Klickitat Hatchery Program, 34740-34741 [E9-17034]
Download as PDF
34740
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 136 / Friday, July 17, 2009 / Notices
the formal record of the Commission
proceeding on the project.
Kimberly D. Bose,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. E9–16973 Filed 7–16–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6717–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Bonneville Power Administration
Klickitat Hatchery Program
mstockstill on DSKH9S0YB1PROD with NOTICES
AGENCY: Bonneville Power
Administration (BPA), Department of
Energy (DOE).
ACTION: Notice of intent to prepare an
Environmental Impact Statement (EIS)
and a floodplain and wetland
assessment.
SUMMARY: BPA intends to prepare an EIS
in accordance with the National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) on
funding proposed changes to the
existing salmon and steelhead hatchery
program in the Klickitat subbasin in
Klickitat and Yakima counties,
Washington. As mitigation under the
Pacific Northwest Electric Power
Planning and Conservation Act, BPA
proposes to upgrade and improve the
Klickitat Hatchery, a Mitchell Act
artificial production facility built and
funded by the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration Fisheries
(NOAA Fisheries), located seven miles
east of Glenwood, Washington, at river
mile 42 of the Klickitat River. The
proposed changes would also involve
construction, of a new Wahkiacus
Hatchery and Acclimation Facility
located at river mile 17 on the Klickitat
River in Wahkiacus, Washington, and a
steelhead acclimation facility at
McCreedy Creek at river mile 70. With
this Notice of Intent, BPA is initiating
the public scoping process for the EIS.
BPA is requesting comments about
potential environmental impacts that it
should consider as it prepares the EIS
for the proposed changes to the
program, as well as comments on
alternatives that meet fish production
objectives for the Klickitat Hatchery
Program. Further details are provided in
the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section
below.
In accordance with DOE regulations
for compliance with floodplain and
wetlands environmental review
requirements, BPA will prepare a
floodplain and wetlands assessment to
avoid or minimize potential harm to or
within any affected floodplains and
wetlands. The assessment will be
included in the EIS.
VerDate Nov<24>2008
19:20 Jul 16, 2009
Jkt 217001
DATES: Written scoping comments are
due to the address below no later than
August 18th, 2009. Comments may also
be made at the EIS scoping meeting to
be held on August 4th, 2009, from 6
p.m. to 8:30 p.m. at the Lyle Community
Center.
ADDRESSES: Send letters with comments
and suggestions on the proposed scope
of the Draft EIS, and requests to be
placed on the project mailing list, to
Bonneville Power Administration,
Public Affairs Office—DKE–7, P.O. Box
14428, Portland, OR 97293–4428, or by
fax to 503 230–3285. You also may call
BPA’s toll free comment line at 800
622–4519 and leave a message (please
include the name of this project); or
submit comments online at https://
www.bpa.gov/comment. BPA will post
all comment letters in their entirety on
BPA’s Web site at https://www.bpa.gov/
comment.
On Tuesday August 4th, 2009, an
open-house scoping meeting will be
held from 6 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. at the Lyle
Community Center, Lyle, Washington.
At this informal meeting, we will
provide maps and other information
about the project and have members of
the project team available to answer
questions and accept oral and written
comments. You may stop by anytime
during the open house.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Rosy Mazaika, Environmental
Coordinator, Bonneville Power
Administration—KEC–4, P.O. Box 3621,
Portland, Oregon 97208–3621; toll-free
telephone 1–800–282–3713; direct
telephone 503–230–5869; or e-mail
rxmazaika@bpa.gov. You may also
contact Patricia Smith, Project Manager,
Bonneville Power Administration—
KEWL–4, P.O. Box 3621, Portland,
Oregon 97208–3621; toll-free telephone
1–800–282–3713; direct telephone 503–
230–7349; or e-mail prsmith@bpa.gov.
