subsistence regulations
require that the rural/nonrural status of
communities or areas be reviewed every
10 years, beginning with the availability
of the 2000 census data. The Board
evaluated several options for conducting
the review and decided to adopt an
approach similar to that taken in 1990,
which used criteria established in
Federal subsistence regulations. The
review was conducted with an emphasis
on what has changed since 1990.
Although the process uses data from
the 2000 census for its review, some
data were not compiled and available
until 2005. Data from the Alaska
Department of Labor were used to
supplement the census data.
During February–July 2005, the staff
of the Federal Subsistence Management
Program conducted an initial review of
the rural status of Alaska communities,
looking at the 2000 census data for each
community or area with an emphasis on
what had changed since 1990. From this
initial review, staff compiled a report
that included a proposed list of
communities and areas for which
further analysis appeared warranted. In
addition, the report included the
method used to develop this list. In
August–October 2005, the public and
Federal Subsistence Regional Advisory
Councils were invited to comment on
the results of this initial review.
At a meeting in Anchorage on
December 6–7, 2005, the Board took
public testimony and determined that
PO 00000
Frm 00007
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
46417
additional information was needed on
10 communities and areas before it
decided upon any potential changes.
• For three communities, analysis
was focused on evaluation of rural/
nonrural status, as follows:
Kodiak, Adak, and Prudhoe Bay:
Currently Kodiak and Prudhoe Bay are
considered rural, and Adak is
considered nonrural. These three
communities were further analyzed as
to their rural/nonrural status.
• For five nonrural groupings of
communities and areas, further analysis
evaluated the possibility of excluding or
including places, as follows:
Fairbanks North Star Borough:
Evaluate whether to continue using the
entire borough as the nonrural area, or
separate some outlying areas and
evaluate their rural/nonrural status
independently.
Seward Area: Evaluate whether to
exclude Moose Pass and similarly
situated places from this nonrural
grouping and evaluate their rural/
nonrural status independently.
Wasilla/Palmer Area: Evaluate
whether to include Willow, Point
MacKenzie, and similarly situated
places in this nonrural grouping.
Homer Area: Evaluate whether to
include Fox River, Happy Valley, and
similarly situated places in this
nonrural grouping.
Kenai Area: Evaluate whether to
exclude Clam Gulch and similarly
situated places from this nonrural
grouping and evaluate their rural/
nonrural status independently.
• In addition, two areas were
recommended for further analysis as
follows:
Ketchikan Area: Evaluate whether to
include Saxman, and areas of growth
and development outside the current
nonrural boundary, and evaluate the
rural/nonrural status of the whole area.
Delta Junction, Big Delta, Deltana and
Fort Greely: Evaluate whether some or
all of these communities should be
grouped, and their rural/nonrural status
evaluated collectively.
This list for additional analysis
differed from the proposed list put out
for public comment in July 2005, in
that: (1) The scope of the review was
broadened for the Ketchikan area,
currently considered nonrural, to
include an analysis of rural/nonrural
characteristics of the entire area; (2) the
rural/nonrural status of Prudhoe Bay
was added; and (3) additional analysis
of Sitka was not believed to be
necessary.
Sitka, whose population had
increased from 8,588 people in 1990 to
8,835 in 2000, had been identified as an
area possibly warranting further
E:\FR\FM\14AUP1.SGM
14AUP1
jlentini on PROD1PC65 with PROPOSAL
46418
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 156 / Monday, August 14, 2006 / Proposed Rules
analysis. However, during its December
6–7, 2005, meeting, the Board heard
substantial public testimony regarding
the rural characteristics of Sitka and
determined that no additional analysis
was necessary. The Board is proposing
to leave Sitka’s rural status unchanged.
During January–May 2006, Federal
subsistence staff conducted in-depth
analyses of each community or area on
the Board-approved list of communities
and areas identified for further analysis.
On June 22, 2006, the Board met in
executive session to develop the list of
communities and areas they believe to
be nonrural. Those communities and
areas are identified in this proposed
rule.
Population size is a fundamental
distinguishing characteristic between
rural and nonrural communities. Under
the current programmatic guidance in
Federal subsistence regulations:
• A community with a population of
2,500 or less is deemed rural, unless it
possesses significant characteristics of a
nonrural nature, or is considered to be
socially and economically a part of a
nonrural area.
• A community with a population of
more than 7,000 is deemed nonrural,
unless it possesses significant
characteristics of a rural nature.
• A community with a population
above 2,500 but not more than 7,000 is
evaluated to determine its rural/
nonrural status. The community
characteristics considered in this
evaluation may include, but are not
limited to, diversity and development of
the local economy, use of fish and
wildlife, community infrastructure,
transportation, and educational
institutions.
Communities that are economically,
socially, and communally integrated are
combined for evaluation purposes. The
Board identified three guidelines or
criteria for analysis to assist in its
determination of whether or not to
group communities in its review of rural
determinations. The criteria to be used
include: (1) Are the communities in
proximity and road-accessible to one
another? The first criterion, proximity
and road accessibility, is considered a
logical first step in evaluating the
relationship between communities, and,
applied in relation to the other two
criteria, is considered a reasonable
indicator of economic, social, and
communal integration. (2) Do they share
a common high school attendance area?
The second criterion, regarding sharing
a common high school attendance area,
is taken to be an indicator of the social
integration of communities. This is an
improvement by way of modification
from the former criterion of a shared
VerDate Aug<31>2005
17:17 Aug 11, 2006
Jkt 208001
school district. The public pointed out
in past testimony that attendance in a
common school district often reflects
political or administrative boundaries
rather than social integration. A shared
social experience is better captured by
the shared high school criterion. (3) Do
30% or more of the working people
commute from one community to
another? This criterion, regarding
whether working people commute from
one community to another, was
identified as providing meaningful
information relating to the grouping of
communities. Also, the U.S. Census
uses this criterion because commuting
to work is an easily understood measure
that reflects social and economic
integration. These criteria were not
considered separately, but assessed
collectively, with the recommendation
to group communities being dependent
upon the collective assessment.
Community characteristics and
specific indicators that the Board used
to evaluate rural/nonrural status
include: (1) Economy—wage
employment, percent unemployment,
per capita income, diversity of services,
cost-of-food index, and number of stores
defined as large national retailers; (2)
community infrastructure—including
the cost of electricity; (3) fish and
wildlife use—variety of species used per
household, percentage of households
participating, level of average harvest
per capita for all subsistence resources
combined, and level of average harvest
per capita for salmon and large land
mammals only; (4) transportation—
variety of means, predominant means,
and length of road system; and (5)
educational institutions present in the
community.
The Board’s analysis and preliminary
efforts to distinguish between rural
places and nonrural places were heavily
reliant on population size, but when the
Board used other characteristics, its
approach was based on a totality of the
circumstances. Unemployment is
generally higher and per capita income
is generally lower in rural places than
in nonrural places. Cost of food and cost
of electricity were generally higher in
the rural communities than in the
nonrural. Subsistence per capita harvest
of all resources shows a pattern of
increasing amount with decreasing
population size among nonrural areas,
and typically higher levels in rural
communities. The per capita harvest of
salmon and large land mammals also
shows a general pattern of increasing
amount with decreasing population size
among nonrural areas, and typically
higher levels in rural communities.
There were no large national retailers
found in the rural communities
PO 00000
Frm 00008
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
examined (other than Kodiak which is
being proposed as nonrural), or in the
three smallest nonrural communities or
areas. Population density was generally
higher for most nonrural places than it
was for rural places.
Summarized below are the Board’s
recommendation for each area analyzed
and the justification for that
recommendation.
Adak: Recommend changing Adak’s
status from nonrural to rural. Following
the closure of the military base, the
community of Adak has decreased in
population by 94 percent from 1990 to
2000. It currently has 167 residents
(2005), which is well below the
presumptive rural threshold of 2,500
persons. Adak is also extremely remote
and is accessible only by boat or plane,
with the nearest community (Atka) 169
miles away. With the changes that have
occurred since the 1990s, Adak now has
rural characteristics typical of a small
isolated community.
Prudhoe Bay (including Deadhorse):
Recommend changing Prudhoe Bay’s
status from rural to nonrural. In 2000
Prudhoe Bay had one permanent
household comprised of five people.
There were reportedly no permanent
residents in February 2006. Prudhoe
Bay has none of the characteristics
typical of a rural community. Prudhoe
Bay is an industrial enclave built for the
sole purpose of extracting oil. The oil
companies provide everything
employees need: Lodging, food, health
care, and recreation. The thousands of
people in Prudhoe Bay do not live there
permanently, but work multi week-long
shifts. They eat in cafeterias and live in
group quarters. There are no schools,
grocery stores, or churches. Subsistence
is not a part of the way of life. Hunting
in the area and possession of firearms
and ammunition are prohibited. Based
on its industrial enclave characteristics,
Prudhoe Bay should be determined to
be nonrural.
Fairbanks North Star Borough: No
changes to this nonrural grouping are
recommended. In applying the grouping
criteria as indicators of economic,
social, and communal integration, the
Board believes that the current nonrural
boundary of the Fairbanks Area should
continue to be defined as the Fairbanks
North Star Borough boundary. No
census designated places (CDPs) should
be excluded from the nonrural grouping
for the following reasons: (1) All CDPs
are road accessible to one another.
Although the Harding-Birch Lakes and
Salcha areas are more sparsely
populated than central areas of the
borough, both communities include
many occasional-use homes owned by
Fairbanks residents. Further, both
E:\FR\FM\14AUP1.SGM
14AUP1
jlentini on PROD1PC65 with PROPOSAL
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 156 / Monday, August 14, 2006 / Proposed Rules
places are home to only a few yearround residents. (2) The majority of the
Borough’s high school students are
bused to one of the schools located in
Fairbanks, North Pole, or Eielson. (3)
The Remainder area of the North Star
Borough should be included in the
grouping because the majority of the
population is road connected and over
half (57 percent) of the workers residing
in this area commute to Fairbanks for
employment. Additionally, 75 percent
of the workers living in Harding–Birch
Lakes drive to the City of Fairbanks to
work, and 71 percent of the working
population in Pleasant Valley commute
to the City of Fairbanks.
