Lincoln National Forest; New Mexico; Perk-Grindstone III Hazardous Fuel Reduction Project, 55419-55421 [06-8010]
Download as PDF
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 184 / Friday, September 22, 2006 / Notices
NM 88345; (2) telephone—(406) 752–
6400; or (3) e-mail—pklug@fs.fed.us. If
you choose to comment by e-mail,
please include your name and regular
mailing address with the scoping
comment.
determined by Agency officials in
consultation with the Recreation RAC
members, when the committee is
formed.
Dated: August 31, 2006.
Boyd K. Rutherford,
Assistant Secretary for Administration.
[FR Doc. 06–8096 Filed 9–19–06; 3:07 pm]
BILLING CODE 3410–11–U
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Forest Service
Lincoln National Forest; New Mexico;
Perk-Grindstone III Hazardous Fuel
Reduction Project
Forest Service, USDA.
ACTION: Notice of Intent to Prepare an
Environmental Impact Statement (EIS).
sroberts on PROD1PC70 with NOTICES
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: The Smokey Bear Ranger
District of the Lincoln National Forest
intends to prepare an environmental
impact statement to address the PerkGrindstone III Hazardous Fuel
Reduction Project on National Forest
System lands in Lincoln County, New
Mexico. The proposed project is located
adjacent to or in the immediate vicinity
of the Village of Ruidoso. The project
area is bounded on the west and south
by the Mescalero Apache Indian
Reservation.
The Village of Ruidoso is listed as a
community at high risk from wildfire, as
defined by the National Fire Plan of
2000 (NFP). The proposed project
addresses this problem through
hazardous fuel reduction and related
forest health objectives, as directed by
the NFP and as governed by all
applicable laws and public policies. The
project has been developed through
local collaborative processes, continual
public participation, and
interdisciplinary design. It would
involve up to approximately 4,730 acres
of forest management treatments and
integrated conservation measures within
a gross project area of approximately
5,920 acres.
DATES: Comments concerning the scope
of the analysis are requested within 14
days following the publication of this
notice in the Federal Register. The draft
EIS is expected to be available for public
review in February 2007 and the final
EIS is expected to be published in May
2007.
ADDRESSES: Send written, oral, or e-mail
scoping comments to the project leader
by: (1) mail—Perk-Grindstone III
Hazardous Fuel Reduction Project, Attn:
Paul Klug—Project Leader, c/o USDA
Forest Service—Smokey Bear Ranger
District, 901 Mechem Drive, Ruidoso,
VerDate Aug<31>2005
20:37 Sep 21, 2006
Jkt 208001
Paul
Klug, Forester, TEAMS Planning
Enterprise, USDA Forest Service, (406)
752–6400. Individuals who use
telecommunication devices for the deaf
(TDD) may call the Federal Information
Relay Service (FIRS) at 1–800–877–8339
between 8 a.m. and 8 p.m., Eastern
Standard Time, Monday through Friday.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Purpose and Need for Action
This proposal is being prepared to
meet the intent of the Healthy Forests
Restoration Act of 2003 for authorized
hazardous fuel reduction projects. The
purpose of the Perk-Grindstone III
Hazardous Fuel Reduction Project is to
moderate potential wildfire intensity on
National Forest System lands
surrounding the Village of Ruidoso,
New Mexico, an area that local
cooperative planning has identified and
prioritized for treatment: The project
area is immediately adjacent to the
community, which is listed as being at
high risk from wildfire as defined by the
National Fire Plan of 2000. The
surrounding area is a topographically
complex, densely forested landscape
with current and future potential for
high intensity wildfire. Although
portions of the area received fuel
reduction treatments between 1994 and
2004, a high-intensity wildfire in
untreated areas could exceed the
capability of ground-based crews and
equipment to use direct-attack
firefighting methods, and could put at
risk the lives of community residents
and firefighters, private property, public
facilities, and natural-resource values of
the area targeted for conservation by the
Forest Plan—including recreation,
scenery, and wildlife habitat.
To serve the purpose of moderating
potential wildfire intensity in this area
and thereby reduce the risk of severe
impacts from wildfire, particular forest
management needs are indicated, to
change current conditions toward
desired conditions. These needs are as
follows:
• Reduce the tonnage and continuity
of woody debris on the forest floor that
provides the basic fuel for wildfires.
