Southeastern Lincoln County Habitat Conservation Plan, Lincoln County, NV, 74185-74187 [E8-28704]
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GRANTS.
Dated: December 1, 2008.
Keith A. Nelson,
Assistant Secretary for Administration.
[FR Doc. E8–28868 Filed 12–4–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4210–67–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
[FWS–R8–2008–N0277; 1112–0000–80221–
F2]
Southeastern Lincoln County Habitat
Conservation Plan, Lincoln County, NV
AGENCY: Fish and Wildlife Service,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice of availability and
receipt of applications.
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05DEN1
74186
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 235 / Friday, December 5, 2008 / Notices
dwashington3 on PROD1PC60 with NOTICES
SUMMARY: This notice announces the
availability of the draft Southeastern
Lincoln County Habitat Conservation
Plan (HCP), draft Implementing
Agreement (IA), and draft
Environmental Impact Statement (EIS)
for public review and comment. The
Fish and Wildlife Service (Service) is
considering the issuance of three 30year incidental take permits for two
species in response to receipt of three
applications prepared, pursuant to
section 10(a)(1)(B) of the Endangered
Species Act of 1973, as amended (Act).
The applicants are Lincoln County,
Nevada; the City of Caliente, Nevada;
and the Union Pacific Railroad. The
proposed permits would authorize
incidental take of species listed under
the Act. The permits are needed because
take of species could occur during
proposed urban development activities
and construction of associated
infrastructure; road and railroad
construction, operation, and
maintenance; flood control projects; and
agricultural practices (covered
activities). The covered activities would
occur on approximately 31,000 acres of
non-Federal property in southeastern
Lincoln County, Nevada.
DATES: Written comments must be
received by 5 p.m. on February 18,
2009.
ADDRESSES: Comments should be
addressed to Robert D. Williams, Field
Supervisor, Nevada Fish and Wildlife
Office, 4701 North Torrey Pines Drive,
Las Vegas, Nevada 89130, fax number
(702) 515–5231 (for further information
and instruction on the reviewing and
commenting process, see Public Review
and Comment section below).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jeri
Krueger, Habitat Conservation Planning
Coordinator, Nevada Fish and Wildlife
Office, 4701 North Torrey Pines Drive,
Las Vegas, Nevada 89130, or telephone
(702) 515–5230.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Availability of Documents
Individuals wishing copies of the
application, draft HCP, draft EIS, and
draft IA, should contact the Service by
telephone (see FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT). Copies of the subject
documents are also available for public
inspection during regular business
hours at the Nevada Fish and Wildlife
Office in Las Vegas (see FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT), and may be
downloaded from the Nevada Fish and
Wildlife Office Web site at: https://
www.fws.gov/nevada.
In addition, copies of all documents
are available at the following library
locations: (1) Clark County Library, 1401
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15:27 Dec 04, 2008
Jkt 217001
E. Flamingo Road, Las Vegas, Nevada
89119, (702) 507–3400; (2) Washoe
County Library, Downtown Main
Branch, 301 South Center Street, Reno,
Nevada 89501, (775) 327–8300; (3)
Mesquite Library, 121 West First North
Street, Mesquite, Nevada 89027, (702)
346–5224; (4) Alamo Branch Library,
100 N. First Street, Alamo, Nevada
89001, (775) 725–3343; (5) Lincoln
County Library, 100 Depot Avenue,
Caliente, Nevada 89008, (775) 726–
3104; and (6) Lincoln County Library,
63 Main Street, Pioche, Nevada 89043,
(775) 962–5244.