Delta Junction Vicinity: No changes
are recommended for the rural status of
Delta Junction, or the communities in
the immediate vicinity. In applying the
grouping criteria as indicators of
economic, social, and communal
integration, the Board believes that the
four Delta Junction vicinity CDPs
assigned for analysis (Delta Junction,
Big Delta, Deltana, and Fort Greely)
should be grouped as an area for
purposes of rural/nonrural analysis
because they fulfill the three guidelines
for grouping: (1) All four CDPs are road
connected and proximal; (2) the
majority of the high school-aged
students from Big Delta, Deltana, and
Fort Greely attend high school in Delta
Junction; and (3) in the two outlying
CDPs, over 30 percent of the workers
commute within the vicinity (41 percent
of the workers living in Big Delta
commute to either Delta Junction,
Deltana, Fort Greely, or to a Remainder
area within the Southeast Fairbanks
Census Area, and 45 percent of the
workers in Deltana commute to Delta
Junction or Fort Greely).
The four places grouped into the Delta
Junction Area should remain rural in
status. The population size of the
grouping (3,921) places it in the
nonpresumptive midrange, and
information on the characteristics of the
grouping, although somewhat limited, is
indicative of a rural character. The
recent economic upswing to the area
due to construction of the Missile
Defense system at Fort Greely and
development of the Pogo Mine is
thought to be temporary.
Seward Area: No changes to this
nonrural grouping are recommended. In
applying the grouping criteria as
indicators of economic, social, and
communal integration, the Board
believes that the Moose Pass, Crown
Point, and Primrose CDPs should
remain within the Seward Area
grouping. Moose Pass, Crown Point, and
Primrose CDPs meet all the criteria for
grouping: proximity and road-
VerDate Aug<31>2005
17:17 Aug 11, 2006
Jkt 208001
accessibility to the Seward Area; their
students attend the high school in
Seward; and the level of workers
commuting to Seward for employment
is greater than 30 percent.
Wasilla/Palmer Area: Include the
Point MacKenzie CDP in the nonrural
Wasilla/Palmer Area grouping; do not
include the Willow CDP. The Board
believes that the Point Mackenzie CDP
meets all the criteria for grouping with
the Wasilla/Palmer Area. The Point
Mackenzie CDP is in proximity to the
Wasilla/Palmer Area and roadaccessible; their students attend Wasilla
High School; and the level of workers
commuting to the Wasilla/Palmer Area
for employment is at 50 percent. This
change would make Point McKenzie
part of a nonrural area, a change from
its current rural status. The Board
recommends that the Willow CDP not
be included in the Wasilla/Palmer Area
grouping. Students in the Willow CDP
are located in two attendance areas for
high schools, within and outside of the
Wasilla/Palmer Area. The level of
commuting for workers to the Wasilla/
Palmer Area is at 23.9 percent, which is
below the criteria identified for
grouping.
Kenai Area: Adjust the boundaries of
the nonrural Kenai Area to include all
of the current Sterling CDP, and propose
no change to the current grouping and
status of Clam Gulch CDP as part of the
nonrural Kenai Area. It appears that
Clam Gulch CDP should continue to be
included in the Kenai Area grouping
because, although students of Clam
Gulch CDP attend high school outside of
the Kenai Area, the commuting of
workers to the Kenai Area is on the
order of 30 percent, and Clam Gulch is
connected by paved highway to the
Kenai Area, with which it has been
grouped since initial determinations
were made in 1990. It also appears that
Cohoe CDP should remain within the
Kenai Area grouping. Cohoe students
attend a high school in the Kenai Area
and the level of work commuting, at
69.5 percent, is significantly above the
minimum criteria for grouping. The
Sterling CDP has been part of the
nonrural Kenai Area since 1990. For the
2000 census, the Sterling CDP has
expanded in size, such that a significant
portion of the CDP extends beyond the
current boundary of the nonrural Kenai
Area. The Board believes that the
boundaries of the Kenai Area should be
adjusted to include all of the current
Sterling CDP. Students within the
Sterling CDP go to high school within
the Kenai Area and the level of
commuting is at 61.2 percent of
workers, well above the minimum
criteria for grouping.
PO 00000
Frm 00009
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
46419
Homer Area: Adjust the boundaries of
the nonrural Homer Area to include all
of the Fritz Creek CDP (not including
Voznesenka), and the North Fork Road
portion of the Anchor Point CDP. This
change would make Fritz Creek East,
except for Voznesenka, and the North
Fork Road portion of the Anchor Point
CDP nonrural, a change from their
current rural status. The Board has
tentatively concluded for Fritz Creek
East that, except for Voznesenka, the
residents are economically, socially, and
communally integrated with the Homer
Area. Fritz Creek East is in proximity
and road-connected to the Homer Area.
The Homer High School attendance area
includes their students, and 43.8
percent of their workers commute to the
Homer Area. It appears that Voznesenka
should not be included in the Homer
Area because, while it is in proximity
and road-connected to the Homer Area,
the number of jobs shown as being
located within the Homer Area is only
19.5 percent, and Voznesenka students
attend high school in Voznesenka.
The Board believes that residents of
the North Fork Road area fully meet two
of the three criteria, proximity and
commuting of workers. For the third
criteria, although students have the
option of attendance in Nikolaevsk
School or Ninilchik High School, the
vast majority go to Homer High School.
This is sufficient basis for considering
the North Fork Road area of the Anchor
Point CDP to be economically, socially,
and communally integrated with the
nonrural Homer Area.
The Board believes that residents of
the Happy Valley CDP fulfill only the
proximity criterion for grouping with
the Homer Area. Happy Valley students
are within the Ninilchik School high
school attendance area, and less than 30
percent of Happy Valley workers
commute to the Homer Area (14.4
percent). It appears that residents of the
Happy Valley CDP should not be
included with the Homer Area.
It appears that the Nikolaevsk CDP,
north of the Anchor Point CDP and
connected to the Homer Area by the
North Fork Road, does not warrant
inclusion in the Homer Area. There is
a K–12 school in Nikolaevsk, and data
show that only 22 percent of jobs held
by Nikolaevsk residents were located in
the Homer Area.
It appears that residents of Fox River
CDP, primarily in the communities of
Razdolna and Kachemak Selo, do not
meet any of the three criteria, which
would indicate that Fox River residents
are not economically, socially, or
communally integrated with the Homer
Area.
E:\FR\FM\14AUP1.SGM
14AUP1
jlentini on PROD1PC65 with PROPOSAL
46420
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 156 / Monday, August 14, 2006 / Proposed Rules
Kodiak Area: Define the Kodiak Area
to include the road system, including
the City of Kodiak, the Mill Bay area,
Womens Bay, Bell’s Flats, and the Coast
Guard Station, but not including
Chiniak, Pasagshak, and Anton Larsen,
and change the status of the Kodiak
Area, as defined, from rural to nonrural.
The Board believes that the Kodiak
Station CDP should be included in the
Kodiak Area grouping. The Kodiak
Station CDP directly fulfills two of the
three criteria for being grouped in the
Kodiak Area, and special consideration
is warranted in relation to the third
criterion: (1) The Kodiak Station CDP is
road-connected and adjacent to the City
of Kodiak; (2) the Kodiak Station CDP
does not have a high school; all students
attend high school in the City of Kodiak;
and (3) the special circumstance of
enlisted employment accounts for the
overall commuting level of workers to
Kodiak City being an estimated 11
percent of all working residents.
However, this can be attributed to the
fact that enlisted personnel residing on
the base are by duty assignment bound
to the base. Working dependents, who
are not bound to employment on the
base, virtually all work in Kodiak City.
While the worker commuting criterion
is thereby not met if one pools enlisted
personnel and working dependents, ties
to the Kodiak Area are otherwise
evident. The Board believes that the
Womens Bay CDP should be included in
the Kodiak Area grouping. Womens Bay
CDP fulfills all three criteria for being
grouped in the Kodiak Area: (1)
Womens Bay CDP is road-connected
and proximal to the City of Kodiak; (2)
Womens Bay CDP does not have a high
school; students attend high school in
the City of Kodiak; and (3) more than 30
percent of the working residents are
employed in the City of Kodiak.
The Board believes that the Chiniak
CDP should not be included in the
Kodiak Area grouping because (1)
although there is a road from Chiniak to
the City of Kodiak, it is a minimum of
a one-hour trip, and the 14 miles closest
to Chiniak are unpaved; (2) there is a
partial high school in Chiniak to grade
10, and only two-fifths of the high
school-aged children attend school in
Kodiak.
The Board believes that the roadconnected Remainder area should be
included in the Kodiak Area grouping,
with the exception of the Pasagshak and
Anton Larsen portions. The roadconnected Remainder area, with the
exceptions as noted, is proximal to the
City of Kodiak; students from the roadconnected Remainder area attend high
school in the City of Kodiak; and more
than 30 percent of the working residents
VerDate Aug<31>2005
17:17 Aug 11, 2006
Jkt 208001
of the Remainder area are employed in
the City of Kodiak. The road-connected
Remainder area of the Kodiak Area
includes people residing in Anton
Larsen and Pasagshak. There is no
information about these ‘‘sub-areas’’ of
the road-connected Remainder area,
thus it is unknown if students living in
these areas are taught through
correspondence, home-schooled, or
travel to Kodiak to attend high school.
It is also unknown how many people
commute to Kodiak City to work.
However, the Board determined that
despite the lack of information
regarding the three criteria for grouping,
the remoteness of Pasgashak and Anton
Larsen is comparable to the remoteness
of Chiniak, and therefore elected to
propose no change in the rural status of
these areas.
The population of the Kodiak Area—
estimated at approximately 12,000 in
2005—is well above the presumptive
nonrural population of 7,000 in Federal
regulations. The population has
increased slightly since 1990. Kodiak’s
per capita income is relatively high and
it also has a 2-year college, high
diversity of services, a large national
retailer, fast food restaurants, and roads
linking the outlying area to the city. Of
the communities examined during this
analysis, the Kodiak Area is 34 percent
larger in population than the next
largest rural place, and its use of fish
and wildlife is 24 percent lower. While
the per capita harvest of subsistence
resources is higher in the Kodiak Area
than in some rural areas, it is well below
the levels in some other rural
communities.
