Wallkill River National Wildlife Refuge, Sussex, NJ, 6522-6524 [E8-1936]
Download as PDF
6522
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 23 / Monday, February 4, 2008 / Notices
Dated: January 11, 2008.
Lawrence Hale,
Acting Director, National Communications
System.
[FR Doc. E8–2011 Filed 2–1–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4410–10–P
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
SECURITY
U.S. Customs and Border Protection
Agency Information Collection
Activities; Arrival and Departure
Record
(Forms I–94 and I–94W)
U.S. Customs and Border
Protection, Department of Homeland
Security.
ACTION: 30-Day Notice and request for
comments; Revision of an existing
information collection: 1651–0111.
ebenthall on PRODPC61 with NOTICES
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: U.S. Customs and Border
Protection (CBP) of the Department of
Homeland Security has submitted the
following information collection request
to the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) for review and approval in
accordance with the Paperwork
Reduction Act: Arrival and Departure
Record, Forms I–94 and I–94W. This is
a revision of an existing collection of
information. This document is
published to obtain comments from the
public and affected agencies. This
proposed information collection was
previously published in the Federal
Register (72 FR 63622) on November 9,
2007, allowing for a 60-day comment
period. Seven public comments were
received. CBP will respond to these
comments. This notice allows for an
additional 30 days for public comments.
This process is conducted in accordance
with 5 CFR 1320.10.
DATES: Written comments should be
received on or before March 5, 2008.
ADDRESSES: Interested persons are
invited to submit written comments on
the proposed information collection to
the Office of Information and Regulatory
Affairs, Office of Management and
Budget. Comments should be addressed
to Nathan Lesser, Desk Officer,
Department of Homeland Security/
Customs and Border Protection, and
sent via electronic mail to
oira_submission@omb.eop.gov or faxed
to (202) 395–6974.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: U.S.
Customs and Border Protection (CBP)
encourages the general public and
affected Federal agencies to submit
written comments and suggestions on
proposed and/or continuing information
collection requests pursuant to the
VerDate Aug<31>2005
15:15 Feb 01, 2008
Jkt 214001
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (Pub.
L.104–13). Your comments should
address one of the following four points:
(1) Evaluate whether the proposed
collection of information is necessary
for the proper performance of the
functions of the agency/component,
including whether the information will
have practical utility;
(2) Evaluate the accuracy of the
agencies/components estimate of the
burden of the proposed collection of
information, including the validity of
the methodology and assumptions used;
(3) Enhance the quality, utility, and
clarity of the information to be
collected; and
(4) Minimize the burden of the
collections of 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, e.g., permitting
electronic submission of responses.
Title: Arrival and Departure Record.
OMB Number: 1651–0111.
Form Number: I–94 and I–94W.
Abstract: These forms must be
completed and signed by aliens arriving
by commercial sea and air, who seek
admission to the United States. These
forms must be given to the CBP Officer
at the U.S. port of entry. CBP proposes
to revise this information collection by
adding data fields for: e-mail address;
phone number; passport issuance date;
and passport expiration date to the I–94
and I–94W.
Current Actions: This submission is
being submitted to revise the current
information collection.
Type of Review: Revision.
Affected Public: Individuals.
Estimated Number of Respondents:
30,924,380.
Estimated Time per Respondent: 8
minutes.
Estimated Total Annual Burden
Hours: 4,112,943.
Estimated Total Annualized Cost on
the Public: $247,385,705.
If additional information is required
contact: Tracey Denning, U.S. Customs
and Border Protection, 1300
Pennsylvania Avenue, NW., Room
3.2.C, Washington, DC 20229, at 202–
344–1429.
Dated: January 24, 2008.
Tracey Denning,
Agency Clearance Officer, Information
Services Branch.