Additional information can be found at
BPA’s Web site: https://
www.efw.bpa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Fisheries
programs in the Klickitat River subbasin
are co-managed by the Yakama Nation
and the Washington Department of Fish
and Wildlife (WDFW), and include the
Yakima/Klickitat Fisheries Project
(YKFP) funded by BPA. The YKFP uses
state-of-the-art artificial propagation
methods designed to re-establish,
supplement, or increase natural
production and harvest opportunities of
anadromous salmonids while
maintaining the long-term fitness of
target species and minimizing ecological
and genetic impacts on non-target
species. The YKFP has been developed
to:
PO 00000
Frm 00031
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
• Enhance existing stocks of
anadromous fish in the Yakima and
Klickitat river basins, while maintaining
genetic and ecological resources; and
• Apply the knowledge gained
through supplementation throughout
the Columbia River Basin.
The YKFP also pursues the protection
and restoration of habitat important to
health and restoration of anadromous
fish stocks.
Under the YKFP, in 2008, the Yakama
Nation revised the Klickitat River
Anadromous Fisheries Master Plan 1 in
response to comments from the
Northwest Power and Conservation
Council (NPCC) and its Independent
Scientific Review Panel.2 Master plans
are submitted as step one of the NPCC’s
three-step process 3 for the review of
artificial propagation project proposals
for funding by the BPA. Included in the
plan are details and the scientific basis
for proposed production goals, facilities,
monitoring and evaluation, and habitat
improvements necessary to manage
endemic spring Chinook and steelhead
and hatchery coho and fall Chinook in
the Klickitat subbasin. Because
1. The facilities and habitat work are
proposed to benefit more than one target
species,
2. Artificial production work will
require BPA and NOAA Fisheries to
coordinate efforts at the proposed
various facilities, and
3. Proposed changes to production
practices for single species could affect
other target species,
the Yakama Nation developed the
Klickitat Subbasin Anadromous Fishery
Hatchery Plan (‘‘Master Plan’’) to
address all species, as well as Pacific
lamprey.
According to the master plan
prepared by the Yakama Nation and
WDFW, the existing Klickitat Hatchery
facilities, completed in 1954, need
repair to meet current building codes
and up-to-date artificial production
guidelines. The Tribe operates the
Klickitat Hatchery and NOAA Fisheries
provides annual operation and
maintenance funding using
appropriations to the Mitchell Act
program. Under the 2008 Columbia
Basin Fish Accords Memorandum of
Agreement between the three Treaty
Tribes and Federal Columbia River
Power System Action Agencies (The
1 https://www.nwcouncil.org/dropbox/YKFP_0331-08%20Draft%20Master%20Plan.pdf.
2 https://www.nwppc.org/library/isrp/isrp20086.pdf.
3 Northwest Power and Conservation Council,
Three-Step Review Process (Nov. 2006) https://
www.nwcouncil.org/Library/2006/2006-21.pdf.
E:\FR\FM\17JYN1.SGM
17JYN1
mstockstill on DSKH9S0YB1PROD with NOTICES
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 136 / Friday, July 17, 2009 / Notices
Accords) 4 the Yakama Nation will
actively seek congressional
appropriations during fiscal years 2010
and 2011 for additional Mitchell Act
funding for the new Wahkiacus facility.
Under the Accords, BPA made funding
available, pending satisfactory results
from its environmental compliance
efforts, to fund hatchery facility
improvements to increase production in
the Klickitat Basin as described in
alternative one below.
The master plan was developed in
concert with salmonid production and
harvest agreements pursuant to U.S. v.
Oregon, which is the primary forum for
decisions related to salmon and
steelhead fisheries management for the
Columbia River Basin. U.S. v. Oregon is
landmark litigation over Indian treaty
fishing rights. The Federal district court
that initially decided the case has
retained continuing jurisdiction to
assure the development of harvest and
production plans follow the court’s
decisions. Through the on-going U.S. v.
Oregon process, the parties develop and
update the Columbia River Fish
Management Plan which addresses
management of Chinook, coho, and
steelhead in the Klickitat basin,
including hatchery production at the
Klickitat Hatchery. Current programs
focus on harvest augmentation for coho
and fall Chinook and on
supplementation for spring Chinook and
summer steelhead.
The proposed Yakama NationKlickitat Hatchery Program EIS would
respond to these master plan objectives.