Background Information
Section 9 of the Act (16 U.S.C. 1531
et seq.) and Federal regulations prohibit
the take of fish and wildlife species
listed as endangered or threatened. Take
of federally listed fish or wildlife is
defined under section 3 of the Act as
including to ‘‘harass, harm, pursue,
hunt, shoot, wound, kill, trap, capture,
or collect, or to attempt to engage in
such conduct’’ (16 U.S.C. 1532). Harm
includes significant habitat modification
or degradation that actually kills or
injures listed wildlife by significantly
impairing essential behavioral patterns,
including breeding, feeding, and
sheltering (50 CFR 17.3(c)). Under
limited circumstances, the Service may
issue permits to authorize incidental
take of listed fish or wildlife; i.e., take
that is incidental to, and not the
purpose of, carrying out an otherwise
lawful activity. Regulations governing
incidental take permits for threatened
species and endangered species are at
50 CFR 17.32 and 17.22, respectively.
The Service has received three
incidental take permit applications for
implementation of the HCP. The
applications have been prepared and
submitted by Lincoln County, Nevada;
the City of Caliente, Nevada; and the
Union Pacific Railroad (collectively, the
applicants). The applicants have
prepared the HCP to satisfy the
application requirements for permits
issued under section 10(a)(1)(B) of the
Act.
The applicants are seeking permits for
the incidental take of desert tortoise
(Gopherus agassizii) and southwestern
willow flycatcher (Empidonax traillii
extimus) for a term of 30 years.
Incidental take of these species may
occur on approximately 31,000 acres of
habitat for the tortoise and the
flycatcher within the planning area for
the HCP (covered area). The covered
activities may result in the loss of up to
20,000 acres of desert tortoise habitat,
and up to 85 acres of southwestern
willow flycatcher habitat during the
term of the permit. The covered area
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includes the non-Federal lands on
which the covered activities would
occur, and Federal lands administered
by the Bureau of Land Management
(BLM), on which most of the mitigation
is contemplated to occur. The BLM,
acting as a participant in the HCP, will
be responsible for reviewing and if
considered appropriate, authorizing and
assisting in the implementation of
mitigation measures on BLMadministered land.
The covered area is situated in the
southeastern corner of Lincoln County,
and is approximately defined as the area
north of the Clark County line, west of
the Utah-Nevada border, south of
Township 3 South, and east of Range 62
East, Mount Diablo Meridian. The
covered area also includes
approximately 4,000 acres of land west
of Range 62 East identified for disposal
by the BLM in the vicinity of the towns
of Alamo and Hiko, and excludes
private and leased lands in the Coyote
Spring Valley. The Meadow Valley
Wash and Clover Creek are two
intermittently flowing streams that
support riparian vegetation within the
covered area. Clover Creek flows from
the Nevada/Utah border east to its
confluence with Meadow Valley Wash
at Caliente, and the Meadow Valley
Wash flows south through Caliente,
crossing the Lincoln/Clark County line,
and terminating at the confluence with
the Muddy River in Glendale, Nevada.
The majority of development activity
will be focused in three locations within
the covered area: (1) The 13,500-acre
Lincoln County Land Act (LCLA) lands
located in the extreme southeastern
corner of the covered area; (2)
approximately 4,000 acres of land
identified for disposal by the BLM in
the vicinity of the towns of Alamo and
Hiko; and (3) the 103-acre Meadow
Valley Industrial Park site located on
the eastern edge of Caliente. A per-acre
mitigation fee will be collected by
Lincoln County for disturbance of desert
tortoise habitat prior to the
commencement of construction
activities, which will be used to fund
implementation of the HCP. Other
planned activities that may result in
take of the proposed covered species
include flood control projects in the
portion of the Meadow Valley Wash that
flows through Caliente, operation and
maintenance activities conducted by
Union Pacific Railroad, and existing
agricultural practices conducted by
private landowners along the Meadow
Valley Wash and Clover Creek. The City
of Caliente and Union Pacific Railroad
will provide the funding necessary to
create additional suitable flycatcher
habitat or enhance the functional value
E:\FR\FM\05DEN1.SGM
05DEN1
dwashington3 on PROD1PC60 with NOTICES
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 235 / Friday, December 5, 2008 / Notices
of existing potentially suitable
flycatcher habitat at a ratio of 2 acres for
every one acre of native habitat
removed, or at a ratio of one acre for
every one acre of non-native habitat
removed, as a result of the covered
activities. Private landowners with
property located along these two
waterways may volunteer to participate
in the HCP by signing a Participation
Agreement provided by Lincoln County,
which would extend take authorization
under Lincoln County’s permit to the
participating landowner provided the
landowner agrees to implement the
minimization and mitigation measures
in the HCP.