[FR Doc. E8–1956 Filed 2–1–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 9111–14–P
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DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
[FWS–R5–R–2008–N0021; 50130–1265–
0000–S3; ABC Code: S3]
Wallkill River National Wildlife Refuge,
Sussex, NJ
Fish and Wildlife Service,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice of availability: draft
comprehensive conservation plan and
environmental assessment; request for
comments.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: We, the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service (Service), announce the
availability for review of the Draft
Comprehensive Conservation Plan
(CCP) and Environmental Assessment
(EA) for Wallkill River National Wildlife
Refuge (NWR). The Service prepared the
Draft CCP/EA in compliance with the
National Environmental Policy Act of
1969 and the National Wildlife Refuge
System Administration Act of 1966, as
amended by the National Wildlife
Refuge System Improvement Act of
1997. We request public comments.
DATES: The Draft CCP/EA will be
available for public review and
comment until close of business on
March 10, 2008.
ADDRESSES: You may obtain copies of
the Draft CCP/EA on CD–ROM or in
print by writing to Beth Goldstein,
Refuge Planner, U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service, 300 Westgate Center Drive,
Hadley, Massachusetts 01035, or by
electronic mail at
northeastplanning@fws.gov. You may
also view the draft plan on the Web at:
https://www.fws.gov/northeast/planning/
Wallkill%20River/ccphome.html. We
will host public meetings on
Wednesday, Feb. 20 in Augusta, NJ and
Thursday, Feb. 21 in Wantage, NJ We
will post the details of each meeting 2
weeks in advance, via our project
mailing list, in local papers, and at the
refuge.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
more information, or to get on the
project mailing list, contact Beth
Goldstein, Refuge Planner, at the
address above, by telephone at 413–
253–8564, by fax at 413–253–8468, or
by electronic mail at
Beth_Goldstein@fws.gov.
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 et seq.), requires the Service to
develop a CCP for each refuge. The
purpose of developing a CCP is to
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
E:\FR\FM\04FEN1.SGM
04FEN1
ebenthall on PRODPC61 with NOTICES
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 23 / Monday, February 4, 2008 / Notices
provide refuge managers with a 15-year
strategy for achieving refuge purposes
and contributing to the mission of the
National Wildlife Refuge System
(NWRS), in conformance with the sound
principles of fish and wildlife science,
natural resources conservation, legal
mandates, and Service policies. In
addition to outlining broad management
direction on conserving wildlife and
habitats, CCPs identify compatible
wildlife-dependent recreational
opportunities available to the public,
including opportunities for hunting,
fishing, wildlife observation and
photography, and environmental
interpretation and education. The
Service will review and update each
CCP at least once every 15 years.
Congress established the Wallkill
River Refuge by law on November 16,
1990 (Section 107 of H.R. 3338; Pub. L.
101–593) with the following purposes:
(1) To preserve and enhance the refuge’s
lands and waters in a manner that will
conserve the natural diversity of fish,
wildlife, plants, and their habitats for
present and future generations, (2) to
conserve and enhance populations of
fish, wildlife, and plants within the
refuge, including populations of black
ducks and other waterfowl, raptors,
passerines, and marsh and water birds,
(3) to protect and enhance the water
quality of aquatic habitats within the
refuge, (4) to fulfill international treaty
obligation of the United States with
respect to fish and wildlife and their
habitats, and (5) to provide
opportunities for compatible scientific
research, environmental education, and
fish- and wildlife-oriented recreation
(104 Stat. 2955).
The refuge encompasses
approximately 5,000 acres, stretching
from Sussex County, New Jersey to
Orange County, New York. It is located
along a 9-mile stretch of the Wallkill
River, and lies in a rolling valley within
the Appalachian Ridge and Valley
physiographic province. The region’s
major wetlands are former glacial lake
bottoms, and the lake’s organic muck
soils support extensive bottomland
hardwood forests, wet meadows, and
farm fields. Since establishing the
refuge, we have focused primarily on
conserving, restoring, and enhancing the
natural diversity of fish, wildlife, plants
and their habitats along the Wallkill
River. Management activities include
restoring wetlands, creating moist soil
management units, maintaining
grasslands and providing wildlifedependent recreational opportunities.