• Reduce the density of lower- and
mid-level trees that can help wildfires
climb and torch the crowns of upperlevel trees.
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Frm 00004
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
55419
• In selected stands, reduce the
density and continuity of upper-level
trees that can help sustain a crown fire.
• Interrupt forest insect and disease
trends that are currently killing large
trees and adding to the fuel hazard.
• Create forest conditions that would
allow the health and vigor of surviving
large trees to improve and become more
fire-resilient.
• Implement standards of resource
management and environmental
protection applicable to the area.
Proposed Action
Proposed forest management work
includes noncommercial thinning,
commercial thinning involving removal
of logs and slash by ground-based
skidding or helicopter, ground-based
machine work and hand work to pile
thinning slash, and slash-pile burning or
broadcast burning to dispose of or
reduce woody fuels. On existing roads
used to support these treatments,
maintenance work including forestry
best management practices would be
performed. No new permanent roads are
proposed; however, new temporary
roads would be developed to facilitate
proper ground-based skidding and
access log-landing areas, especially sites
used to receive logs by helicopter. Upon
completion of logging and other
mechanized treatments, temporary
roads would be rehabilitated and closed.
The proposed forest management
treatments and roadwork integrate
various detailed design-features to
conserve cultural or historical sites, air
quality, soil, water quality, wildlife,
native plants and trees, scenery, and
recreation.
To achieve desired conditions for the
area, the proposed action involves some
removal of commercial-size trees from
areas of protected habitat of the Mexican
spotted owl, a threatened species. Under
the current forest plan as amended,
these treatments to reduce fuels near
urban areas are anticipated; nonetheless,
they are a departure from the forestwide
standards and guidelines adopted to
implement the recovery plan for this
species. Therefore, to ensure project
consistency with the forest plan, the
plan would be amended at the same
time as and in conjunction with the
approval of an action alternative, should
one be selected, that involves similar
departure from current standards and
guidelines to conserve the Mexican
spotted owl. The plan amendment
would be limited to apply only to the
Perk-Grindstone III hazardous fuel
reduction project area and its approved
activities (36 CFR 219.8(e)).
E:\FR\FM\22SEN1.SGM
22SEN1
55420
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 184 / Friday, September 22, 2006 / Notices
Responsible Official
The responsible official for the PerkGrindstone III Hazardous Fuel
Reduction Project is S.E. ‘‘Lou’’
Woltering, Forest Supervisor, Lincoln
National Forest, 1101 New York
Avenue, Alamogordo, NM 88310–6692.
Nature of Decision To Be Made
The EIS will inform both the public
and responsible Forest Service officials
so that the following decisions can be
made: (1) Whether the Forest Service
has met procedural requirements of the
National Environmental Policy Act to
study and disclose effects of the
proposed action and alternatives on the
quality of the human environment; (2)
whether any proposed or alternative
activities or their predicted effects are
inconsistent with Forest Plan standards
and guidelines or other applicable laws,
regulations, and policies; (3) whether to
amend the Forest Plan as previously
described; and (4) whether to approve
and implement the proposed action or
an alternative.
If, on the basis of the final EIS, the
responsible official decides to approve
and implement the proposed action or
an alternative, it is anticipated that
project operations could begin in midto-late summer 2007, and continue
intermittently for at least three
additional years (through 2010 or
beyond).
sroberts on PROD1PC70 with NOTICES
Scoping Process
In December 2004, the Forest Service
issued an earlier version of the proposed
action. Comments were received and
considered, a preferred alternative was
developed, and the environmental
effects of no action, the original
proposed action, and the preferred
alternative were compared and reported
in an environmental assessment (EA)
issued in July 2005. Subsequently, an
objection was submitted by an eligible
party in accordance with 36 CFR Part
218, and the response to the objection
by the Forest Service’s southwestern
regional office instructed the Forest
Supervisor to further analyze and
disclose particular environmental
effects of the proposed action and
alternatives in a revised EA. In this
process, the Forest Supervisor decided
to feature as the proposed action the
previously identified preferred
alternative, which involves more
commercial cutting to achieve desired
conditions and, as a result, departs from
current forestwide standards and
guidelines for managing Mexican
spotted owl habitat. Given this situation
and the need for a forest plan
amendment, the Forest Supervisor
VerDate Aug<31>2005
20:37 Sep 21, 2006
Jkt 208001
determined that an EIS would be
prepared.
