Notice of Intent To Prepare a Resource Management Plan for the Malta Field Office and Associated Environmental Impact Statement, 52572-52573 [E6-14669]
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Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 172 / Wednesday, September 6, 2006 / Notices
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development operations in existing
fields. The purpose of the proposal is to
extract and recover natural gas for
distribution to consumers. The
Operators’ proposal consists of
development of up to 4,207 wells and
associated facilities including but not
limited to roads, well pads, pipelines,
gas treatment and possible compression
resulting in approximately 25,820 acres
of short-term disturbance and 9,058
acres of life-of-project disturbance.
Wells would be drilled using a
combination of vertical and directional
drilling techniques. The proposal calls
for a 20- to 30-year construction and
drilling period with another 30 years for
the project operations.
The Hiawatha Regional Energy
Development Project is located in an
area of existing oil and gas development
known as Canyon Creek, Trail, and
Kinney Fields (also known as the
Vermillion Basin area) in Sweetwater
County, Wyoming, and the East and
West Hiawatha/Sugarloaf Fields in
Moffat County, Colorado. This project
would meet the goals and objectives of
the Energy Policy Act of 2005 and the
President’s National Energy Policy.
During the preparation of the EIS,
development within the project area
may be allowed in Wyoming as
approved under the Modified Decision
Record for the Vermillion Basin Natural
Gas Exploration and Production Project.
Other interim development will be
subject to interim development
guidelines on the Wyoming portion of
the project.
The EIS will analyze the
environmental consequences of
implementing the proposed action and
alternatives to the proposed action
including the No Action alternative.
Other alternatives under consideration
include a range of drilling surface
densities and pace, mitigation measures,
best management practices and phased
development.
Agency resource issues and concerns
will be identified in the public scoping
notice mailed to Federal, State and local
governments, interested groups,
individuals, and businesses under
separate cover.
Dated: June 30, 2006.
Robert A. Bennett,
State Director.
[FR Doc. E6–14670 Filed 9–5–06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–22–P
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DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Land Management
[MT–090–1610–DO–048E]
Notice of Intent To Prepare a Resource
Management Plan for the Malta Field
Office and Associated Environmental
Impact Statement
Bureau of Land Management,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice of Intent.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: Pursuant to the Federal Land
Policy and Management Act (FLPMA)
and the National Environmental Policy
Act (NEPA) the Bureau of Land
Management (BLM), Malta Field Office
intends to prepare a Resource
Management Plan with an associated
Environmental Impact Statement (RMP/
EIS). The planning area is located in
Blaine, Choteau, Glacier, Hill, Liberty,
Phillips, Toole, and Valley Counties,
Montana. The public scoping process
will identify planning issues and
develop planning criteria, including
evaluation of the existing RMPs in the
context of the needs and interests of the
public. This notice initiates the public
scoping process.
DATES: To be most helpful you should
submit formal scoping comments within
60 days after publication of this Notice.
However, collaboration with the public
will continue throughout the process.
All public meetings will be announced
through the local news media,
newsletters, and the BLM Web site
(https://www.mt.blm.gov/mafo/rmp) at
least 15 days prior to the event. The
minutes and list of attendees for each
meeting will be available to the public
and open for 30 days to any participant
who wishes to clarify the views they
expressed.
Written comments should
be sent to Bureau of Land Management,
G. Claire Trent, RMP Project Manager,
Malta Field Office, 501 S 2nd St. East,
Malta, MT 59538; Fax—406–654–5150.
Documents pertinent to this proposal
may be examined at the Malta Field
Office. Respondents’ comments,
including their names and street
addresses, will be available for public
review at the Malta Field Office during
regular business hours from 7:45 a.m. to
4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday,
except holidays, and may be published
as part of the EIS. Individual
respondents may request
confidentiality. If you wish to withhold
your name or street address from public
review or from disclosure under the
Freedom of Information Act, you must
state this prominently at the beginning
ADDRESSES:
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of your written comments. Such
requests will be honored to the extent
allowed by law. All submissions from
organizations and businesses, and from
individuals identifying themselves as
representatives or officials of
organizations or businesses, will be
available for public inspection in their
entirety.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
further information and/or to have your
name added to our mailing list, contact
G. Claire Trent at (406) 654–5124 or email at: MT_Malta_RMP@blm.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The BLM
will work collaboratively with
interested parties to identify the
management decisions that are best
suited to local, regional, and national
needs and concerns. Public meetings
will be held throughout the plan
scoping and preparation period. In order
to ensure local community participation
and input, public scoping meeting
locations will be rotated among the
towns of Big Sandy, Billings, Browning,
Chester, Chinook, Cut Bank, Fort
Benton, Glasgow, Great Falls, Harlem,
Helena, Havre, Hays, Malta, Opheim,
Rocky Boy, Shelby, Turner, and
Whitewater. Early participation is
encouraged, and will help determine the
future management of public lands
administered by the Malta Field Office.