The Draft CCP/EA evaluates three
alternatives that address nine major
issues identified during the planning
process. Several sources generated those
VerDate Aug<31>2005
15:15 Feb 01, 2008
Jkt 214001
issues, including the public, State or
Federal agencies, other Service
programs, and our planning team. The
Draft CCP/EA describes those issues in
detail. Highlights of the alternatives
follow.
Alternative A (Current Management):
This alternative is the ‘‘No Action’’
alternative required by the National
Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (42
U.S.C. 4321–4347, as amended).
Alternative A defines our current
management activities, including those
planned, funded, or under way, and
serves as the baseline against which to
compare the other two action
alternatives. It would maintain our
present levels of approved refuge
staffing and the biological and visitor
programs. Our biological program
would continue to use a variety of
habitat management tools to maintain
the refuge’s scrub-shrub habitats, nonforested wetlands, grasslands and
forested communities. We would
continue efforts to protect the federallythreatened bog turtle by managing
occupied sites on refuge-owned lands
and attempting to acquire occupied sites
within the current acquisition
boundary. We would continue to offer
hunt programs for deer, spring and fall
turkey, woodcock, resident Canada
geese, waterfowl and other migratory
birds according to New Jersey State
seasons. We would maintain current
access sites for fishing and boating, and
current trails for wildlife observation
and photography. We would continue to
offer limited environmental education
and interpretation programs, as staffing
and funding allows. Finally, we would
continue to pursue the acquisition from
willing sellers of the remaining 2,021
acres of important wildlife habitat that
lies within our currently approved
acquisition boundary.
Alternative B (the Service-preferred
alternative): This alternative represents
the combination of actions we believe
most effectively achieves the purposes
and goals of the refuge and addresses
the major issues. It builds on the
programs identified under current
management. We would conduct field
surveys of all suitable bog turtle sites on
refuge-owned lands and we would
develop a site management and
monitoring plan for occupied and
potential sites. We would hire a
contractor to conduct surveys of Indiana
bats (federally listed as endangered) and
we would determine the feasibility of
re-establishing dwarf wedgemussel
(federally listed as endangered)
populations on Service-owned lands.
We would take a more proactive
approach to restoring wetlands and
establish a 100-meter forested riparian
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
6523
corridor along either side of the Wallkill
River where it traverses the refuge. We
would establish three grassland focus
areas on the refuge and let other small
fields revert to scrub-shrub habitat.
We would open the refuge to bear
hunting according to State seasons and
provide at least one additional fishing
access site in the current refuge
boundary. We would increase access to
Service-owned lands within the current
refuge by opening at least two new trails
and extending an existing trail. We
would also develop new interpretive
materials and work with partners to
expand the refuge’s environmental
education programs.
Alternative B proposes to expand the
current approved refuge boundary by
9,550 acres through a combination of
fee-simple and easement acquisition
from willing sellers. The proposed
expansion boundary includes four focus
areas, including the 7,079-acre
Papakating Creek Focus Area, which
encompasses a 15-mile tributary of the
Wallkill River. All four focus areas have
tremendous wetland resource values,
and together they form a key corridor
connection between preserved habitats
on the Kittatinny Ridge to the west and
the Hudson Highlands to the east.
Finally, they would fully complement
and enhance the Federal, State and
private conservation partnerships
actively involved in protecting this
unique ecosystem.
Alternative C: This alternative
proposes to establish and maintain the
ecological integrity of natural
communities on the refuge and
surrounding landscape without specific
emphasis or concern for any particular
species or species groups. Under this
alternative, refuge lands would be
restored to their historic condition as
they existed in the Wallkill River Valley
during the late 1600s. At this time, the
area was thought to consist of a forested
matrix dominated by floodplain forest.
