Environmental Impact Statement/General Management Plan; Kalaupapa National Historical Park, Kalawao County, Molokai, HI; Notice of Intent To Prepare an Environmental Impact Statement, 10611-10612 [E9-5146]
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Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 46 / Wednesday, March 11, 2009 / Notices
Depending on the number of persons
wishing to comment and time available,
the time for individual oral comments
may be limited. Individuals who plan to
attend and need special assistance, such
as sign language interpretation, or other
reasonable accommodations, should
contact the BLM as provided below. The
Council will hear updates to Sage
Grouse Conservation studies, recreation
fees and resource management planning
issues and ongoing efforts.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Lonny Bagley, Field Manager, North
Dakota Field Office, 99 23rd Avenue
West, Dickinson, North Dakota,
701.227.7700, or Marian Atkins, Field
Manager, South Dakota Field Office, 310
Roundup St., Belle Fourche, South
Dakota, 605.892.7000.
Dated: March 4, 2009.
Lonny R. Bagley,
Field Manager.
[FR Doc. E9–5151 Filed 3–10–09; 8:45 am]
community support was expressed for
concepts which were developed as the
agency-preferred alternative presented
in the Draft EIS. Due to the minimal
nature of public response to the Draft
EIS, an abbreviated format was utilized
in preparing the Final EIS. As
documented in the Draft and Final EIS,
the selected alternative was deemed to
be the ‘‘environmentally preferred’’
course of action.
Copies: Interested parties desiring to
review the Record of Decision may
obtain a copy by contacting the
Superintendent, Ala Kahakai National
Historic Trail, 73–4786 Kanalani St.,
#14, Kailua-Kona, HI 96740 or via
telephone request at (808) 326–6012.
Dated: January 29, 2009.
Cynthia L. Ip,
Acting Regional Director, Pacific West Region.
[FR Doc. E9–5145 Filed 3–10–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–70–P
BILLING CODE 4310–$$–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
National Park Service
National Park Service
Environmental Impact Statement/
General Management Plan; Kalaupapa
National Historical Park, Kalawao
County, Molokai, HI; Notice of Intent To
Prepare an Environmental Impact
Statement
Final Environmental Impact Statement/
Comprehensive Management Plan: Ala
Kahakai National Historic Trail, Hawaii
County, HI; Notice of Approval of
Record of Decision
Pursuant to 102(2)(C) of the
National Environmental Policy Act of
1969 (Pub. L. 91–190, as amended) and
the regulations promulgated by the
Council on Environmental Quality (40
CFR 1505.2), the Department of the
Interior, National Park Service (NPS)
has prepared and approved a Record of
Decision for the Final Environmental
Impact Statement for the
Comprehensive Management Plan for
the Ala Kahakai National Historic Trail.
The requisite no-action ‘‘wait period’’
was initiated November 7, 2008, with
the Environmental Protection Agency’s
Federal Register notification of the
filing of the Final EIS.
Decision: As soon as practical the NPS
will begin to implement an Ahupua’a
trail system (described and analyzed as
the agency-preferred Alternative C in
the Final EIS, and which includes no
substantive changes from the course of
action as presented in the Draft EIS).
The full range of foreseeable
environmental consequences was
assessed, and appropriate mitigation
measures are included in the approved
plan. Both a No Action alternative and
an additional ‘‘action’’ alternative were
identified and analyzed. During an
extended scoping period, strong
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with NOTICES
SUMMARY:
VerDate Nov<24>2008
17:01 Mar 10, 2009
Jkt 217001
SUMMARY: In accord with section
102(2)(c) of the National Environmental
Policy Act of 1969 (42 U.S.C. 4321, et
seq.), the National Park Service is
undertaking a conservation planning
and environmental impact analysis
process for developing a General
Management Plan (GMP) for Kalaupapa
National Historical Park, Hawaii. An
Environmental Impact Statement (EIS)
will be prepared concurrently with the
GMP. The GMP is intended to set forth
the basic management philosophy for
this unit of the National Park System
and provide the strategies for addressing
issues and achieving identified
management objectives. Thus, the GMP
serves as a ‘‘blueprint’’ to guide
management of natural and cultural
resources and visitor use during the
next 15–20 years.
