Guam National Wildlife Refuge, Dededo, Guam, 37037-37039 [E7-13084]

Download as PDF Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 129 / Friday, July 6, 2007 / Notices Landholding Agency: Navy Property Number: 77200720063 Status: Excess Reasons: Secured Area Status: Unutilized Reasons: Extensive deterioration Unsuitable Properties Building Florida Waste Water Treatment Plant Everglades National Park Chekika Monroe FL Landholding Agency: Interior Property Number: 61200720020 Status: Unutilized Reasons: Extensive deterioration Hawaii Bldg. 25 Naval Computer & Telecommunications Wahiawa HI 96786 Landholding Agency: Navy Property Number: 77200720056 Status: Excess Reasons: Extensive deterioration Bldg. 398 Naval Computer & Telecommunications Wahiawa HI 96786 Landholding Agency: Navy Property Number: 77200720057 Status: Excess Reasons: Extensive deterioration Bldg. 408 Naval Station Pearl Harbor HI 96860 Landholding Agency: Navy Property Number: 77200720058 Status: Excess Reasons: Extensive deterioration Building Florida Bldgs. 421, 422 Everglades National Park Flamingo District Monroe FL Landholding Agency: Interior Property Number: 61200720012 Status: Unutilized Reasons: Extensive deterioration Bldg. 473 Everglades National Park Flamingo Lodge Monroe FL Landholding Agency: Interior Property Number: 61200720013 Status: Unutilized Reasons: Extensive deterioration Bldgs. 474–485 Everglades National Park Flamingo Lodge Monroe FL Landholding Agency: Interior Property Number: 61200720014 Status: Unutilized Reasons: Extensive deterioration Bldgs. A–G Everglades National Park Flamingo Lodge Monroe FL Landholding Agency: Interior Property Number: 61200720015 Status: Unutilized Reasons: Extensive deterioration mstockstill on PROD1PC66 with NOTICES Unsuitable Properties Building Florida Stilt Dormitory House Flamingo Monroe FL Landholding Agency: Interior Property Number: 61200720016 Status: Unutilized Reasons: Extensive deterioration Bldgs. T60, T61 Everglades National Park Flamingo Monroe FL Landholding Agency: Interior Property Number: 61200720017 Status: Unutilized Reasons: Extensive deterioration Bldg. 701 Everglades National Park Chekika Monroe FL Landholding Agency: Interior Property Number: 61200720018 Status: Unutilized Reasons: Extensive deterioration Bldgs. 714A, 717 Everglades National Park Chekika Monroe FL Landholding Agency: Interior Property Number: 61200720019 VerDate Aug<31>2005 17:16 Jul 05, 2007 Jkt 211001 Unsuitable Properties Unsuitable Properties Building Hawaii Bldgs. 300, 442 Ford Island Naval Station Pearl Harbor HI 96860 Landholding Agency: Navy Property Number: 77200720059 Status: Excess Reasons: Extensive deterioration, Secured Area Bldgs. A3, 425 Naval Station Pearl Harbor HI 96860 Landholding Agency: Navy Property Number: 77200720060 Status: Excess Reasons: Extensive deterioration, Secured Area Bldg. 59 Naval Station Beckoning Point Pearl Harbor HI 96860 Landholding Agency: Navy Property Number: 77200720061 Status: Excess Reasons: Extensive deterioration, Secured Area Unsuitable Properties Building Illinois Bldgs. 306A, B, C, TR–5 Argonne National Lab PO 00000 Frm 00088 Fmt 4703 Sfmt 4703 37037 Argonne IL 60439 Landholding Agency: Energy Property Number: 41200720017 Status: Excess Reasons: Secured Area Virginia Bldg. 00172 Defense Supply Center Richmond VA 23297 Landholding Agency: Army Property Number: 21200720112 Status: Excess Reasons: Secured Area West Virginia Bldg. 64 Naval Info Operations Command Sugar Grove WV 26815 Landholding Agency: Navy Property Number: 77200720062 Status: Excess Reasons: Secured Area, Within 2000 ft. of flammable or explosive material [FR Doc. E7–12890 Filed 7–5–07; 8:45 am] BILLING CODE 4210–67–P DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR Fish and Wildlife Service Guam National Wildlife Refuge, Dededo, Guam Fish and Wildlife Service, Interior. ACTION: Notice of intent to prepare a comprehensive conservation plan; announcement of public meeting and open house; and request for comments. AGENCY: SUMMARY: This notice advises the public that the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Service, we) intends to prepare a Comprehensive Conservation Plan (CCP) and associated environmental compliance document for the Guam National Wildlife Refuge (Refuge). The Refuge includes the Ritidian Unit in northern Guam and two overlay units, the Andersen Air Force Base Unit in northern Guam and the Navy Unit. The Navy Unit includes portions of the Naval Computer and Telecommunications Station (NCTS) and Public Works Center (PWC) in northern Guam, and portions of the Naval Station and Ordnance Annex areas in central and southern Guam. We are furnishing this notice to advise the public and other agencies of our intentions, and to obtain public comments, suggestions, and information on the scope of issues to be considered during the CCP planning process. The Refuge will hold a public open house to provide information