In order to comply with the ESA, the
proposed HCP addresses a number of
required elements, including: Species
and habitat goals and objectives;
evaluation of the direct and indirect
effects of covered activities on covered
species; a conservation strategy; a
monitoring and adaptive management
program; descriptions of changed
circumstances and remedial measures;
identification of funding sources; and an
assessment of alternatives to take of
listed species.
The proposed conservation strategy
provides for the restoration and
enhancement of desert tortoise habitat
on land administered by the BLM
within the Mormon Mesa and Beaver
Dam Slope Critical Habitat Units. Over
30,000 acres of desert tortoise critical
habitat impacted by wildfires and other
disturbances could benefit from
restoration projects and research funded
and implemented under the HCP by
improving the functional value of desert
tortoise critical habitat above existing
conditions. The applicants are also
proposing to replace and manage in
perpetuity all suitable flycatcher habitat
lost as a result of the covered activities
at a ratio of 2 acres of native habitat for
every one acre of native habitat lost, and
at a ratio of one acre of native habitat
for every one acre of non-native habitat
lost.
The proposed HCP is intended to be
a comprehensive and multijurisdictional document, providing for
regional species conservation and
habitat planning, while allowing the
applicants to better manage anticipated
growth and development, and to
maintain the safety of roads and
railroads within the covered area. The
proposed HCP also intends to provide a
coordinated process for permitting and
mitigating the take of covered species as
an alternative to a project-by-project
approach.
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15:27 Dec 04, 2008
Jkt 217001
National Environmental Policy Act
Compliance
Proposed permit issuance triggers the
need for compliance with the National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA).
Accordingly, a NEPA document has
been prepared by the Service as the
Federal agency responsible for
compliance under NEPA. The Service is
providing notice of the availability of
the draft EIS, which evaluates the
impacts of proposed issuance of the
permit and implementation of the HCP,
as well as evaluating the impacts of a
reasonable range of alternatives.
The draft EIS analyzes two
alternatives in addition to the proposed
HCP, described above. The proposed
HCP is considered the Preferred
Alternative. Additional alternatives are
described below.
The No Action Alternative: Under the
No Action Alternative, the Service
would not issue an incidental take
permit to the applicants and the HCP
would not be implemented. Under this
scenario, private land development or
other activities on non-Federal land that
may adversely affect listed species
would require individual incidental
take permits. As such, Lincoln County
would lose the ability to plan for
coordinated, controlled urban growth,
and species conservation would be
implemented on a project-by-project
basis, rather than at a regional
landscape-scale.
Alternative A—Additional Lands for
Development: Alternative A would
increase the acreage on which the
covered activities would occur, thereby
increasing the acreage of habitat that
may be disturbed within the term of the
permit. Covered activities would remain
the same as those under the Preferred
Alternative. Alternative A would
require consideration of adding to the
permit and HCP additional federally
listed species that occur in the
Pahranagat Valley. The general
conservation strategy would remain the
same as described for the Preferred
Alternative.
Public Comments
If you wish to comment on the permit
application, draft HCP, draft EIS, or
draft IA, you may submit your
comments to the address listed in the
ADDRESSES section of this document.
Before including your address, phone
number, e-mail address, or other
personal identifying information in your
comment, you should be aware that
your entire comment—including your
personal identifying information—may
be made publicly available at any time.
While you may ask us in your comment
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74187
to withhold your personal identifying
information from public review, we
cannot guarantee that we will be able to
do so.
The Service will evaluate the
application, associated documents, and
comments submitted to them to prepare
a final EIS. A permit decision will be
made no sooner than 30 days after the
publication of the final EIS and
completion of the Record of Decision.
This notice is provided pursuant to
section 10(a) of the Act and pursuant to
implementing regulations for NEPA (40
CFR 1506.6).
Dated: November 20, 2008.
Richard E. Sayers, Jr.,
Acting Deputy Regional Director, California
and Nevada Region, Sacramento, California.
[FR Doc. E8–28704 Filed 12–4–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–55–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Indian Affairs
Shingle Springs Band of Miwok
Indians Liquor Ordinance
AGENCY: Bureau of Indian Affairs,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice.