Ketchikan Area: Define the Ketchikan
Area to include Pennock Island, parts of
Gravina Island, and the road system
connected to the City of Ketchikan,
except for the community of Saxman.
Saxman would retain its current rural
status, and the Ketchikan Area, as
defined, would retain its nonrural
status. Saxman is directly adjacent to
Ketchikan, connected by road, and
surrounded by the outlying Ketchikan
development. Visually, the only
distinguishing feature to indicate the
boundary between Ketchikan and
Saxman is a sign on the South Tongass
Highway. Saxman has clearly been
overtaken and is surrounded by the
geographic expansion of Ketchikan;
Saxman students attend high school in
Ketchikan; and 64 percent of the
workers in Saxman commute to
Ketchikan for their employment, with
another 8 percent commuting to the
Remainder area of the borough to work.
Even though the grouping criteria would
indicate including Saxman with the
Ketchikan Area, social and economic
PO 00000
Frm 00010
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
characteristics indicate that Saxman
should not be grouped in the Ketchikan
Area. Saxman is a small, close-knit
community that is socially and
politically separate from Ketchikan. The
residents of Saxman have two distinct
entities to separate themselves from
Ketchikan, the traditional government
(Organized Village of Saxman) and the
municipal government (City of Saxman).
Socioeconomic indicators suggest
distinctions between the two
communities. For example, Saxman has
a higher unemployment rate, lower per
capita income, higher percentage of
residents below the poverty level than
those found in Ketchikan, and a 70
percent Native population. Another
distinguishing characteristic of the
community is that Saxman residents
depend much more heavily on the
harvest of subsistence resources.
Saxman’s average per capita harvest of
217 pounds is substantially more than
has been estimated for the Ketchikan
Area. Thus, while the grouping criteria
lead to including Saxman with the
Ketchikan Area, the unique
socioeconomic characteristics of
Saxman suggest that it should remain
separate from the Ketchikan Area.
The Remainder fulfills all three
criteria for grouping with the Ketchikan
Area: (1) The Remainder, other than
nearby Gravina and Pennock Islands, is
road-connected to the City of Ketchikan;
(2) Students in the Remainder attend
high school in Ketchikan; and (3) Over
30 percent of the workers from the
Remainder commute to work in the City
of Ketchikan. Presently, most of the
Remainder is included in the nonrural
Ketchikan Area, established in 1990,
except for extensions of the highway to
the north and south that have since
occurred.
The population of the Ketchikan Area
was estimated at 12,720 in 2005
(excluding Saxman), having decreased
slightly from 1990. Ketchikan possesses
many nonrural characteristics,
including having a 2-year college, a
large national retailer, car dealerships,
fast food restaurants, and roads linking
the outlying surrounding area to the
city. Although the pulp mill closed,
there is still some diversity in the
economy with tourism, fishing, fish
processing, timber, retail services, and
government providing the majority of
employment. There is a hospital and a
high diversity of services offered. The
Ketchikan Area had the sixth highest
population in the state in 2005,
considering community groupings as
defined by the Board. All other areas
with higher populations are currently
considered nonrural in Federal
subsistence regulations. Three areas
E:\FR\FM\14AUP1.SGM
14AUP1
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 156 / Monday, August 14, 2006 / Proposed Rules
with smaller populations are currently
classified as nonrural and are not
proposed for a change in status: the
Homer Area, Seward Area, and Valdez.
Harvest of subsistence resources in the
Ketchikan Area is lower than is
characteristic of rural communities.
This change would make the
extended road connected areas of
Ketchikan nonrural, a change from their
current rural status.
The list of nonrural communities and
areas, along with those other nonrural
communities or areas whose status
would remain unchanged, is published
herein as the proposed rule. All other
communities and areas of Alaska not
listed herein would retain their rural
determination. We propose to amend
Section ll.23, which identifies those
communities and areas of Alaska that
are determined to be rural and nonrural.
We have made maps available for the
nonrural areas. The purpose of these
maps is to provide to the subsistence
user an overall graphic representation of
the extent of the nonrural areas. To view
maps, go to the Office of Subsistence
Management Web site at https://
alaska.fws.gov/asm/home.html. If you
do not have access to the internet, you
may contact the Office of Subsistence
Management at the address or phone
number shown at ADDRESSES or FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT,
respectively, and we will send the maps
to you.
During August–October 2006, the
public and Federal Subsistence Regional
Advisory Councils are invited to
comment on the proposed rule.
Hearings in Kodiak, Sitka, Saxman, and
Ketchikan will be held in September
and October 2006. The specific dates,
times, and locations will be announced
in locally and Statewide—circulated
newspapers or you may call the phone
number shown at FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT. Additional
hearings may be scheduled by the
Board, as appropriate. In December 12–
13, 2006, in Anchorage, Alaska, the
Federal Subsistence Board will meet to
consider the comments received and
may make changes to the proposed rule.
From the decisions made in December,
the Board will develop a final rule for
publication in the Federal Register. The
effective date of any community or area
changing from a rural to nonrural status
is 5 years after the date of publication
of the final rule in the Federal Register.
For communities or areas that change
from nonrural to rural, the effective date
is 30 days after the date of publication
of the final rule in the Federal Register.
Because the Federal Subsistence
Management Program relates to public
lands managed by an agency or agencies
in both the Departments of Agriculture
and the Interior, we propose to
incorporate identical text into 36 CFR
part 242 and 50 CFR part 100.
Conformance With Statutory and
Regulatory Authorities
National Environmental Policy Act
Compliance
A Draft Environmental Impact
Statement (DEIS) for developing a
Federal Subsistence Management
Program was distributed for public
comment on October 7, 1991. That
document described the major issues
associated with Federal subsistence
management as identified through
public meetings, written comments, and
46421
staff analysis, and examined the
environmental consequences of four
alternatives. Proposed regulations
(Subparts A, B, and C) that would
implement the preferred alternative
were included in the DEIS as an
appendix. The DEIS and the proposed
administrative regulations presented a
framework for an annual regulatory
cycle regarding subsistence hunting and
fishing regulations (Subpart D). The
Final Environmental Impact Statement
(FEIS) was published on February 28,
1992.
Based on the public comments
received, the analysis contained in the
FEIS, and the recommendations of the
Federal Subsistence Board and the
Department of the Interior’s Subsistence
Policy Group, the Secretary of the
Interior, with the concurrence of the
Secretary of Agriculture, through the
U.S. Department of Agriculture—Forest
Service, implemented Alternative IV as
identified in the DEIS and FEIS (Record
of Decision on Subsistence Management
for Federal Public Lands in Alaska
(ROD), signed April 6, 1992). The DEIS
and the selected alternative in the FEIS
defined the administrative framework of
an annual regulatory cycle for
subsistence hunting and fishing
regulations. The final rule for
Subsistence Management Regulations
for Public Lands in Alaska, Subparts A,
B, and C, published May 29, 1992,
implemented the Federal Subsistence
Management Program and included a
framework for an annual cycle for
subsistence hunting and fishing
regulations. The following Federal
Register documents pertain to this
rulemaking:
FEDERAL REGISTER DOCUMENTS PERTAINING TO SUBSISTENCE MANAGEMENT REGULATIONS FOR PUBLIC LANDS IN
ALASKA, SUBPARTS A AND B
Date of publication
Category
Detail
57 FR 22940 ......
May 29, 1992 ...............
Final Rule .....................
64 FR 1276 ........
jlentini on PROD1PC65 with PROPOSAL
Federal Register
citation
January 8, 1999 ...........
Final Rule (amended) ..
66 FR 31533 ......
June 12, 2001 ..............
Interim Rule ..................
‘‘Subsistence Management Regulations for Public Lands in Alaska;
Final Rule’’ was published in the Federal Register establishing a Federal Subsistence Management Program.
Amended 7 FR 22940 to include subsistence activities occurring on inland navigable waters in which the United States has a reserved
water right and to identify specific Federal land units where reserved
water rights exist. Extended the Federal Subsistence Board’s management to all Federal lands selected under the Alaska Native
Claims Settlement Act and the Alaska Statehood Act and situated
within the boundaries of a Conservation System Unit, National Recreation Area, National Conservation Area, or any new national forest or
forest addition, until conveyed to the State of Alaska or an Alaska
Native Corporation. Specified and clarified Secretaries’ authority to
determine when hunting, fishing, or trapping activities taking place in
Alaska off the public lands interfere with the subsistence priority.
Expanded the authority that the Board may delegate to agency field officials and clarified the procedures for enacting emergency or temporary restrictions, closures, or openings.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
18:13 Aug 11, 2006
Jkt 208001
PO 00000
Frm 00011
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
E:\FR\FM\14AUP1.SGM
14AUP1
46422
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 156 / Monday, August 14, 2006 / Proposed Rules
FEDERAL REGISTER DOCUMENTS PERTAINING TO SUBSISTENCE MANAGEMENT REGULATIONS FOR PUBLIC LANDS IN
ALASKA, SUBPARTS A AND B—Continued
Federal Register
citation
Date of publication
Category
Detail
67 FR 30559 ......
May 7, 2002 .................
Final Rule .....................
68 FR 7703 ........
February 18, 2003 .......
Direct Final Rule ..........
68 FR 23035 ......
April 30, 2003 ...............
68 FR 60957 ......
70 FR 76400 ......
October 14, 2004 .........
December 27, 2005 .....
Affirmation of Direct
Final Rule.
Final Rule .....................
Final Rule .....................
In response to comments on an interim rule, amended the operating
regulations. Also corrected some inadvertent errors and oversights of
previous rules.
Clarified how old a person must be to receive certain subsistence use
permits and removed the requirement that Regional Councils must
have an odd number of members.
Received no adverse comments on 68 FR 7703. Adopted direct final
rule.
Established Regional Council membership goals.
Revised jurisdiction in marine waters and clarified jurisdiction relative to
military lands.
An environmental assessment was
prepared in 1997 on the expansion of
Federal jurisdiction over fisheries and is
available from the office listed under
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT. The
Secretary of the Interior with the
concurrence of the Secretary of
Agriculture determined that the
expansion of Federal jurisdiction did
not constitute a major Federal action
significantly affecting the human
environment and therefore signed a
Finding of No Significant Impact.
