Notice of Availability of a Final Implementation Schedule for the South Florida Multi-Species Recovery Plan, 14132-14133 [E7-5471]
Download as PDF
14132
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 57 / Monday, March 26, 2007 / Notices
Dated: March 16, 2007.
Brian D. Montgomery,
Assistant Secretary for Housing—Federal
Housing Commissioner.
Appendix
United States Department of Housing and
Urban Development Servicemembers Civil
Relief Act Notice
Legal Rights and Protections Under the SCRA
Servicemembers on ‘‘active duty’’ or
‘‘active service,’’ or a dependent of such a
servicemember may be entitled to certain
legal protections and debt relief pursuant to
the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act (50
U.S.C. App. 501, et seq.) (SCRA).
Who May Be Entitled to Legal Protections
Under the SCRA
• Active duty members of the Army, Navy,
Air Force, Marine Corps, Coast Guard, and
active service National Guard;
• Active service members of the
commissioned corps of the National and
Atmospheric Administration;
• Active service members of the
commissioned corps of the Public Health
Service;
• United States citizens serving with the
armed forces of a nation with which the
United States is allied in the prosecution of
a war or military action; and
• Dependents of the above (e.g., spouse or
children).
What Legal Protections Are Servicemembers
Entitled to Under the SCRA?
• The SCRA states that a debt incurred by
a service member, or spouse jointly, prior to
entering military service shall not bear
interest at a rate above 6 percent during the
period of military service.
• The SCRA states that in a legal action to
enforce a debt against real estate that is filed
during, or within 90 days after the
servicemember’s military service, a court
may stop the proceedings for a period of
time, or adjust the debt. In addition, the sale,
foreclosure, or seizure of real estate shall not
be valid if it occurs during, or within 90 days
after the servicemember’s military service
unless the creditor has obtained a court order
approving the sale, foreclosure, or seizure of
the real estate.
cprice-sewell on PROD1PC66 with NOTICES
How Does a Servicemember or Dependent
Request Relief Under the SCRA?
• A servicemember or dependent, or both,
may request relief under the SCRA by
providing the lender a written notice with a
copy of the servicemember’s military orders.
(Note: Lender should place its name, address,
and contact information here.)
How Does a Servicemember or Dependent
Obtain Information About the SCRA?
• The U.S. Department of Defense’s
information resource is ‘‘Military
OneSource.’’ Web site: https://
www.militaryonesource.com
The toll-free telephone number for Military
OneSource are:
Æ From the United States: 1–800–342–
9647.
Æ From outside the United States (with
applicable access code): 800–3429–6477.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
15:30 Mar 23, 2007
Jkt 211001
Æ International Collect (through long
distance operator): 1–484–530–5908.
• Servicemembers and dependents with
questions about the SCRA should contact
their unit’s Judge Advocate, or their
installation’s Legal Assistance Officer. A
military legal assistance office locator for
each branch of the armed forces is available
at https://legalassistance.law.af.mil/content/
locator.php.
[FR Doc. E7–5412 Filed 3–23–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4210–67–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
Notice of Availability of a Final
Implementation Schedule for the South
Florida Multi-Species Recovery Plan
Fish and Wildlife Service,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice of document availability.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: The Fish and Wildlife Service
(‘‘we,’’ ‘‘our,’’ or ‘‘Service’’) announces
the availability of the Implementation
schedule for the South Florida MultiSpecies Recovery Plan (MSRP). The
MSRP, as approved in 1999, included a
discussion of the need for a coordinated
effort to develop an implementation
schedule. This implementation
schedule was prepared with the
assistance of the South Florida Multispecies/Ecosystem Recovery
Implementation Team (MERIT). The
implementation schedule prioritizes the
recovery tasks as described in the MSRP
on a community level, and identifies the
associated participating parties, time
frames, and costs necessary to
accomplish those tasks.