In addition to the ongoing public
participation process, formal
opportunities for public participation
will be provided upon publication of
the Draft RMP/EIS, the final Proposed
Plan, and Record of Decision.
The Bureau of Land Management’s
Malta Resource Management Plan and
Environmental Impact Statement
incorporates a planning area
administered by three BLM offices: the
Glasgow and Havre Field Stations, and
the Malta Field Office. These offices
were recently combined under the Malta
Field Office [Notice of Montana/Dakotas
Administrative Boundaries Resulting
from the Havre Field Station
Realignment and other Organizational
Changes, (IM No. MT–2005–041)]. The
land area to be covered under the Malta
RMP/EIS is approximately two and a
half million surface acres (∼2,500,000)
and three- and a half million subsurface
acres (∼3,500,000) of public land in the
north-central tier of the State of
Montana. Currently, land resources are
managed under the following decisions:
the 1988 West HiLine RMP as amended
in 1992, for portions of the planning
area administered by the Havre Field
Station; and the 1994 Judith, Valley,
Phillips (JVP) RMP for the remainder of
the planning areas administered by the
Malta Field Office and Glasgow Field
E:\FR\FM\06SEN1.SGM
06SEN1
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with NOTICES
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 172 / Wednesday, September 6, 2006 / Notices
Station. The current JVP RMP does not
include oil and gas planning decisions.
Oil and gas planning decisions for these
lands are under the Management
Framework Plans and the supporting
National Environmental Policy Act
(NEPA) document—Lewistown District
Oil and Gas Environmental Assessment
of BLM Leasing Program (September
1981).
Some of the BLM-managed public
lands (226,920 acres) analyzed in the
West HiLine and JVP RMPs have
recently become a part of the Upper
Missouri River Breaks National
Monument, which will be managed
under a separate RMP.
The RMP revision to be prepared for
the public lands administered by the
Malta Field Office will identify goals,
objectives, standards, and guidelines for
management of a variety of resources
and values. The scope of the RMP will
be comprehensive. The plan will specify
actions, constraints, and general
management practices necessary to
achieve desired conditions. The plan
will also identify any areas requiring
special management such as Areas of
Critical Environmental Concern
(ACECs). Certain existing standards and
guidelines and other BLM plans/plan
amendments will be incorporated into
the RMP.
In accordance with the National
Energy Policy Act of 2005, the BLM is
implementing long-term strategies to
produce traditional sources of energy on
Federal land in an environmentally
compatible way, to increase renewable
energy production on Federal land, and
to involve all interested persons in the
public planning process. The significant
amount of oil and gas leasing,
exploration, and development
throughout this part of Montana is a
major reason for revising these RMPs.
The BLM is involved in managing more
than 1500 oil and gas leases across the
planning area, and an increasing interest
in leasing has created a pressing need
for new inventories and revised data.
The BLM needs this information to
evaluate oil and gas planning decision
alternatives. Increased interest in
developing alternative energy resources
such as wind and solar power have also
impacted the planning area, but these
activities were not addressed in either
current RMP. Also, in recent years,
greater sage-grouse, black-tailed prairie
dogs and prairie dog associate special
status species (SSS) such as burrowing
owls and mountain plovers, and
migratory birds, in particular SSS
associated with grassland habitats, will
be addressed in the RMP planning
process.
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The BLM’s decision to begin a new
planning effort for the public lands in
the Malta resource area is based on
public and agency need for revised
management guidance to address
changing issues. Preliminary issues and
management concerns have been
identified by BLM, other agencies, and
in meetings with individuals and user
groups. They represent the BLM’s
information to date on the existing
issues and concerns with current
management. The major issue themes
that will be addressed in the RMP effort
include the following:
1. Energy development—(fluid
minerals—oil and gas; alternative—
wind);
2. Management of vegetation;
3. Management of wildlife;
4. Conservation and recovery of
special status species;
5. Water quality, quantity, and aquatic
species;
6. Travel management and access to
public lands;
7. Management of areas with special
values;
8. Availability and management of
public lands for commercial uses; and
9. Land tenure adjustments.
After gathering public comments on
what issues the plan should address, the
suggested issues will be placed in one
of three categories:
1. Issues to be resolved in the plan;
2. Issues resolved through policy or
administrative action; or
3. Issues beyond the scope of this
plan.
