Notice of Intent To Prepare an Environmental Impact Statement, 41051-41052 [07-3653]
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Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 143 / Thursday, July 26, 2007 / Notices
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Farm Service Agency
Information Collection: Emergency
Conservation Program
Farm Service Agency, USDA.
Notice; request for comments.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with NOTICES
SUMMARY: In accordance with the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, the
Farm Service Agency (FSA) is seeking
comments from all interested
individuals and organizations on the
revision of currently approved
information collection associated with
the Emergency Conservation Program
(ECP).
DATES: Comments on this notice must be
received on or before September 24,
2007 to be assured consideration.
ADDRESSES: We invite you to submit
comments on this Notice. In your
comment, include the volume, date, and
page number of this issue of the Federal
Register. You may submit comments by
any of the following methods:
E-mail: Send comments to:
Clayton.Furukawa@wdc.usda.gov.
Fax: (202) 720–4619.
Mail: Farm Service Agency, USDA,
Attn: Clayton Furukawa, ECP Program
Manager, Conservation and
Environmental Programs Division,
USDA, FSA, STOP 0513, 1400
Independence Avenue, SW.,
Washington, DC 20250–0513.
Comments also should be sent to the
Desk Officer for Agriculture, Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs,
Office of Management and Budget,
Washington, DC 20503.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Clayton Furukawa, ECP Program
Manager, (202) 690–0571.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Description of Information Collection
Title: Emergency Conservation
Program.
OMB Control Number: 0560–0082.
Expiration Date: February 28, 2010.
Type of Request: Revision of a
Currently Approved Information
Collection.
Abstract: This information collection
is to allow FSA to effectively administer
the regulations under the ECP. The
regulations at 7 CFR part 701 set forth
basic policies, program provisions, and
eligibility requirements for owners and
operators to enter into agreement with
to apply for financial and technical
assistance and for receiving cost-share
payments under the ECP. The revision
to the currently approved information
collection is in response to, and
consistent with, the new requirement
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:36 Jul 25, 2007
Jkt 211001
that an Adjusted Gross Income
Limitation be used when determining
the eligibility of certain respondents
who wish to participate in the ECP,
pursuant to the provisions of Section
9004(b) of Public Law 110–28.
Estimate of Burden: Public reporting
burden for this collection of information
is estimated to average .25 hours (15
minutes) per response. The average
travel time, which is included in the
total annual burden, is estimated to be
1 hour per respondent.
Respondents: Owners, operators and
other eligible agricultural producers on
eligible farmland.
Number of Respondents: 90,000.
Estimated Annual Number of
Respondents: 90,420.
Estimated Number of Responses per
Respondent: 1.
Estimated Total Annual Burden on
Respondents: 67,610.
Comments
Comments are invited on:
(1) Whether this collection
information is necessary for the proper
performance of the functions of the
agency, including whether the
information will have practical utility;
(2) The accuracy of the agency’s
estimate of burden, including the
validity of the methodology and
assumptions used;
(3) Ways to enhance the quality,
utility, and clarity of the information to
be collected; and
(4) Ways to minimize the burden of
the collection of the information on
those who are to respond, including the
use of appropriate automated,
electronic, mechanical, or other
technological collection techniques or
other forms of information technology.
All comments received in response to
this notice, including names and
addresses when provided, will be a
matter of public records. Comments will
be summarized and included in the
submission for Office of Management
and Budget approval.
Signed at Washington, DC, on July 19,
2007.
Glen L. Keppy,
Acting Administrator, Farm Service Agency.
[FR Doc. E7–14385 Filed 7–25–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410–05–P
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Notice of Intent To Prepare an
Environmental Impact Statement
Forest Service, USDA.
Corralled Bear, Clearwater
National Forest, Latah County, ID.
AGENCY:
PROJECT:
PO 00000
Frm 00003
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
41051
Notice of intent to prepare an
environmental impact statement.
ACTION:
SUMMARY: The USDA, Forest Service,
will prepare an Environmental Impact
Statement (EIS) to disclose the
environmental effects of timber harvest,
prescribed fire, fuels reduction,
watershed restoration, and access
management activities in the Corralled
Bear project area on the Palouse Ranger
District of the Clearwater National
Forest. The Corralled Bear project area
is located north of the towns of Deary
and Helmer within the East Fork of Big
Bear Creek and Corral Creek drainages,
approximately 21 air-miles northeast of
the town of Moscow, Idaho.
