Board for International Food and Agricultural Development; One Hundred and Fifty-Ninth Meeting; Notice of Meeting, 9388-9389 [2010-4285]
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 40 / Tuesday, March 2, 2010 / Notices
p.m., Eastern Time, Monday through
Friday.
[FR Doc. 2010–4275 Filed 3–1–10; 8:45 am]
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SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Forest Service
Prescott National Forest, Bradshaw
Ranger District; Arizona; Bradshaw
Vegetation Management Project
Forest Service, USDA.
Notice of intent to prepare an
environmental impact statement.
AGENCY:
WReier-Aviles on DSKGBLS3C1PROD with NOTICES
ACTION:
SUMMARY: This project is a proposal to
improve the health of fire adapted
ecosystems while simultaneously
reducing hazardous fuels on the
Bradshaw Ranger District. The project
area encompasses about 55,554 acres.
Within the project area, the proposal is
to commercially thin approximately
16,312 acres in ponderosa pine, pineoak, and mixed conifer forest types.
Fuels treatments include mechanized
fuel reduction on 34,445 acres of
chaparral, pinyon-juniper, and oak sites
and non-mechanized fuel reduction
treatments on 6,242 acres of chaparral,
juniper, pinyon, oak, pine, and mixed
conifer sites. Prescribed fire is proposed
on 44,641 acres and fuelbreak
construction is proposed on 791 acres.
It is expected that this project will
require a site specific forest plan
amendment to the Prescott National
Forest Land and Resource Management
Plan (1986), as amended, in order to
implement treatments within Mexican
Spotted Owl habitat.
DATES: Comments concerning the scope
of the analysis should be received
within 30 days after publication of this
notice in the Federal Register. The draft
environmental impact statement is
expected in December, 2010 and the
final environmental impact statement is
expected in March, 2011.
ADDRESSES: Send written comments to
Jodi Stevens, Bradshaw Ranger District,
344 South Cortez Street, Prescott,
Arizona 86303. Comments may also be
submitted by e-mail to: commentssouthwestern-prescott@fs.fed.us.
Include ‘‘Bradshaw Vegetation
Management’’ in the subject line of
e-mail comments. Electronic comments
must be submitted in Word (.doc),
RichText (.rtf), or Adobe Acrobat (.pdf)
format.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jodi
Stevens, 928–443–8041 or
jodistevens@fs.fed.us. Individuals who
use telecommunication devices for the
deaf (TDD) may call the Federal
Information Relay Service (FIRS) at
1–800–877–8339 between 8 a.m. and 8
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15:07 Mar 01, 2010
Jkt 220001
Purpose and Need for Action: The
purpose of the proposed action is to
improve the health of fire adapted
ecosystems while simultaneously
reducing hazardous fuels. The EIS will
describe existing conditions and desired
conditions, analyze environmental
consequences of shifting existing
conditions towards desired conditions,
and assist the decision maker in
selecting management strategies that
will achieve desired conditons. The
proposed action is needed due to
prominent changes in the structure and
function of vegetation and fire behavior
within the analysis area, and the
proximity of homes and private
property to these changed conditions.
The changes in vegetation and fire
behavior are a result of aggressive fire
suppression over the past several
decades. One of the most effective ways
to protect communities is to create
defensible fuel profile zones both
adjacent to homes and private property
and on adjacent public lands.
Proposed Action: The Prescott
National Forest proposes to
commercially thin approximately
16,312 acres in ponderosa pine, pineoak, and mixed conifer forest types.
Proposed fuels treatments include
mechanized fuel reduction on 34,445
acres of chaparral, pinyon-juniper, and
oak sites, and non-mechanized fuel
reduction treatments on 6,242 acres of
chaparral, juniper, pinyon, oak, pine,
and mixed conifer sites. Prescribed fire
is proposed on 44,641 acres and
fuelbreak construction is proposed on
791 acres. The project area is located to
the southeast, south, southwest, west
and northwest of the city of Prescott.
Implementation of this proposed project
could begin as early as June 1, 2011.
Responsible Official
The Responsible Official for this
project is the Forest Supervisor, Prescott
National Forest, Prescott, Arizona.
