Final Recirculated Environmental Impact Report/Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement for the Coachella Valley Multiple Species Habitat Conservation Plan and Natural Community Conservation Plan, Riverside County, CA, 63922-63924 [E7-22087]
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63922
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 218 / Tuesday, November 13, 2007 / Notices
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
Final Recirculated Environmental
Impact Report/Supplemental
Environmental Impact Statement for
the Coachella Valley Multiple Species
Habitat Conservation Plan and Natural
Community Conservation Plan,
Riverside County, CA
Fish and Wildlife Service,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice of availability; final
recirculated environmental impact
report/supplemental environmental
impact statement and multiple species
habitat conservation plan.
rfrederick on PROD1PC67 with NOTICES
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: Pursuant to the National
Environmental Policy Act, this notice
announces the availability of the Final
Recirculated Coachella Valley Multiple
Species Habitat Conservation Plan/
Natural Community Conservation Plan
(MSHCP), Final Recirculated
Environmental Impact Report/
Supplemental Environmental Impact
Statement (Final EIR/EIS), and
Implementing Agreement. The
Coachella Valley Association of
Governments, Coachella Valley
Conservation Commission, County of
Riverside, Riverside County Flood
Control and Water Conservation
District, Riverside County Parks and
Open Space District, Riverside County
Waste Management District, Coachella
Valley Water District, Imperial Irrigation
District, California Department of
Transportation, California Department
of Parks and Recreation, Coachella
Valley Mountains Conservancy, and the
cities of Cathedral City, Coachella,
Indian Wells, Indio, La Quinta, Palm
Desert, Palm Springs, and Rancho
Mirage (Applicants) applied to the U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service (Service) for
an incidental take permit pursuant to
section 10(a)(1)(B) of the Endangered
Species Act of 1973, as amended (Act).
The permit is needed to authorize
incidental take of listed animal species
due to development and certain other
activities in the approximately 1.1
million acre Plan Area in the Coachella
Valley of Riverside County, California.
The Service is publishing this notice to
inform the public of the proposed action
and to make available for review the
Final EIR/EIS, which includes responses
to public comments received on the
March 2007, Recirculated Draft EIR/
Supplemental Final EIS.
The MSHCP also incorporates a
Public Use and Trails Plan, which
includes proposals that address nonmotorized recreation activities on
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Federal and non-Federal lands in the
Santa Rosa and San Jacinto Mountains.
The Bureau of Land Management (BLM)
is a Cooperating Agency in this
planning process and will use this Final
EIR/EIS to make decisions on BLMadministered public lands pertaining to
trail use in the Santa Rosa and San
Jacinto Mountains. The proposals
constitute activity (implementation)
level actions in furtherance of the
California Desert Conservation Area
Plan (1980), as amended, and the Santa
Rosa and San Jacinto Mountains
National Monument Management Plan
(2004). The BLM will issue a separate
Record of Decision regarding nonmotorized recreation activities on public
lands.
DATES: A Record of Decision will be
signed no sooner than 30 days after the
publication date of the EPA notice.
Comments on the Final EIR/EIS must be
received on or before December 13,
2007.
Comments should be sent to
Mr. Jim Bartel, Field Supervisor, U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service, Carlsbad Fish
and Wildlife Office, 6010 Hidden Valley
Road, Carlsbad, California 92011. You
may also submit comments by facsimile
to 760–431–9624.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ms.
Therese O’Rourke, Assistant Field
Supervisor, at the Carlsbad Fish and
Wildlife Office above; telephone 760–
431–9440.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
ADDRESSES:
Availability of Documents
Copies of the Final Recirculated
MSHCP, Implementation Agreement,
and Final EIR/EIS are available for
public review, by appointment, during
regular business hours, at the Carlsbad
Fish and Wildlife Office or at the
Coachella Valley Association of
Governments (see ADDRESSES). Copies
are also available for viewing on the
World Wide Web at https://
www.cvmshcp.org and at the following
locations:
(1) Riverside County Planning
Department: 4080 Lemon Street, 9th
Floor, Riverside, California 92502.
(2) Riverside County Planning: 82675
Hwy 111, Room 209, Indio, California
92201.
