2008-2009 Refuge-Specific Hunting and Sport Fishing Regulations (Additions), 33202-33210 [E8-12193]
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Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 113 / Wednesday, June 11, 2008 / Proposed Rules
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
50 CFR Part 32
[FWS–R9–WSR–2008–0017; 93270–1265–
0000–4A]
RIN 1018–AV20
2008–2009 Refuge-Specific Hunting
and Sport Fishing Regulations
(Additions)
Fish and Wildlife Service,
Interior.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
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AGENCY:
SUMMARY: The Fish and Wildlife Service
proposes to add one refuge to the list of
areas open for hunting and/or sport
fishing programs and increase the
activities available at six other refuges
for the 2008–2009 season.
DATES: Your comments must be
postmarked on or before July 11, 2008.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments
by one of the following methods:
Æ Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
Æ U.S. mail or hand delivery: Public
Comments Processing, Attn: RIN 1018–
AV20; Division of Policy and Directives
Management; U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service; 4401 N. Fairfax Drive, Suite
222; Arlington, VA 22203.
We will not accept e-mail or faxes. We
will post all comments on https://
www.regulations.gov. This generally
means that we will post any personal
information you provide us (see the
Public Comments section below for
more information). For information on
specific refuges’ public use programs
and the conditions that apply to them or
for copies of compatibility
determinations for any refuge(s), contact
individual programs at the addresses/
phone numbers given in ‘‘Available
Information for Specific Refuges’’ under
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Leslie A. Marler, Management Analyst,
Division of Conservation Planning and
Policy, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service,
4401 N. Fairfax Drive, Suite 670,
Arlington, VA 22203; (703) 358–2397;
Fax (703) 358–2248.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
National Wildlife Refuge System
Administration Act of 1966 closes
national wildlife refuges in all States
except Alaska to all uses until opened.
The Secretary of the Interior (Secretary)
may open refuge areas to any use,
including hunting and/or sport fishing,
upon a determination that such uses are
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compatible with the purposes of the
refuge and National Wildlife Refuge
System (Refuge System or our/we)
mission. The action also must be in
accordance with provisions of all laws
applicable to the areas, developed in
coordination with the appropriate State
fish and wildlife agency(ies), consistent
with the principles of sound fish and
wildlife management and
administration, and otherwise in the
public interest. These requirements
ensure that we maintain the biological
integrity, diversity, and environmental
health of the Refuge System for the
benefit of present and future generations
of Americans.
We review refuge hunting and sport
fishing programs to determine whether
to include additional refuges or whether
individual refuge regulations governing
existing programs need modifications.
Changing environmental conditions,
State and Federal regulations, and other
factors affecting fish and wildlife
populations and habitat may warrant
modifications to refuge-specific
regulations to ensure the continued
compatibility of hunting and sport
fishing programs and to ensure that
these programs will not materially
interfere with or detract from the
fulfillment of refuge purposes or the
Refuge System’s mission.
Provisions governing hunting and
sport fishing on refuges are in title 50 of
the Code of Federal Regulations in part
32 (50 CFR part 32). We regulate
hunting and sport fishing on refuges to:
• Ensure compatibility with refuge
purpose(s);
• Properly manage the fish and
wildlife resource(s);
• Protect other refuge values;
• Ensure refuge visitor safety; and
• Provide opportunities for quality
fish and wildlife-dependent recreation.
On many refuges where we decide to
allow hunting and sport fishing, our
general policy of adopting regulations
identical to State hunting and sport
fishing regulations is adequate in
meeting these objectives. On other
refuges, we must supplement State
regulations with more-restrictive
Federal regulations to ensure that we
meet our management responsibilities,
as outlined in the ‘‘Statutory Authority’’
section. We issue refuge-specific
hunting and sport fishing regulations
when we open wildlife refuges to
migratory game bird hunting, upland
game hunting, big game hunting, or
sport fishing. These regulations list the
wildlife species that you may hunt or
fish, along with seasons, bag or creel
limits, methods of hunting or sport
fishing, descriptions of areas open to
hunting or sport fishing, and other
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provisions as appropriate. You may find
previously issued refuge-specific
regulations for hunting and sport fishing
in 50 CFR part 32. In this rulemaking,
we are also proposing to standardize
and clarify the language of existing
regulations.
Plain Language Mandate
In this proposed rule, we made some
of the revisions to the individual refuge
units to comply with a Presidential
mandate to use plain language in
regulations; as such, these particular
revisions do not modify the substance of
the previous regulations. These types of
changes include using ‘‘you’’ to refer to
the reader and ‘‘we’’ to refer to the
Refuge System, using the word ‘‘allow’’
instead of ‘‘permit’’ when we do not
require the use of a permit for an
activity, and using active voice (i.e.,
‘‘We restrict entry into the refuge’’ vs.
‘‘Entry into the refuge is restricted’’.)
Statutory Authority
The National Wildlife Refuge System
Administration Act of 1966
(16 U.S.C. 668dd–668ee, as amended
by the National Wildlife Refuge System
Improvement Act of 1997 [Improvement
Act]) (Administration Act) and the
Refuge Recreation Act of 1962 (16
U.S.C. 460k–460k–4) (Recreation Act)
govern the administration and public
use of refuges.
Amendments enacted by the
Improvement Act built upon the
Administration Act in a manner that
provides an ‘‘organic act’’ for the Refuge
System similar to those that exist for
other public Federal lands. The
Improvement Act serves to ensure that
we effectively manage the Refuge
System as a national network of lands,
waters, and interests for the protection
and conservation of our Nation’s
wildlife resources. The Administration
Act states first and foremost that we
focus our Refuge System mission on
conservation of fish, wildlife, and plant
resources and their habitats. The
Improvement Act requires the Secretary,
before allowing a new use of a refuge,
or before expanding, renewing, or
extending an existing use of a refuge, to
determine that the use is compatible
with the mission for which the refuge
was established. The Improvement Act
established as the policy of the United
States that wildlife-dependent
recreation, when compatible, is a
legitimate and appropriate public use of
the Refuge System, through which the
American public can develop an
appreciation for fish and wildlife. The
Improvement Act established six
wildlife-dependent recreational uses,
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when compatible, as the priority general
public uses of the Refuge System. These
uses are: Hunting, fishing, wildlife
observation and photography, and
environmental education and
interpretation.
The Recreation Act authorizes the
Secretary to administer areas within the
Refuge System for public recreation as
an appropriate incidental or secondary
use only to the extent that doing so is
practicable and not inconsistent with
the primary purpose(s) for which
Congress and the Service established the
areas. The Recreation Act requires that
any recreational use of refuge lands be
compatible with the primary purpose(s)
for which we established the refuge and
not inconsistent with other previously
authorized operations.
The Administration Act and
Recreation Act also authorize the
Secretary to issue regulations to carry
out the purposes of the Acts and
regulate uses.
We develop specific management
plans for each refuge prior to opening it
to hunting or sport fishing. In many
cases, we develop refuge-specific
regulations to ensure the compatibility
of the programs with the purpose(s) for
which we established the refuge and the
Refuge System mission. We ensure
initial compliance with the
Administration Act and the Recreation
Act for hunting and sport fishing on
newly acquired refuges through an
interim determination of compatibility
made at or near the time of acquisition.
These regulations ensure that we make
the determinations required by these
acts prior to adding refuges to the lists
of areas open to hunting and sport
fishing in 50 CFR part 32. We ensure
continued compliance by the
development of comprehensive
conservation plans, specific plans, and
by annual review of hunting and sport
fishing programs and regulations.
New Hunting and Sport Fishing
Programs
In preparation for new openings, we
prepare and approve, at the appropriate
Regional Office and in Washington,
documentation of National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) and
the Endangered Species Act; and we
consult with the State and, where
appropriate, Tribal wildlife management
agency. The Regional Director(s) certify
that the opening of these refuges to
hunting and/or sport fishing has been
found to be compatible with the
purpose(s) for which the respective
refuge(s) were established and the
Refuge System mission. Copies of the
compatibility determinations for these
respective refuges are available by
request to the Regional office noted
under the heading ‘‘Available
Information for Specific Refuges.’’
The annotated chart below
summarizes our proposed changes. The
key below the chart explains the
symbols used:
TABLE 1.—CHANGES FOR 2008–2009 HUNTING/FISHING
National wildlife refuge
State
Migratory bird hunting
Upland
hunting
Big game hunting
Agassiz ................................
Hamden Slough ..................
Blackwater ...........................
Whittlesey Creek .................
Tensas River .......................
Upper Ouachita ...................
MN .........
MN .........
MD .........
WI ..........
LA ..........
LA ..........
B ..........................................
A ..........................................
B ..........................................
Previously published ...........
D .........................................
D .........................................
B ............
................
B ............
................
D ............
D ............
Previously published.
A.
Previously published ...........
B.
D .........................................
C/D ......................................
Fishing
Previously published.
Previously published.
D.
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A = Refuge added and activities opened.
B = Refuge already listed; added hunt category.
C = Refuge already listed; added species to hunt category.
D = Refuge already listed and opened to this activity; added land.
We are adding one refuge to the list
of areas open for hunting and/or sport
fishing and increasing opportunities at
six refuges. We proposed these same
changes in the 2006–2007 refugespecific regulations (71 FR 41864, July
24, 2006) but did not finalize them. We
are reproposing these changes with this
rulemaking. We have made significant
changes to the analysis of impacts under
the requirements of the National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) to
address inadequacies in our ‘‘opening’’
process found by Judge Ricardo Urbina
in his ruling in The Fund for Animals
v. Dale Hall, 448 F. Supp. 2d.127,
August 31, 2006. We believe that our
new NEPA analysis satisfies our legal
requirements. Due to the delays
experienced because of the lawsuit, no
rulemakings were published for the
2007–2008 season.
Bayou Cocodrie National Wildlife
Refuge in the State of Louisiana added
new lands available to all existing
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opportunities, but this did not result in
any regulatory changes.
We are removing Stillwater Wildlife
Management Area in the State of
Nevada from the list of refuges in 50
CFR part 32. The Bureau of Reclamation
holds primary jurisdiction over these
lands by virtue of a public lands
withdrawal for drainage for the 1902
Newlands Reclamation Project. The
1948 Tripartie Agreement with the
Service, Nevada Board of Fish and
Game Commissioners (Nevada), and the
Truckee-Carson Irrigation District
(Truckee-Carson) expired and has not
been renewed.
We have cross-referenced a number of
existing regulations in 50 CFR parts 26,
27, and 32 to assist hunting and sport
fishing visitors with understanding
safety and other legal requirements on
refuges. This redundancy is deliberate,
with the intention of improving safety
and compliance in our hunting and
sport fishing programs.
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Fish Advisory
For health reasons, anglers should
review and follow State-issued
consumption advisories before enjoying
recreational sport fishing opportunities
on Service-managed waters. You can
find information about current fish
consumption advisories on the Internet
at: https://www.epa.gov/ost/fish/.
Request for Comments
You may comment and send materials
on this proposed rule by any one of the
methods listed in the ADDRESSES
section. We will not accept comments
sent by e-mail or fax or to an address not
listed in the ADDRESSES section. We will
not accept anonymous comments; your
comment must include your first and
last name, city, State, country, and
postal (zip) code. Finally, we will not
consider hand-delivered comments that
we do not receive, or mailed comments
that are not postmarked, by the date
specified in the DATES section.
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We will post your entire comment—
including your personal identifying
information—on https://
www.regulations.gov. If you provide
personal identifying information in
addition to the required items specified
in the previous paragraph, such as your
street address, phone number, or e-mail
address, you may request at the top of
your document that we withhold this
information from public review.
However, we cannot guarantee that we
will be able to do so.
Comments and materials we receive,
as well as supporting documentation we
used in preparing this proposed rule,
will be available for public inspection
on https://www.regulations.gov, or by
appointment, during normal business
hours, at the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service; 4401 N. Fairfax Drive, Suite
670; Arlington, Virginia 22203; (703)
358–2397.
Public Comment
Department of the Interior policy is,
whenever practicable, to afford the
public a meaningful opportunity to
participate in the rulemaking process.
The process of opening refuges is done
in stages, with the fundamental work
being performed on the ground at the
refuge and in the community where the
program is administered. In these stages,
the public is given other opportunities
to comment, for example, on the
comprehensive conservation plans,
compatibility determinations, and
environmental assessments. The second
stage is this document, when we
publish the proposed rule in the Federal
Register for additional comment,
commonly a 30-day comment period.
We make every attempt to collect all
of the proposals from the refuges
nationwide and process them
expeditiously to maximize the time
available for public review. We believe
that a 30-day comment period, through
the broader publication following the
earlier public involvement, gives the
public sufficient time to comment and
allows us to establish hunting and
fishing programs in time for the
upcoming seasons. Many of these rules
also relieve restrictions and allow the
public to participate in recreational
activities on a number of refuges. In
addition, in order to continue to provide
for previously authorized hunting
opportunities while at the same time
providing for adequate resource
protection, we must be timely in
providing modifications to certain
hunting programs on some refuges.
