Supplement to Notice of Availability (NOA) of the Draft Resource Management Plan and Draft Environmental Impact Statement for the Pinedale Field Office To List Proposed Areas of Critical Environmental Concern and Specific Associated Resource Use Limitations for Public Lands in Sublette and Lincoln Counties, WY, 9585-9586 [E8-3251]
Download as PDF
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 35 / Thursday, February 21, 2008 / Notices
[FR Doc. 08–743 Filed 2–20–08; 8:45am]
BILLING CODE 4310–55–C
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Land Management
[WY–100–07–1610–DP]
Supplement to Notice of Availability
(NOA) of the Draft Resource
Management Plan and Draft
Environmental Impact Statement for
the Pinedale Field Office To List
Proposed Areas of Critical
Environmental Concern and Specific
Associated Resource Use Limitations
for Public Lands in Sublette and
Lincoln Counties, WY
Bureau of Land Management,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice of availability.
pwalker on PROD1PC71 with NOTICES
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: A notice of availability for the
Draft Resource Management Plan (RMP)
and Environmental Impact Statement
(EIS) for the Pinedale Field Office
planning area in Sublette and Lincoln
Counties, Wyoming was published in
the Federal Register, volume 72,
number 32, on February 16, 2007. This
supplements that Notice with
information on existing and potential
Areas of Critical Environmental Concern
(ACECs) considered within the Draft
RMP and EIS and also provides a 60-day
comment period on the proposed
ACECs as required by 43 CFR 1610.7–
2.
DATES: The comment period will
commence with the publication of this
notice in the Federal Register and end
60 days after its publication.
ADDRESSES: Comments on ACECs and
resource use limitations (found on pages
2–106–2–110 and 2–153–2–155) must
be received within 60-days of the date
of publication of this notice. Written
comments must be submitted as follows:
1. Comments may be provided via the
Pinedale RMP Revision Web site at:
https://www.blm.gov/rmp/wy/pinedale.
The Web site is designed to allow
commenter to submit comments
electronically by resource subject
directly onto a comment form posted on
the Web site. Comments may be
uploaded in an electronic file to the
above Web site. Whenever possible,
please include reference to either the
page or section in the Draft RMP/EIS to
which the ACEC-related comment
applies. To facilitate analysis of
comments and information submitted,
the BLM encourages commenters to
submit comments in an electronic
format though the Web site.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:34 Feb 20, 2008
Jkt 214001
2. Written comments may be mailed
or delivered to the BLM at: Pinedale
RMP EIS, BLM Pinedale Field Office,
1625 W. Pine St., P.O. Box 768,
Pinedale, Wyoming 82941. All postal
mail must be addressed to the post
office box.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Kellie Roadifer, Pinedale RMP Team
Leader, BLM Pinedale Field Office, 1625
W. Pine Street, Pinedale, Wyoming
82941; or by telephone at 307–367–
5309.
The Draft
RMP/EIS addresses four alternatives and
provides proposed management
decisions and impact analysis of the
alternatives. The number and acreages
of ACECs that would be designated vary
by alternative. The four alternatives
include:
1. Alternative 1 (No Action
Alternative): Continues the existing
management strategy;
2. Alternative 2: Maximizes the
production of resource commodities
while providing an adequate level of
environmental protection for wildlife
habitat and other resource values;
3. Alternative 3: Provides a high level
of environmental protection for wildlife
habitat and other resource values while
allowing the production of resource
commodities; and
4. Alternative 4 (BLM Preferred
Alternative): Optimizes the mix of
resource outputs, including production
of resource commodities and wildlife
habitat, while providing an appropriate
level of environmental protection for all
resources.
There are two ACECs in the existing
Pinedale Field Office land use plan:
Rock Creek ACEC (5,300 acres) and
Beaver Creek ACEC (3,590 acres). There
are six potential new ACECs proposed
in the Draft RMP/EIS. The ACECs are:
• Trapper’s Point ACEC (550 acres
[Alternative 2], 4,000 acres [Alternative
4], or 9,540 acres [Alternative 3]):
Values of concern are big game
migration corridors, cultural and
historic properties, and livestock
trailing. Within this ACEC, fence
construction and surface disturbing
activities would be prohibited with the
exception of activities designed to
increase big game migration viability.