Consistent with NPS Planning
Program Standards, the updated GMP
will: (1) Describe the National Historical
Park’s purpose, significance, and
primary interpretive themes; (2) identify
the fundamental resources and values of
the park, its other important resources
and values, and describe the condition
of these resources; (3) describe desired
conditions for cultural and natural
resources and visitor experiences
throughout the park; (4) develop
PO 00000
Frm 00084
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
10611
management zoning to support these
desired conditions; (5) develop
alternative applications of these
management zones to the Park’s
landscape (i.e., zoning alternatives); (6)
address user capacity; (7) analyze
potential boundary modifications; (8)
ensure that management
recommendations are developed in
consultation with interested partners
and the public and adopted by NPS
leadership after an adequate analysis of
the benefits, environmental impacts,
and economic costs of alternative
courses of action; (9) develop cost
estimates implementing each of the
alternatives; and (10) identify and
prioritize subsequent detailed studies,
plans and actions that may be needed to
implement the updated GMP.
Scoping Process: The park will
undertake extensive scoping outreach
efforts in order to elicit early public
comment regarding issues and concerns,
the nature and extent of potential
environmental impacts (and as
appropriate, mitigation measures), and
alternatives which should be addressed
in the GMP. Through the outreach
activities planned in the scoping phase,
the NPS welcomes information and
suggestions from the public regarding
resource protection, visitor use, and
land management. This notice formally
initiates the public scoping comment
phase for the EIS process. All scoping
comments must be postmarked or
transmitted not later than July 15, 2009,
and should be addressed to: General
Management Plan, Attn: Steve Prokop,
Superintendent, Kalaupapa National
Historical Park, P.O. Box 2222,
Kalaupapa, HI 96742 (or may also be
transmitted electronically via https://
parkplanning.nps.gov/kala). Before
including your address, phone number,
e-mail address, or other personal
identifying information in your
comment, you should be aware that
your entire comment—including your
personal identifying information—may
be made publicly available at any time.
While you can ask us in your comment
to withhold your personal identifying
information from public review, we
cannot guarantee that we will be able to
do so.
At this time, it is expected that public
workshops will take place on Molokai,
Oahu, and Maui, and possibly Hawaii
and Kauai in late April and early May
2009. Detailed information regarding
these meetings will be posted on the
GMP Web site (noted above) and
announced through local and regional
press media. All attendees will be given
the opportunity to ask questions and
provide comments to the planning team.
The GMP Web site will provide the
E:\FR\FM\11MRN1.SGM
11MRN1
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with NOTICES
10612
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 46 / Wednesday, March 11, 2009 / Notices
most up-to-date information regarding
the project, including project
description, planning process updates,
meeting notices, reports and documents,
and useful links associated with the
project.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Kalaupapa
National Historical Park was established
as a unit of the National Park System on
December 22, 1980. The park is oriented
toward patient privacy and maintaining
the patients’ lifestyles, and the patients
are guaranteed they may remain at
Kalaupapa as long as they wish. These
park purposes will continue for as long
as there is a resident Hansen’s disease
patient community at Kalaupapa. The
park purpose also includes more
‘‘conventional’’ park purposes: to
preserve and interpret the Kalaupapa
Settlement for the education and
inspiration of present and future
generations; to research, preserve and
maintain the historic structures and
character of the community, as well as
cultural values, Native Hawaiian
remnants and natural features; and to
provide limited visitation by the general
public.
Federally owned land at Kalaupapa
NHP includes a lighthouse, 23 acres
surrounding it, and 7 associated
structures. The remainder of the park
land is currently in non-Federal
ownership, managed under a lease and
a series of cooperative agreements
mandated by legislation. The NPS
currently has a fifty year lease
agreement (with 35 years remaining) for
the approximately 1300 acres of the
Kalaupapa Settlement owned by the
Department of Hawaiian Home Lands
(DHHL). The remainder of the land is
owned by the State of Hawaii. Formal
20-year cooperative agreements for
management have been signed with the
State of Hawaii Departments of Health
(DOH), Transportation (DOT), and Land
and Natural Resources (DLNR); the
Roman Catholic Church; and the United
Church of Christ. These mandated
agreements allow for preservation of
critical resources, but do not provide
long-term rights and interests for the
NPS. Fewer than twenty-five Hansen’s
disease patients still reside at
Kalaupapa, either in their own homes or
at Kalaupapa’s hospital/care-home.