ADDRESSES: Copies of the final
implementation schedule can be
downloaded from https://
verobeach.fws.gov or can be obtained by
contacting the Fish and Wildlife
Service, South Florida Ecological
Services Office, 1339 20th Street, Vero
Beach, Florida 32960. We encourage
requests for the CD–ROM version of the
implementation schedule, as the hard
(paper) copy encompasses more than
140 pages.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Cindy Schulz at the South Florida
Ecological Services Office, (772) 562–
3909, ext. 305.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: On April
2, 2004, we published a notice
announcing the availability of this
technical/agency draft implementation
schedule in the Federal Register, and
opened a 60-day public comment
period. We particularly sought
comments concerning: (1)
Recommended changes to the priority
PO 00000
Frm 00061
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
number for recovery tasks; (2)
recommendations for additions or
deletions to the participants identified
for each recovery task; and (3)
additional information to assist us with
determining costs for accomplishing
recovery tasks. Four parties provided
comments on ten species. Among those
were comments on recovery task
priority number, participants, and cost.
Comments were also received on the
recovery tasks themselves. We have
considered and addressed comments
where appropriate in this final
implementation schedule. Those
comments, as well as updates by Service
staff, led to this final version of the
implementation schedule that differs
from the technical/agency draft. The
recovery tasks listed in the
implementation schedule were taken
directly from the MSRP. Any changes
needed to the tasks themselves will be
addressed in a future revision of the
MSRP rather than in the
implementation schedule. These
changes, if any, would be subject to
public comment only during such future
revision.
Background
Restoring listed animals and plants to
the point where they are again secure,
self-sustaining components of their
ecosystems is a primary goal of the
Service’s threatened and endangered
species program. To help guide the
recovery effort, we prepare recovery
plans for listed species native to the
United States, pursuant to section 4(f) of
the Endangered Species Act of 1973
(Act), as amended (16 U.S.C. et seq.),
which requires the development of
recovery plans for listed species unless
such a plan would not promote the
conservation of a particular species.
Recovery plans describe actions that
may be necessary for conservation of
these species, establish criteria for
reclassification from endangered to
threatened status or removal from the
list, and estimate the time and cost for
implementing the needed recovery
measures.
Section 4(f) of the Act also requires
that a public notice and an opportunity
for public review and comment be
provided during recovery plan
development. Accordingly, the MSRP
was made available for public review
and comment before its approval in May
1999. The MSRP identifies the recovery
needs of the 68 threatened and
endangered species and 23 natural
communities in the south Florida
ecosystem, which encompasses 67,346
square kilometers (26,002 square miles),
covering the 19 southernmost counties
in Florida.
E:\FR\FM\26MRN1.SGM
26MRN1
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 57 / Monday, March 26, 2007 / Notices
The process to develop this final
implementation schedule involved the
collaborative effort of a team appointed
by the Service to focus specifically on
recovery implementation efforts in
South Florida. The team, known as
MERIT, is comprised of 36 members
representing Federal, State, and local
government agencies; Tribal
governments; academia; industry, and
the private sector. MERIT members
assisted in assigning priorities to
recovery tasks, and estimating the
duration and possible cost to complete
each task. They also identified
organizations or agencies that would
likely be involved in accomplishing
each task.
The implementation schedule for the
MSRP contains recovery tasks for those
species that occur only in south Florida,
and for which the South Florida
14133
Ecological Services Office has recovery
lead. Other Service offices have
recovery responsibility for those species
that occur in south Florida but also
occur elsewhere. Implementation
schedules for those species can be found
in the approved individual recovery
plans for those species. Recovery tasks
are provided in this implementation
schedule for the following species:
Status/species
Scientific name
Mammals:
E Key deer ......................................................................................
E Key Largo cotton mouse .............................................................
E Key Largo woodrat ......................................................................
E Rice rat (= silver rice rat) ............................................................
E Lower Keys rabbit .......................................................................
Birds:
T Audubon’s crested caracara ........................................................
E Cape Sable seaside sparrow ......................................................