Compliance With Section 810 of
ANILCA
The intent of all Federal subsistence
regulations is to accord subsistence uses
of fish and wildlife on public lands a
priority over the taking of fish and
wildlife on such lands for other
purposes, unless restriction is necessary
to conserve healthy fish and wildlife
populations. A section 810 analysis was
completed as part of the FEIS process.
The final section 810 analysis
determination appeared in the April 6,
1992, ROD, which concluded that the
Federal Subsistence Management
Program may have some local impacts
on subsistence uses, but that the
program is not likely to significantly
restrict subsistence uses.
jlentini on PROD1PC65 with PROPOSAL
Paperwork Reduction Act
This rule contains no new
information collection requirements
subject to Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) approval under the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995. The
information collection requirements
described in the CFR regulations were
approved by OMB under 44 U.S.C. 3501
and were assigned clearance number
1018–0075, which expires August 31,
2006. We will not conduct or sponsor,
and you are not required to respond to,
a collection of information request
unless it displays a currently valid OMB
control number.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
18:13 Aug 11, 2006
Jkt 208001
Other Requirements
Economic Effects—This rule is not a
significant rule subject to OMB review
under Executive Order 12866. This
rulemaking will impose no significant
costs on small entities; this rule does
not restrict any existing sport or
commercial fishery on the public lands,
and subsistence fisheries will continue
at essentially the same levels as they
presently occur. The number of
businesses and the amount of trade that
will result from this Federal land’related
activity is unknown but expected to be
insignificant.
The Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980
(5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.) requires
preparation of regulatory flexibility
analyses for rules that will have a
significant economic effect on a
substantial number of small entities,
which include small businesses,
organizations, or governmental
jurisdictions. The Departments have
determined that this rulemaking will
not have a significant economic effect
on a substantial number of small entities
within the meaning of the Regulatory
Flexibility Act.
This rulemaking will impose no
significant costs on small entities; the
exact number of businesses and the
amount of trade that will result from
this Federal land—related activity is
unknown. The aggregate effect is an
insignificant positive economic effect on
a number of small entities, such as
tackle, boat, sporting goods dealers, and
gasoline dealers. The number of small
entities affected is unknown; however,
the fact that the positive effects will be
seasonal in nature and will, in most
cases, merely continue preexisting uses
of public lands indicates that the effects
will not be significant.
Title VIII of ANILCA requires the
Secretaries to administer a subsistence
preference on public lands. The scope of
this program is limited by definition to
certain public lands. Likewise, these
PO 00000
Frm 00012
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
regulations have no potential takings of
private property implications as defined
by Executive Order 12630.
The Secretaries have determined and
certify pursuant to the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act, 2 U.S.C. 1502 et
seq., that this rulemaking will not
impose a cost of $100 million or more
in any given year on local or State
governments or private entities. The
implementation of this rule is by
Federal agencies, and no cost is
involved to any State or local entities or
Tribal governments.
The Secretaries have determined that
these regulations meet the applicable
standards provided in Sections 3(a) and
3(b)(2) of Executive Order 12988 on
Civil Justice Reform.
In accordance with Executive Order
13132, the rule does not have sufficient
federalism implications to warrant the
preparation of a Federalism Assessment.
Title VIII of ANILCA precludes the State
from exercising subsistence
management authority over fish and
wildlife resources on Federal lands
unless the State program is compliant
with the requirements of that Title.
In accordance with the President’s
memorandum of April 29, 1994,
‘‘Government-to-Government Relations
with Native American Tribal
Governments’’ (59 FR 22951), 512 DM 2,
and E.O. 13175, we have evaluated
possible effects on Federally recognized
Indian tribes and have determined that
there are no substantial direct effects.
The Bureau of Indian Affairs is a
participating agency in this rulemaking.
On May 18, 2001, the President issued
Executive Order 13211 on regulations
that significantly affect energy supply,
distribution, or use. This Executive
Order requires agencies to prepare
Statements of Energy Effects when
undertaking certain actions. As this rule
is not a significant regulatory action
under Executive Order 13211, affecting
energy supply, distribution, or use, this
E:\FR\FM\14AUP1.SGM
14AUP1
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 156 / Monday, August 14, 2006 / Proposed Rules
action is not a significant action and no
Statement of Energy Effects is required.
William Knauer drafted these
regulations under the guidance of Peter
J. Probasco of the Office of Subsistence
Management, Alaska Regional Office,
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service,
Anchorage, Alaska. Chuck Ardizzone,
Alaska State Office, Bureau of Land
Management; Greg Bos, Carl Jack, and
Jerry Berg, Alaska Regional Office, U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service; Sandy
Rabinowitch and Nancy Swanton,
Alaska Regional Office, National Park
Service; Dr. Warren Eastland, Pat
Petrivelli, and Dr. Glenn Chen, Alaska
Regional Office, Bureau of Indian
Affairs; and Steve Kessler, Alaska
Regional Office, USDA—Forest Service
provided additional guidance.
List of Subjects
36 CFR Part 242
Administrative practice and
procedure, Alaska, Fish, National
forests, Public lands, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Wildlife.
List of Subjects
(3) Juneau area—including Juneau,
West Juneau, and Douglas;
(4) Kenai area—including Kenai,
Soldotna, Sterling, Nikiski, Salamatof,
Kalifornsky, Kasilof, and Clam Gulch;
(5) Ketchikan area—including all
parts of the road system connected to
the City of Ketchikan (except Saxman),
Pennock Island, and parts of Gravina
Island;
(6) Kodiak area—including the City of
Kodiak, the Mill Bay area, the Coast
Guard Station, Womens Bay, and Bells
Flats;
(7) Municipality of Anchorage;
(8) Prudhoe Bay;
(9) Seward area—including Seward
and Moose Pass;
(10) Valdez; and
(11) Wasilla/Palmer area—including
Wasilla, Palmer, Sutton, Big Lake,
Houston, Point MacKenzie, and
Bodenberg Butte.
You may obtain maps delineating the
boundaries of nonrural areas from the
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Office of
Subsistence Management.
*
*
*
*
*
Dated: July 24, 2006.
Peter J. Probasco,
Acting Chair, Federal Subsistence Board.
50 CFR Part 100
Administrative practice and
procedure, Alaska, Fish, National
forests, Public lands, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Wildlife.
For the reasons set out in the
preamble, the Secretaries propose to
amend title 36, part 242, and title 50,
part 100, of the Code of Federal
Regulations, as set forth below.
Dated: July 24, 2006.
Steve Kessler,
Subsistence Program Leader, USDA—Forest
Service.
[FR Doc. 06–6902 Filed 8–11–06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410–11–P; 4310–55–P
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
PART ll—SUBSISTENCE
MANAGEMENT REGULATIONS FOR
PUBLIC LANDS IN ALASKA
Forest Service
1. The authority citation for both 36
CFR part 242 and 50 CFR part 100
would continue to read as follows:
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
36 CFR Part 242
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 3, 472, 551, 668dd,
3101–3126; 18 U.S.C. 3551–3586; 43 U.S.C.
1733.
Fish and Wildlife Service
Subpart C—Board Determinations
RIN 1018–AU15
2. In Subpart C of 36 CFR part 242
and 50 CFR part 100, § ll.23(a) would
be revised to read as follows:
*
*
*
*
*
Subsistence Management Regulations
for Public Lands in Alaska, Subpart C
and Subpart D—2007–2008
Subsistence Taking of Wildlife
Regulations; 2007–2008 Subsistence
Taking of Fish on the Kenai Peninsula
Regulations
jlentini on PROD1PC65 with PROPOSAL
§ ll.23
Rural Determinations.
(a) The Board has determined all
communities and areas to be rural in
accordance with § ll.15 except the
following:
(1) Fairbanks North Star Borough;
(2) Homer area—including Homer,
Anchor Point, North Fork Road area,
Kachemak City, and the Fritz Creek area
(not including Voznesenka);
VerDate Aug<31>2005
17:17 Aug 11, 2006
Jkt 208001
50 CFR Part 100
Forest Service, Agriculture;
Fish and Wildlife Service, Interior.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCIES:
This proposed rule would
establish regulations for hunting and
trapping seasons, harvest limits,
methods, and means related to taking of
SUMMARY:
PO 00000
Frm 00013
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
46423
wildlife for subsistence uses during the
2007–2008 regulatory year. The
rulemaking is necessary because
Subpart D is subject to an annual public
review cycle. When final, this
rulemaking would replace the wildlife
taking regulations included in the
‘‘Subsistence Management Regulations
for Public Lands in Alaska, Subpart D—
2006–2007 Subsistence Taking of Fish
and Wildlife Regulations,’’ which expire
on June 30, 2007. This rule would also
amend the Customary and Traditional
Use Determinations of the Federal
Subsistence Board and the General
Regulations on taking of wildlife. In
addition, at the request of the
Southcentral Subsistence Regional
Advisory Council, the Federal
Subsistence Board is accepting
proposals to revise the regulations for
fishing seasons, harvest limits, and
methods related to taking of fish on the
Kenai Peninsula for subsistence uses
during the 2007–2008 regulatory year.
DATES: The Federal Subsistence Board
must receive your written public
comments and proposals to change this
proposed rule no later than October 20,
2006. Federal Subsistence Regional
Advisory Councils (Regional Councils)
will hold public meetings to receive
proposals to change this proposed rule
on several dates from September 7,
2006, through October 20, 2006. See
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION for
additional information on the public
meetings, including dates.
ADDRESSES: You may submit proposals
electronically to Subsistence@fws.gov.
See SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION for file
formats and other information about
electronic filing. You may also submit
written comments and proposals to the
Office of Subsistence Management, 3601
C Street, Suite 1030, Anchorage, Alaska
99503. The public meetings will be held
at various locations in Alaska. See
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION for
additional information on locations of
the public meetings.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Pete
Probasco, Office of Subsistence
Management; (907) 786–3888. For
questions specific to National Forest
System lands, contact Steve Kessler,
(907) 786–3592.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Public Review Process—Regulation
Comments, Proposals, and Public
Meetings
The Federal Subsistence Board
(Board), through the Regional Councils,
will hold meetings on this proposed
rule at the following Alaska locations,
on the following dates:
E:\FR\FM\14AUP1.SGM
14AUP1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 71, Number 156 (Monday, August 14, 2006)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 46416-46423]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 06-6902]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Forest Service
36 CFR Part 242
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
50 CFR Part 100
RIN 1018-AT99
Subsistence Management Regulations for Public Lands in Alaska,
Subpart C; Nonrural Determinations
AGENCIES: Forest Service, Agriculture; Fish and Wildlife Service,
Interior.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This rule would revise the list of nonrural areas identified
by the Federal Subsistence Board (Board, we, us). Areas determined to
be nonrural are not eligible to participate in the Federal Subsistence
Management Program on Federal public lands in Alaska. We propose to
change Adak's status to rural. We also propose to add Prudhoe Bay and
the Kodiak Area, including the City of Kodiak, the Mill Bay area,
Womens Bay, Bell's Flats, and the Coast Guard Station to the list of
nonrural areas. The following areas would continue to be nonrural, but
we propose changes in their boundaries: the Kenai Area; the Wasilla/
Palmer Area, including Point McKenzie; the Homer Area, including Fritz
Creek East (except Voznesenka) and the North Fork Road area; and the
Ketchikan Area. We propose no other changes in status. However, new
information could lead to changes not proposed at this time.
DATES: We must receive your written public comments no later than
October 27, 2006.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments electronically to
Subsistence@fws.gov. See SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION for file format and
other information about electronic filing. You may also submit written
comments to the Office of Subsistence Management, 3601 C Street, Suite
1030, Anchorage, Alaska 99503.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Chair, Federal Subsistence Board, c/o
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Attention: Pete Probasco, Office of
Subsistence Management; (907) 786-3888. For questions specific to
National Forest System lands, contact Steve Kessler, Regional
Subsistence Program Leader, USDA, Forest Service, Alaska Region, (907)
786-3888.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Comments
Electronic filing of comments is preferred: You may submit
electronic comments and other data to Subsistence@fws.gov. Please
submit as MS Word or Adobe Acrobat (PDF) files, avoiding the use of any
special characters and any form of encryption.
Background
In Title VIII of the Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation
Act (ANILCA) (16 U.S.C. 3111-3126), Congress found that ``the situation
in Alaska is unique in that, in most cases, no practical alternative
means are available to replace the food supplies and other items
gathered from fish and wildlife which supply rural residents dependent
on subsistence uses * * *'' and that ``continuation of the opportunity
for subsistence uses of resources on public and other lands in Alaska
is threatened * * *.'' As a result, Title VIII requires, among other
things, that the Secretary of the Interior and the Secretary of
Agriculture (Secretaries) implement a program to provide rural Alaska
residents a priority for the taking of fish and wildlife on public
lands in Alaska for subsistence uses, unless the State of Alaska enacts
and implements laws of general applicability that are consistent with
ANILCA and that provide for the subsistence definition, priority, and
participation specified in sections 803, 804, and 805 of ANILCA.
[[Page 46417]]
The State implemented a program that the Department of the Interior
previously found to be consistent with ANILCA. However, in December
1989, the Alaska Supreme Court ruled in McDowell v. State of Alaska
that the rural priority in the State subsistence statute violated the
Alaska Constitution. The Court's ruling in McDowell caused the State to
delete the rural priority from the subsistence statute which therefore
negated State compliance with ANILCA. The Court stayed the effect of
the decision until July 1, 1990. As a result of the McDowell decision,
the Department of the Interior and the Department of Agriculture
(Departments) assumed, on July 1, 1990, responsibility for
implementation of Title VIII of ANILCA on public lands. On June 29,
1990, the Departments published the Temporary Subsistence Management
Regulations for Public Lands in Alaska in the Federal Register (55 FR
27114). Permanent regulations were jointly published on May 29, 1992
(57 FR 22940), and have been amended since then.
As a result of this joint process between Interior and Agriculture,
these regulations can be found in the titles for Agriculture and
Interior in the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) both in title 36,
``Parks, Forests, and Public Property,'' and title 50, ``Wildlife and
Fisheries,'' at 36 CFR 242.1-28 and 50 CFR 100.1-28, respectively. The
regulations contain the following subparts: Subpart A, General
Provisions; Subpart B, Program Structure; Subpart C, Board
Determinations; and Subpart D, Subsistence Taking of Fish and Wildlife.
Consistent with Subparts A, B, and C of these regulations, as
revised May 7, 2002 (67 FR 30559), and December 27, 2005 (70 FR 76400),
the Departments established a Federal Subsistence Board (Board) to
administer the Federal Subsistence Management Program, as established
by the Secretaries. The Board's composition includes a Chair appointed
by the Secretary of the Interior with concurrence of the Secretary of
Agriculture; the Alaska Regional Director, U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service; the Alaska Regional Director, U.S. National Park Service; the
Alaska State Director, U.S. Bureau of Land Management (BLM); the Alaska
Regional Director, U.S. Bureau of Indian Affairs; and the Alaska
Regional Forester, USDA Forest Service. Through the Board, these
agencies participate in the development of regulations for Subparts A,
B, and C, and the annual Subpart D regulations.
Rural Determination Process
With a Federal Register notice on October 5, 1990 (55 FR 40897),
the newly established Federal Subsistence Board initiated the
preparation of an Environmental Impact Statement as a vehicle for
widespread public review and participation in the development of the
final temporary regulations. The rural determination process was
included, and subsequently on November 23, 1990 (55 FR 48877), the
Board published another notice in the Federal Register explaining the
proposed Federal process for making rural determinations, the criteria
to be used, and the application of those criteria in preliminary
determinations. Public meetings were held in approximately 56 Alaskan
communities, specifically to solicit comments on the proposed Federal
Subsistence Management Program. On December 17, 1990, the Board adopted
final rural and nonrural determinations, which were published on
January 3, 1991 (56 FR 236). Final programmatic regulations were
published on May 29, 1992, with only slight variations in the rural
determination process (57 FR 22940).
Federal subsistence regulations require that the rural/nonrural
status of communities or areas be reviewed every 10 years, beginning
with the availability of the 2000 census data. The Board evaluated
several options for conducting the review and decided to adopt an
approach similar to that taken in 1990, which used criteria established
in Federal subsistence regulations. The review was conducted with an
emphasis on what has changed since 1990.
Although the process uses data from the 2000 census for its review,
some data were not compiled and available until 2005. Data from the
Alaska Department of Labor were used to supplement the census data.
During February-July 2005, the staff of the Federal Subsistence
Management Program conducted an initial review of the rural status of
Alaska communities, looking at the 2000 census data for each community
or area with an emphasis on what had changed since 1990. From this
initial review, staff compiled a report that included a proposed list
of communities and areas for which further analysis appeared warranted.
In addition, the report included the method used to develop this list.
In August-October 2005, the public and Federal Subsistence Regional
Advisory Councils were invited to comment on the results of this
initial review.
At a meeting in Anchorage on December 6-7, 2005, the Board took
public testimony and determined that additional information was needed
on 10 communities and areas before it decided upon any potential
changes.
For three communities, analysis was focused on evaluation
of rural/nonrural status, as follows:
Kodiak, Adak, and Prudhoe Bay: Currently Kodiak and Prudhoe Bay are
considered rural, and Adak is considered nonrural. These three
communities were further analyzed as to their rural/nonrural status.
For five nonrural groupings of communities and areas,
further analysis evaluated the possibility of excluding or including
places, as follows:
Fairbanks North Star Borough: Evaluate whether to continue using
the entire borough as the nonrural area, or separate some outlying
areas and evaluate their rural/nonrural status independently.
Seward Area: Evaluate whether to exclude Moose Pass and similarly
situated places from this nonrural grouping and evaluate their rural/
nonrural status independently.
Wasilla/Palmer Area: Evaluate whether to include Willow, Point
MacKenzie, and similarly situated places in this nonrural grouping.
Homer Area: Evaluate whether to include Fox River, Happy Valley,
and similarly situated places in this nonrural grouping.
Kenai Area: Evaluate whether to exclude Clam Gulch and similarly
situated places from this nonrural grouping and evaluate their rural/
nonrural status independently.
In addition, two areas were recommended for further
analysis as follows:
Ketchikan Area: Evaluate whether to include Saxman, and areas of
growth and development outside the current nonrural boundary, and
evaluate the rural/nonrural status of the whole area.
Delta Junction, Big Delta, Deltana and Fort Greely: Evaluate
whether some or all of these communities should be grouped, and their
rural/nonrural status evaluated collectively.
This list for additional analysis differed from the proposed list
put out for public comment in July 2005, in that: (1) The scope of the
review was broadened for the Ketchikan area, currently considered
nonrural, to include an analysis of rural/nonrural characteristics of
the entire area; (2) the rural/nonrural status of Prudhoe Bay was
added; and (3) additional analysis of Sitka was not believed to be
necessary.
Sitka, whose population had increased from 8,588 people in 1990 to
8,835 in 2000, had been identified as an area possibly warranting
further
[[Page 46418]]
analysis. However, during its December 6-7, 2005, meeting, the Board
heard substantial public testimony regarding the rural characteristics
of Sitka and determined that no additional analysis was necessary. The
Board is proposing to leave Sitka's rural status unchanged.
During January-May 2006, Federal subsistence staff conducted in-
depth analyses of each community or area on the Board-approved list of
communities and areas identified for further analysis.
On June 22, 2006, the Board met in executive session to develop the
list of communities and areas they believe to be nonrural. Those
communities and areas are identified in this proposed rule.
Population size is a fundamental distinguishing characteristic
between rural and nonrural communities. Under the current programmatic
guidance in Federal subsistence regulations:
A community with a population of 2,500 or less is deemed
rural, unless it possesses significant characteristics of a nonrural
nature, or is considered to be socially and economically a part of a
nonrural area.
A community with a population of more than 7,000 is deemed
nonrural, unless it possesses significant characteristics of a rural
nature.
A community with a population above 2,500 but not more
than 7,000 is evaluated to determine its rural/nonrural status. The
community characteristics considered in this evaluation may include,
but are not limited to, diversity and development of the local economy,
use of fish and wildlife, community infrastructure, transportation, and
educational institutions.