Rationale will be provided for each
issue placed in categories two or three.
In addition to these major issues, a
number of management questions and
concerns will be addressed in the plan.
The public is encouraged to help
identify these questions and concerns
during the scoping phase.
An interdisciplinary approach will be
used to develop the plan in order to
consider the variety of resource issues
and concerns identified. Disciplines
involved in the planning process will
include specialists with expertise in
minerals and geology, forestry, range,
fire and fuels, outdoor recreation,
archaeology, paleontology, wildlife and
fisheries, lands and realty, hydrology,
soils, sociology, environmental justice
and economics.
The following planning criteria have
been proposed to guide development of
the plan, avoid unnecessary data
collection and analyses, and to ensure
the plan is tailored to the issues. Other
criteria may be identified during the
public scoping process. After gathering
comments on planning criteria, the BLM
will finalize the criteria and provide
PO 00000
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Fmt 4703
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52573
feedback to the public on the criteria to
be used throughout the planning
process.
• The RMP/EIS will comply with
FLPMA, NEPA, and all other applicable
laws and regulations.
• The plan amendment will recognize
the existence of valid existing rights.
• Lands covered in the RMP
amendment will be public lands, which
include split estate lands, managed by
BLM. Decisions in the RMP amendment
will be made only on lands managed by
the BLM.
The RMP/EIS will utilize existing
guidance where appropriate, and
establish new guidance for managing
the public lands within the Malta Field
Office.
• The RMP/EIS will incorporate by
reference the Standards for Rangeland
Health and Guidelines for Livestock
Grazing Management for Montana,
North Dakota and South Dakota
(August 1997), the Wind Energy Final
Programmatic Environmental Impact
Statement (June 2005), the Off-Highway
Vehicle Environmental Impact
Statement and Plan Amendment for
Montana and the Dakotas (June 2003),
and the Montana/Dakotas Statewide
Fire Management Plan (September
2003).
• The RMP/EIS will incorporate by
reference all prior Wilderness
designations and Wilderness Study Area
findings that affect public lands in the
planning area.
• The RMP/EIS will recognize the
State’s responsibility to manage wildlife
populations, including uses such as
hunting and fishing.
• Planning decisions will strive to be
compatible with the existing plans and
policies of adjacent local, State, tribal,
and Federal agencies as long as the
decisions are in conformance with BLM
legal mandates.
• The BLM will use a collaborative
and multi-jurisdictional approach,
where applicable throughout the
planning process.
• The scope of analysis will be
consistent with the level of analysis in
current approved plans and in
accordance with Bureau-wide standards
and program guidance.
• Resource allocations will be
reasonable and achievable within
available technological and budgetary
constraints.
• The lifestyles and concerns of area
residents will be recognized in the plan.
Dated: June 9, 2006.
Mark Albers,
Malta Field Office Manager.
[FR Doc. E6–14669 Filed 9–5–06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4311–DN–P
E:\FR\FM\06SEN1.SGM
06SEN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 71, Number 172 (Wednesday, September 6, 2006)]
[Notices]
[Pages 52572-52573]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E6-14669]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Land Management
[MT-090-1610-DO-048E]
Notice of Intent To Prepare a Resource Management Plan for the
Malta Field Office and Associated Environmental Impact Statement
AGENCY: Bureau of Land Management, Interior.
ACTION: Notice of Intent.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: Pursuant to the Federal Land Policy and Management Act (FLPMA)
and the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) the Bureau of Land
Management (BLM), Malta Field Office intends to prepare a Resource
Management Plan with an associated Environmental Impact Statement (RMP/
EIS). The planning area is located in Blaine, Choteau, Glacier, Hill,
Liberty, Phillips, Toole, and Valley Counties, Montana. The public
scoping process will identify planning issues and develop planning
criteria, including evaluation of the existing RMPs in the context of
the needs and interests of the public. This notice initiates the public
scoping process.