Since the project developed to this
current status through an early and
ongoing collaborative process involving
meetings and correspondence with a
wide range of public interests,
organizations, agencies and individuals,
and since this collaborative process and
comments on the original proposal
helped shape and define the current
proposal, all past collaboration and
public comments still apply. Additional
comments received at this stage of the
process will also be considered, and
there will also be opportunity to
comment on the draft EIS. Considering
the amount of public involvement and
analysis performed to date and the
desire of local partners and community
members to expedite the project, the
scheduled scoping comment period has
been limited to two weeks.
Preliminary Issues
Based on scoping completed to date,
the known environmental, economic,
and social concerns related to the
proposed action are as follows:
• Conservation of scenery and
recreation opportunities within the
project area;
• Truly effective reduction of the
current fuel hazard and potential
wildfire intensity;
• Integration of project activities with
related fuel-reduction work planned or
already in process on neighboring lands;
• Protection of private property
during prescribed burning operations;
• Protection of soil, water and air
quality;
• Conservation of federally listed
threatened species including the
Mexican spotted owl and northern
goshawk;
• Conservation of old-growth forest
conditions;
• Prevention or control of non-native
plant invasion;
• Supply of raw materials to area
forest-products industries resulting from
trees removed to achieve desired
conditions; and
• Protection of important
archaeological sites or historic
properties present in the project area.
The EIS will address these
preliminary issues through the proposed
action and its integrated design features
and conservation measures, through
mitigation to avoid, minimize, rectify,
reduce, or compensate for possible
impacts, or through other reasonable
courses of action (alternatives) that
might remedy issues while still serving
the project purpose and meeting the
indicated forest-management needs.
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Comment Requested
This notice of intent initiates the final
phase of the scoping process which
guides the development of the EIS. The
Forest Service is requesting any new
scoping comments related to the current
proposed action and its potential effects
on the quality of the human
environment. All information, ideas,
and concerns previously submitted for
the proposal of December 2004 are being
retained and considered as potentially
relevant to the current proposed action;
such comments do not need to be
resubmitted unless there are changes or
additions.
Early Notice of Importance of Public
Participation in Subsequent
Environmental Review
A draft EIS will be prepared for notice
and comment in February 2007. The
comment period on the draft EIS will be
45 days from the date the
Environmental Protection Agency
publishes the notice of availability in
the Federal Register. The Forest Service
believes, at this early stage, it is
important to give reviewers notice of
several court rulings related to public
participation in the environmental
review process. First, reviewers of draft
EISs must structure their participation
in the environmental review of the
proposal so that it is meaningful and
alerts an agency to the reviewer’s
position and contentions. Vermont
Yankee Nuclear Power Corp. v. NRDC,
435 U.S. 519, 553 (1978). Also,
environmental objections that could be
raised at the draft EIS stage but that are
not raised until after completion of the
final EIS may be waived or dismissed by
the courts. City of Angoon v. Hodel, 803
F.2d 1016, 1022 (9th Cir. 1986) and
Wisconsin Heritages, Inc. v. Harris, 490
F. Supp. 1334, 1338 (E.D. Wis. 1980).
Because of these court rulings, it is very
important that those interested in this
proposed action participate by the close
of the 45-day comment period on the
draft EIS so that substantive comments
and objections are made available to the
Forest Service at a time when it can
meaningfully consider them and
respond to them in the final EIS.
To assist the Forest Service in
identifying and considering issues and
concerns on the proposed action,
comments on the draft EIS should be as
specific as possible. It is also helpful if
comments refer to specific pages or
chapters of the draft statement.
Comments may also address the
adequacy of the draft EIS or the merits
of the alternatives formulated and
discussed in the statement. Reviewers
may wish to refer to the Council on
E:\FR\FM\22SEN1.SGM
22SEN1
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 184 / Friday, September 22, 2006 / Notices
Environmental Quality Regulations for
implementing the procedural provisions
of the National Environmental Policy
Act at 40 CFR 1503.3 in addressing
these points.
Comments received, including the
names and addresses of those who
comment, will be considered part of the
public record on this proposal and will
be available for public inspection.
(Authority: 40 CFR 1501.7 and 1508.22;
Forest Service Handbook 1909.15,
Section 21)
Dated: September 15, 2006.
S.E. ‘‘Lou’’ Woltering,
Forest Supervisor, Lincoln National Forest.