E Everglade snail kite .....................................................................
E Florida grasshopper sparrow ......................................................
Reptiles:
PT American crocodile ....................................................................
T Bluetail (blue-tailed) mole skink ..................................................
T Sand skink ...................................................................................
Invertebrates:
E Schaus swallowtail butterfly ........................................................
T Stock Island tree snail .................................................................
Plants:
E Avon Park harebells ....................................................................
E Beach jacquemontia ....................................................................
E Beautiful pawpaw ........................................................................
E Carter’s mustard ..........................................................................
E Crenulate lead-plant ....................................................................
E Deltoid spurge .............................................................................
E Florida perforate cladonia ...........................................................
E Florida ziziphus ...........................................................................
E Four-petal pawpaw ......................................................................
E Fragrant prickly-apple ..................................................................
T Garber’s spurge ...........................................................................
E Garrett’s mint ...............................................................................
E Highlands scrub hypericum .........................................................
E Key tree-cactus ...........................................................................
E Lakela’s mint ...............................................................................
E Lewton’s polygala ........................................................................
E Okeechobee gourd ......................................................................
T Papery whitlow-wort ....................................................................
T Pigeon wings ...............................................................................
E Pygmy fringe-tree ........................................................................
E Sandlace ......................................................................................
E Scrub blazing star .......................................................................
E Scrub mint ...................................................................................
E Short-leaved rosemary ................................................................
E Small’s milkpea ...........................................................................
E Snakeroot ....................................................................................
E Tiny polygala ...............................................................................
E Wireweed .....................................................................................
Odocoileus virginianus clavium.
Peromyscus gossypinus allapaticola.
Neotoma floridana smalli.
Oryzomys palustris natator (= O. argentatus.)
Sylvilagus palustris hefneri.
Polyborus plancus audubonii.
Ammodramus (= Ammospiza) maritimus mirabilis.
Rostrhamus sociabilis plumbeus.
Ammodramus savannarum floridanus.
Crocodylus acutus.
Eumeces egregius lividus.
Neoseps reynoldsi.
Heraclides (= Papilio) aristodemus ponceanus.
Orthalicus reses (not incl. nesodryas.)
Crotalaria avonensis.
Jacquemontia reclinata.
Deeringothamnus pulchellus.
Warea carteri.
Amorpha crenulata.
Chamaesyce (= Euphorbia) deltoidea spp. deltoidea.
Cladonia perforata.
Ziziphus celata.
Asimina tetramera.
Cereus eriophorus var. fragrans.
Chamaesyce (= Euphorbia) garberi.
Dicerandra christmanii.
Hypericum cumulicola.
Pilosocereus (= Cereus) robinii.
Dicerandra immaculata.
Polygala lewtonii.
Cucurbita okeechobeensis ssp. okeechobeensis.
Paronychia chartacea (= Nyachia pulvinata.)
Clitoria fragrans.
Chionanthus pygmaeus.
Polygonella myriophylla.
Liatris ohlingerae.
Dicerandra frutescens.
Conradina brevifolia.
Galactia smallii.
Eryngium cuneifolium.
Polygala smallii.
Polygonella basiramia (= ciliata var. b.)
cprice-sewell on PROD1PC66 with NOTICES
E = Endangered, T = Threatened, PT = Proposed for Reclassification to Threatened Status.
To request copies of the final
implementation schedule, please see the
ADDRESSES section above. Paper copies
of both the MSRP and the final
implementation schedule are available
for public inspection at the South
Florida Ecological Services Office.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
15:30 Mar 23, 2007
Jkt 211001
Authority
The authority for this action is section
4(f) of the Endangered Species Act, 16
U.S.C. 1533(f).
PO 00000
Dated: December 27, 2006.
Cynthia K. Dohner,
Acting Regional Director.