DATES: To be most helpful you should submit formal scoping comments
within 60 days after publication of this Notice. However, collaboration
with the public will continue throughout the process. All public
meetings will be announced through the local news media, newsletters,
and the BLM Web site (https://www.mt.blm.gov/mafo/rmp) at least 15 days
prior to the event. The minutes and list of attendees for each meeting
will be available to the public and open for 30 days to any participant
who wishes to clarify the views they expressed.
ADDRESSES: Written comments should be sent to Bureau of Land
Management, G. Claire Trent, RMP Project Manager, Malta Field Office,
501 S 2nd St. East, Malta, MT 59538; Fax--406-654-5150. Documents
pertinent to this proposal may be examined at the Malta Field Office.
Respondents' comments, including their names and street addresses, will
be available for public review at the Malta Field Office during regular
business hours from 7:45 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday,
except holidays, and may be published as part of the EIS. Individual
respondents may request confidentiality. If you wish to withhold your
name or street address from public review or from disclosure under the
Freedom of Information Act, you must state this prominently at the
beginning of your written comments. Such requests will be honored to
the extent allowed by law. All submissions from organizations and
businesses, and from individuals identifying themselves as
representatives or officials of organizations or businesses, will be
available for public inspection in their entirety.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For further information and/or to have
your name added to our mailing list, contact G. Claire Trent at (406)
654-5124 or e-mail at: MT--Malta--RMP@blm.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The BLM will work collaboratively with
interested parties to identify the management decisions that are best
suited to local, regional, and national needs and concerns. Public
meetings will be held throughout the plan scoping and preparation
period. In order to ensure local community participation and input,
public scoping meeting locations will be rotated among the towns of Big
Sandy, Billings, Browning, Chester, Chinook, Cut Bank, Fort Benton,
Glasgow, Great Falls, Harlem, Helena, Havre, Hays, Malta, Opheim, Rocky
Boy, Shelby, Turner, and Whitewater. Early participation is encouraged,
and will help determine the future management of public lands
administered by the Malta Field Office. In addition to the ongoing
public participation process, formal opportunities for public
participation will be provided upon publication of the Draft RMP/EIS,
the final Proposed Plan, and Record of Decision.
The Bureau of Land Management's Malta Resource Management Plan and
Environmental Impact Statement incorporates a planning area
administered by three BLM offices: the Glasgow and Havre Field
Stations, and the Malta Field Office. These offices were recently
combined under the Malta Field Office [Notice of Montana/Dakotas
Administrative Boundaries Resulting from the Havre Field Station
Realignment and other Organizational Changes, (IM No. MT-2005-041)].
The land area to be covered under the Malta RMP/EIS is approximately
two and a half million surface acres (~2,500,000) and three- and a half
million subsurface acres (~3,500,000) of public land in the north-
central tier of the State of Montana. Currently, land resources are
managed under the following decisions: the 1988 West HiLine RMP as
amended in 1992, for portions of the planning area administered by the
Havre Field Station; and the 1994 Judith, Valley, Phillips (JVP) RMP
for the remainder of the planning areas administered by the Malta Field
Office and Glasgow Field
[[Page 52573]]
Station. The current JVP RMP does not include oil and gas planning
decisions. Oil and gas planning decisions for these lands are under the
Management Framework Plans and the supporting National Environmental
Policy Act (NEPA) document--Lewistown District Oil and Gas
Environmental Assessment of BLM Leasing Program (September 1981).
Some of the BLM-managed public lands (226,920 acres) analyzed in
the West HiLine and JVP RMPs have recently become a part of the Upper
Missouri River Breaks National Monument, which will be managed under a
separate RMP.
The RMP revision to be prepared for the public lands administered
by the Malta Field Office will identify goals, objectives, standards,
and guidelines for management of a variety of resources and values. The
scope of the RMP will be comprehensive. The plan will specify actions,
constraints, and general management practices necessary to achieve
desired conditions. The plan will also identify any areas requiring
special management such as Areas of Critical Environmental Concern
(ACECs). Certain existing standards and guidelines and other BLM plans/
plan amendments will be incorporated into the RMP.