(3) U.S. Bureau of Land Management:
690 Garnet Avenue, North Palm
Springs, California 92258.
(4) City of Palm Springs: 3200 E.
Tahquitz Canyon Way, Palm Springs,
California 92262.
(5) City of Cathedral City: 68–700
Avenida Lalo Guerrero, Cathedral City,
California 92234.
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(6) City of La Quinta: 78–495 Calle
Tampico, La Quinta, California 92253.
(7) City of Rancho Mirage: 69825
Highway 111, Rancho Mirage, California
92270.
(8) City of Palm Desert: 73–510 Fred
Waring Drive, Palm Desert, California
92260.
(9) City of Indio: 100 Civic Center
Mall, Indio, California 92201.
(10) City of Indian Wells: 44950 El
Dorado Drive, Indian Wells, California
92210.
(11) City of Coachella: 1515 Sixth
Street, Coachella, California 92236.
(12) Cathedral City Public Library:
33520 Date Palm Drive, Cathedral City,
California 92234.
(13) Coachella Branch Library: 1538
7th Street, Coachella Valley, California
92260.
(14) Indio Public Library: 200 Civic
Center Mall, Indio, California 92201.
(15) Lake Tamarisk Branch Library:
Lake Tamarisk Drive, Desert Center,
California 92239.
(16) La Quinta Public Library: 78080
Calle Estado, La Quinta, California
92253.
(17) Mecca-North Shore Branch
Library: 65250 Cahuilla, Mecca,
California 92254.
(18) Palm Springs City Library: 300
South Sunrise Way, Palm Springs,
California 92262.
(19) Rancho Mirage Public Library:
42–520 Bob Hope Drive, Rancho Mirage,
California 92270.
(20) Riverside County Library: Palm
Desert Branch, 73–300 Fred Waring
Drive Palm Desert, California 92260.
(21) Thousand Palms Library: 72–715
La Canada Way, Thousand Palms,
California 92276.
(22) Coachella Valley Association of
Governments: 73–710 Fred Waring
Drive, Suite 200, Palm Desert, California
92260.
Background Information
A permit is needed because section 9
of the Act and Federal regulations
prohibit the ‘‘take’’ of animal species
listed as endangered or threatened. Take
of listed animal species is defined under
the Act to include kill, harm, or harass.
Harm includes significant habitat
modification or degradation that
actually kills or injures listed animals
by significantly impairing essential
behavioral patterns, including breeding,
feeding, and sheltering [50 CFR 17.3(c)].
Under limited circumstances, the
Service may issue permits to authorize
incidental take; i.e., take that is
incidental to, and not the purpose of,
otherwise lawful activity. Although take
of plant species is not prohibited under
the Act, and therefore cannot be
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Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 218 / Tuesday, November 13, 2007 / Notices
authorized under an incidental take
permit, plant species are proposed to be
included on the permit in recognition of
the conservation benefits provided to
them under the MSHCP. Assurances
provided under the No Surprises Rule at
50 CFR 17.3, 17.22(b)(5), and 17.32(b)(5)
would extend to all species named on
the permit. Regulations governing
incidental take permits for threatened
and endangered species are found in 50
CFR 17.32 and 17.22, respectively.
The EIR/EIS analyzes the impacts of
the proposed implementation of the
MSHCP by the Applicants. The
Applicants seek an incidental take
permit and assurances to incidentally
take 22 animal species and assurances
for 5 plants. Collectively, the 27 listed
and unlisted species are referred to as
‘‘Covered Species’’ by the MSHCP and
include 5 plant species (2 endangered,
3 unlisted); 2 insect species (both
unlisted); 1 fish species (endangered); 1
amphibian species (endangered); 3
reptile species (2 threatened, 1
unlisted); 11 bird species (3 endangered,
8 unlisted); and 4 mammal species (1
endangered and 3 unlisted).