A bottomland hardwood forest
component would be established on
more than 70 percent of the current
refuge. Sites prone to continuous
flooding would likely be sustained as
emergent marsh and shrublands.
Upland sites would likely revert to a
mixed mid-Atlantic hardwood forest
association. We would also restore, to
the extent practicable, the natural
hydrologic regimen of the Wallkill River
and its tributaries by removing manmade impediments to natural flow, such
as the freshwater impoundments in
place to benefit waterfowl.
Under Alternative C, we would allow
hunting for deer and resident Canada
geese only. Otherwise, public use
within the current refuge boundary
E:\FR\FM\04FEN1.SGM
04FEN1
6524
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 23 / Monday, February 4, 2008 / Notices
would remain the same as Alternative
A.
Alternative C proposes a 7,609-acre
boundary expansion that includes two
of the four focus areas proposed in
Alternative B. These focus areas were
chosen because they offer the greatest
potential for restoring the natural
hydrologic regimen of the Wallkill River
system. As in Alternative B, those
expansion lands consist of high-quality,
important wildlife habitat; occur in an
amount and distribution that provide us
the management flexibility to achieve
refuge habitat goals and objectives; and
fully complement and enhance the land
management of adjacent conservation
partners.
We plan to announce the availability
of our Draft CCP/EA in the Federal
Register for a 30-day public review and
comment period. After we evaluate and
respond to public comments on the
draft document, we will prepare a final
CCP for review by our Regional Director.
We will simultaneously submit the
Land Protection Plan, outlining our
expansion proposal, to the Director for
his review. The Regional Director will
evaluate the final CCP for agency
compliance requirements, and to
determine whether it will achieve refuge
purposes and help fulfill the Refuge
System mission. If he approves that
document, and the Director concurs
with the Land Protection Plan, the
decision will be documented in a
Finding of No Significant Impact
(FONSI). We can begin implementation
of the final CCP as soon as our Regional
Director issues the FONSI.
Dated: September 26, 2007.
Thomas J. Healy,
Acting Regional Director, Northeast Region,
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Hadley,
Massachusetts.
Editorial Note: This document was
received at the Office of the Federal Register
on January 30, 2008.
[FR Doc. E8–1936 Filed 2–1–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–55–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Indian Affairs
Proposed Agency Information
Collection Activities; Comment
Request
Bureau of Indian Affairs,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice of renewal of a current
approved information collection.
ebenthall on PRODPC61 with NOTICES
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: This notice announces that
the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) in
accordance with the Paperwork
VerDate Aug<31>2005
15:15 Feb 01, 2008
Jkt 214001
Reduction Act is soliciting comments on
the Financial Assistance and Social
Service program application forms in
order to renew the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB)
clearance. This information collection
request is cleared under OMB control
number 1076–0017 and expires on July
31, 2008.
DATES: Written comments must be
submitted on or before April 4, 2008.
ADDRESSES: Written comments or
suggestion should be sent directly to
Evangeline M. Campbell, Office of
Indian Services, Bureau of Indian
Affairs, Department of Interior, 1849 C
Street, NW., MS–4513–MIB,
Washington, DC 20240. Facsimile
number (202) 208–2648.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Evangeline M. Campbell, 202–513–
7623.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Abstract
The information collected is
necessary to be in compliance with 25
CFR part 20 and 25 U.S.C. 13. The
information is used to make
determinations of eligibility for the
BIA’s social service (financial
assistance) programs: General
Assistance, Child Welfare Assistance,
Miscellaneous Assistance, and services
only (no cash assistance).
The information is also used to insure
uniformity of services, and assure the
maintenance of current and accurate
records for clear audit facilitating data.
All information collected is retained in
an individual case record and used for
case management/case planning
purposes. The BIA does not require an
individual to maintain a record.
An agency may not conduct or
sponsor, and a person is not required to
respond to a collection of information
unless it displays a currently valid OMB
control number.