The ACEC would be unavailable for oil
and gas leasing. Off-road vehicle use
would be restricted to designated roads
and trails and subject to a seasonal
closure from November 15 through
April 30 annually.
• New Fork Potholes ACEC (1,800
acres [Alternatives 3 and 4]): Values of
concern are waterfowl, trumpeter swan,
and riparian habitats. With the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
PO 00000
Frm 00070
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
9585
exception of those that would benefit
wildlife habitat, surface disturbing
activities would be prohibited. The
ACEC would be unavailable for oil and
gas leasing. Off-road vehicle use would
be restricted to designated roads and
trails.
• Upper Green River ACEC (12,270
acres [Alternative 3]): Values of concern
are big game migration routes and
migration bottlenecks, and high scenic
and recreational values. The ACEC
would be unavailable for oil and gas
leasing. Off-road vehicle use would be
restricted to designated roads and trails,
and no net increase in miles of roads
would be allowed.
• White-Tailed Prairie Dog (WTPD)
ACEC (no acreage estimate available,
[Alternative 3]): The WTPD ACEC
would not have a specific area but
would involve a number of townships
where WTPD habitat is found in future
surveys. The value of concern is habitat
for the WTPD. Surveys for WTPD
presence would be required prior to
authorizing any activities. Anti-raptor
perching devices would be required on
any above-ground facilities located
within 1⁄4 mile of WTPD towns greater
than 12.5 acres in size. Surfacedisturbing activities would be
prohibited in WTPD towns greater than
12.5 acres in size. Off-road vehicle use
would be limited to designated roads
and trails. Poisoning of WTPD would be
prohibited except in cases of health and
safety emergencies.
• Ross Butte ACEC (35,670 acres
[Alternative 3]): Values of concern are
significant cultural resources,
archeological landscapes and Native
American sacred sites, a unique
community of Wyoming sensitive plant
species, high-quality paleontological
resources, open space and dispersed
recreation opportunities, and unique
geology and unstable soils. The ACEC
would be unavailable for oil and gas
leasing and closed to the placement of
new communication sites. Off-road
vehicle use would be limited to
designated roads and trails. Surface
occupancy and disturbance would be
prohibited on erosive soils, sensitive
plant species habitats, and on slopes
greater than 10 percent.
• CCC Ponds ACEC (5,530 acres
[Alternative 3]): Values of concern are a
wildlife migration bottleneck on a welldefined mule deer migration route and
recreational values including a
developed, nonmotorized trail system,
fishing ponds, and interpretive
facilities. The ACEC would be
unavailable for oil and gas leasing and
would be closed to mineral location and
land disposal. Off-highway vehicle use
E:\FR\FM\21FEN1.SGM
21FEN1
9586
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 35 / Thursday, February 21, 2008 / Notices
pwalker on PROD1PC71 with NOTICES
would be limited to designated roads
and trails.
Alternative 1 proposes to maintain the
status of the two existing ACECs
identified in the 1988 Pinedale RMP.
Alternative 2 proposes to eliminate the
two existing ACECs, and establish a new
ACEC at Trapper’s Point (550 acres).
Alternative 3 proposes to maintain the
existing Rock Creek and Beaver Creek
ACECs, and establish all of the new
ACECs listed above (6).
As a result of public scoping and the
alternative development process,
Alternative 4 (Preferred Alternative)
proposes to maintain the status of the
existing Beaver Creek ACEC, maintain
but reduce slightly in size the existing
Rock Creek ACEC, and establish two
new ACECs at Trapper’s Point (4,000
acres) and New Fork Potholes.
Please note that public comments and
information submitted including names,
street addresses, and e-mail addresses of
respondents will be available for public
review and disclosure at the above
address during regular business hours (8
a.m. to 4 p.m.), Monday through Friday,
except holidays.
Before including your address, phone
number, e-mail address, or other
personal identifying information in your
comment, you should be aware that
your entire comment—including your
personal identifying information—may
be made publicly available at any time.
While you can ask us in your comment
to withhold your personal identifying
information from public review, we
cannot guarantee that we will be able to
do so. Copies of the Draft RMP/EIS were
sent to affected Federal, State, and local
government agencies and interested
parties when the document first became
available. Additional copies have been
supplied to interested parties on
request. There are a limited number of
hard copies available upon request. The
document was posted electronically,
and is still available for public review
on the following Web site: https://
www.blm.gov/rmp/wy/pinedale/. Copies
of the Draft RMP EIS are also available
for public review at the following
locations:
• Bureau of Land Management,
Wyoming State Office, 5353
Yellowstone Road, Cheyenne,
Wyoming 82003.