BPA, therefore, will prepare an EIS
under NEPA to assist the agency as it
decides whether to fund the proposed
changes to the existing salmon and
steelhead hatchery program in the
Klickitat subbasin and, if a decision is
made to fund the changes, which
alternative to meet the master plan
objectives should be chosen.
Alternatives Proposed for
Consideration. BPA will consider three
action alternatives to meet master plan
objectives for salmon and steelhead in
the Klickitat Basin. One alternative, the
Master Plan, would involve the fisheries
managers increasing the production of
Klickitat spring Chinook and steelhead
at the existing Klickitat Hatchery and
transferring artificial production of coho
and fall Chinook to a new hatchery
facility at Wahkiacus. This would free
up water and space at the Klickitat
Hatchery, ensuring optimal rearing
densities for spring Chinook and
summer steelhead at that facility.
4 https://www.salmonrecovery.gov/
Biological_opinions/FCRPS/2008_biop/docs/3-tribeAA-MOA-Final.pdf.
VerDate Nov<24>2008
19:20 Jul 16, 2009
Jkt 217001
Transferring coho and fall Chinook
production downstream would
minimize the impact of these species on
the spawning and rearing of wild spring
Chinook and steelhead by reducing
species interactions and competition for
habitat in the 26.5-mile reach between
Wahkiacus and Klickitat. A second
alternative would evaluate meeting the
same production objectives but at the
Klickitat Hatchery alone. A third
alternative would examine a phased
approach to the proposed production
changes, with a partial build-out at the
Wahkiacus facility. The current
Wahkiacus facility design provides for
acclimation of up to 1,000,000 coho presmolts and rearing and release of up to
2,000,000 fall Chinook. The partial
build-out would consider a phased
approach for accomplishing production
objectives, with the associated phasing
of the completion of project facilities.
BPA will also consider a No-Action
Alternative. Under the No-Action
Alternative, production activities would
continue as they do currently. Other
alternatives may be identified through
the scoping process.
BPA will be the lead agency for
preparation of the EIS. BPA will
formally invite the Yakama Nation,
WDFW, NOAA Fisheries, Klickitat
County, and Washington Department of
Ecology to be cooperating agencies for
the proposed Yakama Nation-Klickitat
Hatchery Program EIS. Other potential
cooperating agencies may be identified
as the proposed project proceeds
through the NEPA process. BPA will
also coordinate with NOAA Fisheries
which is preparing a programmatic EIS
on the Mitchell Act hatchery facilities it
funds throughout the Columbia River
Basin.5
Public Participation and
Identification of Environmental Issues.
The potential environmental issues
identified for the project are anticipated
to include land use, socioeconomic
concerns, cultural resources, visual
resources, sensitive plants and animals,
fisheries, soil erosion, wetlands,
floodplains, water quality, water
quantity, wild and scenic rivers, and
recreation resources. BPA has
established a 45-day scoping period
during which tribes, affected
landowners, concerned citizens, special
interest groups, local governments,
Federal agencies, and any other
interested parties are invited to
comment on the scope of the proposed
EIS. Scoping will help BPA ensure that
a full range of issues related to this
proposal is addressed in the EIS, and
5 https://www.nwr.noaa.gov/Salmon-HarvestHatcheries/Hatcheries/Mitchell-Act-EIS.cfm.
PO 00000
Frm 00032
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
34741
also will identify significant or
potentially significant impacts that may
result from the proposed project. When
completed, the Draft EIS will be
circulated for review and comment, and
BPA will hold at least one public
meeting to hear comments. The Draft
EIS is expected to be published in fall
2010. BPA will consider and respond to
comments received on the Draft EIS in
the Final EIS. The Final EIS is expected
to be published in spring 2011. BPA’s
decision will be documented in a
Record of Decision that will follow the
Final EIS.
Issued in Portland, Oregon, on July 10,
2009.
Stephen J. Wright,
Administrator and Chief Executive Officer.
[FR Doc. E9–17034 Filed 7–16–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission
[Project No.: 2660–024]
Domtar Maine Corporation; Notice of
Intent To Prepare an Environmental
Assessment and Notice of Scoping
Meetings and Site Visit and Soliciting
Scoping Comments
July 10, 2009.