[FR Doc. E7–5471 Filed 3–23–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–55–P
Frm 00062
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
E:\FR\FM\26MRN1.SGM
26MRN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 72, Number 57 (Monday, March 26, 2007)]
[Notices]
[Pages 14132-14133]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E7-5471]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
Notice of Availability of a Final Implementation Schedule for the
South Florida Multi-Species Recovery Plan
AGENCY: Fish and Wildlife Service, Interior.
ACTION: Notice of document availability.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Fish and Wildlife Service (``we,'' ``our,'' or
``Service'') announces the availability of the Implementation schedule
for the South Florida Multi-Species Recovery Plan (MSRP). The MSRP, as
approved in 1999, included a discussion of the need for a coordinated
effort to develop an implementation schedule. This implementation
schedule was prepared with the assistance of the South Florida Multi-
species/Ecosystem Recovery Implementation Team (MERIT). The
implementation schedule prioritizes the recovery tasks as described in
the MSRP on a community level, and identifies the associated
participating parties, time frames, and costs necessary to accomplish
those tasks.
ADDRESSES: Copies of the final implementation schedule can be
downloaded from https://verobeach.fws.gov or can be obtained by
contacting the Fish and Wildlife Service, South Florida Ecological
Services Office, 1339 20th Street, Vero Beach, Florida 32960. We
encourage requests for the CD-ROM version of the implementation
schedule, as the hard (paper) copy encompasses more than 140 pages.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Cindy Schulz at the South Florida
Ecological Services Office, (772) 562-3909, ext. 305.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: On April 2, 2004, we published a notice
announcing the availability of this technical/agency draft
implementation schedule in the Federal Register, and opened a 60-day
public comment period. We particularly sought comments concerning: (1)
Recommended changes to the priority number for recovery tasks; (2)
recommendations for additions or deletions to the participants
identified for each recovery task; and (3) additional information to
assist us with determining costs for accomplishing recovery tasks. Four
parties provided comments on ten species. Among those were comments on
recovery task priority number, participants, and cost. Comments were
also received on the recovery tasks themselves. We have considered and
addressed comments where appropriate in this final implementation
schedule. Those comments, as well as updates by Service staff, led to
this final version of the implementation schedule that differs from the
technical/agency draft. The recovery tasks listed in the implementation
schedule were taken directly from the MSRP. Any changes needed to the
tasks themselves will be addressed in a future revision of the MSRP
rather than in the implementation schedule. These changes, if any,
would be subject to public comment only during such future revision.
Background
Restoring listed animals and plants to the point where they are
again secure, self-sustaining components of their ecosystems is a
primary goal of the Service's threatened and endangered species
program. To help guide the recovery effort, we prepare recovery plans
for listed species native to the United States, pursuant to section
4(f) of the Endangered Species Act of 1973 (Act), as amended (16 U.S.C.
et seq.), which requires the development of recovery plans for listed
species unless such a plan would not promote the conservation of a
particular species. Recovery plans describe actions that may be
necessary for conservation of these species, establish criteria for
reclassification from endangered to threatened status or removal from
the list, and estimate the time and cost for implementing the needed
recovery measures.
Section 4(f) of the Act also requires that a public notice and an
opportunity for public review and comment be provided during recovery
plan development. Accordingly, the MSRP was made available for public
review and comment before its approval in May 1999. The MSRP identifies
the recovery needs of the 68 threatened and endangered species and 23
natural communities in the south Florida ecosystem, which encompasses
67,346 square kilometers (26,002 square miles), covering the 19
southernmost counties in Florida.
[[Page 14133]]
The process to develop this final implementation schedule involved
the collaborative effort of a team appointed by the Service to focus
specifically on recovery implementation efforts in South Florida. The
team, known as MERIT, is comprised of 36 members representing Federal,
State, and local government agencies; Tribal governments; academia;
industry, and the private sector. MERIT members assisted in assigning
priorities to recovery tasks, and estimating the duration and possible
cost to complete each task. They also identified organizations or
agencies that would likely be involved in accomplishing each task.