The federally listed species include
the Coachella Valley milk-vetch
(Astragalus lentiginosus var.
coachellae), triple-ribbed milk-vetch
(Astragalus tricarinatus), desert pupfish
(Cyprinodon macularius), arroyo toad
(Bufo californicus), desert tortoise
(Gopherus agassizii), Coachella Valley
fringe-toed lizard (Uma inornata), Yuma
clapper rail (Rallus longirostris
yumanensis), southwestern willow
flycatcher (Empidonax traillii extimus),
least Bell’s vireo (Vireo bellii pusillus),
and Peninsular bighorn sheep (Ovis
canadensis cremnobates). The
Coachella Valley round-tailed ground
squirrel (Spermophilus tereticaudus
chlorus) is a Federal Candidate. The
unlisted species include the Mecca aster
(Xylorhiza cognate), Orocopia sage
(Salvia greatae), Little San Bernardino
Mountains linanthus (Linanthus
maculates) or (Gilia maculata),
Coachella Valley giant sand-treader
cricket (Macrobaenetes valgum),
Coachella Valley Jerusalem cricket
(Stenopelmatus cahuilaensis), flat-tailed
horned lizard (Phrynosoma mcalli),
burrowing owl (Athene cunicularia),
crissal thrasher (Toxostoma crissale), Le
Conte’s thrasher (Toxostoma lecontei),
gray vireo (Vireo vicinior), yellow
warbler (Dendroica petechia brewsteri),
yellow-breasted chat (Icteria virens),
summer tanager (Piranga rubra),
California black rail (Laterallus
jamaicensis), southern yellow bat
(Lasiurus ega xanthinus), and Palm
Springs pocket mouse (Perognathus
longimembris bangsi).
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The Coachella Valley Association of
Government’s Executive Committee
approved the Final Recirculated MSHCP
on September 10, 2007. The MSHCP is
intended to protect and sustain viable
populations of native plant and animal
species and their habitats in perpetuity
through the creation of a reserve system,
while accommodating continued
economic development and quality of
life for residents of the Coachella Valley.
The MSHCP plan area includes the
following eight incorporated cities:
Cathedral City, Coachella, Indian Wells,
Indio, La Quinta, Palm Desert, Palm
Springs, and Rancho Mirage. It is one of
two large, multiple-jurisdictional
habitat-planning efforts in Riverside
County, each of which constitutes a
‘‘subregional’’ plan under the State of
California’s NCCP Act, as amended.
The MSHCP identifies the proposed
reserve system, which would be
established from lands within 21
conservation areas that are either
adjacent or linked by biological
corridors. When completed, the reserve
system would include core habitat for
Covered Species, essential ecological
processes, and biological corridors and
linkages to provide for the conservation
of the proposed Covered Species.
The MSHCP includes measures to
avoid and minimize incidental take of
the proposed Covered Species,
emphasizing project design
modifications to protect both habitats
and species’ individuals. A monitoring
and reporting plan would measure the
MSHCP’s success based on achieving
biological goals and objectives; thus,
ensuring conservation keeps pace with
development. The MSHCP also includes
a management program, with adaptive
management, which allows for changes
in the conservation program if the
biological species objectives are not met,
or new information becomes available to
improve the efficacy of the MSHCP’s
conservation strategy.
Covered Activities, as described in the
MSHCP, would include public and
private development within the plan
area that require discretionary actions
by an Applicant, making them subject to
consistency with MSHCP, regional
transportation facilities, maintenance of
and safety improvements on existing
roads, the Circulation Elements of the
Applicants, maintenance and
construction of flood control facilities,
and compatible uses in the reserve. The
MSHCP makes provision for the
inclusion of special districts and other
non-Applicant entities in the permit
with a certificate of inclusion.
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63923
Public Review
The Service and the cooperating
agency issued a notice of intent to
prepare an EIR/EIS for the proposed
MSHCP, on June 28, 2000 (65 FR
39920); a notice of availability of the
Draft Environmental Impact Report/
Environmental Impact Statement for the
proposed MSHCP on November 5, 2004
(69 FR 64581); a notice of availability of
the Final Environmental Impact Report/
Environmental Impact Statement for the
proposed MSHCP on April 21, 2006 (71
FR 20719); and a notice of availability
of the Recirculated Draft EIR/
Supplemental Final EIS for the
proposed MSHCP on March 30, 2007
(72 FR 15148) for a 60-day public
comment period.