about the CCP and the planning process, and to obtain public comments (see SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION for details). E:\FR\FM\06JYN1.SGM 06JYN1 37038 Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 129 / Friday, July 6, 2007 / Notices Please provide written comments on the scope of the CCP by August 31, 2007. To begin the CCP planning process, a public meeting will be held on July 14, 2007, which is also the first day of an open house that will run through July 22, 2007, see SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION for details. ADDRESSES: Address comments, questions, and requests for information to Chris Bandy, Project Leader, Guam National Wildlife Refuge, P.O. Box 8134, MOU–3, Dededo, GU 96929. Comments may be faxed to the Refuge at (671) 355–5098; or e-mailed to FW1PlanningComments@fws.gov. Include ‘‘Guam NWR CCP’’ in the subject line of the message. Additional information about the CCP planning process is available on the Internet at: https://www.fws.gov/pacific/planning. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Chris Bandy, Project Leader, Guam National Wildlife Refuge, phone (671) 355–5096. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The National Wildlife Refuge System Administration Act of 1966, as amended by the National Wildlife Refuge System Improvement Act of 1997 (16 U.S.C. 668dd–668ee), requires all lands within the National Wildlife Refuge System to be managed in accordance with an approved CCP. A CCP guides a refuge’s management decisions, and identifies long-range goals, objectives, and strategies for achieving the purposes for which the refuge was established. During the CCP planning process many elements will be considered, including wildlife and habitat protection and management, and public use opportunities. Public input during the planning process is essential. The CCP for the Guam Refuge will describe the purposes and desired conditions for the Refuge units, and the long-term conservation goals, objectives, and strategies for fulfilling the purposes and achieving those conditions. As part of the planning process, the Service will prepare an environmental compliance document in accordance with the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) of 1969, as amended (42 U.S.C. 4371 et seq.) mstockstill on PROD1PC66 with NOTICES DATES: Public Availability of Comments Before including your address, phone number, e-mail address, or other personal identifying information in your comment, you should be aware that your entire comment—including your personal identifying information—may be made publicly available at any time. While you can ask us in your comment to withhold your personal identifying information from public review, we VerDate Aug<31>2005 17:16 Jul 05, 2007 Jkt 211001 cannot guarantee that we will be able to do so. Background Guam National Wildlife Refuge is located on the island of Guam, the southernmost island in the Mariana Islands Archipelago in the western Pacific Ocean. Guam is a U.S. Territory located between 13°15′ and 13°14′ N latitude, and between 144°30′ and 144°57′ E longitude. The Refuge is comprised of three units: the Ritidian Unit, in northern Guam; the Andersen Air Force Base Unit, in northern Guam; and the Navy Unit, with areas in northern, central, and southern Guam. The Ritidian Unit, in northern Guam, is approximately 772 acres including approximately 370 acres of terrestrial land and 401 acres of marine waters. The Unit includes a densely vegetated coastal plain bounded on one side by sheer limestone cliffs jutting to approximately 200 feet above sea level. Native vegetation on the Ritidian Unit includes high-quality coastal strand, backstrand, and limestone forest natural communities; a sandy beach; and nearshore marine habitats to the depth of 30 meters (approximately 100 feet). The clear waters of the Ritidian Unit feature sandy areas, platform reefs, and coral habitats that support a diversity of fish, marine invertebrates, and algae and provide foraging areas for endangered hawksbill and green sea turtles. The terrestrial lands on the Ritidian Unit are designated critical habitat for the endangered Mariana crow, the endangered Guam Micronesian kingfisher, and the threatened Mariana fruit bat. Threatened green sea turtles nest on the Unit’s beach. Management programs at the Ritidian Unit focus on preserving and restoring essential wildlife habitat, and protection and recovery of endangered and threatened species. Protecting habitat for endangered species also conserves a rich diversity of other plant and animals species. The Ritidian Unit supports a diversity of tropical trees, shrubs, vines, ferns, cycads, grasses, and other species that in turn provide habitat for native birds, the Mariana fruit bat, tree snails, coconut crabs, land crabs, skinks, geckos, and a myriad of native insects. The Ritidian Unit is the only Refuge site on northern Guam open