Communities that are economically, socially, and communally
integrated are combined for evaluation purposes. The Board identified
three guidelines or criteria for analysis to assist in its
determination of whether or not to group communities in its review of
rural determinations. The criteria to be used include: (1) Are the
communities in proximity and road-accessible to one another? The first
criterion, proximity and road accessibility, is considered a logical
first step in evaluating the relationship between communities, and,
applied in relation to the other two criteria, is considered a
reasonable indicator of economic, social, and communal integration. (2)
Do they share a common high school attendance area? The second
criterion, regarding sharing a common high school attendance area, is
taken to be an indicator of the social integration of communities. This
is an improvement by way of modification from the former criterion of a
shared school district. The public pointed out in past testimony that
attendance in a common school district often reflects political or
administrative boundaries rather than social integration. A shared
social experience is better captured by the shared high school
criterion. (3) Do 30% or more of the working people commute from one
community to another? This criterion, regarding whether working people
commute from one community to another, was identified as providing
meaningful information relating to the grouping of communities. Also,
the U.S. Census uses this criterion because commuting to work is an
easily understood measure that reflects social and economic
integration. These criteria were not considered separately, but
assessed collectively, with the recommendation to group communities
being dependent upon the collective assessment.
Community characteristics and specific indicators that the Board
used to evaluate rural/nonrural status include: (1) Economy--wage
employment, percent unemployment, per capita income, diversity of
services, cost-of-food index, and number of stores defined as large
national retailers; (2) community infrastructure--including the cost of
electricity; (3) fish and wildlife use--variety of species used per
household, percentage of households participating, level of average
harvest per capita for all subsistence resources combined, and level of
average harvest per capita for salmon and large land mammals only; (4)
transportation--variety of means, predominant means, and length of road
system; and (5) educational institutions present in the community.
The Board's analysis and preliminary efforts to distinguish between
rural places and nonrural places were heavily reliant on population
size, but when the Board used other characteristics, its approach was
based on a totality of the circumstances. Unemployment is generally
higher and per capita income is generally lower in rural places than in
nonrural places. Cost of food and cost of electricity were generally
higher in the rural communities than in the nonrural. Subsistence per
capita harvest of all resources shows a pattern of increasing amount
with decreasing population size among nonrural areas, and typically
higher levels in rural communities. The per capita harvest of salmon
and large land mammals also shows a general pattern of increasing
amount with decreasing population size among nonrural areas, and
typically higher levels in rural communities. There were no large
national retailers found in the rural communities examined (other than
Kodiak which is being proposed as nonrural), or in the three smallest
nonrural communities or areas. Population density was generally higher
for most nonrural places than it was for rural places.
Summarized below are the Board's recommendation for each area
analyzed and the justification for that recommendation.
Adak: Recommend changing Adak's status from nonrural to rural.
Following the closure of the military base, the community of Adak has
decreased in population by 94 percent from 1990 to 2000. It currently
has 167 residents (2005), which is well below the presumptive rural
threshold of 2,500 persons. Adak is also extremely remote and is
accessible only by boat or plane, with the nearest community (Atka) 169
miles away. With the changes that have occurred since the 1990s, Adak
now has rural characteristics typical of a small isolated community.
Prudhoe Bay (including Deadhorse): Recommend changing Prudhoe Bay's
status from rural to nonrural. In 2000 Prudhoe Bay had one permanent
household comprised of five people. There were reportedly no permanent
residents in February 2006. Prudhoe Bay has none of the characteristics
typical of a rural community. Prudhoe Bay is an industrial enclave
built for the sole purpose of extracting oil. The oil companies provide
everything employees need: Lodging, food, health care, and recreation.
The thousands of people in Prudhoe Bay do not live there permanently,
but work multi week-long shifts. They eat in cafeterias and live in
group quarters. There are no schools, grocery stores, or churches.
Subsistence is not a part of the way of life. Hunting in the area and
possession of firearms and ammunition are prohibited. Based on its
industrial enclave characteristics, Prudhoe Bay should be determined to
be nonrural.
Fairbanks North Star Borough: No changes to this nonrural grouping
are recommended. In applying the grouping criteria as indicators of
economic, social, and communal integration, the Board believes that the
current nonrural boundary of the Fairbanks Area should continue to be
defined as the Fairbanks North Star Borough boundary. No census
designated places (CDPs) should be excluded from the nonrural grouping
for the following reasons: (1) All CDPs are road accessible to one
another. Although the Harding-Birch Lakes and Salcha areas are more
sparsely populated than central areas of the borough, both communities
include many occasional-use homes owned by Fairbanks residents.
Further, both
[[Page 46419]]
places are home to only a few year-round residents. (2) The majority of
the Borough's high school students are bused to one of the schools
located in Fairbanks, North Pole, or Eielson. (3) The Remainder area of
the North Star Borough should be included in the grouping because the
majority of the population is road connected and over half (57 percent)
of the workers residing in this area commute to Fairbanks for
employment. Additionally, 75 percent of the workers living in Harding-
Birch Lakes drive to the City of Fairbanks to work, and 71 percent of
the working population in Pleasant Valley commute to the City of
Fairbanks.
Delta Junction Vicinity: No changes are recommended for the rural
status of Delta Junction, or the communities in the immediate vicinity.
In applying the grouping criteria as indicators of economic, social,
and communal integration, the Board believes that the four Delta
Junction vicinity CDPs assigned for analysis (Delta Junction, Big
Delta, Deltana, and Fort Greely) should be grouped as an area for
purposes of rural/nonrural analysis because they fulfill the three
guidelines for grouping: (1) All four CDPs are road connected and
proximal; (2) the majority of the high school-aged students from Big
Delta, Deltana, and Fort Greely attend high school in Delta Junction;
and (3) in the two outlying CDPs, over 30 percent of the workers
commute within the vicinity (41 percent of the workers living in Big
Delta commute to either Delta Junction, Deltana, Fort Greely, or to a
Remainder area within the Southeast Fairbanks Census Area, and 45
percent of the workers in Deltana commute to Delta Junction or Fort
Greely).
The four places grouped into the Delta Junction Area should remain
rural in status. The population size of the grouping (3,921) places it
in the nonpresumptive midrange, and information on the characteristics
of the grouping, although somewhat limited, is indicative of a rural
character. The recent economic upswing to the area due to construction
of the Missile Defense system at Fort Greely and development of the
Pogo Mine is thought to be temporary.
Seward Area: No changes to this nonrural grouping are recommended.
In applying the grouping criteria as indicators of economic, social,
and communal integration, the Board believes that the Moose Pass, Crown
Point, and Primrose CDPs should remain within the Seward Area grouping.
Moose Pass, Crown Point, and Primrose CDPs meet all the criteria for
grouping: proximity and road-accessibility to the Seward Area; their
students attend the high school in Seward; and the level of workers
commuting to Seward for employment is greater than 30 percent.
Wasilla/Palmer Area: Include the Point MacKenzie CDP in the
nonrural Wasilla/Palmer Area grouping; do not include the Willow CDP.
The Board believes that the Point Mackenzie CDP meets all the criteria
for grouping with the Wasilla/Palmer Area. The Point Mackenzie CDP is
in proximity to the Wasilla/Palmer Area and road-accessible; their
students attend Wasilla High School; and the level of workers commuting
to the Wasilla/Palmer Area for employment is at 50 percent. This change
would make Point McKenzie part of a nonrural area, a change from its
current rural status. The Board recommends that the Willow CDP not be
included in the Wasilla/Palmer Area grouping. Students in the Willow
CDP are located in two attendance areas for high schools, within and
outside of the Wasilla/Palmer Area. The level of commuting for workers
to the Wasilla/Palmer Area is at 23.9 percent, which is below the
criteria identified for grouping.
Kenai Area: Adjust the boundaries of the nonrural Kenai Area to
include all of the current Sterling CDP, and propose no change to the
current grouping and status of Clam Gulch CDP as part of the nonrural
Kenai Area. It appears that Clam Gulch CDP should continue to be
included in the Kenai Area grouping because, although students of Clam
Gulch CDP attend high school outside of the Kenai Area, the commuting
of workers to the Kenai Area is on the order of 30 percent, and Clam
Gulch is connected by paved highway to the Kenai Area, with which it
has been grouped since initial determinations were made in 1990. It
also appears that Cohoe CDP should remain within the Kenai Area
grouping. Cohoe students attend a high school in the Kenai Area and the
level of work commuting, at 69.5 percent, is significantly above the
minimum criteria for grouping. The Sterling CDP has been part of the
nonrural Kenai Area since 1990. For the 2000 census, the Sterling CDP
has expanded in size, such that a significant portion of the CDP
extends beyond the current boundary of the nonrural Kenai Area. The
Board believes that the boundaries of the Kenai Area should be adjusted
to include all of the current Sterling CDP. Students within the
Sterling CDP go to high school within the Kenai Area and the level of
commuting is at 61.2 percent of workers, well above the minimum
criteria for grouping.
Homer Area: Adjust the boundaries of the nonrural Homer Area to
include all of the Fritz Creek CDP (not including Voznesenka), and the
North Fork Road portion of the Anchor Point CDP. This change would make
Fritz Creek East, except for Voznesenka, and the North Fork Road
portion of the Anchor Point CDP nonrural, a change from their current
rural status. The Board has tentatively concluded for Fritz Creek East
that, except for Voznesenka, the residents are economically, socially,
and communally integrated with the Homer Area. Fritz Creek East is in
proximity and road-connected to the Homer Area. The Homer High School
attendance area includes their students, and 43.8 percent of their
workers commute to the Homer Area. It appears that Voznesenka should
not be included in the Homer Area because, while it is in proximity and
road-connected to the Homer Area, the number of jobs shown as being
located within the Homer Area is only 19.5 percent, and Voznesenka
students attend high school in Voznesenka.
The Board believes that residents of the North Fork Road area fully
meet two of the three criteria, proximity and commuting of workers. For
the third criteria, although students have the option of attendance in
Nikolaevsk School or Ninilchik High School, the vast majority go to
Homer High School. This is sufficient basis for considering the North
Fork Road area of the Anchor Point CDP to be economically, socially,
and communally integrated with the nonrural Homer Area.