DATES: This project was previously
scoped in March 2006, and the
comments received will be included in
the documentation for the EIS. A 45-day
public comment period will follow the
release of the draft environmental
impact statement (DEIS) that is expected
in September 2007. The final
environmental impact statement (FEIS)
and Record of Decision (ROD) is
expected in February 2008.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
Corralled Bear project area contains
approximately 11,318 acres, which is all
National Forest lands except for 160
acres of private land. The project area is
located in portions of T40N, R1W;
T40N, R2W; T41N, R1W; and T41N,
R2W, Boise Meridian, Latah County,
Idaho. The proposed actions would
occur on National Forest lands and are
all outside the boundaries of any
inventoried roadless area or any areas
considered for inclusion to the National
Wilderness System as recommended by
the Clearwater National Forest Plan or
by any past or present legislative
wilderness proposals.
Purpose and Need for Action is to: (1)
Promote stand productivity, restore
vegetative successional stages to reflect
historical patch sizes and locations, and
restore blister rust resistant white pine;
(2) reduce fuel buildup in stands where
fire suppression has interrupted the
short-return fire interval and resulted in
unnaturally high amounts of fuel and
overgrown understory, and create a
more defensible space to control
wildfire on Forest Service land adjacent
to private property; (3) reduce long-term
sedimentation to streams caused by
existing unsurfaced roads, and stabilize
stream banks made unstable by
motorized vehicles, cattle trailing, and
channelization (historic railroad grades);
(4) update fish/water quality standards
for Corral Creek in Appendix K of the
Clearwater Forest Plan to better meet the
Clean Water Act standards supporting
fisheries and reflect better information
E:\FR\FM\26JYN1.SGM
26JYN1
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with NOTICES
41052
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 143 / Thursday, July 26, 2007 / Notices
on fisheries collected in stream surveys;
and (5) provide for a reasonable level of
off-highway vehicle (OHV) access,
reduce user conflicts, and provide the
necessary resource protection required
by law, regulation, and good
stewardship practices.
The Proposed Action would consist of
timber harvest on about 812 acres, using
improvement cuts, commercial
thinning, and regeneration harvest
methods. Some regeneration harvests
could create openings exceeding 40
acres in size; however, all harvest will
retain some healthy trees and
replacement snags for structural
diversity. Road activities associated
with the timber sales would include
reconstructing about 2.4 miles of
existing roads and constructing 3.6
miles of temporary road (to be
decommissioned after harvest activity).
About 8.6 miles of open roads would be
treated on each side to reduce fuel
concentrations and ladder fuels.
Watershed improvements would
include 8.2 miles of road
decommissioning, putting 14.4 miles of
existing roads into intermittent stored
service (self-maintaining), and
installation of a rocked cattle crossing.
Access management would consist of
designating existing suitable OHV
routes for future use and managing area
roads and trails based on a Roads
Analysis. Other components of the
proposed action include designating
areas to be managed for old growth and
making a Forest Plan Amendment to
raise the fish/water quality standards on
Corrall Creek to incorporate better
information on fish and their habitat.
Possible Alternatives the Forest
Service will consider include the ‘‘no
action ’’ alternative in which none of the
proposed activities would be
implemented. Additional alternatives
being considered include an alternative
that does not build any new roads, an
alternative that does not create any
openings by utilizing only intermediate
(non-regeneration) type harvests like
thinnings and improvement cuts, an
alternative that promotes patch
placement for maximum wildlife and
biological benefits, an alternative that
does not include a Forest Plan
Amendment to increase the fish and
water standard for Corral Creek, and an
alternative that only includes activities
that would help stabilize watershed
conditions, such as road obliteration,
stream bank stabilization and OHV use
management.
The Scoping Process was initiated
with the release of a Scoping Letter on
March 29, 2006. Comments received as
a result of that effort will be included in
the documentation for the EIS.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:36 Jul 25, 2007
Jkt 211001
Additional public input will be solicited
following the release of the DEIS. This
proposal also includes six openings
greater than 40 acres in size that would
be created by timber harvest. A 60-day
public review of the proposed openings
will be initiated by public notice in the
newspaper of record.
Preliminary Issues that could be
affected by proposed activities include:
Access management, air quality,
economic feasibility, fish habitat,
heritage resources, sensitive and
management indicator species of
wildlife, sensitive plants, snag habitat,
soil productivity, spread of noxious
weeds, tribal treaty rights, and water
quality. Issues expected not to be
affected by the proposal include impacts
of grazing, old growth habitat, risk of
landslides, and threatened and
endangered wildlife and plant species.