[FR Doc. 06–8010 Filed 9–21–06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410–11–P
End of Certification
Accordingly, the following products
and service are added to the
Procurement List:
COMMITTEE FOR PURCHASE FROM
PEOPLE WHO ARE BLIND OR
SEVERELY DISABLED
Procurement List; Additions
Committee for Purchase From
People Who Are Blind or Severely
Disabled.
ACTION: Additions to procurement list.
sroberts on PROD1PC70 with NOTICES
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: This action adds to the
Procurement List products and service
to be furnished by nonprofit agencies
employing persons who are blind or
have other severe disabilities.
EFFECTIVE DATE: October 22, 2006.
ADDRESS: Committee for Purchase From
People Who Are Blind or Severely
Disabled, Jefferson Plaza 2, Suite 10800,
1421 Jefferson Davis Highway,
Arlington, Virginia 22202–3259.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Sheryl D. Kennerly, Telephone: (703)
603–7740, Fax: (703) 603–0655, or email SKennerly@jwod.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: On July
28, 2006, the Committee for Purchase
From People Who Are Blind or Severely
Disabled published notice (71 FR42800)
of proposed additions to the
Procurement List.
After consideration of the material
presented to it concerning capability of
qualified nonprofit agencies to provide
the products and service and impact of
the additions on the current or most
recent contractors, the Committee has
determined that the products and
service listed below are suitable for
procurement by the Federal Government
under 41 U.S.C. 46–48c and 41 CFR 51–
2.4.
Regulatory Flexibility Act Certification
I certify that the following action will
not have a significant impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
20:37 Sep 21, 2006
Jkt 208001
The major factors considered for this
certification were:
1. The action will not result in any
additional reporting, recordkeeping or
other compliance requirements for small
entities other than the small
organizations that will furnish the
products and service to the Government.
2. The action will result in
authorizing small entities to furnish the
products and service to the Government.
3. There are no known regulatory
alternatives which would accomplish
the objectives of the Javits-WagnerO’Day Act (41 U.S.C. 46–48c) in
connection with the products and
service proposed for addition to the
Procurement List.
Products
Product/NSN: Stainless Steel Scrubber—
Metal Sponges
7920–00–926–5176
NPA: Beacon Lighthouse, Inc., Wichita Falls,
Texas.
Contracting Activity: GSA, Southwest Supply
Center, Fort Worth, Texas.
Product/NSN: Tool Kit, Highway Safety
5180–01–434–5068
NPA: Development Workshop, Inc., Idaho
Falls, Idaho.
Contracting Activity: GSA, Federal Supply
Service, Region 6, Kansas City, Missouri.
Service
Service Type/Location: Document
Destruction, DOI Acquisition & Property
Management Division, Building 22208,
Auger Street, 2nd Floor, Fort Huachuca,
Arizona.
NPA: Beacon Group SW, Inc., Tucson,
Arizona.
Contracting Activity: DOI/NBC Acquisition &
Property Management Division, Fort
Huachuca, AZ.
This action does not affect current
contracts awarded prior to the effective
date of this addition or options that may
be exercised under those contracts.
Sheryl D. Kennerly,
Director, Information Management.
[FR Doc. E6–15658 Filed 9–21–06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6353–01–P
COMMISSION ON CIVIL RIGHTS
Agenda and Notice of Public Meeting
of the Connecticut State Advisory
Committee
Notice is hereby given, pursuant to
the provisions of the rules and
regulations of the U.S. Commission on
Civil Rights, that a briefing of the
Connecticut State Advisory Committee
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55421
will convene at 12 p.m. and adjourn at
7 p.m. on Thursday, September 28, 2006
in Hearing Group Room 2C, located in
the Legislative Building, 210 Capitol
Ave., in Hartford, Connecticut. The
purpose of the meeting is to hear from
education experts and advocates about
school choice and civil rights.
This briefing is open the public.
Members of the public needing
disability accommodations are asked to
contact Barbara de La Viez of the
Eastern Regional Office by Friday,
September 22, 2006.
The meeting will be conducted
pursuant to the provisions of the rules
and regulations of the Commission.
Dated at Washington, DC, September 15,
2006.
Ivy L. Davis,
Acting Chief, Regional Programs
Coordination Unit.