We considered providing a 60-day,
rather than a 30-day, comment period.
However, we feel, in conjunction with
previous comment periods on other
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aspects of this process (comprehensive
conservation plans, compatibility
determinations, environmental
assessments) that 30 days is adequate
for public comment. Any additional
delay would hinder the effective
planning and administration of our
hunting and fishing programs.
Even after issuance of a final rule, we
accept comments, suggestions, and
concerns for consideration for any
appropriate subsequent rulemaking.
When finalized, we will incorporate
these regulations into 50 CFR part 32.
Part 32 contains general provisions and
refuge-specific regulations for hunting
and sport fishing on refuges.
Clarity of This Rule
Executive Order (E.O.) 12866 requires
each agency to write regulations that are
easy to understand. We invite your
comments on how to make this
proposed rule easier to understand,
including answers to questions such as
the following: (1) Are the requirements
in the rule clearly stated? (2) Does the
rule contain technical language or
jargon that interferes with its clarity? (3)
Does the format of the rule (e.g.,
grouping and order of sections, use of
headings, paragraphing) aid or reduce
its clarity? (4) Would the rule be easier
to understand if it were divided into
more (but shorter) sections? (5) Is the
description of the rule in the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section of
the preamble helpful in understanding
the rule? (6) What else could we do to
make the proposed rule easier to
understand? Send a copy of any
comments on how we could make this
proposed rule easier to understand to:
Office of Regulatory Affairs, Department
of the Interior, Room 7229, 1849 C
Street, NW., Washington, DC 20240.
You may e-mail your comments to:
Execsec@ios.doi.gov.
Regulatory Planning and Review
The Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) has determined that this rule is
not significant and has not reviewed
this rule under Executive Order 12866
(E.O. 12866). OMB bases its
determination on the following four
criteria:
(a) Whether the rule will have an
annual effect of $100 million or more on
the economy or adversely affect an
economic sector, productivity, jobs, the
environment, or other units of the
government.
(b) Whether the rule will create
inconsistencies with other Federal
agencies’ actions.
(c) Whether the rule will materially
affect entitlements, grants, use fees, loan
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programs, or the rights and obligations
of their recipients.
(d) Whether the rule raises novel legal
or policy issues.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
Under the Regulatory Flexibility Act
(as amended by the Small Business
Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act
[SBREFA] of 1996) (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.),
whenever a Federal agency is required
to publish a notice of rulemaking for
any proposed or final rule, it must
prepare and make available for public
comment a regulatory flexibility
analysis that describes the effect of the
rule on small entities (i.e., small
businesses, small organizations, and
small government jurisdictions).
However, no regulatory flexibility
analysis is required if the head of an
agency certifies that the rule would not
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities.
Thus, for a regulatory flexibility analysis
to be required, impacts must exceed a
threshold for ‘‘significant impact’’ and a
threshold for a ‘‘substantial number of
small entities.’’ See 5 U.S.C. 605(b).
SBREFA amended the Regulatory
Flexibility Act to require Federal
agencies to provide a statement of the
factual basis for certifying that a rule
would not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities.
This proposed rule does not increase
the number of recreation types allowed
on the System but establishes a hunting
program on one refuge and expands
activities at six other refuges. As a
result, opportunities for wildlifedependent recreation on national
wildlife refuges will increase. The
changes in the number of allowed use(s)
are likely to increase visitor activity on
these national wildlife refuges.
Recreational user days are expected to
increase by 475 fishing days and 8,352
hunting days. However, this is likely to
be a substitute site for the activity and
not necessarily an overall increase in
participation rates for the activity.
New recreational user days generate
expenditures associated with
recreational activities on refuges’
wilderness areas. Due to the
unavailability of site-specific
expenditure data, we use the national
estimates from the 2001 National Survey
of Fishing, Hunting, and Wildlife
Associated Recreation to identify
expenditures for food and lodging,
transportation, and other incidental
expenses. Using the average
expenditures for these categories with
the maximum expected additional
participation on the Refuge System
yields approximately $68,700 in fishing-
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related expenditures and $831,300 in
hunting-related expenditures.
By having ripple effects throughout
the economy, these direct expenditures
are only part of the economic impact of
recreational user days. Using a national
impact multiplier for hunting activities
(2.73) derived from the report
‘‘Economic Importance of Hunting in
America’’ and a national impact
multiplier for sportfishing activities
(2.79) from the report ‘‘Sportfishing in
America’’ for the estimated increase in
direct expenditures yields a total
economic impact of approximately $2.4
million (2006 dollars) (Southwick
Associates, Inc., 2003). (Using a local
impact multiplier would yield more
accurate and smaller results. However,
we employed the national impact
multiplier due to the difficulty in
developing local multipliers for each
specific region.)
Since most of the fishing and hunting
occurs within 100 miles of a
participant’s residence, it is unlikely
that most of this spending would be
‘‘new’’ money coming into a local
economy; therefore, this spending
would be offset with a decrease in some
other sector of the local economy. The
net gain to the local economies would
be no more than $2.5 million, and most
likely considerably less. Since 80
percent of the participants travel fewer
than 100 miles to engage in hunting and
fishing activities, their spending
patterns would not add new money into
the local economy and, therefore, the
real impact would be on the order of
$488,000 annually.
To the extent visitors spend time and
money in the area of the refuge that they
would not have spent there anyway,
they contribute new income to the
regional economy and benefit local
businesses. Many small businesses
within the retail trade industry (such as
hotels, gas stations, taxidermy shops,
bait and tackle shops) may benefit from
some increased refuge visitation. A large
percentage of these retail trade
establishments in the majority of
affected counties qualify as small
businesses (Table 2).
We expect that the incremental
recreational opportunities will be
scattered, and so we do not expect that
the rule will have a significant
economic effect (benefit) on a
substantial number of small entities in
any region or nationally. Using the
estimate derived in the Regulatory
Planning and Review section, we expect
approximately $488,000 to be spent in
total in the refuges’ local economies.
The maximum increase ($2.4 million if
all spending were new money) at most
would be less than 1 percent for local
retail trade spending (Table 2).
TABLE 2.—COMPARATIVE EXPENDITURES FOR RETAIL TRADE ASSOCIATED WITH ADDITIONAL REFUGE VISITATION FOR
2008–2009
[2005 dollars in thousands]
Retail trade in
2002
Refuge/county(ies)
Estimated
maximum
addition from
new activities
$80,352
$4
351,508
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Agassiz:
Marshall, MN .................................................................
Hamden Slough:
Becker, MN ...................................................................
Blackwater:
Dorchester, MD .............................................................
Whittlesey Creek:
Ashland, WI ..................................................................
Bayou Cocodrie:
Concordia, LA ...............................................................
Tensas River:
Franklin, LA ...................................................................
Madison, LA ..................................................................
Tensas, LA ....................................................................
Upper Ouachita
Morehouse, LA .............................................................
Union, LA ......................................................................
With the small increase in overall
spending anticipated from this proposed
rule, it is unlikely that a substantial
number of small entities will have more
than a small benefit from the increased
spending near the affected refuges.
Therefore, we certify that this proposed
rule will not have a significant
economic effect on a substantial number
of small entities as defined under the
Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C.
601). An initial/final Regulatory
Flexibility Analysis is not required.
Accordingly, a Small Entity Compliance
Guide is not required.
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Total number
retail establish.
Establish. with
< 10 emp.
0.005
43
35
16
0.005
159
117
259,667
48
0.018
123
91
185,394
2
0.001
94
70
135,975
63
0.047
82
60
205,637
78,207
23,931
53
53
53
0.026
0.068
0.222
83
42
26
63
31
22
231,753
127,496
76
76
0.033
0.059
115
70
91
57
Small Business Regulatory Enforcement
Fairness Act
The proposed rule is not a major rule
under 5 U.S.C. 804(2), the Small
Business Regulatory Enforcement
Fairness Act. We anticipate no
significant employment or small
business effects. This rule:
a. Would not have an annual effect on
the economy of $100 million or more.
The additional fishing and hunting
opportunities at these refuges would
generate angler and hunter expenditures
with an economic impact estimated at
$2.4 million per year (2006 dollars).
Consequently, the maximum benefit of
this rule for businesses both small and
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Addition as a
% of total
large would not be sufficient to make
this a major rule. The impact would be
scattered across the country and would
most likely not be significant in any
local area.
b. Would not cause a major increase
in costs or prices for consumers;
individual industries; Federal, State, or
local government agencies; or
geographic regions. This proposed rule
would have only a slight effect on the
costs of hunting and fishing
opportunities for Americans. Under the
assumption that any additional hunting
and fishing opportunities would be of
high quality, participants would be
attracted to the refuge. If the refuge were
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closer to the participants’ residences,
then a reduction in travel costs would
occur and benefit the participants. The
Service does not have information to
quantify this reduction in travel cost but
assumes that, since most people travel
less than 100 miles to hunt and fish, the
reduced travel cost would be small for
the additional days of hunting and
fishing generated by this proposed rule.
We do not expect this proposed rule to
affect the supply or demand for fishing
and hunting opportunities in the United
States and, therefore, it should not affect
prices for fishing and hunting
equipment and supplies, or the retailers
that sell equipment. Additional refuge
hunting and fishing opportunities
would account for less than 0.001
percent of the available opportunities in
the United States.
c. Would not have significant adverse
effects on competition, employment,
investment, productivity, innovation, or
the ability of United States-based
enterprises to compete with foreignbased enterprises. This proposed rule
represents only a small proportion of
recreational spending of a small number
of affected anglers and hunters,
approximately a maximum of $2.4
million annually in impact. Therefore,
this rule would have no measurable
economic effect on the wildlifedependent industry, which has annual
sales of equipment and travel
expenditures of $72 billion nationwide.
Refuges that establish hunting and
fishing programs may hire additional
staff from the local community to assist
with the programs, but this would not
be a significant increase because we are
opening only one refuge to hunting and
only six refuges are increasing activities
by this proposed rule.
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Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
Since this proposed rule would apply
to public use of federally owned and
managed refuges, it would not impose
an unfunded mandate on State, local, or
Tribal governments or the private sector
of more than $100 million per year. The
rule would not have a significant or
unique effect on State, local, or Tribal
governments or the private sector. A
statement containing the information
required by the Unfunded Mandates
Reform Act (2 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.) is not
required.
Takings (E.O. 12630)
In accordance with E.O. 12630, this
proposed rule would not have
significant takings implications. This
regulation would affect only visitors at
national wildlife refuges and describe
what they can do while they are on a
refuge.
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Federalism (E.O. 13132)
As discussed in the Regulatory
Planning and Review and Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act sections above,
this proposed rule would not have
sufficient Federalism implications to
warrant the preparation of a Federalism
Assessment under E.O. 13132. In
preparing this proposed rule, we
worked with State governments.
Civil Justice Reform (E.O. 12988)
In accordance with E.O. 12988, the
Office of the Solicitor has determined
that the proposed rule would not
unduly burden the judicial system and
that it meets the requirements of
sections 3(a) and 3(b)(2) of the Order.
The regulation would clarify established
regulations and result in better
understanding of the regulations by
refuge visitors.
Energy Supply, Distribution or Use
(E.O. 13211)
On May 18, 2001, the President issued
E.O. 13211 on regulations that
significantly affect energy supply,
distribution, and use. E.O. 13211
requires agencies to prepare Statements
of Energy Effects when undertaking
certain actions. Because this proposed
rule would add one refuge to the list of
areas open for hunting and increase the
activities at six refuges, it is not a
significant regulatory action under E.O.
12866 and is not expected to
significantly affect energy supplies,
distribution, and use. Therefore, this
action is a not a significant energy
action and no Statement of Energy
Effects is required.
Consultation and Coordination With
Indian Tribal Governments (E.O.
13175)
In accordance with E.O. 13175, we
have evaluated possible effects on
federally recognized Indian tribes and
have determined that there are no
effects. We coordinate recreational use
on national wildlife refuges with Tribal
governments having adjoining or
overlapping jurisdiction before we
propose the regulations.
Paperwork Reduction Act
This regulation does not contain any
information collection requirements
other than those already approved by
the Office of Management and Budget
under the Paperwork Reduction Act (44
U.S.C. 3501 et seq.) (OMB Control
Number is 1018–0102). See 50 CFR
25.23 for information concerning that
approval. 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
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control number. We will ask OMB to
approve necessary information
collection(s).
Endangered Species Act Section 7
Consultation
In preparation for new openings, we
comply with Section 7 of the
Endangered Species Act. Copies of the
Section 7 evaluations may be obtained
by contacting the regions listed under
Available Information for Specific
Refuges. For the proposals to open or to
add opportunities at national wildlife
refuges for hunting and/or fishing, we
have determined that at Hamden Slough
National Wildlife Refuge, and Tensas
River National Wildlife Refuge, the
actions are not likely to adversely affect
listed species or designated critical
habitat. For the proposals at Whittlesey
Creek National Wildlife Refuge and
Blackwater National Wildlife Refuge, we
have determined the actions will have
no effect on any listed species or critical
habitat. For Bayou Cocodrie National
Wildlife Refuge, Upper Ouachita
National Wildlife Refuge, and Agassiz
National Wildlife Refuge, we have
determined the actions may affect but
are not likely to adversely affect listed
species/critical habitat.