The Recirculated Draft EIR/
Supplemental Final EIS analyzed the
potential environmental impacts that
may result from the Federal action of
authorizing incidental take anticipated
to occur with implementation of the
MSHCP, and identified various
alternatives. We received 67 comment
letters on the Recirculated Draft EIR/
Supplemental Final EIS. A response to
each comment received in these letters
has been included in Volume 5 of the
Final EIR/EIS. The analysis provided in
the Final EIR/EIS is intended to
accomplish the following: inform the
public of the Service’s proposed action
and alternatives; address public
comments received on the Recirculated
Draft EIR/Supplemental Final EIS;
disclose the direct, indirect, and
cumulative environmental effects of our
proposed action and alternatives; and
indicate any irreversible commitment of
resources that would result from
implementation of the proposed action
and alternatives. This notice is provided
pursuant to section 10(a) of the Act and
Service regulations for implementing
National Environmental Policy Act (40
CFR 1506.6).
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 may 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.
We will evaluate the permit
application, associated documents, and
public comments to determine whether
the application meets the requirements
of section 10(a) of the Act. The Service
will then prepare a Record of Decision.
A permit decision will be made no
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63924
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 218 / Tuesday, November 13, 2007 / Notices
sooner than 30 days after the
publication of this notice and
completion of the Record of Decision.
Dated: October 26, 2007.
Ken McDermond,
Deputy Manager, California/Nevada
Operations Office, Sacramento, California.
[FR Doc. E7–22087 Filed 11–9–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–55–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Indian Affairs
Proclaiming Certain Lands as
Reservation for the Nottawaseppi
Huron Band of Potawatomi Indians of
Michigan
Bureau of Indian Affairs,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice of Reservation
Proclamation.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: This notice informs the public
that the Assistant Secretary—Indian
Affairs proclaimed approximately 78.26
acres, more or less, as the Nottawaseppi
Huron Band of Potawatomi Indian
Reservation for the Nottawaseppi Huron
Band of Potawatomi Indians of
Michigan.
Ben
Burshia, Bureau of Indian Affairs,
Division of Real Estate Services, 1849 C
Street, NW., Mail Stop-4639-MIB,
Washington, DC 20240, telephone (202)
208–7737.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This
notice is published in the exercise of
authority delegated by the Secretary of
the Interior to the Assistant Secretary—
Indian Affairs by part 209 of the
Departmental Manual.
A proclamation was issued according
to the Act of June 18, 1934 (48 Stat. 986;
25 U.S.C. 467), for the land described
below. The land was proclaimed to be
the Nottawaseppi Huron Band of
Potawatomi Indian Reservation for the
exclusive use of Indians on that
reservation who are entitled to reside at
the reservation by enrollment or tribal
membership.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Calhoun County, Michigan; thence
North 89 degrees 06′ 09″ East along said
Southerly line, 214.69 feet; thence
362.37 feet along the arc of a curve to
the left whose radius measures 362.0
feet and whose chord bears North 60
degrees 2′ 31″ East, 347.43 feet; thence
North 31 degrees 44′ 56″ East, 263.62
feet; thence North 59 degrees 52′ 54″
East, 81.39 feet to the place of
beginning; thence continuing North 59
degrees 52′ 54″ East, 181.87 feet; thence
South 78 degrees 01′ 12″ East, 472.30
feet; thence South 76 degrees 27′ 00″
East 1357.31 feet; thence South 00
degrees 04′ 24″ West, 205.69 feet to the
Northwest corner of Lot 21 of the
Supervisor’s plat of Wagner Acres, as
recorded in Liber 11 of plats, on page
21, in the Office of the Register of Deeds
for Calhoun County, Michigan; thence
South 00 degrees 4′ 24″ West along the
West line of said Plat, 1992.58 feet to
the centerline of Michigan Avenue;
thence North 55 degrees 29′ 21″ West
along said centerline, 2350.98 feet;
thence North 00 degrees 03′ 28″ East,
1191.07 feet to the place of beginning.
The above-described lands contain a
total of 78.26 acres, more or less, which
is subject to all valid rights,
reservations, rights-of-way, and
easements of record.