SUMMARY: This notice publishes the
Liquor Ordinance of the Shingle Springs
Band of Miwok Indians. The Ordinance
regulates and controls the possession,
sale and consumption of liquor within
the Shingle Springs Indian Rancheria
tribal land. The tribal land is located on
trust land and this Ordinance allows for
the possession and sale of alcoholic
beverages. This Ordinance will increase
the ability of the tribal government to
control the distribution and possession
of liquor within their tribal land, and at
the same time will provide an important
source of revenue and strengthening of
the tribal government and the delivery
of tribal services.
DATES: Effective Date: This Ordinance is
effective December 5, 2008.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Fred
Doka Jr., Tribal Operations Officer,
Pacific Regional Office, 2800 Cottage
Way, Sacramento, CA 95825, Telephone
(916) 978–6067; or Elizabeth
Colliflower, Office of Tribal Services,
1849 C Street, NW., Mail Stop 4513–
MIB, Washington, DC 20240; Telephone
(202) 513–7627; Fax (202) 501–0679.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Pursuant
to the Act of August 15, 1953, Public
Law 83–277, 67 Stat. 586, 18 U.S.C.
1161, as interpreted by the Supreme
Court in Rice v. Rehner, 463 U.S. 713
(1983), the Secretary of the Interior shall
certify and publish in the Federal
E:\FR\FM\05DEN1.SGM
05DEN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 73, Number 235 (Friday, December 5, 2008)]
[Notices]
[Pages 74185-74187]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E8-28704]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
[FWS-R8-2008-N0277; 1112-0000-80221-F2]
Southeastern Lincoln County Habitat Conservation Plan, Lincoln
County, NV
AGENCY: Fish and Wildlife Service, Interior.
ACTION: Notice of availability and receipt of applications.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 74186]]
SUMMARY: This notice announces the availability of the draft
Southeastern Lincoln County Habitat Conservation Plan (HCP), draft
Implementing Agreement (IA), and draft Environmental Impact Statement
(EIS) for public review and comment. The Fish and Wildlife Service
(Service) is considering the issuance of three 30-year incidental take
permits for two species in response to receipt of three applications
prepared, pursuant to section 10(a)(1)(B) of the Endangered Species Act
of 1973, as amended (Act). The applicants are Lincoln County, Nevada;
the City of Caliente, Nevada; and the Union Pacific Railroad. The
proposed permits would authorize incidental take of species listed
under the Act. The permits are needed because take of species could
occur during proposed urban development activities and construction of
associated infrastructure; road and railroad construction, operation,
and maintenance; flood control projects; and agricultural practices
(covered activities). The covered activities would occur on
approximately 31,000 acres of non-Federal property in southeastern
Lincoln County, Nevada.
DATES: Written comments must be received by 5 p.m. on February 18,
2009.
ADDRESSES: Comments should be addressed to Robert D. Williams, Field
Supervisor, Nevada Fish and Wildlife Office, 4701 North Torrey Pines
Drive, Las Vegas, Nevada 89130, fax number (702) 515-5231 (for further
information and instruction on the reviewing and commenting process,
see Public Review and Comment section below).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jeri Krueger, Habitat Conservation
Planning Coordinator, Nevada Fish and Wildlife Office, 4701 North
Torrey Pines Drive, Las Vegas, Nevada 89130, or telephone (702) 515-
5230.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Availability of Documents
Individuals wishing copies of the application, draft HCP, draft
EIS, and draft IA, should contact the Service by telephone (see FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT). Copies of the subject documents are also
available for public inspection during regular business hours at the
Nevada Fish and Wildlife Office in Las Vegas (see FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT), and may be downloaded from the Nevada Fish and
Wildlife Office Web site at: https://www.fws.gov/nevada.
In addition, copies of all documents are available at the following
library locations: (1) Clark County Library, 1401 E. Flamingo Road, Las
Vegas, Nevada 89119, (702) 507-3400; (2) Washoe County Library,
Downtown Main Branch, 301 South Center Street, Reno, Nevada 89501,
(775) 327-8300; (3) Mesquite Library, 121 West First North Street,
Mesquite, Nevada 89027, (702) 346-5224; (4) Alamo Branch Library, 100
N. First Street, Alamo, Nevada 89001, (775) 725-3343; (5) Lincoln
County Library, 100 Depot Avenue, Caliente, Nevada 89008, (775) 726-
3104; and (6) Lincoln County Library, 63 Main Street, Pioche, Nevada
89043, (775) 962-5244.