We also comply with Section 7 of the
ESA when developing comprehensive
conservation plans (CCPs) and stepdown management plans for public use
of refuges, and prior to implementing
any new or revised public recreation
program on a refuge as identified in 50
CFR 26.32.
National Environmental Policy Act
Based upon review of the refugespecific Environmental Assessments for
the opening of new or expansion of
existing hunting programs on 7 national
wildlife refuges (Agassiz NWR, Hamden
Slough NWR, Blackwater NWR,
Whittlesey Creek, Bayou Cocodrie NWR,
Tensas River NWR, and Upper Ouachita
NWR), and of associated documentation
referenced below, it is our
determination that the action of opening
or expanding hunting programs on these
7 refuges as described and which will be
codified by rulemaking in 2008, does
not constitute a major Federal action
significantly affecting the quality of the
human environment under the meaning
of section 102(2)(c) of the National
Environment Policy Act of 1969 (as
amended). As such, an environmental
impact statement is not required.
We have further prepared a
Cumulative Impact Report that analyzes
the cumulative impacts of these
proposed openings. In this Report we
evaluate cumulative impacts within the
context of the new and expanded
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hunting and fishing programs on the
seven refuges combined and within the
context of hunting and fishing programs
on the Refuge System as a whole.
Prior to the addition of a refuge to the
list of areas open to hunting and fishing
in 50 CFR part 32, we develop hunting
and fishing plans for the affected
refuges. We incorporate these proposed
refuge hunting and fishing activities in
the refuge CCPs and/or other step-down
management plans, pursuant to our
refuge planning guidance in 602 Fish
and Wildlife Service Manual (FW) 1, 3,
and 4. We prepare these CCPs and stepdown plans in compliance with section
102(2)(C) of NEPA and the Council on
Environmental Quality’s regulations for
implementing NEPA in 40 CFR parts
1500–1508. We invite the affected
public to participate in the review,
development, and implementation of
these plans. Copies of all plans and
NEPA compliance are available from the
refuges at the addresses provided below.
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Available Information for Specific
Refuges
Individual refuge headquarters retain
information regarding public use
programs and conditions that apply to
their specific programs and maps of
their respective areas. If the specific
refuge you are interested in is not
mentioned below, then contact the
appropriate Regional offices listed
below:
Region 1—California, Hawaii, Idaho,
Nevada, Oregon, and Washington.
Regional Chief, National Wildlife Refuge
System, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service,
Eastside Federal Complex, Suite 1692,
911 N.E. 11th Avenue, Portland, OR
97232–4181; Telephone (503) 231–6214.
Region 2—Arizona, New Mexico,
Oklahoma, and Texas. Regional Chief,
National Wildlife Refuge System, U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service, Box 1306,
500 Gold Avenue, Albuquerque, NM
87103; Telephone (505) 248–7419.
Region 3—Illinois, Indiana, Iowa,
Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Ohio,
and Wisconsin. Regional Chief, National
Wildlife Refuge System, U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service, 1 Federal Drive,
Federal Building, Fort Snelling, Twin
Cities, MN 55111; Telephone (612) 713–
5401. Hamden Slough National Wildlife
Refuge, 21212 210th Street, Audubon,
Minnesota 56511; Telephone (218) 439–
6319.
Region 4—Alabama, Arkansas,
Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana,
Mississippi, North Carolina, Tennessee,
South Carolina, Puerto Rico, and the
Virgin Islands. Regional Chief, National
Wildlife Refuge System, U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service, 1875 Century
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Boulevard, Atlanta, GA 30345;
Telephone (404) 679–7166.
Region 5—Connecticut, Delaware,
District of Columbia, Maine, Maryland,
Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New
Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode
Island, Vermont, Virginia and West
Virginia. Regional Chief, National
Wildlife Refuge System, U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service, 300 Westgate Center
Drive, Hadley, MA 01035–9589;
Telephone (413) 253–8306.
Region 6—Colorado, Kansas,
Montana, Nebraska, North Dakota,
South Dakota, Utah, and Wyoming.
Regional Chief, National Wildlife Refuge
System, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service,
134 Union Blvd., Lakewood, CO 80228;
Telephone (303) 236–8145.
Region 7—Alaska. Regional Chief,
National Wildlife Refuge System, U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service, 1011 E.
Tudor Rd., Anchorage, AK 99503;
Telephone (907) 786–3545.
Primary Author
Leslie A. Marler, Management
Analyst, Division of Conservation
Planning and Policy, National Wildlife
Refuge System, is the primary author of
this rulemaking document.
List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 32
Fishing, Hunting, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Wildlife,
Wildlife refuges.
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, we propose to amend title 50,
Chapter I, subchapter C of the Code of
Federal Regulations as follows:
PART 32—[AMENDED]
1. The authority citation for part 32
continues to read as follows:
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 301; 16 U.S.C. 460k,
664, 668dd–668ee, and 715i.
2. Amend § 32.7 ‘‘What refuge units
are open to hunting and/or sport
fishing?’’ by:
a. Adding Hamden Slough National
Wildlife Refuge in the State of
Minnesota; and
b. Removing Stillwater Wildlife
Management Area in the State of
Nevada.
3. Amend § 32.37 Louisiana by:
a. Revising paragraphs A.3., A.5., A.6.,
A.9., A.11., A.12, B.2., B.6. and B.7,
adding paragraphs B.8 through B.10.,
and revising paragraph C. of Tensas
River National Wildlife Refuge; and
b. Revising paragraphs A., B., and C.
of Upper Ouachita National Wildlife
Refuge to read as follows:
§ 32.37
*
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*
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Tensas River National Wildlife Refuge
A. Migratory Game Bird Hunting.
* * *
*
*
*
*
*
3. We allow refuge hunters to enter
the refuge no earlier than 4 a.m., and
they must depart no later than 2 hours
after legal sunset unless they are
participating in the refuge raccoon hunt.
*
*
*
*
*
5. We allow shotguns equipped with
a single-piece magazine plug that allows
the gun to hold no more than two shells
in the magazine and one in the chamber.
We prohibit target practicing or shooting
to unload modern firearms on the refuge
at any time. Shotgun hunters must
possess only an approved nontoxic shot
when hunting migratory birds (see
§ 32.2(k)). We require hunters to unload
and encase all guns transported in
automobiles and boats or on all-terrain
vehicles (see § 27.42(b) of this chapter).
We allow firearms on the refuge only
during the refuge hunting season.
6. We prohibit permanent or pit
blinds on the refuge. You must remove
all blind material sand decoys following
each day’s hunt (see § 27.93 of this
chapter).
*
*
*
*
*
9. We prohibit baiting or the
possession of bait at any time while on
the refuge (see § 32.2(h)).
*
*
*
*
*
11. While visiting the refuge, we
prohibit: Spotlighting, littering, fires,
trapping, mandrives for game,
possession of alcoholic beverages in
hunting areas, possession of open
alcoholic beverage containers, flagging,
engineers tape, paint, unleashed pets,
and parking/blocking trail and gate
entrances. We prohibit hunting within
150 feet (45 m) of: A designated public
road, maintained road, trail, fire breaks,
dwellings, and above-ground oil and gas
production facilities. We define a
maintained road or trail as one which
has been mowed, disked, or plowed.
12. We require a Tensas River
National Wildlife Refuge Access Permit
for all migratory bird hunts. You will
find the permits on the front of the
Public Use Regulation brochure.
*
*
*
*
*
B. Upland Game Hunting. * * *
*
*
*
*
*
2. We allow squirrel and rabbit
hunting with and without dogs. We will
allow hunting without dogs from the
beginning of the State season to a date
typically ending the day before the
refuge deer muzzleloader hunt. We do
not require hunters to wear hunter
orange during the squirrel and rabbit
hunt without dogs. Squirrel and rabbit
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hunting will begin again, with or
without dogs, the day after the refuge
deer muzzleloader hunt and will
conclude the last day of the refuge
squirrel season which typically ends on
February 15.
*
*
*
*
*
6. We allow .22 caliber rimfire
weapons and shotguns equipped with a
single-piece magazine plug that allows
the gun to hold no more than two shells
in the magazine and one in the chamber.
We prohibit target practicing or shooting
to unload modern firearms on the refuge
at any time. Shotgun hunters must
possess only an approved nontoxic shot
when hunting upland game (see
§ 32.2(k)). We require hunters to unload
and encase all guns transported in
automobiles and boats or on all-terrain
vehicles (see § 27.42(b) of this chapter).
We define loaded as shells in gun or
caps on muzzleloader. We allow
firearms on the refuge only during the
refuge hunting season.
7. We require all upland game hunters
to report their game immediately after
each hunt at the check station nearest
the point of take.
8. Conditions A7, A10, A11, and A13
apply.
9. We prohibit any hunter to use
climbing spikes or to hunt from a tree
that contains screw-in steps, nails,
screw-in umbrellas, or any metal objects
that could damage trees (see § 32.2(i)).
10. We require a Tensas River
National Wildlife Refuge Access Permit
for all upland game hunts. Hunters will
find permits on the front of the Public
Use Regulations brochure.
C. Big Game Hunting. We allow
hunting of white-tailed deer and turkey
on designated areas of the refuge subject
to the following conditions:
1. Deer archery season will begin the
first Saturday in November and will
conclude on the last day of the State
archery season which is generally
January 31. We require that archery
hunters, including crossbow hunters,
possess proof of completion of the
International Bowhunters Safety Course.
We prohibit archery hunting during the
following refuge-wide deer hunts: Youth
gun hunt and modern firearms hunts.
We prohibit possession of pods, drugtipped arrows, or other chemical
substances.
2. Deer muzzleloader season will be 3
days and occur on a Monday, Tuesday,
and Wednesday in January. We will
allow in-line muzzleloaders and
magnified scopes.
3. We will conduct two 2-day quota
modern firearms hunts for deer typically
in the month of December. Hunt dates
and permit application procedures will
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be available at Refuge Headquarters in
July. We restrict hunters using a
muzzleloader during this hunt to areas
where we allow modern firearms.
4. We will conduct guided quota
youth deer hunts and guided quota
physically challenged deer hunts in the
Greenlea Bend area typically in
December and January. Hunt dates and
permit application procedures will be
available at the Refuge Headquarters in
July.
5. We will conduct a refuge-wide
youth deer hunt during the State-wide
youth hunt weekend typically in
November. Hunt dates will be available
at Refuge Headquarters in July. Each
participating youth must: Be age 8–15,
possess proof of completion of an
approved Hunter Safety Course, and be
accompanied at all times by an adult age
21 or older. Each adult hunter may
supervise only one youth.
6. Hunters may take only one deer
(one buck or one doe) per day during
refuge deer hunts except during guided
youth and physically challenged hunts
where the limit will be one antlerless
and one antlered deer per day.
7. We allow turkey hunting the first
16 days of the State turkey season. We
will conduct a youth turkey hunt the
Saturday and Sunday before the regular
State turkey season. You may harvest
two bearded turkeys per season. We
allow the use and possession of lead
shot while turkey hunting on the refuge
(see § 32.2(k)). We allow use of
nonmotorized bicycles on designated
all-terrain vehicle trails. Although you
may hunt turkeys without displaying a
solid hunter orange cap or vest during
your turkey hunt, we do recommend its
use.
8. Conditions A3, A7, A9, A11, A13,
and B9 apply.
9. In areas posted ‘‘Closed Area,’’ we
prohibit big game hunting at any time.
‘‘Closed Area’’(s), which we designate
on the Public Use Regulations brochure
map, are closed to all hunts.
10. We allow shotguns that are
equipped with a single-piece magazine
plug that allows the gun to hold no
more than two shells in the magazine
and one in the chamber. We allow
shotgun hunters to use rifled slugs only
when hunting deer. We prohibit hunters
using or possessing buckshot while on
the refuge. We prohibit target practicing
or shooting to unload modern firearms
on the refuge at any time. We require
hunters to unload and encase all guns
transported in automobiles and boats or
on all-terrain vehicles (see § 27.42(b) of
this chapter). We define loaded as shells
in gun or caps on muzzleloader. We
allow firearms on the refuge only during
the refuge hunting season.
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11. We allow muzzleloader hunters to
discharge their muzzleloaders at the end
of each hunt safely into the ground at
least 150 feet (45 m) from any
designated public road, maintained
road, trail, fire breaks, dwellings, or
above-ground oil and gas production
facilities. We define a maintained road
or trail as one which has been mowed,
disked, or plowed and one which is free
of trees.