The Board believes that residents of the Happy Valley CDP fulfill
only the proximity criterion for grouping with the Homer Area. Happy
Valley students are within the Ninilchik School high school attendance
area, and less than 30 percent of Happy Valley workers commute to the
Homer Area (14.4 percent). It appears that residents of the Happy
Valley CDP should not be included with the Homer Area.
It appears that the Nikolaevsk CDP, north of the Anchor Point CDP
and connected to the Homer Area by the North Fork Road, does not
warrant inclusion in the Homer Area. There is a K-12 school in
Nikolaevsk, and data show that only 22 percent of jobs held by
Nikolaevsk residents were located in the Homer Area.
It appears that residents of Fox River CDP, primarily in the
communities of Razdolna and Kachemak Selo, do not meet any of the three
criteria, which would indicate that Fox River residents are not
economically, socially, or communally integrated with the Homer Area.
[[Page 46420]]
Kodiak Area: Define the Kodiak Area to include the road system,
including the City of Kodiak, the Mill Bay area, Womens Bay, Bell's
Flats, and the Coast Guard Station, but not including Chiniak,
Pasagshak, and Anton Larsen, and change the status of the Kodiak Area,
as defined, from rural to nonrural. The Board believes that the Kodiak
Station CDP should be included in the Kodiak Area grouping. The Kodiak
Station CDP directly fulfills two of the three criteria for being
grouped in the Kodiak Area, and special consideration is warranted in
relation to the third criterion: (1) The Kodiak Station CDP is road-
connected and adjacent to the City of Kodiak; (2) the Kodiak Station
CDP does not have a high school; all students attend high school in the
City of Kodiak; and (3) the special circumstance of enlisted employment
accounts for the overall commuting level of workers to Kodiak City
being an estimated 11 percent of all working residents. However, this
can be attributed to the fact that enlisted personnel residing on the
base are by duty assignment bound to the base. Working dependents, who
are not bound to employment on the base, virtually all work in Kodiak
City. While the worker commuting criterion is thereby not met if one
pools enlisted personnel and working dependents, ties to the Kodiak
Area are otherwise evident. The Board believes that the Womens Bay CDP
should be included in the Kodiak Area grouping. Womens Bay CDP fulfills
all three criteria for being grouped in the Kodiak Area: (1) Womens Bay
CDP is road-connected and proximal to the City of Kodiak; (2) Womens
Bay CDP does not have a high school; students attend high school in the
City of Kodiak; and (3) more than 30 percent of the working residents
are employed in the City of Kodiak.
The Board believes that the Chiniak CDP should not be included in
the Kodiak Area grouping because (1) although there is a road from
Chiniak to the City of Kodiak, it is a minimum of a one-hour trip, and
the 14 miles closest to Chiniak are unpaved; (2) there is a partial
high school in Chiniak to grade 10, and only two-fifths of the high
school-aged children attend school in Kodiak.
The Board believes that the road-connected Remainder area should be
included in the Kodiak Area grouping, with the exception of the
Pasagshak and Anton Larsen portions. The road-connected Remainder area,
with the exceptions as noted, is proximal to the City of Kodiak;
students from the road-connected Remainder area attend high school in
the City of Kodiak; and more than 30 percent of the working residents
of the Remainder area are employed in the City of Kodiak. The road-
connected Remainder area of the Kodiak Area includes people residing in
Anton Larsen and Pasagshak. There is no information about these ``sub-
areas'' of the road-connected Remainder area, thus it is unknown if
students living in these areas are taught through correspondence, home-
schooled, or travel to Kodiak to attend high school. It is also unknown
how many people commute to Kodiak City to work. However, the Board
determined that despite the lack of information regarding the three
criteria for grouping, the remoteness of Pasgashak and Anton Larsen is
comparable to the remoteness of Chiniak, and therefore elected to
propose no change in the rural status of these areas.
The population of the Kodiak Area--estimated at approximately
12,000 in 2005--is well above the presumptive nonrural population of
7,000 in Federal regulations. The population has increased slightly
since 1990. Kodiak's per capita income is relatively high and it also
has a 2-year college, high diversity of services, a large national
retailer, fast food restaurants, and roads linking the outlying area to
the city. Of the communities examined during this analysis, the Kodiak
Area is 34 percent larger in population than the next largest rural
place, and its use of fish and wildlife is 24 percent lower. While the
per capita harvest of subsistence resources is higher in the Kodiak
Area than in some rural areas, it is well below the levels in some
other rural communities.
Ketchikan Area: Define the Ketchikan Area to include Pennock
Island, parts of Gravina Island, and the road system connected to the
City of Ketchikan, except for the community of Saxman. Saxman would
retain its current rural status, and the Ketchikan Area, as defined,
would retain its nonrural status. Saxman is directly adjacent to
Ketchikan, connected by road, and surrounded by the outlying Ketchikan
development. Visually, the only distinguishing feature to indicate the
boundary between Ketchikan and Saxman is a sign on the South Tongass
Highway. Saxman has clearly been overtaken and is surrounded by the
geographic expansion of Ketchikan; Saxman students attend high school
in Ketchikan; and 64 percent of the workers in Saxman commute to
Ketchikan for their employment, with another 8 percent commuting to the
Remainder area of the borough to work. Even though the grouping
criteria would indicate including Saxman with the Ketchikan Area,
social and economic characteristics indicate that Saxman should not be
grouped in the Ketchikan Area. Saxman is a small, close-knit community
that is socially and politically separate from Ketchikan. The residents
of Saxman have two distinct entities to separate themselves from
Ketchikan, the traditional government (Organized Village of Saxman) and
the municipal government (City of Saxman). Socioeconomic indicators
suggest distinctions between the two communities. For example, Saxman
has a higher unemployment rate, lower per capita income, higher
percentage of residents below the poverty level than those found in
Ketchikan, and a 70 percent Native population. Another distinguishing
characteristic of the community is that Saxman residents depend much
more heavily on the harvest of subsistence resources. Saxman's average
per capita harvest of 217 pounds is substantially more than has been
estimated for the Ketchikan Area. Thus, while the grouping criteria
lead to including Saxman with the Ketchikan Area, the unique
socioeconomic characteristics of Saxman suggest that it should remain
separate from the Ketchikan Area.
The Remainder fulfills all three criteria for grouping with the
Ketchikan Area: (1) The Remainder, other than nearby Gravina and
Pennock Islands, is road-connected to the City of Ketchikan; (2)
Students in the Remainder attend high school in Ketchikan; and (3) Over
30 percent of the workers from the Remainder commute to work in the
City of Ketchikan. Presently, most of the Remainder is included in the
nonrural Ketchikan Area, established in 1990, except for extensions of
the highway to the north and south that have since occurred.
The population of the Ketchikan Area was estimated at 12,720 in
2005 (excluding Saxman), having decreased slightly from 1990. Ketchikan
possesses many nonrural characteristics, including having a 2-year
college, a large national retailer, car dealerships, fast food
restaurants, and roads linking the outlying surrounding area to the
city. Although the pulp mill closed, there is still some diversity in
the economy with tourism, fishing, fish processing, timber, retail
services, and government providing the majority of employment. There is
a hospital and a high diversity of services offered. The Ketchikan Area
had the sixth highest population in the state in 2005, considering
community groupings as defined by the Board. All other areas with
higher populations are currently considered nonrural in Federal
subsistence regulations. Three areas
[[Page 46421]]
with smaller populations are currently classified as nonrural and are
not proposed for a change in status: the Homer Area, Seward Area, and
Valdez. Harvest of subsistence resources in the Ketchikan Area is lower
than is characteristic of rural communities.
This change would make the extended road connected areas of
Ketchikan nonrural, a change from their current rural status.
The list of nonrural communities and areas, along with those other
nonrural communities or areas whose status would remain unchanged, is
published herein as the proposed rule. All other communities and areas
of Alaska not listed herein would retain their rural determination. We
propose to amend Section ----.23, which identifies those communities
and areas of Alaska that are determined to be rural and nonrural. We
have made maps available for the nonrural areas. The purpose of these
maps is to provide to the subsistence user an overall graphic
representation of the extent of the nonrural areas. To view maps, go to
the Office of Subsistence Management Web site at https://alaska.fws.gov/
asm/home.html. If you do not have access to the internet, you may
contact the Office of Subsistence Management at the address or phone
number shown at ADDRESSES or FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT,
respectively, and we will send the maps to you.
During August-October 2006, the public and Federal Subsistence
Regional Advisory Councils are invited to comment on the proposed rule.
Hearings in Kodiak, Sitka, Saxman, and Ketchikan will be held in
September and October 2006. The specific dates, times, and locations
will be announced in locally and Statewide--circulated newspapers or
you may call the phone number shown at FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT.
Additional hearings may be scheduled by the Board, as appropriate. In
December 12-13, 2006, in Anchorage, Alaska, the Federal Subsistence
Board will meet to consider the comments received and may make changes
to the proposed rule. From the decisions made in December, the Board
will develop a final rule for publication in the Federal Register. The
effective date of any community or area changing from a rural to
nonrural status is 5 years after the date of publication of the final
rule in the Federal Register. For communities or areas that change from
nonrural to rural, the effective date is 30 days after the date of
publication of the final rule in the Federal Register.
Because the Federal Subsistence Management Program relates to
public lands managed by an agency or agencies in both the Departments
of Agriculture and the Interior, we propose to incorporate identical
text into 36 CFR part 242 and 50 CFR part 100.
Conformance With Statutory and Regulatory Authorities
National Environmental Policy Act Compliance
A Draft Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS) for developing a
Federal Subsistence Management Program was distributed for public
comment on October 7, 1991. That document described the major issues
associated with Federal subsistence management as identified through
public meetings, written comments, and staff analysis, and examined the
environmental consequences of four alternatives. Proposed regulations
(Subparts A, B, and C) that would implement the preferred alternative
were included in the DEIS as an appendix. The DEIS and the proposed
administrative regulations presented a framework for an annual
regulatory cycle regarding subsistence hunting and fishing regulations
(Subpart D). The Final Environmental Impact Statement (FEIS) was
published on February 28, 1992.