Most of these patients are elderly and in
poor health (youngest is presently in his
late sixties). Thus, a very critical need
is to engage the patients in dialog about
the future that they envision when there
no longer is a patient community
residing in the park. Crafting this longrange future planning while the patients
are yet able to participate and convey
their ideas and vision of how they want
VerDate Nov<24>2008
17:01 Mar 10, 2009
Jkt 217001
their story told in the future is a key
element of the overall process.
The current ‘‘Statement for
Management’’ for Kalaupapa NHP was
approved in August 1987. This
document provides the primary
guidance for management of the
resources, operations and maintenance
of the park. It was preceded by the
‘‘Proposal for the Establishment of
Kalaupapa National Historical Preserve’’
(April 1980) which was labeled as the
‘‘General Management Plan’’ in
December 1980. In addition, an
approved 1984 Resource Management
Plan which provided then-available
resource management direction needs to
be updated. The legislation establishing
the park specifically directs a reevaluation of park management: ‘‘At
such time when there is no longer a
resident patient community at
Kalaupapa, the Secretary shall
reevaluate the policies governing the
management, administration, and public
use of the park in order to identify any
changes deemed to be appropriate.’’
(Pub. L. 95–565, section 109). This is the
time to begin that process. Kalaupapa
NHP needs guidance for a dramatic and
fundamental change in park
management that will occur in the near
future. As long as Hansen’s disease
patients remain at Kalaupapa, park
operations are subservient to services
and health care for the patients, patient
privacy, and maintaining patients’
lifestyles. The State Department of
Health has substantial control over
activities in Kalaupapa. Visitation is
restricted to 100 people per day, no
children are allowed, and the law gives
patients the right of first refusal to
provide visitor services. Once
Kalaupapa is no longer a home and safe
haven for the rapidly declining
Hansen’s disease population, the
fundamental management direction of
the park will change, and the NPS needs
to be in a position to influence these
changes.
A GMP is needed to establish the
vision for what the park will be like
when there no longer are patients
residing there. The GMP will help the
NPS set the agenda for discussions,
negotiations and collaboration with
Kalaupapa’s land owners and managers,
funding agencies, local Hansen’s disease
residents and other partners to ensure
the long term protection of important
resources at Kalaupapa.
Decision Process: Following the
scoping phase and consideration of
public concerns and other agency
comments, a Draft EIS for the GMP will
be prepared and released for public
review. Availability of the forthcoming
Draft EIS for public review and
PO 00000
Frm 00085
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
comment will be similarly announced
through the Federal Register. Following
due consideration of all agency and
public comment, a Final EIS will be
prepared. As a delegated EIS, the official
responsible for the final decision on the
proposed plan is the Regional Director,
Pacific West Region, National Park
Service. Subsequently, the official
responsible for implementation of the
approved plan is the Superintendent,
Kalaupapa National Historical Park. It is
anticipated that the final plan will be
available in 2013.
Dated: January 29, 2009.
Cynthia L. Ip,
Acting Regional Director.
[FR Doc. E9–5146 Filed 3–10–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–70–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
National Park Service
Final Environmental Impact Statement;
Wetland and Creek Restoration at Big
Lagoon Golden Gate National
Recreation Area; Marin County,
California; Notice of Approval of
Record of Decision
SUMMARY: Pursuant to 102(2)(C) of the
National Environmental Policy Act of
1969 (Pub. L. 91–190, as amended) and
the regulations promulgated by the
Council on Environmental Quality (40
CFR1505.2), the Department of the
Interior, National Park Service has
prepared and approved a Record of
Decision for the Final Environmental
Impact Statement (Final EIS) for
Wetland and Creek Restoration at Big
Lagoon, Golden Gate National
Recreation Area. The requisite no-action
‘‘wait period’’ was initiated December
21, 2007, with the Environmental
Protection Agency’s Federal Register
notification of the filing of the Final EIS.