12. We prohibit deer hunters leaving
deer stands unattended before the
opening day of the refuge archery
season, and hunters must remove stands
by the end of the last day of the refuge
archery season. Hunters must clearly
mark stands left unattended on the
refuge with the name and address of the
owner of the stand. Hunters must
remove portable stands from trees daily
and place freestanding stands in a
nonhunting position when unattended.
13. We require deer hunters using
muzzleloaders or modern firearms to
display a solid hunter-orange cap on
their head and a solid hunter-orange
vest over their outermost garment
covering their chest and back. Hunters
must display the solid hunter-orange
items at all times while in the field.
14. We require muzzleloader and
modern firearms hunters utilizing
ground blinds to display 400 square
inches (2,600 cm2) of hunter orange
outside of the blind that is visible from
all sides of the blind. Hunters must wear
orange vests and hats as their outermost
garments while inside the blind.
15. We require all deer and turkey
hunters to report their game
immediately after each hunt at the
check station nearest to the point of
take.
16. We prohibit baiting or the
possession of bait while on the refuge at
any time. We prohibit possession of
chemical baits or attractants used as
bait.
17. We require a Tensas River
National Wildlife Refuge Access Permit
for all big game hunts. You will find the
permits on the front of the Public Use
Regulations brochure.
*
*
*
*
*
Upper Ouachita National Wildlife
Refuge
A. Migratory Game Bird Hunting. We
allow hunting of waterfowl (duck,
goose, coot, gallinule, rail, snipe),
woodcock, and dove on designated
areas of the refuge in accordance with
State regulations subject to the
following conditions:
1. Hunters must possess and carry a
signed refuge permit.
2. We allow waterfowl hunting on the
west side of the Ouachita River north of
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RCW Road. We allow waterfowl hunting
on the east side of the Ouachita River
outside the Mollicy levee and south of
the crude oil pipeline which runs
through Township 22N range 4E
sections 2, 3, 4 within the levee.
3. We allow woodcock hunting west
of the Ouachita River. We allow
woodcock hunting on the east side of
the Ouachita River outside the Mollicy
levee and south of the crude oil pipeline
which runs through Township 22N
range 4E sections 2, 3, 4 within the
levee.
4. We allow dove hunting during the
first 3 days of the State season east of
the Ouachita River outside the Mollicy
levee and south of the crude oil pipeline
which runs through Township 22N
range 4E sections 2, 3, 4 within the
levee.
5. We allow waterfowl hunting until
12 p.m. (noon) during the State season.
6. We will hold a limited youth
waterfowl lottery hunt during the State
Youth Waterfowl Hunt. Application
instructions are available at the refuge
office.
7. Hunters may enter the refuge no
earlier than 4 a.m.
8. We prohibit hunting within 100
feet (30 m) of the maintained rights of
ways of roads, from or across ATV trails,
and from above-ground oil, gas, or
electrical transmission facilities.
9. We prohibit leaving boats, blinds,
and decoys unattended.
10. We allow dogs to locate, point,
and retrieve when hunting for migratory
game birds. We prohibit the use of dogs
for hog hunting.
11. Youth hunters under age 16 must
successfully complete a State-approved
hunter education course. While hunting,
each youth must possess and carry a
card or certificate of completion. Each
youth hunter must remain within sight
and normal voice contact of an adult age
21 or older. Each adult may supervise
no more than two youth hunters.
12. We prohibit any person or group
to act as a hunting guide, outfitter, or in
any other capacity that pay other
individual(s), pays or promises to pay
directly or indirectly for service
rendered to any other person or persons
hunting on the refuge, regardless of
whether such payment is for guiding,
outfitting, lodging, or club membership.
B. Upland Game Hunting. We allow
hunting of quail, squirrel, rabbit,
raccoon, beaver, coyote, and opossum
on designated areas of the refuge in
accordance with State regulations
subject to the following conditions:
1. Conditions A1, A8, A9, A11, and
A12 (to hunt upland game) apply.
2. We allow hunting west of the
Ouachita River. We allow hunting on
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the east side of the Ouachita River
outside the Mollicy levee and south of
the crude oil pipeline which runs
through Township 22N range 4E
sections 2,3,4 within the levee.
3. We prohibit possession of firearms
larger than .22 caliber rimfire, shotgun
slugs, and buckshot.
4. We allow hunting of raccoon and
opossum during the daylight hours
(legal sunrise to legal sunset) of rabbit
and squirrel season. We allow night
hunting (legal sunset to legal sunrise)
during December and January, and we
allow use of dogs for night hunting. We
prohibit the selling of raccoon and
opossum taken on the refuge for human
consumption.
5. We allow the use of dogs to hunt
squirrel and rabbit after the last refuge
Gun Deer Hunt.
6. To use horses and mules to hunt
raccoon and opossum at night, hunters
must first obtain a special permit at the
refuge office.
7. Hunters may enter the refuge no
earlier than 4 a.m. and must exit no later
than 2 hours after legal shooting hours.
8. We allow hunting of beaver and
coyote during all open refuge hunts
with weapons legal for the ongoing
hunt.
C. Big Game Hunting. We allow
hunting of white-tailed deer, feral hog,
and turkey on designated areas of the
refuge in accordance with State
regulations subject to the following
conditions:
1. Conditions A1, A8, A9, A12 (to
hunt big game), and B7 apply.
2. We allow general gun deer hunting
on the following days: The first
consecutive Saturday and Sunday of
November; the Friday, Saturday, and
Sunday following Thanksgiving Day;
and the second Saturday and Sunday
after Thanksgiving Day. We allow
archery deer hunting during the entire
State season.
3. We allow deer and feral hog
hunting west of the Ouachita River. We
allow deer hunting on the east side of
the Ouachita River outside the Mollicy
levee and south of the crude oil pipeline
which runs through Township 22N
range 4E sections 2, 3, 4 within the
levee.
4. The daily bag limit is one either-sex
deer. The State season limit applies.
5. Archery hunters must possess and
carry proof of completion of the
International Bowhunters’ Education
Program.
6. We prohibit leaving deer stands,
blinds, and other equipment
unattended.
7. Deer hunters must wear hunter
orange as per State deer hunting
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regulations on Wildlife Management
Areas.
8. We prohibit hunters placing stands
or hunting from stands on pine trees
with white-painted bands/rings.
9. Youth hunters under age 16 must
successfully complete a State-approved
hunter education course. While hunting,
each youth must possess and carry a
card or certificate of completion. Each
youth hunter must remain within sight
and normal voice contact of an adult age
21 or older. Each adult may supervise
no more than one youth hunter.
10. We will hold a limited lottery
youth turkey hunt on the Saturday of
the State youth turkey hunt weekend.
11. We prohibit possession or
distribution of bait or hunting with the
aid of bait, including any grain, salt,
minerals, or other feed or nonnaturally
occurring attractant on the refuge (see
§ 32.2(h)).
12. We allow hunting of hog during
all open refuge hunts with weapons
legal for the ongoing hunt.
*
*
*
*
*
4. Amend § 32.39 Maryland by
revising paragraphs A. and B. of
Blackwater National Wildlife Refuge to
read as follows:
§ 32.39
*
*
Maryland.
*
*
*
Blackwater National Wildlife Refuge
A. Migratory Game Bird Hunting. We
allow hunting of goose and duck on
designated areas of the refuge in
accordance with State regulations
subject to the following conditions:
1. We require refuge permits for all
hunters regardless of age. We require
that hunters possess a valid State
hunting license, any required stamps,
and a photo identification. Permits are
nontransferable.
2. All refuge hunters must abide by
the terms and conditions of the refuge
permit.
B. Upland Game Hunting. We allow
hunting of eastern wild turkey on
designated areas of the refuge in
accordance with State regulations
subject to the following conditions:
Conditions A1 and A2 apply.
*
*
*
*
*
5. Amend § 32.42 Minnesota by:
a. Revising Agassiz National Wildlife
Refuge; and
b. Adding Hamden Slough National
Wildlife Refuge to read as follows:
§ 32.42
*
*
Minnesota.
*
*
*
Agassiz National Wildlife Refuge
A. Migratory Game Bird Hunting. We
allow hunting of waterfowl on the
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Farmers Pool Unit area of the refuge in
accordance with State regulations
subject to the following conditions:
1. We allow a youth hunt only (age 16
and under). Youth hunters age 14 and
under must be accompanied by an adult
age 18 or older.
2. We prohibit vehicles and hunters
from entering the refuge before 5:30 a.m.
They must leave the refuge each day as
soon as possible after legal hunting
hours.
3. We prohibit the use of motorized
boats.
4. We prohibit the construction or use
of permanent blinds, stands, or scaffolds
(see § 27.92 of this chapter).
5. You must remove all personal
property, which includes boats, decoys,
and blinds brought onto the refuge, each
day of hunting (see §§ 27.93 and 27.94
of this chapter).
6. We allow the use of hunting dogs,
provided the dog is under the
immediate control of the hunter at all
times.
7. We prohibit the use of snowmobiles
and ATVs.
8. We prohibit camping.
B. Upland Game Hunting. We allow
hunting of ruffed grouse and sharptailed grouse on designated areas of the
refuge in accordance with State
regulations subject to the following
conditions:
1. We allow hunting from the opening
of the State’s deer firearms season to the
close of the regular State’s ruffed grouse
and sharp-tailed grouse seasons.
2. You may possess only approved
nontoxic shot while in the field (see
§ 32.2(k)).
3. We prohibit hunting in the closed
areas around the administrative
buildings.
4. Conditions A2 through A8 apply.
C. Big Game Hunting. We allow
hunting of white-tailed deer and moose
on designated areas of the refuge in
accordance with State regulations
subject to the following conditions:
1. We are currently closed to moose
hunting until the population recovers.
2. Conditions A1, A3, A4, A5, A7, and
A8 apply.
3. We allow scouting the day before
the youth deer hunt and the deer
firearms hunt.
4. We open archery hunting at the
start of the State’s deer firearms season
and close according to the State’s
archery deer season.
5. We allow muzzleloader deer
hunting following the State’s
muzzleloader season.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:43 Jun 10, 2008
Jkt 214001
6. Hunters may use portable stands.
We prohibit construction or use of
permanent blinds, permanent platforms,
or permanent ladders.
7. You must remove all stands and
personal property from the refuge by
legal sunset of each day (see §§ 27.93
and 27.94 of this chapter).
8. We prohibit hunters from
occupying illegally set up or
constructed ground and tree stands (see
condition C2).
9. We allow the use of wheeled,
nonmotorized conveyance devices (e.g.,
bikes, retrieval carts) except in
Wilderness Areas.
10. We prohibit vehicles and hunters
from entering the refuge during the
youth deer hunt until after 6 a.m.
D. Sport Fishing. [Reserved]
*
*
*
*
*
1. We only allow hunting during the
State’s muzzleloader season with
muzzleloaders.
2. Hunters may use portable stands.
We prohibit construction or use of
permanent blinds, permanent platforms,
or permanent ladders.
3. Hunters must remove all stands and
personal property from the refuge at the
end of each day’s hunt (see §§ 27.93 and
27.94 of this chapter).
4. Condition A8 applies.
D. Sport Fishing. [Reserved]
*
*
*
*
*
6. Amend § 32.69 Wisconsin by
revising paragraph C. of Whittlesey
Creek National Wildlife Refuge to read
as follows:
§ 32.69
*
*
Wisconsin.
*
*
*
Hamden Slough National Wildlife
Refuge
Whittlesey Creek National Wildlife
Refuge
A. Migratory Game Bird Hunting. We
allow hunting of waterfowl on
designated areas of the refuge in
accordance with State regulations
subject to the following conditions:
1. We only allow waterfowl hunting
during the State’s Youth Waterfowl Day.
2. Youth waterfowl hunters must be
age 15 and under.
3. We will only allow waterfowl
hunting in refuge tracts within Audubon
and Riceville Townships.
4. We prohibit the use of motorized
boats.
5. We prohibit the construction or use
of permanent blinds, stands, or
scaffolds.
6. You must remove all personal
property, which includes boats, decoys,
blinds, and blind materials (except for
blinds made entirely of marsh
vegetation) brought onto the refuge,
following that day’s hunt (see §§ 27.93
and 27.94 of this chapter).
7. We allow the use of hunting dogs,
provided the dog is under the
immediate control of the hunter at all
times during the State-approved hunting
season.
8. We prohibit entry to hunting areas
earlier than 2 hours before legal
shooting hours.
B. Upland Game Hunting. [Reserved]
C. Big Game Hunting. We allow
hunting of white-tailed deer on
designated areas of the refuge in
accordance with State regulations
subject to the following conditions:
*
PO 00000
Frm 00010
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
*
*
*
*
C. Big Game Hunting. We allow
hunting of white-tailed deer on
designated areas of the refuge in
accordance with State regulations
subject to the following conditions:
1. We will allow archery deer hunting
to take place on refuge lands owned by
the Service that constitute tracts greater
than 20 acres (8 ha).