II. Request for Comments
The Department of the Interior invites
comments on:
(a) Whether the collection of
information is necessary for the proper
performance of the functions of the BIA,
including whether the information will
have practical utility;
(b) The accuracy of the BIA estimate
of the burden (including hours and cost)
of the proposed collection of
information, including the validity of
the methodology and assumptions used;
(c) Ways to enhance the quality,
utility, and clarity of the information to
be collected; and
(d) Ways to minimize the burden of
the collection of information on those
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
who are to respond, including through
the use of appropriate automated,
electronic, mechanical, or other
collection techniques or other forms of
information technology.
Burden means the total time, or
financial resources expended by persons
to generate, maintain, retain, disclose or
provide information to or for a Federal
agency. This includes the time needed
to review instructions; to develop,
acquire, install and utilize technology
and systems for the purpose of
collection, validating, and verifying
information, processing and
maintaining information, and disclosing
and providing information, to search
data sources to complete and review the
collection of information; and to
transmit or otherwise disclose the
information.
Please note that all comments
received will be available for public
review two weeks after publication in
the Federal Register. Before including
your address, phone number, e-mail
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.
It is our policy to make all comments
available to the public for review at the
location listed in the ADDRESSES section,
during the hours of 7 a.m.–4 p.m., EST
Monday through Friday except for legal
holidays. All comments from
organizations or representatives will be
available for review. We may withhold
comments from review for other
reasons.
III. Data
Title of the collection of information:
Bureau of Indian Affairs, Financial
Assistance and Social Service Programs,
25 CFR part 20.
OMB Control Number: 1076–0017.
Expiration Date: July 31, 2008.
Type of Review: Extension of a
currently approved collection. The
information is submitted to obtain or
retain benefits and for case
management/case planning purposes.
Affected Entities: Individual members
of Indian tribes who are living on or
near a tribal service area.
Frequency of responses: One
application per year.
Estimated Number of Annual
Responses: 200,000
Estimated Total Annual Burden
Hours: 50,000 hours.
E:\FR\FM\04FEN1.SGM
04FEN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 73, Number 23 (Monday, February 4, 2008)]
[Notices]
[Pages 6522-6524]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E8-1936]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
[FWS-R5-R-2008-N0021; 50130-1265-0000-S3; ABC Code: S3]
Wallkill River National Wildlife Refuge, Sussex, NJ
AGENCY: Fish and Wildlife Service, Interior.
ACTION: Notice of availability: draft comprehensive conservation plan
and environmental assessment; request for comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: We, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Service), announce the
availability for review of the Draft Comprehensive Conservation Plan
(CCP) and Environmental Assessment (EA) for Wallkill River National
Wildlife Refuge (NWR). The Service prepared the Draft CCP/EA in
compliance with the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 and the
National Wildlife Refuge System Administration Act of 1966, as amended
by the National Wildlife Refuge System Improvement Act of 1997. We
request public comments.
DATES: The Draft CCP/EA will be available for public review and comment
until close of business on March 10, 2008.
ADDRESSES: You may obtain copies of the Draft CCP/EA on CD-ROM or in
print by writing to Beth Goldstein, Refuge Planner, U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service, 300 Westgate Center Drive, Hadley, Massachusetts
01035, or by electronic mail at northeastplanning@fws.gov. You may also
view the draft plan on the Web at: https://www.fws.gov/northeast/
planning/Wallkill%20River/ccphome.html. We will host public meetings on
Wednesday, Feb. 20 in Augusta, NJ and Thursday, Feb. 21 in Wantage, NJ
We will post the details of each meeting 2 weeks in advance, via our
project mailing list, in local papers, and at the refuge.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For more information, or to get on the
project mailing list, contact Beth Goldstein, Refuge Planner, at the
address above, by telephone at 413-253-8564, by fax at 413-253-8468, or
by electronic mail at Beth--Goldstein@fws.gov.