Based on the public comments received, the analysis contained in
the FEIS, and the recommendations of the Federal Subsistence Board and
the Department of the Interior's Subsistence Policy Group, the
Secretary of the Interior, with the concurrence of the Secretary of
Agriculture, through the U.S. Department of Agriculture--Forest
Service, implemented Alternative IV as identified in the DEIS and FEIS
(Record of Decision on Subsistence Management for Federal Public Lands
in Alaska (ROD), signed April 6, 1992). The DEIS and the selected
alternative in the FEIS defined the administrative framework of an
annual regulatory cycle for subsistence hunting and fishing
regulations. The final rule for Subsistence Management Regulations for
Public Lands in Alaska, Subparts A, B, and C, published May 29, 1992,
implemented the Federal Subsistence Management Program and included a
framework for an annual cycle for subsistence hunting and fishing
regulations. The following Federal Register documents pertain to this
rulemaking:
Federal Register Documents Pertaining to Subsistence Management Regulations for Public Lands in Alaska, Subparts
A and B
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Federal Register citation Date of publication Category Detail
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
57 FR 22940................ May 29, 1992.......... Final Rule........... ``Subsistence Management Regulations
for Public Lands in Alaska; Final
Rule'' was published in the Federal
Register establishing a Federal
Subsistence Management Program.
64 FR 1276................. January 8, 1999....... Final Rule (amended). Amended 7 FR 22940 to include
subsistence activities occurring on
inland navigable waters in which
the United States has a reserved
water right and to identify
specific Federal land units where
reserved water rights exist.
Extended the Federal Subsistence
Board's management to all Federal
lands selected under the Alaska
Native Claims Settlement Act and
the Alaska Statehood Act and
situated within the boundaries of a
Conservation System Unit, National
Recreation Area, National
Conservation Area, or any new
national forest or forest addition,
until conveyed to the State of
Alaska or an Alaska Native
Corporation. Specified and
clarified Secretaries' authority to
determine when hunting, fishing, or
trapping activities taking place in
Alaska off the public lands
interfere with the subsistence
priority.
66 FR 31533................ June 12, 2001......... Interim Rule......... Expanded the authority that the
Board may delegate to agency field
officials and clarified the
procedures for enacting emergency
or temporary restrictions,
closures, or openings.
[[Page 46422]]
67 FR 30559................ May 7, 2002........... Final Rule........... In response to comments on an
interim rule, amended the operating
regulations. Also corrected some
inadvertent errors and oversights
of previous rules.
68 FR 7703................. February 18, 2003..... Direct Final Rule.... Clarified how old a person must be
to receive certain subsistence use
permits and removed the requirement
that Regional Councils must have an
odd number of members.
68 FR 23035................ April 30, 2003........ Affirmation of Direct Received no adverse comments on 68
Final Rule. FR 7703. Adopted direct final rule.
68 FR 60957................ October 14, 2004...... Final Rule........... Established Regional Council
membership goals.
70 FR 76400................ December 27, 2005..... Final Rule........... Revised jurisdiction in marine
waters and clarified jurisdiction
relative to military lands.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
An environmental assessment was prepared in 1997 on the expansion
of Federal jurisdiction over fisheries and is available from the office
listed under FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT. The Secretary of the
Interior with the concurrence of the Secretary of Agriculture
determined that the expansion of Federal jurisdiction did not
constitute a major Federal action significantly affecting the human
environment and therefore signed a Finding of No Significant Impact.
Compliance With Section 810 of ANILCA
The intent of all Federal subsistence regulations is to accord
subsistence uses of fish and wildlife on public lands a priority over
the taking of fish and wildlife on such lands for other purposes,
unless restriction is necessary to conserve healthy fish and wildlife
populations. A section 810 analysis was completed as part of the FEIS
process. The final section 810 analysis determination appeared in the
April 6, 1992, ROD, which concluded that the Federal Subsistence
Management Program may have some local impacts on subsistence uses, but
that the program is not likely to significantly restrict subsistence
uses.
Paperwork Reduction Act
This rule contains no new information collection requirements
subject to Office of Management and Budget (OMB) approval under the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995. The information collection
requirements described in the CFR regulations were approved by OMB
under 44 U.S.C. 3501 and were assigned clearance number 1018-0075,
which expires August 31, 2006. We will not conduct or sponsor, and you
are not required to respond to, a collection of information request
unless it displays a currently valid OMB control number.
Other Requirements
Economic Effects--This rule is not a significant rule subject to
OMB review under Executive Order 12866. This rulemaking will impose no
significant costs on small entities; this rule does not restrict any
existing sport or commercial fishery on the public lands, and
subsistence fisheries will continue at essentially the same levels as
they presently occur. The number of businesses and the amount of trade
that will result from this Federal land'related activity is unknown but
expected to be insignificant.
The Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980 (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.)
requires preparation of regulatory flexibility analyses for rules that
will have a significant economic effect on a substantial number of
small entities, which include small businesses, organizations, or
governmental jurisdictions. The Departments have determined that this
rulemaking will not have a significant economic effect on a substantial
number of small entities within the meaning of the Regulatory
Flexibility Act.
This rulemaking will impose no significant costs on small entities;
the exact number of businesses and the amount of trade that will result
from this Federal land--related activity is unknown. The aggregate
effect is an insignificant positive economic effect on a number of
small entities, such as tackle, boat, sporting goods dealers, and
gasoline dealers. The number of small entities affected is unknown;
however, the fact that the positive effects will be seasonal in nature
and will, in most cases, merely continue preexisting uses of public
lands indicates that the effects will not be significant.
Title VIII of ANILCA requires the Secretaries to administer a
subsistence preference on public lands. The scope of this program is
limited by definition to certain public lands. Likewise, these
regulations have no potential takings of private property implications
as defined by Executive Order 12630.
The Secretaries have determined and certify pursuant to the
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act, 2 U.S.C. 1502 et seq., that this
rulemaking will not impose a cost of $100 million or more in any given
year on local or State governments or private entities. The
implementation of this rule is by Federal agencies, and no cost is
involved to any State or local entities or Tribal governments.
The Secretaries have determined that these regulations meet the
applicable standards provided in Sections 3(a) and 3(b)(2) of Executive
Order 12988 on Civil Justice Reform.
In accordance with Executive Order 13132, the rule does not have
sufficient federalism implications to warrant the preparation of a
Federalism Assessment. Title VIII of ANILCA precludes the State from
exercising subsistence management authority over fish and wildlife
resources on Federal lands unless the State program is compliant with
the requirements of that Title.
In accordance with the President's memorandum of April 29, 1994,
``Government-to-Government Relations with Native American Tribal
Governments'' (59 FR 22951), 512 DM 2, and E.O. 13175, we have
evaluated possible effects on Federally recognized Indian tribes and
have determined that there are no substantial direct effects. The
Bureau of Indian Affairs is a participating agency in this rulemaking.
On May 18, 2001, the President issued Executive Order 13211 on
regulations that significantly affect energy supply, distribution, or
use. This Executive Order requires agencies to prepare Statements of
Energy Effects when undertaking certain actions. As this rule is not a
significant regulatory action under Executive Order 13211, affecting
energy supply, distribution, or use, this
[[Page 46423]]
action is not a significant action and no Statement of Energy Effects
is required.
William Knauer drafted these regulations under the guidance of
Peter J. Probasco of the Office of Subsistence Management, Alaska
Regional Office, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Anchorage, Alaska.
Chuck Ardizzone, Alaska State Office, Bureau of Land Management; Greg
Bos, Carl Jack, and Jerry Berg, Alaska Regional Office, U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service; Sandy Rabinowitch and Nancy Swanton, Alaska Regional
Office, National Park Service; Dr. Warren Eastland, Pat Petrivelli, and
Dr. Glenn Chen, Alaska Regional Office, Bureau of Indian Affairs; and
Steve Kessler, Alaska Regional Office, USDA--Forest Service provided
additional guidance.
List of Subjects
36 CFR Part 242
Administrative practice and procedure, Alaska, Fish, National
forests, Public lands, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements,
Wildlife.
List of Subjects
50 CFR Part 100
Administrative practice and procedure, Alaska, Fish, National
forests, Public lands, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements,
Wildlife.
For the reasons set out in the preamble, the Secretaries propose to
amend title 36, part 242, and title 50, part 100, of the Code of
Federal Regulations, as set forth below.
PART ------SUBSISTENCE MANAGEMENT REGULATIONS FOR PUBLIC LANDS IN
ALASKA
1. The authority citation for both 36 CFR part 242 and 50 CFR part
100 would continue to read as follows:
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 3, 472, 551, 668dd, 3101-3126; 18 U.S.C.
3551-3586; 43 U.S.C. 1733.
Subpart C--Board Determinations
2. In Subpart C of 36 CFR part 242 and 50 CFR part 100, Sec. --
--.23(a) would be revised to read as follows:
* * * * *
Sec. ----.23 Rural Determinations.
(a) The Board has determined all communities and areas to be rural
in accordance with Sec. ----.15 except the following:
(1) Fairbanks North Star Borough;
(2) Homer area--including Homer, Anchor Point, North Fork Road
area, Kachemak City, and the Fritz Creek area (not including
Voznesenka);
(3) Juneau area--including Juneau, West Juneau, and Douglas;
(4) Kenai area--including Kenai, Soldotna, Sterling, Nikiski,
Salamatof, Kalifornsky, Kasilof, and Clam Gulch;
(5) Ketchikan area--including all parts of the road system
connected to the City of Ketchikan (except Saxman), Pennock Island, and
parts of Gravina Island;
(6) Kodiak area--including the City of Kodiak, the Mill Bay area,
the Coast Guard Station, Womens Bay, and Bells Flats;
(7) Municipality of Anchorage;
(8) Prudhoe Bay;
(9) Seward area--including Seward and Moose Pass;
(10) Valdez; and
(11) Wasilla/Palmer area--including Wasilla, Palmer, Sutton, Big
Lake, Houston, Point MacKenzie, and Bodenberg Butte.
You may obtain maps delineating the boundaries of nonrural areas
from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Office of Subsistence
Management.
* * * * *
Dated: July 24, 2006.
Peter J. Probasco,
Acting Chair, Federal Subsistence Board.
Dated: July 24, 2006.
Steve Kessler,
Subsistence Program Leader, USDA--Forest Service.
[FR Doc. 06-6902 Filed 8-11-06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410-11-P; 4310-55-P