2. We prohibit hunting within a
designated, signed area around the
Coaster Classroom and Northern Great
Lakes Visitor Center boardwalk.
3. We prohibit the construction or use
of permanent blinds or platforms.
4. Hunters may use ground blinds or
any elevated stands only if they do not
damage live vegetation, including trees
(see § 27.61 of this chapter).
5. Hunters may construct ground
blinds entirely of dead vegetation from
the refuge lands.
6. Hunters must remove all stands and
blinds from the refuge at the end of each
day’s hunt (see §§ 27.93 and 27.94 of
this chapter).
7. We allow motorized vehicles only
on public roads and parking areas (see
§ 27.31 of this chapter).
*
*
*
*
*
Dated: April 2, 2008.
David M. Vehrey,
Acting Assistant Secretary for Fish and
Wildlife and Parks.
[FR Doc. E8–12193 Filed 6–10–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–55–P
E:\FR\FM\11JNP2.SGM
11JNP2
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 73, Number 113 (Wednesday, June 11, 2008)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 33202-33210]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E8-12193]
[[Page 33201]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Part III
Department of the Interior
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Fish and Wildlife Service
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
50 CFR Part 32
2008-2009 Refuge-Specific Hunting and Sport Fishing Regulations
(Additions); Proposed Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 113 / Wednesday, June 11, 2008 /
Proposed Rules
[[Page 33202]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
50 CFR Part 32
[FWS-R9-WSR-2008-0017; 93270-1265-0000-4A]
RIN 1018-AV20
2008-2009 Refuge-Specific Hunting and Sport Fishing Regulations
(Additions)
AGENCY: Fish and Wildlife Service, Interior.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Fish and Wildlife Service proposes to add one refuge to
the list of areas open for hunting and/or sport fishing programs and
increase the activities available at six other refuges for the 2008-
2009 season.
DATES: Your comments must be postmarked on or before July 11, 2008.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments by one of the following methods:
[cir] Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the instructions for submitting comments.
[cir] U.S. mail or hand delivery: Public Comments Processing, Attn:
RIN 1018-AV20; Division of Policy and Directives Management; U.S. Fish
and Wildlife Service; 4401 N. Fairfax Drive, Suite 222; Arlington, VA
22203.
We will not accept e-mail or faxes. We will post all comments on
https://www.regulations.gov. This generally means that we will post any
personal information you provide us (see the Public Comments section
below for more information). For information on specific refuges'
public use programs and the conditions that apply to them or for copies
of compatibility determinations for any refuge(s), contact individual
programs at the addresses/phone numbers given in ``Available
Information for Specific Refuges'' under SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Leslie A. Marler, Management Analyst,
Division of Conservation Planning and Policy, U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service, 4401 N. Fairfax Drive, Suite 670, Arlington, VA 22203; (703)
358-2397; Fax (703) 358-2248.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The National Wildlife Refuge System
Administration Act of 1966 closes national wildlife refuges in all
States except Alaska to all uses until opened. The Secretary of the
Interior (Secretary) may open refuge areas to any use, including
hunting and/or sport fishing, upon a determination that such uses are
compatible with the purposes of the refuge and National Wildlife Refuge
System (Refuge System or our/we) mission. The action also must be in
accordance with provisions of all laws applicable to the areas,
developed in coordination with the appropriate State fish and wildlife
agency(ies), consistent with the principles of sound fish and wildlife
management and administration, and otherwise in the public interest.
These requirements ensure that we maintain the biological integrity,
diversity, and environmental health of the Refuge System for the
benefit of present and future generations of Americans.
We review refuge hunting and sport fishing programs to determine
whether to include additional refuges or whether individual refuge
regulations governing existing programs need modifications. Changing
environmental conditions, State and Federal regulations, and other
factors affecting fish and wildlife populations and habitat may warrant
modifications to refuge-specific regulations to ensure the continued
compatibility of hunting and sport fishing programs and to ensure that
these programs will not materially interfere with or detract from the
fulfillment of refuge purposes or the Refuge System's mission.
Provisions governing hunting and sport fishing on refuges are in
title 50 of the Code of Federal Regulations in part 32 (50 CFR part
32). We regulate hunting and sport fishing on refuges to:
Ensure compatibility with refuge purpose(s);
Properly manage the fish and wildlife resource(s);
Protect other refuge values;
Ensure refuge visitor safety; and
Provide opportunities for quality fish and wildlife-
dependent recreation.
On many refuges where we decide to allow hunting and sport fishing,
our general policy of adopting regulations identical to State hunting
and sport fishing regulations is adequate in meeting these objectives.
On other refuges, we must supplement State regulations with more-
restrictive Federal regulations to ensure that we meet our management
responsibilities, as outlined in the ``Statutory Authority'' section.
We issue refuge-specific hunting and sport fishing regulations when we
open wildlife refuges to migratory game bird hunting, upland game
hunting, big game hunting, or sport fishing. These regulations list the
wildlife species that you may hunt or fish, along with seasons, bag or
creel limits, methods of hunting or sport fishing, descriptions of
areas open to hunting or sport fishing, and other provisions as
appropriate. You may find previously issued refuge-specific regulations
for hunting and sport fishing in 50 CFR part 32. In this rulemaking, we
are also proposing to standardize and clarify the language of existing
regulations.
Plain Language Mandate
In this proposed rule, we made some of the revisions to the
individual refuge units to comply with a Presidential mandate to use
plain language in regulations; as such, these particular revisions do
not modify the substance of the previous regulations. These types of
changes include using ``you'' to refer to the reader and ``we'' to
refer to the Refuge System, using the word ``allow'' instead of
``permit'' when we do not require the use of a permit for an activity,
and using active voice (i.e., ``We restrict entry into the refuge'' vs.
``Entry into the refuge is restricted''.)
Statutory Authority
The National Wildlife Refuge System Administration Act of 1966
(16 U.S.C. 668dd-668ee, as amended by the National Wildlife Refuge
System Improvement Act of 1997 [Improvement Act]) (Administration Act)
and the Refuge Recreation Act of 1962 (16 U.S.C. 460k-460k-4)
(Recreation Act) govern the administration and public use of refuges.
Amendments enacted by the Improvement Act built upon the
Administration Act in a manner that provides an ``organic act'' for the
Refuge System similar to those that exist for other public Federal
lands. The Improvement Act serves to ensure that we effectively manage
the Refuge System as a national network of lands, waters, and interests
for the protection and conservation of our Nation's wildlife resources.
The Administration Act states first and foremost that we focus our
Refuge System mission on conservation of fish, wildlife, and plant
resources and their habitats. The Improvement Act requires the
Secretary, before allowing a new use of a refuge, or before expanding,
renewing, or extending an existing use of a refuge, to determine that
the use is compatible with the mission for which the refuge was
established. The Improvement Act established as the policy of the
United States that wildlife-dependent recreation, when compatible, is a
legitimate and appropriate public use of the Refuge System, through
which the American public can develop an appreciation for fish and
wildlife. The Improvement Act established six wildlife-dependent
recreational uses,
[[Page 33203]]
when compatible, as the priority general public uses of the Refuge
System. These uses are: Hunting, fishing, wildlife observation and
photography, and environmental education and interpretation.
The Recreation Act authorizes the Secretary to administer areas
within the Refuge System for public recreation as an appropriate
incidental or secondary use only to the extent that doing so is
practicable and not inconsistent with the primary purpose(s) for which
Congress and the Service established the areas. The Recreation Act
requires that any recreational use of refuge lands be compatible with
the primary purpose(s) for which we established the refuge and not
inconsistent with other previously authorized operations.
The Administration Act and Recreation Act also authorize the
Secretary to issue regulations to carry out the purposes of the Acts
and regulate uses.
We develop specific management plans for each refuge prior to
opening it to hunting or sport fishing. In many cases, we develop
refuge-specific regulations to ensure the compatibility of the programs
with the purpose(s) for which we established the refuge and the Refuge
System mission. We ensure initial compliance with the Administration
Act and the Recreation Act for hunting and sport fishing on newly
acquired refuges through an interim determination of compatibility made
at or near the time of acquisition. These regulations ensure that we
make the determinations required by these acts prior to adding refuges
to the lists of areas open to hunting and sport fishing in 50 CFR part
32. We ensure continued compliance by the development of comprehensive
conservation plans, specific plans, and by annual review of hunting and
sport fishing programs and regulations.
New Hunting and Sport Fishing Programs
In preparation for new openings, we prepare and approve, at the
appropriate Regional Office and in Washington, documentation of
National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) and the Endangered Species
Act; and we consult with the State and, where appropriate, Tribal
wildlife management agency. The Regional Director(s) certify that the
opening of these refuges to hunting and/or sport fishing has been found
to be compatible with the purpose(s) for which the respective refuge(s)
were established and the Refuge System mission. Copies of the
compatibility determinations for these respective refuges are available
by request to the Regional office noted under the heading ``Available
Information for Specific Refuges.''
The annotated chart below summarizes our proposed changes. The key
below the chart explains the symbols used:
Table 1.--Changes for 2008-2009 Hunting/Fishing
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Migratory bird Upland
National wildlife refuge State hunting hunting Big game hunting Fishing
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Agassiz...................... MN........... B............... B............ Previously
published.
Hamden Slough................ MN........... A............... ............. A...............
Blackwater................... MD........... B............... B............ Previously Previously
published. published.
Whittlesey Creek............. WI........... Previously ............. B...............
published.
Tensas River................. LA........... D............... D............ D............... Previously
published.
Upper Ouachita............... LA........... D............... D............ C/D............. D.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
A = Refuge added and activities opened.
B = Refuge already listed; added hunt category.
C = Refuge already listed; added species to hunt category.
D = Refuge already listed and opened to this activity; added land.
We are adding one refuge to the list of areas open for hunting and/
or sport fishing and increasing opportunities at six refuges. We
proposed these same changes in the 2006-2007 refuge-specific
regulations (71 FR 41864, July 24, 2006) but did not finalize them. We
are reproposing these changes with this rulemaking. We have made
significant changes to the analysis of impacts under the requirements
of the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) to address inadequacies
in our ``opening'' process found by Judge Ricardo Urbina in his ruling
in The Fund for Animals v. Dale Hall, 448 F. Supp. 2d.127, August 31,
2006. We believe that our new NEPA analysis satisfies our legal
requirements. Due to the delays experienced because of the lawsuit, no
rulemakings were published for the 2007-2008 season.
Bayou Cocodrie National Wildlife Refuge in the State of Louisiana
added new lands available to all existing opportunities, but this did
not result in any regulatory changes.
We are removing Stillwater Wildlife Management Area in the State of
Nevada from the list of refuges in 50 CFR part 32. The Bureau of
Reclamation holds primary jurisdiction over these lands by virtue of a
public lands withdrawal for drainage for the 1902 Newlands Reclamation
Project. The 1948 Tripartie Agreement with the Service, Nevada Board of
Fish and Game Commissioners (Nevada), and the Truckee-Carson Irrigation
District (Truckee-Carson) expired and has not been renewed.
We have cross-referenced a number of existing regulations in 50 CFR
parts 26, 27, and 32 to assist hunting and sport fishing visitors with
understanding safety and other legal requirements on refuges. This
redundancy is deliberate, with the intention of improving safety and
compliance in our hunting and sport fishing programs.
Fish Advisory
For health reasons, anglers should review and follow State-issued
consumption advisories before enjoying recreational sport fishing
opportunities on Service-managed waters. You can find information about
current fish consumption advisories on the Internet at: https://
www.epa.gov/ost/fish/.
Request for Comments
You may comment and send materials on this proposed rule by any one
of the methods listed in the ADDRESSES section. We will not accept
comments sent by e-mail or fax or to an address not listed in the
ADDRESSES section. We will not accept anonymous comments; your comment
must include your first and last name, city, State, country, and postal
(zip) code. Finally, we will not consider hand-delivered comments that
we do not receive, or mailed comments that are not postmarked, by the
date specified in the DATES section.
[[Page 33204]]
We will post your entire comment--including your personal
identifying information--on https://www.regulations.gov. If you provide
personal identifying information in addition to the required items
specified in the previous paragraph, such as your street address, phone
number, or e-mail address, you may request at the top of your document
that we withhold this information from public review. However, we
cannot guarantee that we will be able to do so.
Comments and materials we receive, as well as supporting
documentation we used in preparing this proposed rule, will be
available for public inspection on https://www.regulations.gov, or by
appointment, during normal business hours, at the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service; 4401 N. Fairfax Drive, Suite 670; Arlington, Virginia
22203; (703) 358-2397.
Public Comment
Department of the Interior policy is, whenever practicable, to
afford the public a meaningful opportunity to participate in the
rulemaking process. The process of opening refuges is done in stages,
with the fundamental work being performed on the ground at the refuge
and in the community where the program is administered. In these
stages, the public is given other opportunities to comment, for
example, on the comprehensive conservation plans, compatibility
determinations, and environmental assessments. The second stage is this
document, when we publish the proposed rule in the Federal Register for
additional comment, commonly a 30-day comment period.