The implementation schedule for the MSRP contains recovery tasks
for those species that occur only in south Florida, and for which the
South Florida Ecological Services Office has recovery lead. Other
Service offices have recovery responsibility for those species that
occur in south Florida but also occur elsewhere. Implementation
schedules for those species can be found in the approved individual
recovery plans for those species. Recovery tasks are provided in this
implementation schedule for the following species:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Status/species Scientific name
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Mammals:
E Key deer......................... Odocoileus virginianus clavium.
E Key Largo cotton mouse........... Peromyscus gossypinus
allapaticola.
E Key Largo woodrat................ Neotoma floridana smalli.
E Rice rat (= silver rice rat)..... Oryzomys palustris natator (=
O. argentatus.)
E Lower Keys rabbit................ Sylvilagus palustris hefneri.
Birds:
T Audubon's crested caracara....... Polyborus plancus audubonii.
E Cape Sable seaside sparrow....... Ammodramus (= Ammospiza)
maritimus mirabilis.
E Everglade snail kite............. Rostrhamus sociabilis plumbeus.
E Florida grasshopper sparrow...... Ammodramus savannarum
floridanus.
Reptiles:
PT American crocodile.............. Crocodylus acutus.
T Bluetail (blue-tailed) mole skink Eumeces egregius lividus.
T Sand skink....................... Neoseps reynoldsi.
Invertebrates:
E Schaus swallowtail butterfly..... Heraclides (= Papilio)
aristodemus ponceanus.
T Stock Island tree snail.......... Orthalicus reses (not incl.
nesodryas.)
Plants:
E Avon Park harebells.............. Crotalaria avonensis.
E Beach jacquemontia............... Jacquemontia reclinata.
E Beautiful pawpaw................. Deeringothamnus pulchellus.
E Carter's mustard................. Warea carteri.
E Crenulate lead-plant............. Amorpha crenulata.
E Deltoid spurge................... Chamaesyce (= Euphorbia)
deltoidea spp. deltoidea.
E Florida perforate cladonia....... Cladonia perforata.
E Florida ziziphus................. Ziziphus celata.
E Four-petal pawpaw................ Asimina tetramera.
E Fragrant prickly-apple........... Cereus eriophorus var.
fragrans.
T Garber's spurge.................. Chamaesyce (= Euphorbia)
garberi.
E Garrett's mint................... Dicerandra christmanii.
E Highlands scrub hypericum........ Hypericum cumulicola.
E Key tree-cactus.................. Pilosocereus (= Cereus)
robinii.
E Lakela's mint.................... Dicerandra immaculata.
E Lewton's polygala................ Polygala lewtonii.
E Okeechobee gourd................. Cucurbita okeechobeensis ssp.
okeechobeensis.
T Papery whitlow-wort.............. Paronychia chartacea (= Nyachia
pulvinata.)
T Pigeon wings..................... Clitoria fragrans.
E Pygmy fringe-tree................ Chionanthus pygmaeus.
E Sandlace......................... Polygonella myriophylla.
E Scrub blazing star............... Liatris ohlingerae.
E Scrub mint....................... Dicerandra frutescens.
E Short-leaved rosemary............ Conradina brevifolia.
E Small's milkpea.................. Galactia smallii.
E Snakeroot........................ Eryngium cuneifolium.
E Tiny polygala.................... Polygala smallii.
E Wireweed......................... Polygonella basiramia (=
ciliata var. b.)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
E = Endangered, T = Threatened, PT = Proposed for Reclassification to
Threatened Status.
To request copies of the final implementation schedule, please see
the ADDRESSES section above. Paper copies of both the MSRP and the
final implementation schedule are available for public inspection at
the South Florida Ecological Services Office.
Authority
The authority for this action is section 4(f) of the Endangered
Species Act, 16 U.S.C. 1533(f).
Dated: December 27, 2006.
Cynthia K. Dohner,
Acting Regional Director.
[FR Doc. E7-5471 Filed 3-23-07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310-55-P