to the public. Visitors have access to it seven days a week from 8:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m., except for Federal holidays. A variety of visitor programs are offered in the open areas, including certain types of fishing, wildlife observation and photography, natural and cultural resources interpretation, and environmental education. A recently opened nature PO 00000 Frm 00089 Fmt 4703 Sfmt 4703 center provides visitors with additional information about the wildlife values of the Unit. The public enjoys opportunities to picnic, swim, snorkel, SCUBA dive, and hike in open portions of the Ritidian Unit. Collection of traditionally important plant parts for medicine or food is allowed in a designated area with a Special Use Permit. The 10,219-acre Air Force Unit at Andersen Air Force Base in northern Guam is contiguous with the Ritidian Unit and includes high-quality native limestone forest, coastal strand, and backstrand natural communities and beaches. The Air Force Unit supports some of the last remaining endangered Mariana crows, threatened Mariana fruit bats, and endangered Serianthes nelsoni trees in the wild, and supports a diversity of other native wildlife and plant species. The Navy Unit includes approximately 12,237 acres of native habitats in north, central, and south Guam. High-quality habitats on the Navy Unit include limestone forest, backstrand, coastal strand, and beaches in northern and central Guam; and ravine forests, limestone forests, mangroves, and wetlands in southern and central Guam. These areas provide habitat for a diversity of tropical plants and wildlife, including threatened Mariana fruit bats, endangered Mariana swiftlets, endangered Mariana Moorhen, threatened green turtles, and a rich diversity of other plants, skinks, lizards, land snails, and land crabs. Several freshwater rivers and springs are located on Navy lands and support aquatic fauna. Both the Air Force and Navy work cooperatively with the Service, the Guam Division of Aquatic and Wildlife Resources, and other conservation partners to implement proactive measures to protect and enhance wildlife and habitat, while operating the military bases for their primary use. Natural resources and management programs on the Air Force and Navy Units are described in their respective Integrated Natural Resources Management Plans (INRMPs) for Navy and Air Force lands on Guam. Both INRMPs are currently being updated and will be incorporated into the CCP for the Guam Refuge. The Service is a close cooperator in the INRMPs’ planning processes and will continue to have input on proposed natural resource management priorities and programs on the overlay Refuge units. The CCP will incorporate the revised or draft INRMPs by reference, extracting those programs that the Service will be most closely involved with in the foreseeable future. E:\FR\FM\06JYN1.SGM 06JYN1 Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 129 / Friday, July 6, 2007 / Notices Preliminary Issues, Concerns, and Opportunities A brief summary of the preliminary issues, concerns, and opportunities that have been identified follows. The issues fall into five general categories: (1) Natural resources management on the Ritidian Unit; (2) management of visitor services on the Ritidian Unit; (3) management of cultural resources on the Ritidian Unit; (4) facilities, operations, and maintenance on the Ritidian Unit; and (5) natural resources management priorities on the Air Force and Navy Units. Additional issues may be identified during public scoping. The CCP will focus on management at the Ritidian Unit. During the CCP planning process, the Service will analyze methods for protecting the unique and important natural and cultural resources of the terrestrial and marine portions of the Ritidian Unit in the long term, while continuing to provide quality opportunities for wildlife-dependent public uses. The Ritidian Unit includes important cultural and historic resources that reflect human occupation and use of the area during pre-western contact periods, the early post-contact period, and on through to the modern era. Service archaeologists, working in coordination with the Guam Historic Preservation Office, have developed a draft Cultural Resources Management Plan (CRMP) for the Ritidian Unit that will be distributed for public review with the CCP. Ensuring adequate protection and management of unique cultural resources at Ritidian, and their study and interpretation, are topics that will be covered in the final CRMP. mstockstill on PROD1PC66 with NOTICES Public Meeting and Open House The Refuge will hold a public meeting that will include a brief presentation and information and handouts about the Refuge and CCP planning process. The meeting will be held on Saturday, July 14, 2007, from 10 a.m. to 12 noon at the Guam National Wildlife Refuge Headquarters’ Nature Center located on the Ritidian Unit, at the end