Background Information
Section 9 of the Act (16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.) and Federal
regulations prohibit the take of fish and wildlife species listed as
endangered or threatened. Take of federally listed fish or wildlife is
defined under section 3 of the Act as including to ``harass, harm,
pursue, hunt, shoot, wound, kill, trap, capture, or collect, or to
attempt to engage in such conduct'' (16 U.S.C. 1532). Harm includes
significant habitat modification or degradation that actually kills or
injures listed wildlife by significantly impairing essential behavioral
patterns, including breeding, feeding, and sheltering (50 CFR 17.3(c)).
Under limited circumstances, the Service may issue permits to authorize
incidental take of listed fish or wildlife; i.e., take that is
incidental to, and not the purpose of, carrying out an otherwise lawful
activity. Regulations governing incidental take permits for threatened
species and endangered species are at 50 CFR 17.32 and 17.22,
respectively.
The Service has received three incidental take permit applications
for implementation of the HCP. The applications have been prepared and
submitted by Lincoln County, Nevada; the City of Caliente, Nevada; and
the Union Pacific Railroad (collectively, the applicants). The
applicants have prepared the HCP to satisfy the application
requirements for permits issued under section 10(a)(1)(B) of the Act.
The applicants are seeking permits for the incidental take of
desert tortoise (Gopherus agassizii) and southwestern willow flycatcher
(Empidonax traillii extimus) for a term of 30 years. Incidental take of
these species may occur on approximately 31,000 acres of habitat for
the tortoise and the flycatcher within the planning area for the HCP
(covered area). The covered activities may result in the loss of up to
20,000 acres of desert tortoise habitat, and up to 85 acres of
southwestern willow flycatcher habitat during the term of the permit.
The covered area includes the non-Federal lands on which the covered
activities would occur, and Federal lands administered by the Bureau of
Land Management (BLM), on which most of the mitigation is contemplated
to occur. The BLM, acting as a participant in the HCP, will be
responsible for reviewing and if considered appropriate, authorizing
and assisting in the implementation of mitigation measures on BLM-
administered land.
The covered area is situated in the southeastern corner of Lincoln
County, and is approximately defined as the area north of the Clark
County line, west of the Utah-Nevada border, south of Township 3 South,
and east of Range 62 East, Mount Diablo Meridian. The covered area also
includes approximately 4,000 acres of land west of Range 62 East
identified for disposal by the BLM in the vicinity of the towns of
Alamo and Hiko, and excludes private and leased lands in the Coyote
Spring Valley. The Meadow Valley Wash and Clover Creek are two
intermittently flowing streams that support riparian vegetation within
the covered area. Clover Creek flows from the Nevada/Utah border east
to its confluence with Meadow Valley Wash at Caliente, and the Meadow
Valley Wash flows south through Caliente, crossing the Lincoln/Clark
County line, and terminating at the confluence with the Muddy River in
Glendale, Nevada.
The majority of development activity will be focused in three
locations within the covered area: (1) The 13,500-acre Lincoln County
Land Act (LCLA) lands located in the extreme southeastern corner of the
covered area; (2) approximately 4,000 acres of land identified for
disposal by the BLM in the vicinity of the towns of Alamo and Hiko; and
(3) the 103-acre Meadow Valley Industrial Park site located on the
eastern edge of Caliente. A per-acre mitigation fee will be collected
by Lincoln County for disturbance of desert tortoise habitat prior to
the commencement of construction activities, which will be used to fund
implementation of the HCP. Other planned activities that may result in
take of the proposed covered species include flood control projects in
the portion of the Meadow Valley Wash that flows through Caliente,
operation and maintenance activities conducted by Union Pacific
Railroad, and existing agricultural practices conducted by private
landowners along the Meadow Valley Wash and Clover Creek. The City of
Caliente and Union Pacific Railroad will provide the funding necessary
to create additional suitable flycatcher habitat or enhance the
functional value
[[Page 74187]]
of existing potentially suitable flycatcher habitat at a ratio of 2
acres for every one acre of native habitat removed, or at a ratio of
one acre for every one acre of non-native habitat removed, as a result
of the covered activities. Private landowners with property located
along these two waterways may volunteer to participate in the HCP by
signing a Participation Agreement provided by Lincoln County, which
would extend take authorization under Lincoln County's permit to the
participating landowner provided the landowner agrees to implement the
minimization and mitigation measures in the HCP.