Take notice that the following
hydroelectric application has been filed
with the Commission and is available
for public inspection.
a. Type of Application: New License.
b. Project No.: 2660–024.
c. Date Filed: March 19, 2009.
d. Applicant: Domtar Maine
Corporation.
e. Name of Project: Forest City Project.
f. Location: On Forest City Stream, a
tributary of the St. Croix River in
Washington and Aroostock Counties,
Maine and Canada.
g. Filed Pursuant to: Federal Power
Act 16 U.S.C. 791 (a)–825(r).
h. Applicant Contact: Mr. Scott Beal,
Domtar Maine Corporation, 144 Main
Street, Baileyville, Maine 04694 (207)
427–4004.
i. FERC Contact: John Costello, (202)
502–6119 or john.costello@ferc.gov.
j. Deadline for filing scoping
comments: September 11, 2009.
All documents (original and eight
copies) should be filed with: Kimberly
D. Bose, Secretary, Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission, 888 First
Street, NE., Washington, DC 20426.
The Commission’s Rules of Practice
and Procedure require all intervenors
filing documents with the Commission
E:\FR\FM\17JYN1.SGM
17JYN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 74, Number 136 (Friday, July 17, 2009)]
[Notices]
[Pages 34740-34741]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E9-17034]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Bonneville Power Administration
Klickitat Hatchery Program
AGENCY: Bonneville Power Administration (BPA), Department of Energy
(DOE).
ACTION: Notice of intent to prepare an Environmental Impact Statement
(EIS) and a floodplain and wetland assessment.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: BPA intends to prepare an EIS in accordance with the National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) on funding proposed changes to the
existing salmon and steelhead hatchery program in the Klickitat
subbasin in Klickitat and Yakima counties, Washington. As mitigation
under the Pacific Northwest Electric Power Planning and Conservation
Act, BPA proposes to upgrade and improve the Klickitat Hatchery, a
Mitchell Act artificial production facility built and funded by the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Fisheries (NOAA
Fisheries), located seven miles east of Glenwood, Washington, at river
mile 42 of the Klickitat River. The proposed changes would also involve
construction, of a new Wahkiacus Hatchery and Acclimation Facility
located at river mile 17 on the Klickitat River in Wahkiacus,
Washington, and a steelhead acclimation facility at McCreedy Creek at
river mile 70. With this Notice of Intent, BPA is initiating the public
scoping process for the EIS. BPA is requesting comments about potential
environmental impacts that it should consider as it prepares the EIS
for the proposed changes to the program, as well as comments on
alternatives that meet fish production objectives for the Klickitat
Hatchery Program. Further details are provided in the SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION section below.
In accordance with DOE regulations for compliance with floodplain
and wetlands environmental review requirements, BPA will prepare a
floodplain and wetlands assessment to avoid or minimize potential harm
to or within any affected floodplains and wetlands. The assessment will
be included in the EIS.
DATES: Written scoping comments are due to the address below no later
than August 18th, 2009. Comments may also be made at the EIS scoping
meeting to be held on August 4th, 2009, from 6 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. at the
Lyle Community Center.
ADDRESSES: Send letters with comments and suggestions on the proposed
scope of the Draft EIS, and requests to be placed on the project
mailing list, to Bonneville Power Administration, Public Affairs
Office--DKE-7, P.O. Box 14428, Portland, OR 97293-4428, or by fax to
503 230-3285. You also may call BPA's toll free comment line at 800
622-4519 and leave a message (please include the name of this project);
or submit comments online at https://www.bpa.gov/comment. BPA will post
all comment letters in their entirety on BPA's Web site at https://www.bpa.gov/comment.