of Route 3A, in northern Guam. An informal open house will continue in the Nature Center from July 15 through July 22, 2007. A specific area will be set up for the public to obtain information on the CCP planning process and provide written comments. The Nature Center is open from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. daily (except Federal holidays). Additional opportunities for public input will be announced throughout the CCP planning process. VerDate Aug<31>2005 17:16 Jul 05, 2007 Jkt 211001 Dated: June 29, 2007. David J. Wesley, Acting Regional Director, Region 1, Portland, Oregon. [FR Doc. E7–13084 Filed 7–5–07; 8:45 am] BILLING CODE 4310–55–P DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR Fish and Wildlife Service Receipt of Applications for Permit Fish and Wildlife Service, Interior. ACTION: Notice of receipt of applications for permit. AGENCY: SUMMARY: The public is invited to comment on the following applications to conduct certain activities with endangered species and/or marine mammals. DATES: Written data, comments or requests must be received by August 6, 2007. ADDRESSES: Documents and other information submitted with these applications are available for review, subject to the requirements of the Privacy Act and Freedom of Information Act, by any party who submits a written request for a copy of such documents within 30 days of the date of publication of this notice to: U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Division of Management Authority, 4401 North Fairfax Drive, Room 700, Arlington, Virginia 22203; fax 703/358–2281. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Division of Management Authority, telephone 703/358–2104. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Endangered Species The public is invited to comment on the following applications for a permit to conduct certain activities with endangered species. This notice is provided pursuant to Section 10(c) of the Endangered Species Act of 1973, as amended (16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.). Written data, comments, or requests for copies of these complete applications should be submitted to the Director (ADDRESSES above). Applicant: University of Texas, Department of Anthropology, Austin, TX, PRT–152122. The applicant requests a permit to import two male and four female captive-born gray mouse lemurs (Microcebus murinus) from the Museum National d’Histoire Naturelle, Brunoy, France, for the purpose of scientific research. Applicant: Los Angeles Zoo, Los Angeles, CA, PRT–152102. PO 00000 Frm 00090 Fmt 4703 Sfmt 4703 37039 The applicant requests a permit to import one female captive-born mandrill (Mandrillus sphinx) from the Granby Zoo, Quebec, Canada for the purpose of enhancement of the species through captive breeding. Applicant: American Museum of Natural History, Sackler Institute for Comparative Genomics, New York, NY, PRT–156381. The applicant requests a permit to import biological samples from dwarf crocodile (Osteolaemus tetraspis osborni), Nile crocodile (Crocodylus niloticus), and African slender-snout crocodile (Crocodylus cataphractus) from the Republics of Gabon and Congo for the purpose of enhancement of the species through scientific research. This notification covers activities conducted by the applicant for a five-year period. Marine Mammals The public is invited to comment on the following applications for a permit to conduct certain activities with marine mammals. The applications were submitted to satisfy requirements of the Marine Mammal Protection Act of 1972, as amended (16 U.S.C. 1361 et seq.), and the regulations governing marine mammals (50 CFR part 18). Written data, comments, or requests for copies of the complete applications or requests for a public hearing on these applications should be submitted to the Director (ADDRESSES above). Anyone requesting a hearing should give specific reasons why a hearing would be appropriate. The holding of such a hearing is at the discretion of the Director. Applicant: U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Marine Mammals Management, Anchorage, AK, PRT– 046081. The applicant requests renewal and amendment of a permit to take polar bears (Ursus maritimus) in Alaska for the purpose of scientific research. The take activities include capture and release; tag, mark and radio collar; and collection of biometrics and biological samples. This notification covers activities to be conducted by the applicant over a five-year period. Concurrent with the publication of this notice in the Federal Register, the Division of Management Authority is forwarding copies of the above applications to the Marine Mammal Commission and the Committee of Scientific Advisors for their review. Applicant: Jim B. Dismukes, Fair Oaks, CA, PRT–155535. The applicant requests a permit to import a polar bear (Ursus maritimus) sport hunted from the Northern Beaufort E:\FR\FM\06JYN1.SGM 06JYN1