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 et seq.), requires the
Service to develop a CCP for each refuge. The purpose of developing a
CCP is to
[[Page 6523]]
provide refuge managers with a 15-year strategy for achieving refuge
purposes and contributing to the mission of the National Wildlife
Refuge System (NWRS), in conformance with the sound principles of fish
and wildlife science, natural resources conservation, legal mandates,
and Service policies. In addition to outlining broad management
direction on conserving wildlife and habitats, CCPs identify compatible
wildlife-dependent recreational opportunities available to the public,
including opportunities for hunting, fishing, wildlife observation and
photography, and environmental interpretation and education. The
Service will review and update each CCP at least once every 15 years.
Congress established the Wallkill River Refuge by law on November
16, 1990 (Section 107 of H.R. 3338; Pub. L. 101-593) with the following
purposes: (1) To preserve and enhance the refuge's lands and waters in
a manner that will conserve the natural diversity of fish, wildlife,
plants, and their habitats for present and future generations, (2) to
conserve and enhance populations of fish, wildlife, and plants within
the refuge, including populations of black ducks and other waterfowl,
raptors, passerines, and marsh and water birds, (3) to protect and
enhance the water quality of aquatic habitats within the refuge, (4) to
fulfill international treaty obligation of the United States with
respect to fish and wildlife and their habitats, and (5) to provide
opportunities for compatible scientific research, environmental
education, and fish- and wildlife-oriented recreation (104 Stat. 2955).
The refuge encompasses approximately 5,000 acres, stretching from
Sussex County, New Jersey to Orange County, New York. It is located
along a 9-mile stretch of the Wallkill River, and lies in a rolling
valley within the Appalachian Ridge and Valley physiographic province.
The region's major wetlands are former glacial lake bottoms, and the
lake's organic muck soils support extensive bottomland hardwood
forests, wet meadows, and farm fields. Since establishing the refuge,
we have focused primarily on conserving, restoring, and enhancing the
natural diversity of fish, wildlife, plants and their habitats along
the Wallkill River. Management activities include restoring wetlands,
creating moist soil management units, maintaining grasslands and
providing wildlife-dependent recreational opportunities.
The Draft CCP/EA evaluates three alternatives that address nine
major issues identified during the planning process. Several sources
generated those issues, including the public, State or Federal
agencies, other Service programs, and our planning team. The Draft CCP/
EA describes those issues in detail. Highlights of the alternatives
follow.
Alternative A (Current Management): This alternative is the ``No
Action'' alternative required by the National Environmental Policy Act
of 1969 (42 U.S.C. 4321-4347, as amended). Alternative A defines our
current management activities, including those planned, funded, or
under way, and serves as the baseline against which to compare the
other two action alternatives. It would maintain our present levels of
approved refuge staffing and the biological and visitor programs. Our
biological program would continue to use a variety of habitat
management tools to maintain the refuge's scrub-shrub habitats, non-
forested wetlands, grasslands and forested communities. We would
continue efforts to protect the federally-threatened bog turtle by
managing occupied sites on refuge-owned lands and attempting to acquire
occupied sites within the current acquisition boundary. We would
continue to offer hunt programs for deer, spring and fall turkey,
woodcock, resident Canada geese, waterfowl and other migratory birds
according to New Jersey State seasons. We would maintain current access
sites for fishing and boating, and current trails for wildlife
observation and photography. We would continue to offer limited
environmental education and interpretation programs, as staffing and
funding allows. Finally, we would continue to pursue the acquisition
from willing sellers of the remaining 2,021 acres of important wildlife
habitat that lies within our currently approved acquisition boundary.
Alternative B (the Service-preferred alternative): This alternative
represents the combination of actions we believe most effectively
achieves the purposes and goals of the refuge and addresses the major
issues. It builds on the programs identified under current management.