[FR Doc. 06–7865 Filed 9–21–06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6335–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
Economics and Statistics
Administration
Bureau of Economic Analysis Advisory
Committee
Bureau of Economic Analysis,
Commerce.
ACTION: Notice of public meeting.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: Pursuant to the Federal
Advisory Committee Act (Pub. L. 92–
463 as amended by Pub. L. 94–409, Pub.
L. 96–523, Pub. L. 97–375 and Pub. L.
105–153), we are announcing a meeting
of the Bureau of Economic Analysis
Advisory Committee. The meeting will
discuss recent measurement issues
relating to the personal consumption
expenditures price index, compensation
and employment, research and
development, and the upcoming
comprehensive revision of the NIPAs.
DATES: Friday, November 3, 2006, the
meeting will begin at 9 a.m. and adjourn
at approximately 4 p.m.
ADDRESSES: The meeting will take place
at BEA, 2nd floor, Conference Room
A&B, 1441 L Street, NW., Washington,
DC 20230.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Samantha Schasberger,
Communications Division, Program
Analyst, Bureau of Economic Analysis,
U.S. Department of Commerce,
Washington, DC 20230; telephone
number: (202) 606–9642.
Public Participation: This meeting is
open to the public. Because of security
procedures, anyone planning to attend
E:\FR\FM\22SEN1.SGM
22SEN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 71, Number 184 (Friday, September 22, 2006)]
[Notices]
[Pages 55419-55421]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 06-8010]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Forest Service
Lincoln National Forest; New Mexico; Perk-Grindstone III
Hazardous Fuel Reduction Project
AGENCY: Forest Service, USDA.
ACTION: Notice of Intent to Prepare an Environmental Impact Statement
(EIS).
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Smokey Bear Ranger District of the Lincoln National Forest
intends to prepare an environmental impact statement to address the
Perk-Grindstone III Hazardous Fuel Reduction Project on National Forest
System lands in Lincoln County, New Mexico. The proposed project is
located adjacent to or in the immediate vicinity of the Village of
Ruidoso. The project area is bounded on the west and south by the
Mescalero Apache Indian Reservation.
The Village of Ruidoso is listed as a community at high risk from
wildfire, as defined by the National Fire Plan of 2000 (NFP). The
proposed project addresses this problem through hazardous fuel
reduction and related forest health objectives, as directed by the NFP
and as governed by all applicable laws and public policies. The project
has been developed through local collaborative processes, continual
public participation, and interdisciplinary design. It would involve up
to approximately 4,730 acres of forest management treatments and
integrated conservation measures within a gross project area of
approximately 5,920 acres.
DATES: Comments concerning the scope of the analysis are requested
within 14 days following the publication of this notice in the Federal
Register. The draft EIS is expected to be available for public review
in February 2007 and the final EIS is expected to be published in May
2007.
ADDRESSES: Send written, oral, or e-mail scoping comments to the
project leader by: (1) mail--Perk-Grindstone III Hazardous Fuel
Reduction Project, Attn: Paul Klug--Project Leader, c/o USDA Forest
Service--Smokey Bear Ranger District, 901 Mechem Drive, Ruidoso, NM
88345; (2) telephone--(406) 752-6400; or (3) e-mail_pklug@fs.fed.us.
If you choose to comment by e-mail, please include your name and
regular mailing address with the scoping comment.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Paul Klug, Forester, TEAMS Planning
Enterprise, USDA Forest Service, (406) 752-6400. Individuals who use
telecommunication devices for the deaf (TDD) may call the Federal
Information Relay Service (FIRS) at 1-800-877-8339 between 8 a.m. and 8
p.m., Eastern Standard Time, Monday through Friday.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Purpose and Need for Action
This proposal is being prepared to meet the intent of the Healthy
Forests Restoration Act of 2003 for authorized hazardous fuel reduction
projects. The purpose of the Perk-Grindstone III Hazardous Fuel
Reduction Project is to moderate potential wildfire intensity on
National Forest System lands surrounding the Village of Ruidoso, New
Mexico, an area that local cooperative planning has identified and
prioritized for treatment: The project area is immediately adjacent to
the community, which is listed as being at high risk from wildfire as
defined by the National Fire Plan of 2000. The surrounding area is a
topographically complex, densely forested landscape with current and
future potential for high intensity wildfire. Although portions of the
area received fuel reduction treatments between 1994 and 2004, a high-
intensity wildfire in untreated areas could exceed the capability of
ground-based crews and equipment to use direct-attack firefighting
methods, and could put at risk the lives of community residents and
firefighters, private property, public facilities, and natural-resource
values of the area targeted for conservation by the Forest Plan--
including recreation, scenery, and wildlife habitat.