On Tuesday August 4th, 2009, an open-house scoping meeting will be
held from 6 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. at the Lyle Community Center, Lyle,
Washington. At this informal meeting, we will provide maps and other
information about the project and have members of the project team
available to answer questions and accept oral and written comments. You
may stop by anytime during the open house.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Rosy Mazaika, Environmental
Coordinator, Bonneville Power Administration--KEC-4, P.O. Box 3621,
Portland, Oregon 97208-3621; toll-free telephone 1-800-282-3713; direct
telephone 503-230-5869; or e-mail rxmazaika@bpa.gov. You may also
contact Patricia Smith, Project Manager, Bonneville Power
Administration--KEWL-4, P.O. Box 3621, Portland, Oregon 97208-3621;
toll-free telephone 1-800-282-3713; direct telephone 503-230-7349; or
e-mail prsmith@bpa.gov. Additional information can be found at BPA's
Web site: https://www.efw.bpa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Fisheries programs in the Klickitat River
subbasin are co-managed by the Yakama Nation and the Washington
Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW), and include the Yakima/
Klickitat Fisheries Project (YKFP) funded by BPA. The YKFP uses state-
of-the-art artificial propagation methods designed to re-establish,
supplement, or increase natural production and harvest opportunities of
anadromous salmonids while maintaining the long-term fitness of target
species and minimizing ecological and genetic impacts on non-target
species. The YKFP has been developed to:
Enhance existing stocks of anadromous fish in the Yakima
and Klickitat river basins, while maintaining genetic and ecological
resources; and
Apply the knowledge gained through supplementation
throughout the Columbia River Basin.
The YKFP also pursues the protection and restoration of habitat
important to health and restoration of anadromous fish stocks.
Under the YKFP, in 2008, the Yakama Nation revised the Klickitat
River Anadromous Fisheries Master Plan \1\ in response to comments from
the Northwest Power and Conservation Council (NPCC) and its Independent
Scientific Review Panel.\2\ Master plans are submitted as step one of
the NPCC's three-step process \3\ for the review of artificial
propagation project proposals for funding by the BPA. Included in the
plan are details and the scientific basis for proposed production
goals, facilities, monitoring and evaluation, and habitat improvements
necessary to manage endemic spring Chinook and steelhead and hatchery
coho and fall Chinook in the Klickitat subbasin. Because
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ https://www.nwcouncil.org/dropbox/YKFP_03-31-08%20Draft%20Master%20Plan.pdf.
\2\ https://www.nwppc.org/library/isrp/isrp2008-6.pdf.
\3\ Northwest Power and Conservation Council, Three-Step Review
Process (Nov. 2006) https://www.nwcouncil.org/Library/2006/2006-21.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. The facilities and habitat work are proposed to benefit more
than one target species,
2. Artificial production work will require BPA and NOAA Fisheries
to coordinate efforts at the proposed various facilities, and
3. Proposed changes to production practices for single species
could affect other target species,
the Yakama Nation developed the Klickitat Subbasin Anadromous Fishery
Hatchery Plan (``Master Plan'') to address all species, as well as
Pacific lamprey.
According to the master plan prepared by the Yakama Nation and
WDFW, the existing Klickitat Hatchery facilities, completed in 1954,
need repair to meet current building codes and up-to-date artificial
production guidelines. The Tribe operates the Klickitat Hatchery and
NOAA Fisheries provides annual operation and maintenance funding using
appropriations to the Mitchell Act program. Under the 2008 Columbia
Basin Fish Accords Memorandum of Agreement between the three Treaty
Tribes and Federal Columbia River Power System Action Agencies (The
[[Page 34741]]
Accords) \4\ the Yakama Nation will actively seek congressional
appropriations during fiscal years 2010 and 2011 for additional
Mitchell Act funding for the new Wahkiacus facility. Under the Accords,
BPA made funding available, pending satisfactory results from its
environmental compliance efforts, to fund hatchery facility
improvements to increase production in the Klickitat Basin as described
in alternative one below.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ https://www.salmonrecovery.gov/Biological_opinions/FCRPS/2008_biop/docs/3-tribe-AA-MOA-Final.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The master plan was developed in concert with salmonid production
and harvest agreements pursuant to U.S. v. Oregon, which is the primary
forum for decisions related to salmon and steelhead fisheries
management for the Columbia River Basin. U.S. v. Oregon is landmark
litigation over Indian treaty fishing rights. The Federal district
court that initially decided the case has retained continuing
jurisdiction to assure the development of harvest and production plans
follow the court's decisions. Through the on-going U.S. v. Oregon
process, the parties develop and update the Columbia River Fish
Management Plan which addresses management of Chinook, coho, and
steelhead in the Klickitat basin, including hatchery production at the
Klickitat Hatchery. Current programs focus on harvest augmentation for
coho and fall Chinook and on supplementation for spring Chinook and
summer steelhead.