• Bureau of Land Management,
Pinedale Field Office, 1625 W. Pine
Street, Pinedale, Wyoming 82941.
Robert A. Bennett,
State Director.
[FR Doc. E8–3251 Filed 2–20–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–22–P
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:34 Feb 20, 2008
Jkt 214001
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Minerals Management Service
Outer Continental Shelf (OCS) Policy
Committee; Notice and Agenda for
Meeting
Minerals Management Service,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice of meeting.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: The OCS Policy Committee
will meet at the Washington Dulles
Crowne Plaza Hotel in Herndon,
Virginia.
DATES: Wednesday, March 5, 2008, 8:30
a.m. to 5:30 p.m. and Thursday, March
6, 2008, from 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.
ADDRESSES: The Washington Dulles
Crowne Plaza Hotel, 2200 Centreville
Road, telephone (703) 471–6700.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ms.
Jeryne Bryant at Minerals Management
Service, 381 Elden Street, Mail Stop
4001, Herndon, Virginia 20170–4187.
She can be reached by telephone at
(703) 787–1211 or by electronic mail at
jeryne.bryant@mms.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The OCS
Policy Committee represents the
collective viewpoint of coastal states,
local government, environmental
community, industry and other parties
involved with the OCS Program. It
provides policy advice to the Secretary
of the Interior through the Director of
the MMS on all aspects of leasing,
exploration, development, and
protection of OCS resources.
The agenda for Wednesday, March 5
will cover the following principal
subjects:
Status of the 5-Year Outer Continental
Shelf Oil and Gas Leasing Program and
Results to Date. This presentation will
provide an update on the 2007–2012
Leasing Program and lease sales results
in the Gulf of Mexico and Alaska. The
OCS Policy Committee’s 5-Year OCS Oil
and Gas Leasing Program Subcommittee
will also report on its activities and
future plans.
A State’s Perspective on Alternative
Energy. This presentation will provide
an opportunity for a non-OCSPC
member state to share its alternative
energy experience and future plans.
Status of OCS Alternative Energy
Program. This presentation will provide
an update on the MMS’s OCS
Alternative Energy Program that has
been authorized to manage access and
balance competing uses of the OCS
while ensuring appropriate
environmental safeguards. The OCS
Policy Committee’s OCS Alternative
Energy Subcommittee will also report
on its activities and future plans.
PO 00000
Frm 00071
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
State Members’ Round Table
Discussion of Offshore Energy Issues.
State representatives to the OCS Policy
Committee will discuss offshore energy
development (conventional and
alternative) issues from the perspective
of their respective states. This session
will provide Committee members, MMS
representatives, and other participants
with a better and more comprehensive
understanding of the various issues as
perceived by the states and provide an
update on their activities.
Importance of OCS to Nation’s Future
Energy Security. This presentation will
examine the contributions the OCS can
make towards the production of energy.
Legislative Update. This presentation
will address legislative activity
pertinent to the OCS program.
Committee Forum. Time has been set
aside for the Committee members to
have an open discussion on topics of
interest in their respective fields.
The agenda for Thursday, March 6
will cover the following principal
subjects:
MMS Regional Issues. The Regional
Directors will highlight activities off the
California and Alaska coasts and the
Gulf of Mexico.
Status of Marine Minerals Program.
This presentation will provide an
update on the MMS’s Marine Minerals
Program. The OCS Policy Committee’s
Hard Minerals Subcommittee will also
report on its activities and future plans.
Ultra Deepwater—Advances in
Drilling and Development. This
presentation will provide an update on
the current state of technology.
Gulf of Mexico Security Act of 2006
(GOMESA). This presentation will
provide an update on the MMS’s
responsibilities under GOMESA and
highlight issues related to its revenue
sharing provision.
OCS Scientific Committee Update.
This presentation will address current
activities of the OCS Scientific
Committee and its subcommittees.
The meeting is open to the public.
Approximately 100 visitors can be
accommodated on a first-come-firstserved basis.