In accordance with the National Energy Policy Act of 2005, the BLM
is implementing long-term strategies to produce traditional sources of
energy on Federal land in an environmentally compatible way, to
increase renewable energy production on Federal land, and to involve
all interested persons in the public planning process. The significant
amount of oil and gas leasing, exploration, and development throughout
this part of Montana is a major reason for revising these RMPs. The BLM
is involved in managing more than 1500 oil and gas leases across the
planning area, and an increasing interest in leasing has created a
pressing need for new inventories and revised data. The BLM needs this
information to evaluate oil and gas planning decision alternatives.
Increased interest in developing alternative energy resources such as
wind and solar power have also impacted the planning area, but these
activities were not addressed in either current RMP. Also, in recent
years, greater sage-grouse, black-tailed prairie dogs and prairie dog
associate special status species (SSS) such as burrowing owls and
mountain plovers, and migratory birds, in particular SSS associated
with grassland habitats, will be addressed in the RMP planning process.
The BLM's decision to begin a new planning effort for the public
lands in the Malta resource area is based on public and agency need for
revised management guidance to address changing issues. Preliminary
issues and management concerns have been identified by BLM, other
agencies, and in meetings with individuals and user groups. They
represent the BLM's information to date on the existing issues and
concerns with current management. The major issue themes that will be
addressed in the RMP effort include the following:
1. Energy development--(fluid minerals--oil and gas; alternative--
wind);
2. Management of vegetation;
3. Management of wildlife;
4. Conservation and recovery of special status species;
5. Water quality, quantity, and aquatic species;
6. Travel management and access to public lands;
7. Management of areas with special values;
8. Availability and management of public lands for commercial uses;
and
9. Land tenure adjustments.
After gathering public comments on what issues the plan should
address, the suggested issues will be placed in one of three
categories:
1. Issues to be resolved in the plan;
2. Issues resolved through policy or administrative action; or
3. Issues beyond the scope of this plan.
Rationale will be provided for each issue placed in categories two
or three. In addition to these major issues, a number of management
questions and concerns will be addressed in the plan. The public is
encouraged to help identify these questions and concerns during the
scoping phase.
An interdisciplinary approach will be used to develop the plan in
order to consider the variety of resource issues and concerns
identified. Disciplines involved in the planning process will include
specialists with expertise in minerals and geology, forestry, range,
fire and fuels, outdoor recreation, archaeology, paleontology, wildlife
and fisheries, lands and realty, hydrology, soils, sociology,
environmental justice and economics.
The following planning criteria have been proposed to guide
development of the plan, avoid unnecessary data collection and
analyses, and to ensure the plan is tailored to the issues. Other
criteria may be identified during the public scoping process. After
gathering comments on planning criteria, the BLM will finalize the
criteria and provide feedback to the public on the criteria to be used
throughout the planning process.
The RMP/EIS will comply with FLPMA, NEPA, and all other
applicable laws and regulations.
The plan amendment will recognize the existence of valid
existing rights.
Lands covered in the RMP amendment will be public lands,
which include split estate lands, managed by BLM. Decisions in the RMP
amendment will be made only on lands managed by the BLM.
The RMP/EIS will utilize existing guidance where appropriate, and
establish new guidance for managing the public lands within the Malta
Field Office.
The RMP/EIS will incorporate by reference the Standards
for Rangeland Health and Guidelines for Livestock Grazing Management
for Montana, North Dakota and South Dakota (August 1997), the Wind
Energy Final Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement (June 2005),
the Off-Highway Vehicle Environmental Impact Statement and Plan
Amendment for Montana and the Dakotas (June 2003), and the Montana/
Dakotas Statewide Fire Management Plan (September 2003).
The RMP/EIS will incorporate by reference all prior
Wilderness designations and Wilderness Study Area findings that affect
public lands in the planning area.
The RMP/EIS will recognize the State's responsibility to
manage wildlife populations, including uses such as hunting and
fishing.
Planning decisions will strive to be compatible with the
existing plans and policies of adjacent local, State, tribal, and
Federal agencies as long as the decisions are in conformance with BLM
legal mandates.
The BLM will use a collaborative and multi-jurisdictional
approach, where applicable throughout the planning process.
The scope of analysis will be consistent with the level of
analysis in current approved plans and in accordance with Bureau-wide
standards and program guidance.
Resource allocations will be reasonable and achievable
within available technological and budgetary constraints.
The lifestyles and concerns of area residents will be
recognized in the plan.
Dated: June 9, 2006.
Mark Albers,
Malta Field Office Manager.
[FR Doc. E6-14669 Filed 9-5-06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4311-DN-P