This proclamation does not affect title
to the land described above, nor does it
affect any valid existing easements for
public roads and highways, public
utilities and for railroads and pipelines
and any other rights-of-way or
reservations of record.
Dated: October 15, 2007.
Carl J. Artman,
Assistant Secretary—Indian Affairs.
[FR Doc. E7–22158 Filed 11–9–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–W7–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Land Management
[OR–116–5882–PA; HAG–07–0130]
Emergency Closures and Restrictions
on Public Land in Oregon
Bureau of Land Management,
Interior.
ACTION: Emergency Closures and
Restrictions.
rfrederick on PROD1PC67 with NOTICES
Michigan Meridian
AGENCY:
Calhoun County, State of Michigan;
Sackrider Parcel
Commencing at the West 1⁄4 post of
Section 13, Town 2 South, Range 7
West, Emmett Township, Calhoun
County, Michigan; thence North 00
degrees 03′ 28″ East along the West line
of said Section, 46.99 feet to the
Southerly line of the exit ramp for I–94,
as recorded in Liber 898 on page 4, in
the Office of the Register of Deeds for
SUMMARY: Pursuant to Title 43 Code of
Federal Regulations (CFR), § 8364.1 and
43 CFR 8341.2(a), the Bureau of Land
Management (BLM) Medford District
Office is publishing these closures and
restrictions for motorized vehicles on
certain public lands in Jackson County
Oregon. These lands are located within
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the Timber Mountain Off-Highway
Vehicle (OHV) Area, under the
jurisdiction of the BLM Medford District
Office. The closures and restrictions are
needed in order to protect the area’s
natural resources and provide for public
health and safety and address ongoing
resource damage, vehicles and off-road
vehicles, and conduct.
EFFECTIVE DATE: These closures and
restrictions are effective at the time of
this publication, November 13, 2007,
and will remain in effect until the
adverse effects are eliminated and
measures are implemented to prevent
their reoccurrence. Comments may still
be submitted and are welcome.
Comments, including names, street
addresses, and other contact
information of respondents, will be
available for public review at the office
of the Bureau of Land Management,
Medford, Oregon, during regular
business hours (7:45 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.),
Monday through Friday, except Federal
holidays. Before including your address,
telephone number, email address, or
other personal identifying information
in your comment, be advised 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 from public review your
personal identifying information, we
cannot guarantee that we will be able to
do so.
ADDRESSES: Address all comments
concerning these closures and
restrictions to: John Gerritsma, Bureau
of Land Management, Medford District
Office, 3040 Biddle Road, Medford,
Oregon 97504. Comments may also be
submitted electronically to
Medford_Mail@blm.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: John
Gerritsma, Medford District Office,
Medford, Oregon, telephone (541) 618–
2438. Persons who use a
telecommunications device for the deaf
(TDD) may contact this individual by
calling the Federal Information Relay
Service (FIRS) at (800) 877–8339, 24
hours a day, 7 days a week.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
BLM’s Medford District Office has
closed Bunny Meadows (a gravel
stockpile site) and the surrounding
public lands to camping and off-road
vehicle use. Off-road (or off-highway)
vehicle off-loading in a designated area,
and motorized vehicle use on BLM road
38S–3W–14.0 will continue to be
allowed to facilitate OHV access to trails
and roads located to the west of Bunny
Meadows on BLM-administered lands.
The purpose of the closure is to protect
soils, water, and fisheries resources that
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 72, Number 218 (Tuesday, November 13, 2007)]
[Notices]
[Pages 63922-63924]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E7-22087]
[[Page 63922]]
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DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
Final Recirculated Environmental Impact Report/Supplemental
Environmental Impact Statement for the Coachella Valley Multiple
Species Habitat Conservation Plan and Natural Community Conservation
Plan, Riverside County, CA
AGENCY: Fish and Wildlife Service, Interior.