We make every attempt to collect all of the proposals from the
refuges nationwide and process them expeditiously to maximize the time
available for public review. We believe that a 30-day comment period,
through the broader publication following the earlier public
involvement, gives the public sufficient time to comment and allows us
to establish hunting and fishing programs in time for the upcoming
seasons. Many of these rules also relieve restrictions and allow the
public to participate in recreational activities on a number of
refuges. In addition, in order to continue to provide for previously
authorized hunting opportunities while at the same time providing for
adequate resource protection, we must be timely in providing
modifications to certain hunting programs on some refuges.
We considered providing a 60-day, rather than a 30-day, comment
period. However, we feel, in conjunction with previous comment periods
on other aspects of this process (comprehensive conservation plans,
compatibility determinations, environmental assessments) that 30 days
is adequate for public comment. Any additional delay would hinder the
effective planning and administration of our hunting and fishing
programs.
Even after issuance of a final rule, we accept comments,
suggestions, and concerns for consideration for any appropriate
subsequent rulemaking.
When finalized, we will incorporate these regulations into 50 CFR
part 32. Part 32 contains general provisions and refuge-specific
regulations for hunting and sport fishing on refuges.
Clarity of This Rule
Executive Order (E.O.) 12866 requires each agency to write
regulations that are easy to understand. We invite your comments on how
to make this proposed rule easier to understand, including answers to
questions such as the following: (1) Are the requirements in the rule
clearly stated? (2) Does the rule contain technical language or jargon
that interferes with its clarity? (3) Does the format of the rule
(e.g., grouping and order of sections, use of headings, paragraphing)
aid or reduce its clarity? (4) Would the rule be easier to understand
if it were divided into more (but shorter) sections? (5) Is the
description of the rule in the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section of the
preamble helpful in understanding the rule? (6) What else could we do
to make the proposed rule easier to understand? Send a copy of any
comments on how we could make this proposed rule easier to understand
to: Office of Regulatory Affairs, Department of the Interior, Room
7229, 1849 C Street, NW., Washington, DC 20240. You may e-mail your
comments to: Execsec@ios.doi.gov.
Regulatory Planning and Review
The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) has determined that this
rule is not significant and has not reviewed this rule under Executive
Order 12866 (E.O. 12866). OMB bases its determination on the following
four criteria:
(a) Whether the rule will have an annual effect of $100 million or
more on the economy or adversely affect an economic sector,
productivity, jobs, the environment, or other units of the government.
(b) Whether the rule will create inconsistencies with other Federal
agencies' actions.
(c) Whether the rule will materially affect entitlements, grants,
use fees, loan programs, or the rights and obligations of their
recipients.
(d) Whether the rule raises novel legal or policy issues.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
Under the Regulatory Flexibility Act (as amended by the Small
Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act [SBREFA] of 1996) (5
U.S.C. 601 et seq.), whenever a Federal agency is required to publish a
notice of rulemaking for any proposed or final rule, it must prepare
and make available for public comment a regulatory flexibility analysis
that describes the effect of the rule on small entities (i.e., small
businesses, small organizations, and small government jurisdictions).
However, no regulatory flexibility analysis is required if the head of
an agency certifies that the rule would not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small entities. Thus, for a
regulatory flexibility analysis to be required, impacts must exceed a
threshold for ``significant impact'' and a threshold for a
``substantial number of small entities.'' See 5 U.S.C. 605(b). SBREFA
amended the Regulatory Flexibility Act to require Federal agencies to
provide a statement of the factual basis for certifying that a rule
would not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of
small entities.
This proposed rule does not increase the number of recreation types
allowed on the System but establishes a hunting program on one refuge
and expands activities at six other refuges. As a result, opportunities
for wildlife-dependent recreation on national wildlife refuges will
increase. The changes in the number of allowed use(s) are likely to
increase visitor activity on these national wildlife refuges.
Recreational user days are expected to increase by 475 fishing days and
8,352 hunting days. However, this is likely to be a substitute site for
the activity and not necessarily an overall increase in participation
rates for the activity.
New recreational user days generate expenditures associated with
recreational activities on refuges' wilderness areas. Due to the
unavailability of site-specific expenditure data, we use the national
estimates from the 2001 National Survey of Fishing, Hunting, and
Wildlife Associated Recreation to identify expenditures for food and
lodging, transportation, and other incidental expenses. Using the
average expenditures for these categories with the maximum expected
additional participation on the Refuge System yields approximately
$68,700 in fishing-
[[Page 33205]]
related expenditures and $831,300 in hunting-related expenditures.
By having ripple effects throughout the economy, these direct
expenditures are only part of the economic impact of recreational user
days. Using a national impact multiplier for hunting activities (2.73)
derived from the report ``Economic Importance of Hunting in America''
and a national impact multiplier for sportfishing activities (2.79)
from the report ``Sportfishing in America'' for the estimated increase
in direct expenditures yields a total economic impact of approximately
$2.4 million (2006 dollars) (Southwick Associates, Inc., 2003). (Using
a local impact multiplier would yield more accurate and smaller
results. However, we employed the national impact multiplier due to the
difficulty in developing local multipliers for each specific region.)
Since most of the fishing and hunting occurs within 100 miles of a
participant's residence, it is unlikely that most of this spending
would be ``new'' money coming into a local economy; therefore, this
spending would be offset with a decrease in some other sector of the
local economy. The net gain to the local economies would be no more
than $2.5 million, and most likely considerably less. Since 80 percent
of the participants travel fewer than 100 miles to engage in hunting
and fishing activities, their spending patterns would not add new money
into the local economy and, therefore, the real impact would be on the
order of $488,000 annually.
To the extent visitors spend time and money in the area of the
refuge that they would not have spent there anyway, they contribute new
income to the regional economy and benefit local businesses. Many small
businesses within the retail trade industry (such as hotels, gas
stations, taxidermy shops, bait and tackle shops) may benefit from some
increased refuge visitation. A large percentage of these retail trade
establishments in the majority of affected counties qualify as small
businesses (Table 2).
We expect that the incremental recreational opportunities will be
scattered, and so we do not expect that the rule will have a
significant economic effect (benefit) on a substantial number of small
entities in any region or nationally. Using the estimate derived in the
Regulatory Planning and Review section, we expect approximately
$488,000 to be spent in total in the refuges' local economies. The
maximum increase ($2.4 million if all spending were new money) at most
would be less than 1 percent for local retail trade spending (Table 2).
Table 2.--Comparative Expenditures for Retail Trade Associated With Additional Refuge Visitation for 2008-2009
[2005 dollars in thousands]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Estimated
Retail trade maximum Addition as a Total number Establish.
Refuge/county(ies) in 2002 addition from % of total retail with < 10 emp.
new activities establish.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Agassiz:
Marshall, MN................ $80,352 $4 0.005 43 35
Hamden Slough:
Becker, MN.................. 351,508 16 0.005 159 117
Blackwater:
Dorchester, MD.............. 259,667 48 0.018 123 91
Whittlesey Creek:
Ashland, WI................. 185,394 2 0.001 94 70
Bayou Cocodrie:
Concordia, LA............... 135,975 63 0.047 82 60
Tensas River:
Franklin, LA................ 205,637 53 0.026 83 63
Madison, LA................. 78,207 53 0.068 42 31
Tensas, LA.................. 23,931 53 0.222 26 22
Upper Ouachita
Morehouse, LA............... 231,753 76 0.033 115 91
Union, LA................... 127,496 76 0.059 70 57
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
With the small increase in overall spending anticipated from this
proposed rule, it is unlikely that a substantial number of small
entities will have more than a small benefit from the increased
spending near the affected refuges. Therefore, we certify that this
proposed rule will not have a significant economic effect on a
substantial number of small entities as defined under the Regulatory
Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601). An initial/final Regulatory Flexibility
Analysis is not required. Accordingly, a Small Entity Compliance Guide
is not required.
Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act
The proposed rule is not a major rule under 5 U.S.C. 804(2), the
Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act. We anticipate no
significant employment or small business effects. This rule:
a. Would not have an annual effect on the economy of $100 million
or more. The additional fishing and hunting opportunities at these
refuges would generate angler and hunter expenditures with an economic
impact estimated at $2.4 million per year (2006 dollars). Consequently,
the maximum benefit of this rule for businesses both small and large
would not be sufficient to make this a major rule. The impact would be
scattered across the country and would most likely not be significant
in any local area.
b. Would not cause a major increase in costs or prices for
consumers; individual industries; Federal, State, or local government
agencies; or geographic regions. This proposed rule would have only a
slight effect on the costs of hunting and fishing opportunities for
Americans. Under the assumption that any additional hunting and fishing
opportunities would be of high quality, participants would be attracted
to the refuge. If the refuge were
[[Page 33206]]
closer to the participants' residences, then a reduction in travel
costs would occur and benefit the participants. The Service does not
have information to quantify this reduction in travel cost but assumes
that, since most people travel less than 100 miles to hunt and fish,
the reduced travel cost would be small for the additional days of
hunting and fishing generated by this proposed rule. We do not expect
this proposed rule to affect the supply or demand for fishing and
hunting opportunities in the United States and, therefore, it should
not affect prices for fishing and hunting equipment and supplies, or
the retailers that sell equipment. Additional refuge hunting and
fishing opportunities would account for less than 0.001 percent of the
available opportunities in the United States.
c. Would not have significant adverse effects on competition,
employment, investment, productivity, innovation, or the ability of
United States-based enterprises to compete with foreign-based
enterprises. This proposed rule represents only a small proportion of
recreational spending of a small number of affected anglers and
hunters, approximately a maximum of $2.4 million annually in impact.
Therefore, this rule would have no measurable economic effect on the
wildlife-dependent industry, which has annual sales of equipment and
travel expenditures of $72 billion nationwide. Refuges that establish
hunting and fishing programs may hire additional staff from the local
community to assist with the programs, but this would not be a
significant increase because we are opening only one refuge to hunting
and only six refuges are increasing activities by this proposed rule.
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
Since this proposed rule would apply to public use of federally
owned and managed refuges, it would not impose an unfunded mandate on
State, local, or Tribal governments or the private sector of more than
$100 million per year. The rule would not have a significant or unique
effect on State, local, or Tribal governments or the private sector. A
statement containing the information required by the Unfunded Mandates
Reform Act (2 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.) is not required.
Takings (E.O. 12630)
In accordance with E.O. 12630, this proposed rule would not have
significant takings implications. This regulation would affect only
visitors at national wildlife refuges and describe what they can do
while they are on a refuge.
Federalism (E.O. 13132)
As discussed in the Regulatory Planning and Review and Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act sections above, this proposed rule would not have
sufficient Federalism implications to warrant the preparation of a
Federalism Assessment under E.O. 13132. In preparing this proposed
rule, we worked with State governments.
Civil Justice Reform (E.O. 12988)
In accordance with E.O. 12988, the Office of the Solicitor has
determined that the proposed rule would not unduly burden the judicial
system and that it meets the requirements of sections 3(a) and 3(b)(2)
of the Order. The regulation would clarify established regulations and
result in better understanding of the regulations by refuge visitors.
Energy Supply, Distribution or Use (E.O. 13211)
On May 18, 2001, the President issued E.O. 13211 on regulations
that significantly affect energy supply, distribution, and use. E.O.
13211 requires agencies to prepare Statements of Energy Effects when
undertaking certain actions. Because this proposed rule would add one
refuge to the list of areas open for hunting and increase the
activities at six refuges, it is not a significant regulatory action
under E.O. 12866 and is not expected to significantly affect energy
supplies, distribution, and use. Therefore, this action is a not a
significant energy action and no Statement of Energy Effects is
required.
Consultation and Coordination With Indian Tribal Governments (E.O.
13175)
In accordance with E.O. 13175, we have evaluated possible effects
on federally recognized Indian tribes and have determined that there
are no effects. We coordinate recreational use on national wildlife
refuges with Tribal governments having adjoining or overlapping
jurisdiction before we propose the regulations.
Paperwork Reduction Act
This regulation does not contain any information collection
requirements other than those already approved by the Office of
Management and Budget under the Paperwork Reduction Act (44 U.S.C. 3501
et seq.) (OMB Control Number is 1018-0102). See 50 CFR 25.23 for
information concerning that approval. 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. We
will ask OMB to approve necessary information collection(s).
Endangered Species Act Section 7 Consultation
In preparation for new openings, we comply with Section 7 of the
Endangered Species Act. Copies of the Section 7 evaluations may be
obtained by contacting the regions listed under Available Information
for Specific Refuges. For the proposals to open or to add opportunities
at national wildlife refuges for hunting and/or fishing, we have
determined that at Hamden Slough National Wildlife Refuge, and Tensas
River National Wildlife Refuge, the actions are not likely to adversely
affect listed species or designated critical habitat. For the proposals
at Whittlesey Creek National Wildlife Refuge and Blackwater National
Wildlife Refuge, we have determined the actions will have no effect on
any listed species or critical habitat. For Bayou Cocodrie National
Wildlife Refuge, Upper Ouachita National Wildlife Refuge, and Agassiz
National Wildlife Refuge, we have determined the actions may affect but
are not likely to adversely affect listed species/critical habitat.