The proposed Yakama Nation- Klickitat Hatchery Program EIS would
respond to these master plan objectives. BPA, therefore, will prepare
an EIS under NEPA to assist the agency as it decides whether to fund
the proposed changes to the existing salmon and steelhead hatchery
program in the Klickitat subbasin and, if a decision is made to fund
the changes, which alternative to meet the master plan objectives
should be chosen.
Alternatives Proposed for Consideration. BPA will consider three
action alternatives to meet master plan objectives for salmon and
steelhead in the Klickitat Basin. One alternative, the Master Plan,
would involve the fisheries managers increasing the production of
Klickitat spring Chinook and steelhead at the existing Klickitat
Hatchery and transferring artificial production of coho and fall
Chinook to a new hatchery facility at Wahkiacus. This would free up
water and space at the Klickitat Hatchery, ensuring optimal rearing
densities for spring Chinook and summer steelhead at that facility.
Transferring coho and fall Chinook production downstream would minimize
the impact of these species on the spawning and rearing of wild spring
Chinook and steelhead by reducing species interactions and competition
for habitat in the 26.5-mile reach between Wahkiacus and Klickitat. A
second alternative would evaluate meeting the same production
objectives but at the Klickitat Hatchery alone. A third alternative
would examine a phased approach to the proposed production changes,
with a partial build-out at the Wahkiacus facility. The current
Wahkiacus facility design provides for acclimation of up to 1,000,000
coho pre-smolts and rearing and release of up to 2,000,000 fall
Chinook. The partial build-out would consider a phased approach for
accomplishing production objectives, with the associated phasing of the
completion of project facilities. BPA will also consider a No-Action
Alternative. Under the No-Action Alternative, production activities
would continue as they do currently. Other alternatives may be
identified through the scoping process.
BPA will be the lead agency for preparation of the EIS. BPA will
formally invite the Yakama Nation, WDFW, NOAA Fisheries, Klickitat
County, and Washington Department of Ecology to be cooperating agencies
for the proposed Yakama Nation-Klickitat Hatchery Program EIS. Other
potential cooperating agencies may be identified as the proposed
project proceeds through the NEPA process. BPA will also coordinate
with NOAA Fisheries which is preparing a programmatic EIS on the
Mitchell Act hatchery facilities it funds throughout the Columbia River
Basin.\5\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ https://www.nwr.noaa.gov/Salmon-Harvest-Hatcheries/Hatcheries/Mitchell-Act-EIS.cfm.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Public Participation and Identification of Environmental Issues.
The potential environmental issues identified for the project are
anticipated to include land use, socioeconomic concerns, cultural
resources, visual resources, sensitive plants and animals, fisheries,
soil erosion, wetlands, floodplains, water quality, water quantity,
wild and scenic rivers, and recreation resources. BPA has established a
45-day scoping period during which tribes, affected landowners,
concerned citizens, special interest groups, local governments, Federal
agencies, and any other interested parties are invited to comment on
the scope of the proposed EIS. Scoping will help BPA ensure that a full
range of issues related to this proposal is addressed in the EIS, and
also will identify significant or potentially significant impacts that
may result from the proposed project. When completed, the Draft EIS
will be circulated for review and comment, and BPA will hold at least
one public meeting to hear comments. The Draft EIS is expected to be
published in fall 2010. BPA will consider and respond to comments
received on the Draft EIS in the Final EIS. The Final EIS is expected
to be published in spring 2011. BPA's decision will be documented in a
Record of Decision that will follow the Final EIS.
Issued in Portland, Oregon, on July 10, 2009.
Stephen J. Wright,
Administrator and Chief Executive Officer.
[FR Doc. E9-17034 Filed 7-16-09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450-01-P