To serve the purpose of moderating potential wildfire intensity in
this area and thereby reduce the risk of severe impacts from wildfire,
particular forest management needs are indicated, to change current
conditions toward desired conditions. These needs are as follows:
Reduce the tonnage and continuity of woody debris on the
forest floor that provides the basic fuel for wildfires.
Reduce the density of lower- and mid-level trees that can
help wildfires climb and torch the crowns of upper-level trees.
In selected stands, reduce the density and continuity of
upper-level trees that can help sustain a crown fire.
Interrupt forest insect and disease trends that are
currently killing large trees and adding to the fuel hazard.
Create forest conditions that would allow the health and
vigor of surviving large trees to improve and become more fire-
resilient.
Implement standards of resource management and
environmental protection applicable to the area.
Proposed Action
Proposed forest management work includes noncommercial thinning,
commercial thinning involving removal of logs and slash by ground-based
skidding or helicopter, ground-based machine work and hand work to pile
thinning slash, and slash-pile burning or broadcast burning to dispose
of or reduce woody fuels. On existing roads used to support these
treatments, maintenance work including forestry best management
practices would be performed. No new permanent roads are proposed;
however, new temporary roads would be developed to facilitate proper
ground-based skidding and access log-landing areas, especially sites
used to receive logs by helicopter. Upon completion of logging and
other mechanized treatments, temporary roads would be rehabilitated and
closed. The proposed forest management treatments and roadwork
integrate various detailed design-features to conserve cultural or
historical sites, air quality, soil, water quality, wildlife, native
plants and trees, scenery, and recreation.
To achieve desired conditions for the area, the proposed action
involves some removal of commercial-size trees from areas of protected
habitat of the Mexican spotted owl, a threatened species. Under the
current forest plan as amended, these treatments to reduce fuels near
urban areas are anticipated; nonetheless, they are a departure from the
forestwide standards and guidelines adopted to implement the recovery
plan for this species. Therefore, to ensure project consistency with
the forest plan, the plan would be amended at the same time as and in
conjunction with the approval of an action alternative, should one be
selected, that involves similar departure from current standards and
guidelines to conserve the Mexican spotted owl. The plan amendment
would be limited to apply only to the Perk-Grindstone III hazardous
fuel reduction project area and its approved activities (36 CFR
219.8(e)).
[[Page 55420]]
Responsible Official
The responsible official for the Perk-Grindstone III Hazardous Fuel
Reduction Project is S.E. ``Lou'' Woltering, Forest Supervisor, Lincoln
National Forest, 1101 New York Avenue, Alamogordo, NM 88310-6692.
Nature of Decision To Be Made
The EIS will inform both the public and responsible Forest Service
officials so that the following decisions can be made: (1) Whether the
Forest Service has met procedural requirements of the National
Environmental Policy Act to study and disclose effects of the proposed
action and alternatives on the quality of the human environment; (2)
whether any proposed or alternative activities or their predicted
effects are inconsistent with Forest Plan standards and guidelines or
other applicable laws, regulations, and policies; (3) whether to amend
the Forest Plan as previously described; and (4) whether to approve and
implement the proposed action or an alternative.
If, on the basis of the final EIS, the responsible official decides
to approve and implement the proposed action or an alternative, it is
anticipated that project operations could begin in mid-to-late summer
2007, and continue intermittently for at least three additional years
(through 2010 or beyond).
Scoping Process
In December 2004, the Forest Service issued an earlier version of
the proposed action. Comments were received and considered, a preferred
alternative was developed, and the environmental effects of no action,
the original proposed action, and the preferred alternative were
compared and reported in an environmental assessment (EA) issued in
July 2005. Subsequently, an objection was submitted by an eligible
party in accordance with 36 CFR Part 218, and the response to the
objection by the Forest Service's southwestern regional office
instructed the Forest Supervisor to further analyze and disclose
particular environmental effects of the proposed action and
alternatives in a revised EA. In this process, the Forest Supervisor
decided to feature as the proposed action the previously identified
preferred alternative, which involves more commercial cutting to
achieve desired conditions and, as a result, departs from current
forestwide standards and guidelines for managing Mexican spotted owl
habitat. Given this situation and the need for a forest plan amendment,
the Forest Supervisor determined that an EIS would be prepared.