We also comply with Section 7 of the ESA when developing
comprehensive conservation plans (CCPs) and step-down management plans
for public use of refuges, and prior to implementing any new or revised
public recreation program on a refuge as identified in 50 CFR 26.32.
National Environmental Policy Act
Based upon review of the refuge-specific Environmental Assessments
for the opening of new or expansion of existing hunting programs on 7
national wildlife refuges (Agassiz NWR, Hamden Slough NWR, Blackwater
NWR, Whittlesey Creek, Bayou Cocodrie NWR, Tensas River NWR, and Upper
Ouachita NWR), and of associated documentation referenced below, it is
our determination that the action of opening or expanding hunting
programs on these 7 refuges as described and which will be codified by
rulemaking in 2008, does not constitute a major Federal action
significantly affecting the quality of the human environment under the
meaning of section 102(2)(c) of the National Environment Policy Act of
1969 (as amended). As such, an environmental impact statement is not
required.
We have further prepared a Cumulative Impact Report that analyzes
the cumulative impacts of these proposed openings. In this Report we
evaluate cumulative impacts within the context of the new and expanded
[[Page 33207]]
hunting and fishing programs on the seven refuges combined and within
the context of hunting and fishing programs on the Refuge System as a
whole.
Prior to the addition of a refuge to the list of areas open to
hunting and fishing in 50 CFR part 32, we develop hunting and fishing
plans for the affected refuges. We incorporate these proposed refuge
hunting and fishing activities in the refuge CCPs and/or other step-
down management plans, pursuant to our refuge planning guidance in 602
Fish and Wildlife Service Manual (FW) 1, 3, and 4. We prepare these
CCPs and step-down plans in compliance with section 102(2)(C) of NEPA
and the Council on Environmental Quality's regulations for implementing
NEPA in 40 CFR parts 1500-1508. We invite the affected public to
participate in the review, development, and implementation of these
plans. Copies of all plans and NEPA compliance are available from the
refuges at the addresses provided below.
Available Information for Specific Refuges
Individual refuge headquarters retain information regarding public
use programs and conditions that apply to their specific programs and
maps of their respective areas. If the specific refuge you are
interested in is not mentioned below, then contact the appropriate
Regional offices listed below:
Region 1--California, Hawaii, Idaho, Nevada, Oregon, and
Washington. Regional Chief, National Wildlife Refuge System, U.S. Fish
and Wildlife Service, Eastside Federal Complex, Suite 1692, 911 N.E.
11th Avenue, Portland, OR 97232-4181; Telephone (503) 231-6214.
Region 2--Arizona, New Mexico, Oklahoma, and Texas. Regional Chief,
National Wildlife Refuge System, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Box
1306, 500 Gold Avenue, Albuquerque, NM 87103; Telephone (505) 248-7419.
Region 3--Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri,
Ohio, and Wisconsin. Regional Chief, National Wildlife Refuge System,
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, 1 Federal Drive, Federal Building, Fort
Snelling, Twin Cities, MN 55111; Telephone (612) 713-5401. Hamden
Slough National Wildlife Refuge, 21212 210th Street, Audubon, Minnesota
56511; Telephone (218) 439-6319.
Region 4--Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana,
Mississippi, North Carolina, Tennessee, South Carolina, Puerto Rico,
and the Virgin Islands. Regional Chief, National Wildlife Refuge
System, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, 1875 Century Boulevard,
Atlanta, GA 30345; Telephone (404) 679-7166.
Region 5--Connecticut, Delaware, District of Columbia, Maine,
Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York,
Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont, Virginia and West Virginia.
Regional Chief, National Wildlife Refuge System, U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service, 300 Westgate Center Drive, Hadley, MA 01035-9589; Telephone
(413) 253-8306.
Region 6--Colorado, Kansas, Montana, Nebraska, North Dakota, South
Dakota, Utah, and Wyoming. Regional Chief, National Wildlife Refuge
System, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, 134 Union Blvd., Lakewood, CO
80228; Telephone (303) 236-8145.
Region 7--Alaska. Regional Chief, National Wildlife Refuge System,
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, 1011 E. Tudor Rd., Anchorage, AK 99503;
Telephone (907) 786-3545.
Primary Author
Leslie A. Marler, Management Analyst, Division of Conservation
Planning and Policy, National Wildlife Refuge System, is the primary
author of this rulemaking document.
List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 32
Fishing, Hunting, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements,
Wildlife, Wildlife refuges.
For the reasons set forth in the preamble, we propose to amend
title 50, Chapter I, subchapter C of the Code of Federal Regulations as
follows:
PART 32--[AMENDED]
1. The authority citation for part 32 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 301; 16 U.S.C. 460k, 664, 668dd-668ee, and
715i.
2. Amend Sec. 32.7 ``What refuge units are open to hunting and/or
sport fishing?'' by:
a. Adding Hamden Slough National Wildlife Refuge in the State of
Minnesota; and
b. Removing Stillwater Wildlife Management Area in the State of
Nevada.
3. Amend Sec. 32.37 Louisiana by:
a. Revising paragraphs A.3., A.5., A.6., A.9., A.11., A.12, B.2.,
B.6. and B.7, adding paragraphs B.8 through B.10., and revising
paragraph C. of Tensas River National Wildlife Refuge; and
b. Revising paragraphs A., B., and C. of Upper Ouachita National
Wildlife Refuge to read as follows:
Sec. 32.37 Louisiana.
* * * * *
Tensas River National Wildlife Refuge
A. Migratory Game Bird Hunting. * * *
* * * * *
3. We allow refuge hunters to enter the refuge no earlier than 4
a.m., and they must depart no later than 2 hours after legal sunset
unless they are participating in the refuge raccoon hunt.
* * * * *
5. We allow shotguns equipped with a single-piece magazine plug
that allows the gun to hold no more than two shells in the magazine and
one in the chamber. We prohibit target practicing or shooting to unload
modern firearms on the refuge at any time. Shotgun hunters must possess
only an approved nontoxic shot when hunting migratory birds (see Sec.
32.2(k)). We require hunters to unload and encase all guns transported
in automobiles and boats or on all-terrain vehicles (see Sec. 27.42(b)
of this chapter). We allow firearms on the refuge only during the
refuge hunting season.
6. We prohibit permanent or pit blinds on the refuge. You must
remove all blind material sand decoys following each day's hunt (see
Sec. 27.93 of this chapter).
* * * * *
9. We prohibit baiting or the possession of bait at any time while
on the refuge (see Sec. 32.2(h)).
* * * * *
11. While visiting the refuge, we prohibit: Spotlighting,
littering, fires, trapping, mandrives for game, possession of alcoholic
beverages in hunting areas, possession of open alcoholic beverage
containers, flagging, engineers tape, paint, unleashed pets, and
parking/blocking trail and gate entrances. We prohibit hunting within
150 feet (45 m) of: A designated public road, maintained road, trail,
fire breaks, dwellings, and above-ground oil and gas production
facilities. We define a maintained road or trail as one which has been
mowed, disked, or plowed.
12. We require a Tensas River National Wildlife Refuge Access
Permit for all migratory bird hunts. You will find the permits on the
front of the Public Use Regulation brochure.
* * * * *
B. Upland Game Hunting. * * *
* * * * *
2. We allow squirrel and rabbit hunting with and without dogs. We
will allow hunting without dogs from the beginning of the State season
to a date typically ending the day before the refuge deer muzzleloader
hunt. We do not require hunters to wear hunter orange during the
squirrel and rabbit hunt without dogs. Squirrel and rabbit
[[Page 33208]]
hunting will begin again, with or without dogs, the day after the
refuge deer muzzleloader hunt and will conclude the last day of the
refuge squirrel season which typically ends on February 15.
* * * * *
6. We allow .22 caliber rimfire weapons and shotguns equipped with
a single-piece magazine plug that allows the gun to hold no more than
two shells in the magazine and one in the chamber. We prohibit target
practicing or shooting to unload modern firearms on the refuge at any
time. Shotgun hunters must possess only an approved nontoxic shot when
hunting upland game (see Sec. 32.2(k)). We require hunters to unload
and encase all guns transported in automobiles and boats or on all-
terrain vehicles (see Sec. 27.42(b) of this chapter). We define loaded
as shells in gun or caps on muzzleloader. We allow firearms on the
refuge only during the refuge hunting season.
7. We require all upland game hunters to report their game
immediately after each hunt at the check station nearest the point of
take.
8. Conditions A7, A10, A11, and A13 apply.
9. We prohibit any hunter to use climbing spikes or to hunt from a
tree that contains screw-in steps, nails, screw-in umbrellas, or any
metal objects that could damage trees (see Sec. 32.2(i)).
10. We require a Tensas River National Wildlife Refuge Access
Permit for all upland game hunts. Hunters will find permits on the
front of the Public Use Regulations brochure.
C. Big Game Hunting. We allow hunting of white-tailed deer and
turkey on designated areas of the refuge subject to the following
conditions:
1. Deer archery season will begin the first Saturday in November
and will conclude on the last day of the State archery season which is
generally January 31. We require that archery hunters, including
crossbow hunters, possess proof of completion of the International
Bowhunters Safety Course. We prohibit archery hunting during the
following refuge-wide deer hunts: Youth gun hunt and modern firearms
hunts. We prohibit possession of pods, drug-tipped arrows, or other
chemical substances.
2. Deer muzzleloader season will be 3 days and occur on a Monday,
Tuesday, and Wednesday in January. We will allow in-line muzzleloaders
and magnified scopes.
3. We will conduct two 2-day quota modern firearms hunts for deer
typically in the month of December. Hunt dates and permit application
procedures will be available at Refuge Headquarters in July. We
restrict hunters using a muzzleloader during this hunt to areas where
we allow modern firearms.
4. We will conduct guided quota youth deer hunts and guided quota
physically challenged deer hunts in the Greenlea Bend area typically in
December and January. Hunt dates and permit application procedures will
be available at the Refuge Headquarters in July.
5. We will conduct a refuge-wide youth deer hunt during the State-
wide youth hunt weekend typically in November. Hunt dates will be
available at Refuge Headquarters in July. Each participating youth
must: Be age 8-15, possess proof of completion of an approved Hunter
Safety Course, and be accompanied at all times by an adult age 21 or
older. Each adult hunter may supervise only one youth.
6. Hunters may take only one deer (one buck or one doe) per day
during refuge deer hunts except during guided youth and physically
challenged hunts where the limit will be one antlerless and one
antlered deer per day.
7. We allow turkey hunting the first 16 days of the State turkey
season. We will conduct a youth turkey hunt the Saturday and Sunday
before the regular State turkey season. You may harvest two bearded
turkeys per season. We allow the use and possession of lead shot while
turkey hunting on the refuge (see Sec. 32.2(k)). We allow use of
nonmotorized bicycles on designated all-terrain vehicle trails.
Although you may hunt turkeys without displaying a solid hunter orange
cap or vest during your turkey hunt, we do recommend its use.
8. Conditions A3, A7, A9, A11, A13, and B9 apply.
9. In areas posted ``Closed Area,'' we prohibit big game hunting at
any time. ``Closed Area''(s), which we designate on the Public Use
Regulations brochure map, are closed to all hunts.
10. We allow shotguns that are equipped with a single-piece
magazine plug that allows the gun to hold no more than two shells in
the magazine and one in the chamber. We allow shotgun hunters to use
rifled slugs only when hunting deer. We prohibit hunters using or
possessing buckshot while on the refuge. We prohibit target practicing
or shooting to unload modern firearms on the refuge at any time. We
require hunters to unload and encase all guns transported in
automobiles and boats or on all-terrain vehicles (see Sec. 27.42(b) of
this chapter). We define loaded as shells in gun or caps on
muzzleloader. We allow firearms on the refuge only during the refuge
hunting season.
11. We allow muzzleloader hunters to discharge their muzzleloaders
at the end of each hunt safely into the ground at least 150 feet (45 m)
from any designated public road, maintained road, trail, fire breaks,
dwellings, or above-ground oil and gas production facilities. We define
a maintained road or trail as one which has been mowed, disked, or
plowed and one which is free of trees.
12. We prohibit deer hunters leaving deer stands unattended before
the opening day of the refuge archery season, and hunters must remove
stands by the end of the last day of the refuge archery season. Hunters
must clearly mark stands left unattended on the refuge with the name
and address of the owner of the stand. Hunters must remove portable
stands from trees daily and place freestanding stands in a nonhunting
position when unattended.
13. We require deer hunters using muzzleloaders or modern firearms
to display a solid hunter-orange cap on their head and a solid hunter-
orange vest over their outermost garment covering their chest and back.