ACTION: Notice of availability; final recirculated environmental impact
report/supplemental environmental impact statement and multiple species
habitat conservation plan.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: Pursuant to the National Environmental Policy Act, this notice
announces the availability of the Final Recirculated Coachella Valley
Multiple Species Habitat Conservation Plan/Natural Community
Conservation Plan (MSHCP), Final Recirculated Environmental Impact
Report/Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement (Final EIR/EIS), and
Implementing Agreement. The Coachella Valley Association of
Governments, Coachella Valley Conservation Commission, County of
Riverside, Riverside County Flood Control and Water Conservation
District, Riverside County Parks and Open Space District, Riverside
County Waste Management District, Coachella Valley Water District,
Imperial Irrigation District, California Department of Transportation,
California Department of Parks and Recreation, Coachella Valley
Mountains Conservancy, and the cities of Cathedral City, Coachella,
Indian Wells, Indio, La Quinta, Palm Desert, Palm Springs, and Rancho
Mirage (Applicants) applied to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
(Service) for an incidental take permit pursuant to section 10(a)(1)(B)
of the Endangered Species Act of 1973, as amended (Act). The permit is
needed to authorize incidental take of listed animal species due to
development and certain other activities in the approximately 1.1
million acre Plan Area in the Coachella Valley of Riverside County,
California. The Service is publishing this notice to inform the public
of the proposed action and to make available for review the Final EIR/
EIS, which includes responses to public comments received on the March
2007, Recirculated Draft EIR/Supplemental Final EIS.
The MSHCP also incorporates a Public Use and Trails Plan, which
includes proposals that address non-motorized recreation activities on
Federal and non-Federal lands in the Santa Rosa and San Jacinto
Mountains. The Bureau of Land Management (BLM) is a Cooperating Agency
in this planning process and will use this Final EIR/EIS to make
decisions on BLM-administered public lands pertaining to trail use in
the Santa Rosa and San Jacinto Mountains. The proposals constitute
activity (implementation) level actions in furtherance of the
California Desert Conservation Area Plan (1980), as amended, and the
Santa Rosa and San Jacinto Mountains National Monument Management Plan
(2004). The BLM will issue a separate Record of Decision regarding non-
motorized recreation activities on public lands.
DATES: A Record of Decision will be signed no sooner than 30 days after
the publication date of the EPA notice. Comments on the Final EIR/EIS
must be received on or before December 13, 2007.
ADDRESSES: Comments should be sent to Mr. Jim Bartel, Field Supervisor,
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Carlsbad Fish and Wildlife Office, 6010
Hidden Valley Road, Carlsbad, California 92011. You may also submit
comments by facsimile to 760-431-9624.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ms. Therese O'Rourke, Assistant Field
Supervisor, at the Carlsbad Fish and Wildlife Office above; telephone
760-431-9440.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Availability of Documents
Copies of the Final Recirculated MSHCP, Implementation Agreement,
and Final EIR/EIS are available for public review, by appointment,
during regular business hours, at the Carlsbad Fish and Wildlife Office
or at the Coachella Valley Association of Governments (see ADDRESSES).
Copies are also available for viewing on the World Wide Web at https://
www.cvmshcp.org and at the following locations:
(1) Riverside County Planning Department: 4080 Lemon Street, 9th
Floor, Riverside, California 92502.
(2) Riverside County Planning: 82675 Hwy 111, Room 209, Indio,
California 92201.
(3) U.S. Bureau of Land Management: 690 Garnet Avenue, North Palm
Springs, California 92258.
(4) City of Palm Springs: 3200 E. Tahquitz Canyon Way, Palm
Springs, California 92262.
(5) City of Cathedral City: 68-700 Avenida Lalo Guerrero, Cathedral
City, California 92234.
(6) City of La Quinta: 78-495 Calle Tampico, La Quinta, California
92253.
(7) City of Rancho Mirage: 69825 Highway 111, Rancho Mirage,
California 92270.
(8) City of Palm Desert: 73-510 Fred Waring Drive, Palm Desert,
California 92260.
(9) City of Indio: 100 Civic Center Mall, Indio, California 92201.
(10) City of Indian Wells: 44950 El Dorado Drive, Indian Wells,
California 92210.
(11) City of Coachella: 1515 Sixth Street, Coachella, California
92236.
(12) Cathedral City Public Library: 33520 Date Palm Drive,
Cathedral City, California 92234.
(13) Coachella Branch Library: 1538 7th Street, Coachella Valley,
California 92260.