We would conduct field surveys of all suitable bog turtle sites on
refuge-owned lands and we would develop a site management and
monitoring plan for occupied and potential sites. We would hire a
contractor to conduct surveys of Indiana bats (federally listed as
endangered) and we would determine the feasibility of re-establishing
dwarf wedgemussel (federally listed as endangered) populations on
Service-owned lands. We would take a more proactive approach to
restoring wetlands and establish a 100-meter forested riparian corridor
along either side of the Wallkill River where it traverses the refuge.
We would establish three grassland focus areas on the refuge and let
other small fields revert to scrub-shrub habitat.
We would open the refuge to bear hunting according to State seasons
and provide at least one additional fishing access site in the current
refuge boundary. We would increase access to Service-owned lands within
the current refuge by opening at least two new trails and extending an
existing trail. We would also develop new interpretive materials and
work with partners to expand the refuge's environmental education
programs.
Alternative B proposes to expand the current approved refuge
boundary by 9,550 acres through a combination of fee-simple and
easement acquisition from willing sellers. The proposed expansion
boundary includes four focus areas, including the 7,079-acre Papakating
Creek Focus Area, which encompasses a 15-mile tributary of the Wallkill
River. All four focus areas have tremendous wetland resource values,
and together they form a key corridor connection between preserved
habitats on the Kittatinny Ridge to the west and the Hudson Highlands
to the east. Finally, they would fully complement and enhance the
Federal, State and private conservation partnerships actively involved
in protecting this unique ecosystem.
Alternative C: This alternative proposes to establish and maintain
the ecological integrity of natural communities on the refuge and
surrounding landscape without specific emphasis or concern for any
particular species or species groups. Under this alternative, refuge
lands would be restored to their historic condition as they existed in
the Wallkill River Valley during the late 1600s. At this time, the area
was thought to consist of a forested matrix dominated by floodplain
forest. A bottomland hardwood forest component would be established on
more than 70 percent of the current refuge. Sites prone to continuous
flooding would likely be sustained as emergent marsh and shrublands.
Upland sites would likely revert to a mixed mid-Atlantic hardwood
forest association. We would also restore, to the extent practicable,
the natural hydrologic regimen of the Wallkill River and its
tributaries by removing man-made impediments to natural flow, such as
the freshwater impoundments in place to benefit waterfowl.
Under Alternative C, we would allow hunting for deer and resident
Canada geese only. Otherwise, public use within the current refuge
boundary
[[Page 6524]]
would remain the same as Alternative A.
Alternative C proposes a 7,609-acre boundary expansion that
includes two of the four focus areas proposed in Alternative B. These
focus areas were chosen because they offer the greatest potential for
restoring the natural hydrologic regimen of the Wallkill River system.
As in Alternative B, those expansion lands consist of high-quality,
important wildlife habitat; occur in an amount and distribution that
provide us the management flexibility to achieve refuge habitat goals
and objectives; and fully complement and enhance the land management of
adjacent conservation partners.
We plan to announce the availability of our Draft CCP/EA in the
Federal Register for a 30-day public review and comment period. After
we evaluate and respond to public comments on the draft document, we
will prepare a final CCP for review by our Regional Director. We will
simultaneously submit the Land Protection Plan, outlining our expansion
proposal, to the Director for his review. The Regional Director will
evaluate the final CCP for agency compliance requirements, and to
determine whether it will achieve refuge purposes and help fulfill the
Refuge System mission. If he approves that document, and the Director
concurs with the Land Protection Plan, the decision will be documented
in a Finding of No Significant Impact (FONSI). We can begin
implementation of the final CCP as soon as our Regional Director issues
the FONSI.
Dated: September 26, 2007.
Thomas J. Healy,
Acting Regional Director, Northeast Region, U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service, Hadley, Massachusetts.
Editorial Note: This document was received at the Office of the
Federal Register on January 30, 2008.
[FR Doc. E8-1936 Filed 2-1-08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310-55-P