Agencies

[Federal Register Volume 72, Number 129 (Friday, July 6, 2007)]
[Notices]
[Pages 37037-37039]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E7-13084]


=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------

DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR

Fish and Wildlife Service


Guam National Wildlife Refuge, Dededo, Guam

AGENCY: Fish and Wildlife Service, Interior.

ACTION: Notice of intent to prepare a comprehensive conservation plan; 
announcement of public meeting and open house; and request for 
comments.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------

SUMMARY: This notice advises the public that the U.S. Fish and Wildlife 
Service (Service, we) intends to prepare a Comprehensive Conservation 
Plan (CCP) and associated environmental compliance document for the 
Guam National Wildlife Refuge (Refuge). The Refuge includes the 
Ritidian Unit in northern Guam and two overlay units, the Andersen Air 
Force Base Unit in northern Guam and the Navy Unit. The Navy Unit 
includes portions of the Naval Computer and Telecommunications Station 
(NCTS) and Public Works Center (PWC) in northern Guam, and portions of 
the Naval Station and Ordnance Annex areas in central and southern 
Guam. We are furnishing this notice to advise the public and other 
agencies of our intentions, and to obtain public comments, suggestions, 
and information on the scope of issues to be considered during the CCP 
planning process. The Refuge will hold a public open house to provide 
information about the CCP and the planning process, and to obtain 
public comments (see SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION for details).

[[Page 37038]]


DATES: Please provide written comments on the scope of the CCP by 
August 31, 2007. To begin the CCP planning process, a public meeting 
will be held on July 14, 2007, which is also the first day of an open 
house that will run through July 22, 2007, see SUPPLEMENTARY 
INFORMATION for details.