(14) Indio Public Library: 200 Civic Center Mall, Indio, California
92201.
(15) Lake Tamarisk Branch Library: Lake Tamarisk Drive, Desert
Center, California 92239.
(16) La Quinta Public Library: 78080 Calle Estado, La Quinta,
California 92253.
(17) Mecca-North Shore Branch Library: 65250 Cahuilla, Mecca,
California 92254.
(18) Palm Springs City Library: 300 South Sunrise Way, Palm
Springs, California 92262.
(19) Rancho Mirage Public Library: 42-520 Bob Hope Drive, Rancho
Mirage, California 92270.
(20) Riverside County Library: Palm Desert Branch, 73-300 Fred
Waring Drive Palm Desert, California 92260.
(21) Thousand Palms Library: 72-715 La Canada Way, Thousand Palms,
California 92276.
(22) Coachella Valley Association of Governments: 73-710 Fred
Waring Drive, Suite 200, Palm Desert, California 92260.
Background Information
A permit is needed because section 9 of the Act and Federal
regulations prohibit the ``take'' of animal species listed as
endangered or threatened. Take of listed animal species is defined
under the Act to include kill, harm, or harass. Harm includes
significant habitat modification or degradation that actually kills or
injures listed animals by significantly impairing essential behavioral
patterns, including breeding, feeding, and sheltering [50 CFR 17.3(c)].
Under limited circumstances, the Service may issue permits to authorize
incidental take; i.e., take that is incidental to, and not the purpose
of, otherwise lawful activity. Although take of plant species is not
prohibited under the Act, and therefore cannot be
[[Page 63923]]
authorized under an incidental take permit, plant species are proposed
to be included on the permit in recognition of the conservation
benefits provided to them under the MSHCP. Assurances provided under
the No Surprises Rule at 50 CFR 17.3, 17.22(b)(5), and 17.32(b)(5)
would extend to all species named on the permit. Regulations governing
incidental take permits for threatened and endangered species are found
in 50 CFR 17.32 and 17.22, respectively.
The EIR/EIS analyzes the impacts of the proposed implementation of
the MSHCP by the Applicants. The Applicants seek an incidental take
permit and assurances to incidentally take 22 animal species and
assurances for 5 plants. Collectively, the 27 listed and unlisted
species are referred to as ``Covered Species'' by the MSHCP and include
5 plant species (2 endangered, 3 unlisted); 2 insect species (both
unlisted); 1 fish species (endangered); 1 amphibian species
(endangered); 3 reptile species (2 threatened, 1 unlisted); 11 bird
species (3 endangered, 8 unlisted); and 4 mammal species (1 endangered
and 3 unlisted).
The federally listed species include the Coachella Valley milk-
vetch (Astragalus lentiginosus var. coachellae), triple-ribbed milk-
vetch (Astragalus tricarinatus), desert pupfish (Cyprinodon
macularius), arroyo toad (Bufo californicus), desert tortoise (Gopherus
agassizii), Coachella Valley fringe-toed lizard (Uma inornata), Yuma
clapper rail (Rallus longirostris yumanensis), southwestern willow
flycatcher (Empidonax traillii extimus), least Bell's vireo (Vireo
bellii pusillus), and Peninsular bighorn sheep (Ovis canadensis
cremnobates). The Coachella Valley round-tailed ground squirrel
(Spermophilus tereticaudus chlorus) is a Federal Candidate. The
unlisted species include the Mecca aster (Xylorhiza cognate), Orocopia
sage (Salvia greatae), Little San Bernardino Mountains linanthus
(Linanthus maculates) or (Gilia maculata), Coachella Valley giant sand-
treader cricket (Macrobaenetes valgum), Coachella Valley Jerusalem
cricket (Stenopelmatus cahuilaensis), flat-tailed horned lizard
(Phrynosoma mcalli), burrowing owl (Athene cunicularia), crissal
thrasher (Toxostoma crissale), Le Conte's thrasher (Toxostoma
lecontei), gray vireo (Vireo vicinior), yellow warbler (Dendroica
petechia brewsteri), yellow-breasted chat (Icteria virens), summer
tanager (Piranga rubra), California black rail (Laterallus
jamaicensis), southern yellow bat (Lasiurus ega xanthinus), and Palm
Springs pocket mouse (Perognathus longimembris bangsi).