Hunters must display the solid hunter-orange items at all times while
in the field.
14. We require muzzleloader and modern firearms hunters utilizing
ground blinds to display 400 square inches (2,600 cm2) of
hunter orange outside of the blind that is visible from all sides of
the blind. Hunters must wear orange vests and hats as their outermost
garments while inside the blind.
15. We require all deer and turkey hunters to report their game
immediately after each hunt at the check station nearest to the point
of take.
16. We prohibit baiting or the possession of bait while on the
refuge at any time. We prohibit possession of chemical baits or
attractants used as bait.
17. We require a Tensas River National Wildlife Refuge Access
Permit for all big game hunts. You will find the permits on the front
of the Public Use Regulations brochure.
* * * * *
Upper Ouachita National Wildlife Refuge
A. Migratory Game Bird Hunting. We allow hunting of waterfowl
(duck, goose, coot, gallinule, rail, snipe), woodcock, and dove on
designated areas of the refuge in accordance with State regulations
subject to the following conditions:
1. Hunters must possess and carry a signed refuge permit.
2. We allow waterfowl hunting on the west side of the Ouachita
River north of
[[Page 33209]]
RCW Road. We allow waterfowl hunting on the east side of the Ouachita
River outside the Mollicy levee and south of the crude oil pipeline
which runs through Township 22N range 4E sections 2, 3, 4 within the
levee.
3. We allow woodcock hunting west of the Ouachita River. We allow
woodcock hunting on the east side of the Ouachita River outside the
Mollicy levee and south of the crude oil pipeline which runs through
Township 22N range 4E sections 2, 3, 4 within the levee.
4. We allow dove hunting during the first 3 days of the State
season east of the Ouachita River outside the Mollicy levee and south
of the crude oil pipeline which runs through Township 22N range 4E
sections 2, 3, 4 within the levee.
5. We allow waterfowl hunting until 12 p.m. (noon) during the State
season.
6. We will hold a limited youth waterfowl lottery hunt during the
State Youth Waterfowl Hunt. Application instructions are available at
the refuge office.
7. Hunters may enter the refuge no earlier than 4 a.m.
8. We prohibit hunting within 100 feet (30 m) of the maintained
rights of ways of roads, from or across ATV trails, and from above-
ground oil, gas, or electrical transmission facilities.
9. We prohibit leaving boats, blinds, and decoys unattended.
10. We allow dogs to locate, point, and retrieve when hunting for
migratory game birds. We prohibit the use of dogs for hog hunting.
11. Youth hunters under age 16 must successfully complete a State-
approved hunter education course. While hunting, each youth must
possess and carry a card or certificate of completion. Each youth
hunter must remain within sight and normal voice contact of an adult
age 21 or older. Each adult may supervise no more than two youth
hunters.
12. We prohibit any person or group to act as a hunting guide,
outfitter, or in any other capacity that pay other individual(s), pays
or promises to pay directly or indirectly for service rendered to any
other person or persons hunting on the refuge, regardless of whether
such payment is for guiding, outfitting, lodging, or club membership.
B. Upland Game Hunting. We allow hunting of quail, squirrel,
rabbit, raccoon, beaver, coyote, and opossum on designated areas of the
refuge in accordance with State regulations subject to the following
conditions:
1. Conditions A1, A8, A9, A11, and A12 (to hunt upland game) apply.
2. We allow hunting west of the Ouachita River. We allow hunting on
the east side of the Ouachita River outside the Mollicy levee and south
of the crude oil pipeline which runs through Township 22N range 4E
sections 2,3,4 within the levee.
3. We prohibit possession of firearms larger than .22 caliber
rimfire, shotgun slugs, and buckshot.
4. We allow hunting of raccoon and opossum during the daylight
hours (legal sunrise to legal sunset) of rabbit and squirrel season. We
allow night hunting (legal sunset to legal sunrise) during December and
January, and we allow use of dogs for night hunting. We prohibit the
selling of raccoon and opossum taken on the refuge for human
consumption.
5. We allow the use of dogs to hunt squirrel and rabbit after the
last refuge Gun Deer Hunt.
6. To use horses and mules to hunt raccoon and opossum at night,
hunters must first obtain a special permit at the refuge office.
7. Hunters may enter the refuge no earlier than 4 a.m. and must
exit no later than 2 hours after legal shooting hours.
8. We allow hunting of beaver and coyote during all open refuge
hunts with weapons legal for the ongoing hunt.
C. Big Game Hunting. We allow hunting of white-tailed deer, feral
hog, and turkey on designated areas of the refuge in accordance with
State regulations subject to the following conditions:
1. Conditions A1, A8, A9, A12 (to hunt big game), and B7 apply.
2. We allow general gun deer hunting on the following days: The
first consecutive Saturday and Sunday of November; the Friday,
Saturday, and Sunday following Thanksgiving Day; and the second
Saturday and Sunday after Thanksgiving Day. We allow archery deer
hunting during the entire State season.
3. We allow deer and feral hog hunting west of the Ouachita River.
We allow deer hunting on the east side of the Ouachita River outside
the Mollicy levee and south of the crude oil pipeline which runs
through Township 22N range 4E sections 2, 3, 4 within the levee.
4. The daily bag limit is one either-sex deer. The State season
limit applies.
5. Archery hunters must possess and carry proof of completion of
the International Bowhunters' Education Program.
6. We prohibit leaving deer stands, blinds, and other equipment
unattended.
7. Deer hunters must wear hunter orange as per State deer hunting
regulations on Wildlife Management Areas.
8. We prohibit hunters placing stands or hunting from stands on
pine trees with white-painted bands/rings.
9. Youth hunters under age 16 must successfully complete a State-
approved hunter education course. While hunting, each youth must
possess and carry a card or certificate of completion. Each youth
hunter must remain within sight and normal voice contact of an adult
age 21 or older. Each adult may supervise no more than one youth
hunter.
10. We will hold a limited lottery youth turkey hunt on the
Saturday of the State youth turkey hunt weekend.
11. We prohibit possession or distribution of bait or hunting with
the aid of bait, including any grain, salt, minerals, or other feed or
nonnaturally occurring attractant on the refuge (see Sec. 32.2(h)).
12. We allow hunting of hog during all open refuge hunts with
weapons legal for the ongoing hunt.
* * * * *
4. Amend Sec. 32.39 Maryland by revising paragraphs A. and B. of
Blackwater National Wildlife Refuge to read as follows:
Sec. 32.39 Maryland.
* * * * *
Blackwater National Wildlife Refuge
A. Migratory Game Bird Hunting. We allow hunting of goose and duck
on designated areas of the refuge in accordance with State regulations
subject to the following conditions:
1. We require refuge permits for all hunters regardless of age. We
require that hunters possess a valid State hunting license, any
required stamps, and a photo identification. Permits are
nontransferable.
2. All refuge hunters must abide by the terms and conditions of the
refuge permit.
B. Upland Game Hunting. We allow hunting of eastern wild turkey on
designated areas of the refuge in accordance with State regulations
subject to the following conditions: Conditions A1 and A2 apply.
* * * * *
5. Amend Sec. 32.42 Minnesota by:
a. Revising Agassiz National Wildlife Refuge; and
b. Adding Hamden Slough National Wildlife Refuge to read as
follows:
Sec. 32.42 Minnesota.
* * * * *
Agassiz National Wildlife Refuge
A. Migratory Game Bird Hunting. We allow hunting of waterfowl on
the
[[Page 33210]]
Farmers Pool Unit area of the refuge in accordance with State
regulations subject to the following conditions:
1. We allow a youth hunt only (age 16 and under). Youth hunters age
14 and under must be accompanied by an adult age 18 or older.
2. We prohibit vehicles and hunters from entering the refuge before
5:30 a.m. They must leave the refuge each day as soon as possible after
legal hunting hours.
3. We prohibit the use of motorized boats.
4. We prohibit the construction or use of permanent blinds, stands,
or scaffolds (see Sec. 27.92 of this chapter).
5. You must remove all personal property, which includes boats,
decoys, and blinds brought onto the refuge, each day of hunting (see
Sec. Sec. 27.93 and 27.94 of this chapter).
6. We allow the use of hunting dogs, provided the dog is under the
immediate control of the hunter at all times.
7. We prohibit the use of snowmobiles and ATVs.
8. We prohibit camping.
B. Upland Game Hunting. We allow hunting of ruffed grouse and
sharp-tailed grouse on designated areas of the refuge in accordance
with State regulations subject to the following conditions:
1. We allow hunting from the opening of the State's deer firearms
season to the close of the regular State's ruffed grouse and sharp-
tailed grouse seasons.
2. You may possess only approved nontoxic shot while in the field
(see Sec. 32.2(k)).
3. We prohibit hunting in the closed areas around the
administrative buildings.
4. Conditions A2 through A8 apply.
C. Big Game Hunting. We allow hunting of white-tailed deer and
moose on designated areas of the refuge in accordance with State
regulations subject to the following conditions:
1. We are currently closed to moose hunting until the population
recovers.
2. Conditions A1, A3, A4, A5, A7, and A8 apply.
3. We allow scouting the day before the youth deer hunt and the
deer firearms hunt.
4. We open archery hunting at the start of the State's deer
firearms season and close according to the State's archery deer season.
5. We allow muzzleloader deer hunting following the State's
muzzleloader season.
6. Hunters may use portable stands. We prohibit construction or use
of permanent blinds, permanent platforms, or permanent ladders.
7. You must remove all stands and personal property from the refuge
by legal sunset of each day (see Sec. Sec. 27.93 and 27.94 of this
chapter).
8. We prohibit hunters from occupying illegally set up or
constructed ground and tree stands (see condition C2).
9. We allow the use of wheeled, nonmotorized conveyance devices
(e.g., bikes, retrieval carts) except in Wilderness Areas.
10. We prohibit vehicles and hunters from entering the refuge
during the youth deer hunt until after 6 a.m.
D. Sport Fishing. [Reserved]
* * * * *
Hamden Slough National Wildlife Refuge
A. Migratory Game Bird Hunting. We allow hunting of waterfowl on
designated areas of the refuge in accordance with State regulations
subject to the following conditions:
1. We only allow waterfowl hunting during the State's Youth
Waterfowl Day.
2. Youth waterfowl hunters must be age 15 and under.
3. We will only allow waterfowl hunting in refuge tracts within
Audubon and Riceville Townships.
4. We prohibit the use of motorized boats.
5. We prohibit the construction or use of permanent blinds, stands,
or scaffolds.
6. You must remove all personal property, which includes boats,
decoys, blinds, and blind materials (except for blinds made entirely of
marsh vegetation) brought onto the refuge, following that day's hunt
(see Sec. Sec. 27.93 and 27.94 of this chapter).
7. We allow the use of hunting dogs, provided the dog is under the
immediate control of the hunter at all times during the State-approved
hunting season.
8. We prohibit entry to hunting areas earlier than 2 hours before
legal shooting hours.
B. Upland Game Hunting. [Reserved]
C. Big Game Hunting. We allow hunting of white-tailed deer on
designated areas of the refuge in accordance with State regulations
subject to the following conditions:
1. We only allow hunting during the State's muzzleloader season
with muzzleloaders.
2. Hunters may use portable stands. We prohibit construction or use
of permanent blinds, permanent platforms, or permanent ladders.
3. Hunters must remove all stands and personal property from the
refuge at the end of each day's hunt (see Sec. Sec. 27.93 and 27.94 of
this chapter).
4. Condition A8 applies.
D. Sport Fishing. [Reserved]
* * * * *
6. Amend Sec. 32.69 Wisconsin by revising paragraph C. of
Whittlesey Creek National Wildlife Refuge to read as follows:
Sec. 32.69 Wisconsin.
* * * * *
Whittlesey Creek National Wildlife Refuge
* * * * *
C. Big Game Hunting. We allow hunting of white-tailed deer on
designated areas of the refuge in accordance with State regulations
subject to the following conditions:
1. We will allow archery deer hunting to take place on refuge lands
owned by the Service that constitute tracts greater than 20 acres (8
ha).
2. We prohibit hunting within a designated, signed area around the
Coaster Classroom and Northern Great Lakes Visitor Center boardwalk.
3. We prohibit the construction or use of permanent blinds or
platforms.
4. Hunters may use ground blinds or any elevated stands only if
they do not damage live vegetation, including trees (see Sec. 27.61 of
this chapter).
5. Hunters may construct ground blinds entirely of dead vegetation
from the refuge lands.
6. Hunters must remove all stands and blinds from the refuge at the
end of each day's hunt (see Sec. Sec. 27.93 and 27.94 of this
chapter).
7. We allow motorized vehicles only on public roads and parking
areas (see Sec. 27.31 of this chapter).
* * * * *
Dated: April 2, 2008.
David M. Vehrey,
Acting Assistant Secretary for Fish and Wildlife and Parks.
[FR Doc. E8-12193 Filed 6-10-08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310-55-P