Upon request, interested parties may
make oral or written presentations to the
OCS Policy Committee. Such requests
should be made no later than February
29, 2008, to Jeryne Bryant. Requests to
make oral statements should be
accompanied by a summary of the
statement to be made. Please see FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section
for address and telephone number.
Minutes of the OCS Policy Committee
meeting will be available for public
inspection and copying at the MMS in
Herndon, Virginia.
E:\FR\FM\21FEN1.SGM
21FEN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 73, Number 35 (Thursday, February 21, 2008)]
[Notices]
[Pages 9585-9586]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E8-3251]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Land Management
[WY-100-07-1610-DP]
Supplement to Notice of Availability (NOA) of the Draft Resource
Management Plan and Draft Environmental Impact Statement for the
Pinedale Field Office To List Proposed Areas of Critical Environmental
Concern and Specific Associated Resource Use Limitations for Public
Lands in Sublette and Lincoln Counties, WY
AGENCY: Bureau of Land Management, Interior.
ACTION: Notice of availability.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: A notice of availability for the Draft Resource Management
Plan (RMP) and Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) for the Pinedale
Field Office planning area in Sublette and Lincoln Counties, Wyoming
was published in the Federal Register, volume 72, number 32, on
February 16, 2007. This supplements that Notice with information on
existing and potential Areas of Critical Environmental Concern (ACECs)
considered within the Draft RMP and EIS and also provides a 60-day
comment period on the proposed ACECs as required by 43 CFR 1610.7-2.
DATES: The comment period will commence with the publication of this
notice in the Federal Register and end 60 days after its publication.
ADDRESSES: Comments on ACECs and resource use limitations (found on
pages 2-106-2-110 and 2-153-2-155) must be received within 60-days of
the date of publication of this notice. Written comments must be
submitted as follows:
1. Comments may be provided via the Pinedale RMP Revision Web site
at: https://www.blm.gov/rmp/wy/pinedale. The Web site is designed to
allow commenter to submit comments electronically by resource subject
directly onto a comment form posted on the Web site. Comments may be
uploaded in an electronic file to the above Web site. Whenever
possible, please include reference to either the page or section in the
Draft RMP/EIS to which the ACEC-related comment applies. To facilitate
analysis of comments and information submitted, the BLM encourages
commenters to submit comments in an electronic format though the Web
site.
2. Written comments may be mailed or delivered to the BLM at:
Pinedale RMP EIS, BLM Pinedale Field Office, 1625 W. Pine St., P.O. Box
768, Pinedale, Wyoming 82941. All postal mail must be addressed to the
post office box.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Kellie Roadifer, Pinedale RMP Team
Leader, BLM Pinedale Field Office, 1625 W. Pine Street, Pinedale,
Wyoming 82941; or by telephone at 307-367-5309.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Draft RMP/EIS addresses four
alternatives and provides proposed management decisions and impact
analysis of the alternatives. The number and acreages of ACECs that
would be designated vary by alternative. The four alternatives include:
1. Alternative 1 (No Action Alternative): Continues the existing
management strategy;
2. Alternative 2: Maximizes the production of resource commodities
while providing an adequate level of environmental protection for
wildlife habitat and other resource values;
3. Alternative 3: Provides a high level of environmental protection
for wildlife habitat and other resource values while allowing the
production of resource commodities; and
4. Alternative 4 (BLM Preferred Alternative): Optimizes the mix of
resource outputs, including production of resource commodities and
wildlife habitat, while providing an appropriate level of environmental
protection for all resources.
There are two ACECs in the existing Pinedale Field Office land use
plan: Rock Creek ACEC (5,300 acres) and Beaver Creek ACEC (3,590
acres). There are six potential new ACECs proposed in the Draft RMP/
EIS. The ACECs are:
Trapper's Point ACEC (550 acres [Alternative 2], 4,000
acres [Alternative 4], or 9,540 acres [Alternative 3]): Values of
concern are big game migration corridors, cultural and historic
properties, and livestock trailing. Within this ACEC, fence
construction and surface disturbing activities would be prohibited with
the exception of activities designed to increase big game migration
viability. The ACEC would be unavailable for oil and gas leasing. Off-
road vehicle use would be restricted to designated roads and trails and
subject to a seasonal closure from November 15 through April 30
annually.