In order to comply with the ESA, the proposed HCP addresses a
number of required elements, including: Species and habitat goals and
objectives; evaluation of the direct and indirect effects of covered
activities on covered species; a conservation strategy; a monitoring
and adaptive management program; descriptions of changed circumstances
and remedial measures; identification of funding sources; and an
assessment of alternatives to take of listed species.
The proposed conservation strategy provides for the restoration and
enhancement of desert tortoise habitat on land administered by the BLM
within the Mormon Mesa and Beaver Dam Slope Critical Habitat Units.
Over 30,000 acres of desert tortoise critical habitat impacted by
wildfires and other disturbances could benefit from restoration
projects and research funded and implemented under the HCP by improving
the functional value of desert tortoise critical habitat above existing
conditions. The applicants are also proposing to replace and manage in
perpetuity all suitable flycatcher habitat lost as a result of the
covered activities at a ratio of 2 acres of native habitat for every
one acre of native habitat lost, and at a ratio of one acre of native
habitat for every one acre of non-native habitat lost.
The proposed HCP is intended to be a comprehensive and multi-
jurisdictional document, providing for regional species conservation
and habitat planning, while allowing the applicants to better manage
anticipated growth and development, and to maintain the safety of roads
and railroads within the covered area. The proposed HCP also intends to
provide a coordinated process for permitting and mitigating the take of
covered species as an alternative to a project-by-project approach.
National Environmental Policy Act Compliance
Proposed permit issuance triggers the need for compliance with the
National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA). Accordingly, a NEPA document
has been prepared by the Service as the Federal agency responsible for
compliance under NEPA. The Service is providing notice of the
availability of the draft EIS, which evaluates the impacts of proposed
issuance of the permit and implementation of the HCP, as well as
evaluating the impacts of a reasonable range of alternatives.
The draft EIS analyzes two alternatives in addition to the proposed
HCP, described above. The proposed HCP is considered the Preferred
Alternative. Additional alternatives are described below.
The No Action Alternative: Under the No Action Alternative, the
Service would not issue an incidental take permit to the applicants and
the HCP would not be implemented. Under this scenario, private land
development or other activities on non-Federal land that may adversely
affect listed species would require individual incidental take permits.
As such, Lincoln County would lose the ability to plan for coordinated,
controlled urban growth, and species conservation would be implemented
on a project-by-project basis, rather than at a regional landscape-
scale.
Alternative A--Additional Lands for Development: Alternative A
would increase the acreage on which the covered activities would occur,
thereby increasing the acreage of habitat that may be disturbed within
the term of the permit. Covered activities would remain the same as
those under the Preferred Alternative. Alternative A would require
consideration of adding to the permit and HCP additional federally
listed species that occur in the Pahranagat Valley. The general
conservation strategy would remain the same as described for the
Preferred Alternative.
Public Comments
If you wish to comment on the permit application, draft HCP, draft
EIS, or draft IA, you may submit your comments to the address listed in
the ADDRESSES section of this document. Before including your address,
phone number, e-mail address, or other personal identifying information
in your comment, you should be aware that your entire comment--
including your personal identifying information--may be made publicly
available at any time. While you may ask us in your comment to withhold
your personal identifying information from public review, we cannot
guarantee that we will be able to do so.
The Service will evaluate the application, associated documents,
and comments submitted to them to prepare a final EIS. A permit
decision will be made no sooner than 30 days after the publication of
the final EIS and completion of the Record of Decision.
This notice is provided pursuant to section 10(a) of the Act and
pursuant to implementing regulations for NEPA (40 CFR 1506.6).
Dated: November 20, 2008.
Richard E. Sayers, Jr.,
Acting Deputy Regional Director, California and Nevada Region,
Sacramento, California.
[FR Doc. E8-28704 Filed 12-4-08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310-55-P