Since the project developed to this current status through an early
and ongoing collaborative process involving meetings and correspondence
with a wide range of public interests, organizations, agencies and
individuals, and since this collaborative process and comments on the
original proposal helped shape and define the current proposal, all
past collaboration and public comments still apply. Additional comments
received at this stage of the process will also be considered, and
there will also be opportunity to comment on the draft EIS. Considering
the amount of public involvement and analysis performed to date and the
desire of local partners and community members to expedite the project,
the scheduled scoping comment period has been limited to two weeks.
Preliminary Issues
Based on scoping completed to date, the known environmental,
economic, and social concerns related to the proposed action are as
follows:
Conservation of scenery and recreation opportunities
within the project area;
Truly effective reduction of the current fuel hazard and
potential wildfire intensity;
Integration of project activities with related fuel-
reduction work planned or already in process on neighboring lands;
Protection of private property during prescribed burning
operations;
Protection of soil, water and air quality;
Conservation of federally listed threatened species
including the Mexican spotted owl and northern goshawk;
Conservation of old-growth forest conditions;
Prevention or control of non-native plant invasion;
Supply of raw materials to area forest-products industries
resulting from trees removed to achieve desired conditions; and
Protection of important archaeological sites or historic
properties present in the project area.
The EIS will address these preliminary issues through the proposed
action and its integrated design features and conservation measures,
through mitigation to avoid, minimize, rectify, reduce, or compensate
for possible impacts, or through other reasonable courses of action
(alternatives) that might remedy issues while still serving the project
purpose and meeting the indicated forest-management needs.
Comment Requested
This notice of intent initiates the final phase of the scoping
process which guides the development of the EIS. The Forest Service is
requesting any new scoping comments related to the current proposed
action and its potential effects on the quality of the human
environment. All information, ideas, and concerns previously submitted
for the proposal of December 2004 are being retained and considered as
potentially relevant to the current proposed action; such comments do
not need to be resubmitted unless there are changes or additions.
Early Notice of Importance of Public Participation in Subsequent
Environmental Review
A draft EIS will be prepared for notice and comment in February
2007. The comment period on the draft EIS will be 45 days from the date
the Environmental Protection Agency publishes the notice of
availability in the Federal Register. The Forest Service believes, at
this early stage, it is important to give reviewers notice of several
court rulings related to public participation in the environmental
review process. First, reviewers of draft EISs must structure their
participation in the environmental review of the proposal so that it is
meaningful and alerts an agency to the reviewer's position and
contentions. Vermont Yankee Nuclear Power Corp. v. NRDC, 435 U.S. 519,
553 (1978). Also, environmental objections that could be raised at the
draft EIS stage but that are not raised until after completion of the
final EIS may be waived or dismissed by the courts. City of Angoon v.
Hodel, 803 F.2d 1016, 1022 (9th Cir. 1986) and Wisconsin Heritages,
Inc. v. Harris, 490 F. Supp. 1334, 1338 (E.D. Wis. 1980). Because of
these court rulings, it is very important that those interested in this
proposed action participate by the close of the 45-day comment period
on the draft EIS so that substantive comments and objections are made
available to the Forest Service at a time when it can meaningfully
consider them and respond to them in the final EIS.
To assist the Forest Service in identifying and considering issues
and concerns on the proposed action, comments on the draft EIS should
be as specific as possible. It is also helpful if comments refer to
specific pages or chapters of the draft statement. Comments may also
address the adequacy of the draft EIS or the merits of the alternatives
formulated and discussed in the statement. Reviewers may wish to refer
to the Council on
[[Page 55421]]
Environmental Quality Regulations for implementing the procedural
provisions of the National Environmental Policy Act at 40 CFR 1503.3 in
addressing these points.
Comments received, including the names and addresses of those who
comment, will be considered part of the public record on this proposal
and will be available for public inspection.
(Authority: 40 CFR 1501.7 and 1508.22; Forest Service Handbook 1909.15,
Section 21)
Dated: September 15, 2006.
S.E. ``Lou'' Woltering,
Forest Supervisor, Lincoln National Forest.
[FR Doc. 06-8010 Filed 9-21-06; 8:45 am]
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