The Coachella Valley Association of Government's Executive
Committee approved the Final Recirculated MSHCP on September 10, 2007.
The MSHCP is intended to protect and sustain viable populations of
native plant and animal species and their habitats in perpetuity
through the creation of a reserve system, while accommodating continued
economic development and quality of life for residents of the Coachella
Valley. The MSHCP plan area includes the following eight incorporated
cities: Cathedral City, Coachella, Indian Wells, Indio, La Quinta, Palm
Desert, Palm Springs, and Rancho Mirage. It is one of two large,
multiple-jurisdictional habitat-planning efforts in Riverside County,
each of which constitutes a ``subregional'' plan under the State of
California's NCCP Act, as amended.
The MSHCP identifies the proposed reserve system, which would be
established from lands within 21 conservation areas that are either
adjacent or linked by biological corridors. When completed, the reserve
system would include core habitat for Covered Species, essential
ecological processes, and biological corridors and linkages to provide
for the conservation of the proposed Covered Species.
The MSHCP includes measures to avoid and minimize incidental take
of the proposed Covered Species, emphasizing project design
modifications to protect both habitats and species' individuals. A
monitoring and reporting plan would measure the MSHCP's success based
on achieving biological goals and objectives; thus, ensuring
conservation keeps pace with development. The MSHCP also includes a
management program, with adaptive management, which allows for changes
in the conservation program if the biological species objectives are
not met, or new information becomes available to improve the efficacy
of the MSHCP's conservation strategy.
Covered Activities, as described in the MSHCP, would include public
and private development within the plan area that require discretionary
actions by an Applicant, making them subject to consistency with MSHCP,
regional transportation facilities, maintenance of and safety
improvements on existing roads, the Circulation Elements of the
Applicants, maintenance and construction of flood control facilities,
and compatible uses in the reserve. The MSHCP makes provision for the
inclusion of special districts and other non-Applicant entities in the
permit with a certificate of inclusion.
Public Review
The Service and the cooperating agency issued a notice of intent to
prepare an EIR/EIS for the proposed MSHCP, on June 28, 2000 (65 FR
39920); a notice of availability of the Draft Environmental Impact
Report/Environmental Impact Statement for the proposed MSHCP on
November 5, 2004 (69 FR 64581); a notice of availability of the Final
Environmental Impact Report/Environmental Impact Statement for the
proposed MSHCP on April 21, 2006 (71 FR 20719); and a notice of
availability of the Recirculated Draft EIR/Supplemental Final EIS for
the proposed MSHCP on March 30, 2007 (72 FR 15148) for a 60-day public
comment period.
The Recirculated Draft EIR/Supplemental Final EIS analyzed the
potential environmental impacts that may result from the Federal action
of authorizing incidental take anticipated to occur with implementation
of the MSHCP, and identified various alternatives. We received 67
comment letters on the Recirculated Draft EIR/Supplemental Final EIS. A
response to each comment received in these letters has been included in
Volume 5 of the Final EIR/EIS. The analysis provided in the Final EIR/
EIS is intended to accomplish the following: inform the public of the
Service's proposed action and alternatives; address public comments
received on the Recirculated Draft EIR/Supplemental Final EIS; disclose
the direct, indirect, and cumulative environmental effects of our
proposed action and alternatives; and indicate any irreversible
commitment of resources that would result from implementation of the
proposed action and alternatives. This notice is provided pursuant to
section 10(a) of the Act and Service regulations for implementing
National Environmental Policy Act (40 CFR 1506.6).
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 may
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.
We will evaluate the permit application, associated documents, and
public comments to determine whether the application meets the
requirements of section 10(a) of the Act. The Service will then prepare
a Record of Decision. A permit decision will be made no
[[Page 63924]]
sooner than 30 days after the publication of this notice and completion
of the Record of Decision.
Dated: October 26, 2007.
Ken McDermond,
Deputy Manager, California/Nevada Operations Office, Sacramento,
California.
[FR Doc. E7-22087 Filed 11-9-07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310-55-P