ADDRESSES: Address comments, questions, and requests for information to 
Chris Bandy, Project Leader, Guam National Wildlife Refuge, P.O. Box 
8134, MOU-3, Dededo, GU 96929. Comments may be faxed to the Refuge at 
(671) 355-5098; or e-mailed to FW1PlanningComments@fws.gov. Include 
``Guam NWR CCP'' in the subject line of the message. Additional 
information about the CCP planning process is available on the Internet 
at: https://www.fws.gov/pacific/planning.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Chris Bandy, Project Leader, Guam 
National Wildlife Refuge, phone (671) 355-5096.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The National Wildlife Refuge System 
Administration Act of 1966, as amended by the National Wildlife Refuge 
System Improvement Act of 1997 (16 U.S.C. 668dd-668ee), requires all 
lands within the National Wildlife Refuge System to be managed in 
accordance with an approved CCP. A CCP guides a refuge's management 
decisions, and identifies long-range goals, objectives, and strategies 
for achieving the purposes for which the refuge was established. During 
the CCP planning process many elements will be considered, including 
wildlife and habitat protection and management, and public use 
opportunities. Public input during the planning process is essential. 
The CCP for the Guam Refuge will describe the purposes and desired 
conditions for the Refuge units, and the long-term conservation goals, 
objectives, and strategies for fulfilling the purposes and achieving 
those conditions. As part of the planning process, the Service will 
prepare an environmental compliance document in accordance with the 
National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) of 1969, as amended (42 U.S.C. 
4371 et seq.)

Public Availability of Comments

    Before including your address, phone number, e-mail address, or 
other personal identifying information in your comment, you should be 
aware that your entire comment--including your personal identifying 
information--may be made publicly available at any time. While you can 
ask us in your comment to withhold your personal identifying 
information from public review, we cannot guarantee that we will be 
able to do so.

Background

    Guam National Wildlife Refuge is located on the island of Guam, the 
southernmost island in the Mariana Islands Archipelago in the western 
Pacific Ocean. Guam is a U.S. Territory located between 13[deg]15' and 
13[deg]14' N latitude, and between 144[deg]30' and 144[deg]57' E 
longitude. The Refuge is comprised of three units: the Ritidian Unit, 
in northern Guam; the Andersen Air Force Base Unit, in northern Guam; 
and the Navy Unit, with areas in northern, central, and southern Guam.
    The Ritidian Unit, in northern Guam, is approximately 772 acres 
including approximately 370 acres of terrestrial land and 401 acres of 
marine waters. The Unit includes a densely vegetated coastal plain 
bounded on one side by sheer limestone cliffs jutting to approximately 
200 feet above sea level. Native vegetation on the Ritidian Unit 
includes high-quality coastal strand, backstrand, and limestone forest 
natural communities; a sandy beach; and nearshore marine habitats to 
the depth of 30 meters (approximately 100 feet). The clear waters of 
the Ritidian Unit feature sandy areas, platform reefs, and coral 
habitats that support a diversity of fish, marine invertebrates, and 
algae and provide foraging areas for endangered hawksbill and green sea 
turtles.
    The terrestrial lands on the Ritidian Unit are designated critical 
habitat for the endangered Mariana crow, the endangered Guam 
Micronesian kingfisher, and the threatened Mariana fruit bat. 
Threatened green sea turtles nest on the Unit's beach.
    Management programs at the Ritidian Unit focus on preserving and 
restoring essential wildlife habitat, and protection and recovery of 
endangered and threatened species. Protecting habitat for endangered 
species also conserves a rich diversity of other plant and animals 
species. The Ritidian Unit supports a diversity of tropical trees, 
shrubs, vines, ferns, cycads, grasses, and other species that in turn 
provide habitat for native birds, the Mariana fruit bat, tree snails, 
coconut crabs, land crabs, skinks, geckos, and a myriad of native 
insects.
    The Ritidian Unit is the only Refuge site on northern Guam open to 
the public. Visitors have access to it seven days a week from 8:30 a.m. 
to 4:00 p.m., except for Federal holidays. A variety of visitor 
programs are offered in the open areas, including certain types of 
fishing, wildlife observation and photography, natural and cultural 
resources interpretation, and environmental education. A recently 
opened nature center provides visitors with additional information 
about the wildlife values of the Unit. The public enjoys opportunities 
to picnic, swim, snorkel, SCUBA dive, and hike in open portions of the 
Ritidian Unit. Collection of traditionally important plant parts for 
medicine or food is allowed in a designated area with a Special Use 
Permit.
    The 10,219-acre Air Force Unit at Andersen Air Force Base in 
northern Guam is contiguous with the Ritidian Unit and includes high-
quality native limestone forest, coastal strand, and backstrand natural 
communities and beaches. The Air Force Unit supports some of the last 
remaining endangered Mariana crows, threatened Mariana fruit bats, and 
endangered Serianthes nelsoni trees in the wild, and supports a 
diversity of other native wildlife and plant species.
    The Navy Unit includes approximately 12,237 acres of native 
habitats in north, central, and south Guam. High-quality habitats on 
the Navy Unit include limestone forest, backstrand, coastal strand, and 
beaches in northern and central Guam; and ravine forests, limestone 
forests, mangroves, and wetlands in southern and central Guam. These 
areas provide habitat for a diversity of tropical plants and wildlife, 
including threatened Mariana fruit bats, endangered Mariana swiftlets, 
endangered Mariana Moorhen, threatened green turtles, and a rich 
diversity of other plants, skinks, lizards, land snails, and land 
crabs. Several freshwater rivers and springs are located on Navy lands 
and support aquatic fauna.
    Both the Air Force and Navy work cooperatively with the Service, 
the Guam Division of Aquatic and Wildlife Resources, and other 
conservation partners to implement proactive measures to protect and 
enhance wildlife and habitat, while operating the military bases for 
their primary use.
    Natural resources and management programs on the Air Force and Navy 
Units are described in their respective Integrated Natural Resources 
Management Plans (INRMPs) for Navy and Air Force lands on Guam. Both 
INRMPs are currently being updated and will be incorporated into the 
CCP for the Guam Refuge. The Service is a close cooperator in the 
INRMPs' planning processes and will continue to have input on proposed 
natural resource management priorities and programs on the overlay 
Refuge units. The CCP will incorporate the revised or draft INRMPs by 
reference, extracting those programs that the Service will be most 
closely involved with in the foreseeable future.