Decision: As soon as practical Golden
Gate National Recreation Area, in
cooperation with the County of Marin,
will begin to implement restoration
strategies and park and area
improvements identified and analyzed
as the Preferred Alternative presented in
the Final EIS (with minor modifications
from the course of action as presented
in the EIS, based upon final
consultations with partner agencies).
The full range of foreseeable
environmental consequences was
assessed, and appropriate mitigation
measures identified. Both a No Action
alternative and multiple ‘‘action’’
alternatives were identified and
analyzed (three restoration alternatives,
six public access alternatives, four
bridge alternatives, and five fill disposal
E:\FR\FM\11MRN1.SGM
11MRN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 74, Number 46 (Wednesday, March 11, 2009)]
[Notices]
[Pages 10611-10612]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E9-5146]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
National Park Service
Environmental Impact Statement/General Management Plan; Kalaupapa
National Historical Park, Kalawao County, Molokai, HI; Notice of Intent
To Prepare an Environmental Impact Statement
SUMMARY: In accord with section 102(2)(c) of the National Environmental
Policy Act of 1969 (42 U.S.C. 4321, et seq.), the National Park Service
is undertaking a conservation planning and environmental impact
analysis process for developing a General Management Plan (GMP) for
Kalaupapa National Historical Park, Hawaii. An Environmental Impact
Statement (EIS) will be prepared concurrently with the GMP. The GMP is
intended to set forth the basic management philosophy for this unit of
the National Park System and provide the strategies for addressing
issues and achieving identified management objectives. Thus, the GMP
serves as a ``blueprint'' to guide management of natural and cultural
resources and visitor use during the next 15-20 years.
Consistent with NPS Planning Program Standards, the updated GMP
will: (1) Describe the National Historical Park's purpose,
significance, and primary interpretive themes; (2) identify the
fundamental resources and values of the park, its other important
resources and values, and describe the condition of these resources;
(3) describe desired conditions for cultural and natural resources and
visitor experiences throughout the park; (4) develop management zoning
to support these desired conditions; (5) develop alternative
applications of these management zones to the Park's landscape (i.e.,
zoning alternatives); (6) address user capacity; (7) analyze potential
boundary modifications; (8) ensure that management recommendations are
developed in consultation with interested partners and the public and
adopted by NPS leadership after an adequate analysis of the benefits,
environmental impacts, and economic costs of alternative courses of
action; (9) develop cost estimates implementing each of the
alternatives; and (10) identify and prioritize subsequent detailed
studies, plans and actions that may be needed to implement the updated
GMP.
Scoping Process: The park will undertake extensive scoping outreach
efforts in order to elicit early public comment regarding issues and
concerns, the nature and extent of potential environmental impacts (and
as appropriate, mitigation measures), and alternatives which should be
addressed in the GMP. Through the outreach activities planned in the
scoping phase, the NPS welcomes information and suggestions from the
public regarding resource protection, visitor use, and land management.
This notice formally initiates the public scoping comment phase for the
EIS process. All scoping comments must be postmarked or transmitted not
later than July 15, 2009, and should be addressed to: General
Management Plan, Attn: Steve Prokop, Superintendent, Kalaupapa National
Historical Park, P.O. Box 2222, Kalaupapa, HI 96742 (or may also be
transmitted electronically via https://parkplanning.nps.gov/kala).
Before including your address, phone number, e-mail address, or other
personal identifying information in your comment, you should be aware
that your entire comment--including your personal identifying
information--may be made publicly available at any time. While you can
ask us in your comment to withhold your personal identifying
information from public review, we cannot guarantee that we will be
able to do so.
At this time, it is expected that public workshops will take place
on Molokai, Oahu, and Maui, and possibly Hawaii and Kauai in late April
and early May 2009. Detailed information regarding these meetings will
be posted on the GMP Web site (noted above) and announced through local
and regional press media. All attendees will be given the opportunity
to ask questions and provide comments to the planning team. The GMP Web
site will provide the
[[Page 10612]]
most up-to-date information regarding the project, including project
description, planning process updates, meeting notices, reports and
documents, and useful links associated with the project.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Kalaupapa National Historical Park was
established as a unit of the National Park System on December 22, 1980.