Issues identified through previous
scoping and found to be outside the
scope of the project or not consistent
with Forest Plan standards include
using prescribed fire instead of timber
harvest for vegetative treatments within
the E1 management area and evaluating
cattle grazing laws.
Early Notice of Importance of Public
Participation in Subsequent
Environmental Review: A draft
environmental impact statement will be
prepared for comment. The comment
period on the draft environmental
impact statement 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 environmental impact
statements 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 environmental impact
statement stage but that are not raised
until after completion of the final
environmental impact statement 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 45day comment period so that substantive
comments and objections are made
available to the Forest Service at a time
PO 00000
Frm 00004
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
when it can meaningfully consider them
and respond to them in the final
environmental impact statement.
To assist the Forest Service in
identifying and considering issues and
concerns on the proposed action,
comments on the draft environmental
impact statement 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 environmental
impact statement or the merits of the
alternatives formulated and discussed in
the statement. Reviewers may wish to
refer to the Council on 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)
The Responsible Official for this
project is the Forest Supervisor of the
Clearwater National Forest, 12730
Highway 12, Orofino, ID 83544. The
Responsible Official will decide if the
proposed project will be implemented
and will document the decision and
reasons for the decision in a Record of
Decision. That decision will be subject
to Forest Service Appeal Regulations.
The responsibility for preparing the
DEIS and FEIS has been delegated to
Kara Chadwick, District Ranger, Palouse
Ranger District.
Written comments and
suggestions concerning this project
should be sent to: Kara Chadwick,
District Ranger, Palouse Ranger District,
1700 Highway 6, Potlatch, ID 83855 or
e-mailed to: comments-northernclearwater-palouse@fs.fed.us.
ADDRESSES:
Tam
White; Project Leader, North Fork
Ranger District, at: twhite@fs.fed.us or
phone: (208) 476–4541.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Dated: July 19, 2007.
Thomas K. Reilly,
Forest Supervisor.
[FR Doc. 07–3653 Filed 7–25–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410–11–M
E:\FR\FM\26JYN1.SGM
26JYN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 72, Number 143 (Thursday, July 26, 2007)]
[Notices]
[Pages 41051-41052]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 07-3653]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Notice of Intent To Prepare an Environmental Impact Statement
AGENCY: Forest Service, USDA.
PROJECT: Corralled Bear, Clearwater National Forest, Latah County, ID.
ACTION: Notice of intent to prepare an environmental impact statement.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The USDA, Forest Service, will prepare an Environmental Impact
Statement (EIS) to disclose the environmental effects of timber
harvest, prescribed fire, fuels reduction, watershed restoration, and
access management activities in the Corralled Bear project area on the
Palouse Ranger District of the Clearwater National Forest. The
Corralled Bear project area is located north of the towns of Deary and
Helmer within the East Fork of Big Bear Creek and Corral Creek
drainages, approximately 21 air-miles northeast of the town of Moscow,
Idaho.
DATES: This project was previously scoped in March 2006, and the
comments received will be included in the documentation for the EIS. A
45-day public comment period will follow the release of the draft
environmental impact statement (DEIS) that is expected in September
2007. The final environmental impact statement (FEIS) and Record of
Decision (ROD) is expected in February 2008.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Corralled Bear project area contains
approximately 11,318 acres, which is all National Forest lands except
for 160 acres of private land. The project area is located in portions
of T40N, R1W; T40N, R2W; T41N, R1W; and T41N, R2W, Boise Meridian,
Latah County, Idaho. The proposed actions would occur on National
Forest lands and are all outside the boundaries of any inventoried
roadless area or any areas considered for inclusion to the National
Wilderness System as recommended by the Clearwater National Forest Plan
or by any past or present legislative wilderness proposals.
Purpose and Need for Action is to: (1) Promote stand productivity,
restore vegetative successional stages to reflect historical patch
sizes and locations, and restore blister rust resistant white pine; (2)
reduce fuel buildup in stands where fire suppression has interrupted
the short-return fire interval and resulted in unnaturally high amounts
of fuel and overgrown understory, and create a more defensible space to
control wildfire on Forest Service land adjacent to private property;
(3) reduce long-term sedimentation to streams caused by existing
unsurfaced roads, and stabilize stream banks made unstable by motorized
vehicles, cattle trailing, and channelization (historic railroad
grades); (4) update fish/water quality standards for Corral Creek in
Appendix K of the Clearwater Forest Plan to better meet the Clean Water
Act standards supporting fisheries and reflect better information
[[Page 41052]]
on fisheries collected in stream surveys; and (5) provide for a
reasonable level of off-highway vehicle (OHV) access, reduce user
conflicts, and provide the necessary resource protection required by
law, regulation, and good stewardship practices.