[[Page 37039]]

Preliminary Issues, Concerns, and Opportunities

    A brief summary of the preliminary issues, concerns, and 
opportunities that have been identified follows. The issues fall into 
five general categories: (1) Natural resources management on the 
Ritidian Unit; (2) management of visitor services on the Ritidian Unit; 
(3) management of cultural resources on the Ritidian Unit; (4) 
facilities, operations, and maintenance on the Ritidian Unit; and (5) 
natural resources management priorities on the Air Force and Navy 
Units. Additional issues may be identified during public scoping.
    The CCP will focus on management at the Ritidian Unit. During the 
CCP planning process, the Service will analyze methods for protecting 
the unique and important natural and cultural resources of the 
terrestrial and marine portions of the Ritidian Unit in the long term, 
while continuing to provide quality opportunities for wildlife-
dependent public uses.
    The Ritidian Unit includes important cultural and historic 
resources that reflect human occupation and use of the area during pre-
western contact periods, the early post-contact period, and on through 
to the modern era. Service archaeologists, working in coordination with 
the Guam Historic Preservation Office, have developed a draft Cultural 
Resources Management Plan (CRMP) for the Ritidian Unit that will be 
distributed for public review with the CCP. Ensuring adequate 
protection and management of unique cultural resources at Ritidian, and 
their study and interpretation, are topics that will be covered in the 
final CRMP.

Public Meeting and Open House

    The Refuge will hold a public meeting that will include a brief 
presentation and information and handouts about the Refuge and CCP 
planning process. The meeting will be held on Saturday, July 14, 2007, 
from 10 a.m. to 12 noon at the Guam National Wildlife Refuge 
Headquarters' Nature Center located on the Ritidian Unit, at the end of 
Route 3A, in northern Guam. An informal open house will continue in the 
Nature Center from July 15 through July 22, 2007. A specific area will 
be set up for the public to obtain information on the CCP planning 
process and provide written comments. The Nature Center is open from 
8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. daily (except Federal holidays). Additional 
opportunities for public input will be announced throughout the CCP 
planning process.

    Dated: June 29, 2007.
David J. Wesley,
Acting Regional Director, Region 1, Portland, Oregon.
 [FR Doc. E7-13084 Filed 7-5-07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310-55-P
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