New Fork Potholes ACEC (1,800 acres [Alternatives 3 and
4]): Values of concern are waterfowl, trumpeter swan, and riparian
habitats. With the exception of those that would benefit wildlife
habitat, surface disturbing activities would be prohibited. The ACEC
would be unavailable for oil and gas leasing. Off-road vehicle use
would be restricted to designated roads and trails.
Upper Green River ACEC (12,270 acres [Alternative 3]):
Values of concern are big game migration routes and migration
bottlenecks, and high scenic and recreational values. The ACEC would be
unavailable for oil and gas leasing. Off-road vehicle use would be
restricted to designated roads and trails, and no net increase in miles
of roads would be allowed.
White-Tailed Prairie Dog (WTPD) ACEC (no acreage estimate
available, [Alternative 3]): The WTPD ACEC would not have a specific
area but would involve a number of townships where WTPD habitat is
found in future surveys. The value of concern is habitat for the WTPD.
Surveys for WTPD presence would be required prior to authorizing any
activities. Anti-raptor perching devices would be required on any
above-ground facilities located within \1/4\ mile of WTPD towns greater
than 12.5 acres in size. Surface-disturbing activities would be
prohibited in WTPD towns greater than 12.5 acres in size. Off-road
vehicle use would be limited to designated roads and trails. Poisoning
of WTPD would be prohibited except in cases of health and safety
emergencies.
Ross Butte ACEC (35,670 acres [Alternative 3]): Values of
concern are significant cultural resources, archeological landscapes
and Native American sacred sites, a unique community of Wyoming
sensitive plant species, high-quality paleontological resources, open
space and dispersed recreation opportunities, and unique geology and
unstable soils. The ACEC would be unavailable for oil and gas leasing
and closed to the placement of new communication sites. Off-road
vehicle use would be limited to designated roads and trails. Surface
occupancy and disturbance would be prohibited on erosive soils,
sensitive plant species habitats, and on slopes greater than 10
percent.
CCC Ponds ACEC (5,530 acres [Alternative 3]): Values of
concern are a wildlife migration bottleneck on a well-defined mule deer
migration route and recreational values including a developed,
nonmotorized trail system, fishing ponds, and interpretive facilities.
The ACEC would be unavailable for oil and gas leasing and would be
closed to mineral location and land disposal. Off-highway vehicle use
[[Page 9586]]
would be limited to designated roads and trails.
Alternative 1 proposes to maintain the status of the two existing
ACECs identified in the 1988 Pinedale RMP. Alternative 2 proposes to
eliminate the two existing ACECs, and establish a new ACEC at Trapper's
Point (550 acres). Alternative 3 proposes to maintain the existing Rock
Creek and Beaver Creek ACECs, and establish all of the new ACECs listed
above (6).
As a result of public scoping and the alternative development
process, Alternative 4 (Preferred Alternative) proposes to maintain the
status of the existing Beaver Creek ACEC, maintain but reduce slightly
in size the existing Rock Creek ACEC, and establish two new ACECs at
Trapper's Point (4,000 acres) and New Fork Potholes.
Please note that public comments and information submitted
including names, street addresses, and e-mail addresses of respondents
will be available for public review and disclosure at the above address
during regular business hours (8 a.m. to 4 p.m.), Monday through
Friday, except holidays.
Before including your address, phone number, e-mail address, or
other personal identifying information in your comment, you should be
aware that your entire comment--including your personal identifying
information--may be made publicly available at any time. While you can
ask us in your comment to withhold your personal identifying
information from public review, we cannot guarantee that we will be
able to do so. Copies of the Draft RMP/EIS were sent to affected
Federal, State, and local government agencies and interested parties
when the document first became available. Additional copies have been
supplied to interested parties on request. There are a limited number
of hard copies available upon request. The document was posted
electronically, and is still available for public review on the
following Web site: https://www.blm.gov/rmp/wy/pinedale/. Copies of the
Draft RMP EIS are also available for public review at the following
locations:
Bureau of Land Management, Wyoming State Office, 5353
Yellowstone Road, Cheyenne, Wyoming 82003.
Bureau of Land Management, Pinedale Field Office, 1625 W. Pine
Street, Pinedale, Wyoming 82941.
Robert A. Bennett,
State Director.
[FR Doc. E8-3251 Filed 2-20-08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310-22-P