The park is oriented toward patient privacy and maintaining the
patients' lifestyles, and the patients are guaranteed they may remain
at Kalaupapa as long as they wish. These park purposes will continue
for as long as there is a resident Hansen's disease patient community
at Kalaupapa. The park purpose also includes more ``conventional'' park
purposes: to preserve and interpret the Kalaupapa Settlement for the
education and inspiration of present and future generations; to
research, preserve and maintain the historic structures and character
of the community, as well as cultural values, Native Hawaiian remnants
and natural features; and to provide limited visitation by the general
public.
Federally owned land at Kalaupapa NHP includes a lighthouse, 23
acres surrounding it, and 7 associated structures. The remainder of the
park land is currently in non-Federal ownership, managed under a lease
and a series of cooperative agreements mandated by legislation. The NPS
currently has a fifty year lease agreement (with 35 years remaining)
for the approximately 1300 acres of the Kalaupapa Settlement owned by
the Department of Hawaiian Home Lands (DHHL). The remainder of the land
is owned by the State of Hawaii. Formal 20-year cooperative agreements
for management have been signed with the State of Hawaii Departments of
Health (DOH), Transportation (DOT), and Land and Natural Resources
(DLNR); the Roman Catholic Church; and the United Church of Christ.
These mandated agreements allow for preservation of critical resources,
but do not provide long-term rights and interests for the NPS. Fewer
than twenty-five Hansen's disease patients still reside at Kalaupapa,
either in their own homes or at Kalaupapa's hospital/care-home. Most of
these patients are elderly and in poor health (youngest is presently in
his late sixties). Thus, a very critical need is to engage the patients
in dialog about the future that they envision when there no longer is a
patient community residing in the park. Crafting this long-range future
planning while the patients are yet able to participate and convey
their ideas and vision of how they want their story told in the future
is a key element of the overall process.
The current ``Statement for Management'' for Kalaupapa NHP was
approved in August 1987. This document provides the primary guidance
for management of the resources, operations and maintenance of the
park. It was preceded by the ``Proposal for the Establishment of
Kalaupapa National Historical Preserve'' (April 1980) which was labeled
as the ``General Management Plan'' in December 1980. In addition, an
approved 1984 Resource Management Plan which provided then-available
resource management direction needs to be updated. The legislation
establishing the park specifically directs a re-evaluation of park
management: ``At such time when there is no longer a resident patient
community at Kalaupapa, the Secretary shall reevaluate the policies
governing the management, administration, and public use of the park in
order to identify any changes deemed to be appropriate.'' (Pub. L. 95-
565, section 109). This is the time to begin that process. Kalaupapa
NHP needs guidance for a dramatic and fundamental change in park
management that will occur in the near future. As long as Hansen's
disease patients remain at Kalaupapa, park operations are subservient
to services and health care for the patients, patient privacy, and
maintaining patients' lifestyles. The State Department of Health has
substantial control over activities in Kalaupapa. Visitation is
restricted to 100 people per day, no children are allowed, and the law
gives patients the right of first refusal to provide visitor services.
Once Kalaupapa is no longer a home and safe haven for the rapidly
declining Hansen's disease population, the fundamental management
direction of the park will change, and the NPS needs to be in a
position to influence these changes.
A GMP is needed to establish the vision for what the park will be
like when there no longer are patients residing there. The GMP will
help the NPS set the agenda for discussions, negotiations and
collaboration with Kalaupapa's land owners and managers, funding
agencies, local Hansen's disease residents and other partners to ensure
the long term protection of important resources at Kalaupapa.
Decision Process: Following the scoping phase and consideration of
public concerns and other agency comments, a Draft EIS for the GMP will
be prepared and released for public review. Availability of the
forthcoming Draft EIS for public review and comment will be similarly
announced through the Federal Register. Following due consideration of
all agency and public comment, a Final EIS will be prepared. As a
delegated EIS, the official responsible for the final decision on the
proposed plan is the Regional Director, Pacific West Region, National
Park Service. Subsequently, the official responsible for implementation
of the approved plan is the Superintendent, Kalaupapa National
Historical Park. It is anticipated that the final plan will be
available in 2013.
Dated: January 29, 2009.
Cynthia L. Ip,
Acting Regional Director.
[FR Doc. E9-5146 Filed 3-10-09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310-70-P