The Proposed Action would consist of timber harvest on about 812
acres, using improvement cuts, commercial thinning, and regeneration
harvest methods. Some regeneration harvests could create openings
exceeding 40 acres in size; however, all harvest will retain some
healthy trees and replacement snags for structural diversity. Road
activities associated with the timber sales would include
reconstructing about 2.4 miles of existing roads and constructing 3.6
miles of temporary road (to be decommissioned after harvest activity).
About 8.6 miles of open roads would be treated on each side to reduce
fuel concentrations and ladder fuels. Watershed improvements would
include 8.2 miles of road decommissioning, putting 14.4 miles of
existing roads into intermittent stored service (self-maintaining), and
installation of a rocked cattle crossing. Access management would
consist of designating existing suitable OHV routes for future use and
managing area roads and trails based on a Roads Analysis. Other
components of the proposed action include designating areas to be
managed for old growth and making a Forest Plan Amendment to raise the
fish/water quality standards on Corrall Creek to incorporate better
information on fish and their habitat.
Possible Alternatives the Forest Service will consider include the
``no action '' alternative in which none of the proposed activities
would be implemented. Additional alternatives being considered include
an alternative that does not build any new roads, an alternative that
does not create any openings by utilizing only intermediate (non-
regeneration) type harvests like thinnings and improvement cuts, an
alternative that promotes patch placement for maximum wildlife and
biological benefits, an alternative that does not include a Forest Plan
Amendment to increase the fish and water standard for Corral Creek, and
an alternative that only includes activities that would help stabilize
watershed conditions, such as road obliteration, stream bank
stabilization and OHV use management.
The Scoping Process was initiated with the release of a Scoping
Letter on March 29, 2006. Comments received as a result of that effort
will be included in the documentation for the EIS. Additional public
input will be solicited following the release of the DEIS. This
proposal also includes six openings greater than 40 acres in size that
would be created by timber harvest. A 60-day public review of the
proposed openings will be initiated by public notice in the newspaper
of record.
Preliminary Issues that could be affected by proposed activities
include: Access management, air quality, economic feasibility, fish
habitat, heritage resources, sensitive and management indicator species
of wildlife, sensitive plants, snag habitat, soil productivity, spread
of noxious weeds, tribal treaty rights, and water quality. Issues
expected not to be affected by the proposal include impacts of grazing,
old growth habitat, risk of landslides, and threatened and endangered
wildlife and plant species. Issues identified through previous scoping
and found to be outside the scope of the project or not consistent with
Forest Plan standards include using prescribed fire instead of timber
harvest for vegetative treatments within the E1 management area and
evaluating cattle grazing laws.
Early Notice of Importance of Public Participation in Subsequent
Environmental Review: A draft environmental impact statement will be
prepared for comment. The comment period on the draft environmental
impact statement 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 environmental impact statements 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 environmental impact statement stage but that are not raised
until after completion of the final environmental impact statement 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 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 environmental impact statement.
To assist the Forest Service in identifying and considering issues
and concerns on the proposed action, comments on the draft
environmental impact statement 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
environmental impact statement or the merits of the alternatives
formulated and discussed in the statement. Reviewers may wish to refer
to the Council on 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)
The Responsible Official for this project is the Forest Supervisor
of the Clearwater National Forest, 12730 Highway 12, Orofino, ID 83544.
The Responsible Official will decide if the proposed project will be
implemented and will document the decision and reasons for the decision
in a Record of Decision. That decision will be subject to Forest
Service Appeal Regulations. The responsibility for preparing the DEIS
and FEIS has been delegated to Kara Chadwick, District Ranger, Palouse
Ranger District.
ADDRESSES: Written comments and suggestions concerning this project
should be sent to: Kara Chadwick, District Ranger, Palouse Ranger
District, 1700 Highway 6, Potlatch, ID 83855 or e-mailed to: comments-
northern-clearwater-palouse@fs.fed.us.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Tam White; Project Leader, North Fork
Ranger District, at: twhite@fs.fed.us or phone: (208) 476-4541.
Dated: July 19, 2007.
Thomas K. Reilly,
Forest Supervisor.
[FR Doc. 07-3653 Filed 7-25-07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410-11-M