Nature of Decision To Be Made
The Forest Service will evaluate the
proposed action and alternatives to the
proposed action. After reviewing the
proposed action, the alternatives, the
environmental analysis, and considering
public comment, the Forest Supervisor
will reach a decision that is in
accordance with the purpose and need
for this project. The decision will
include a description of activities that
will be implemented. Issues identified
as being outside the scope of this
proposal (such as grazing cattle on the
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Sfmt 4703
Forest or the need for additional
recreation opportunities) will not be
addressed in this planning effort.
Scoping Process
This notice of intent initiates the
scoping process, which guides the
development of the environmental
impact statement. It is important that
reviewers provide their comments at
such times and in such manner that
they are useful to the agency’s
preparation of the environmental impact
statement. Therefore, comments should
be provided prior to the close of the
comment period and should clearly
articulate the reviewer’s concerns and
be as specific as possible. There will be
a public scoping meeting on Thursday,
February 25, 2010 from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m.
Arizona Time. This meeting will be held
at the Mackin Building at the Prescott
Rodeo Grounds, 840 Rodeo Drive,
Prescott, AZ, 86305. Scoping letters will
be mailed to individuals and entities
who have identified themselves as
interested publics regarding proposed
actions on the Prescott National Forest.
Additionally, scoping input will be
requested through a publication in the
Prescott Courier, the newspaper of local
circulation in the proposed project area.
Dated: February 18, 2010.
Reta Laford,
Acting Forest Supervisor, Prescott National
Forest.
[FR Doc. 2010–3965 Filed 3–1–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410–11–M
AGENCY FOR INTERNATIONAL
DEVELOPMENT
Board for International Food and
Agricultural Development; One
Hundred and Fifty-Ninth Meeting;
Notice of Meeting
Pursuant to the Federal Advisory
Committee Act, notice is hereby given of
the one hundred and fifty-ninth meeting
of the Board for International Food and
Agricultural Development (BIFAD). The
meeting will be held from 8:30 a.m. to
4 p.m. on March 3, 2010 at the National
Press Club located at 529 14th St., NW.,
Washington, DC. ‘‘Higher Education: A
Critical Partner in Global Agricultural
Development’’ will be the central theme
of BIFAD’s initiatives and the March
meeting.
Dr. Robert Easter, Chairman of BIFAD,
will preside over the proceedings. Dr.
Easter is Interim Chancellor for the
University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign.
The confirmation of Dr. Rajiv Shah as
USAID’s new administrator will define
the work of BIFAD, consistent with
E:\FR\FM\02MRN1.SGM
02MRN1
WReier-Aviles on DSKGBLS3C1PROD with NOTICES
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 40 / Tuesday, March 2, 2010 / Notices
BIFAD’s legislative mandate, for the
foreseeable future. Accordingly, the
159th BIFAD meeting will attempt to
respond to Dr. Shah’s priorities. Dr.
Shah brings a strong background in
global food security issues. Within this
context comes the recognition that only
through broad-based partnerships and
multidisciplinary approaches will the
US achieve priority foreign assistance
goals in a dramatically changed
development world. It is in the spirit of
the Title XII mandates and in view of
today’s development realities,
underpinned by complex socioeconomic conditions and regional
conflicts, that BIFAD is leading as a
‘‘gateway’’ to the university community.
It is expected that Dr. Shah will
participate in the meeting and present to
the Board his vision and priorities for
the Agency. If the situation in Haiti or
other unanticipated contingencies
preclude him from attending, Karen
Turner, the Director of the Office of
Development Partners or Carol Grigsby,
the Office’s Deputy Director, will
represent the Administrator. In the
event that new BIFAD members are
announced, there is a possibility that
they could be officially sworn in by
Administrator Shah, or Director Turner
or Deputy Director Grigsby.
The Board and USAID have been
collaborating closely to develop a
Memorandum of Understanding to
define our strategic partnership. The
purpose of the MOU is to set forth the
understandings and intentions of
USAID and BIFAD with regard to shared
goals and to mobilize the capacities of
U.S. universities to implement program
components under Section 103
(Agriculture, Rural Development and
Nutrition) and 103A (Agriculture
Research) of the Foreign Assistance Act.
Five key areas were identified for
maximum collaboration: USG Food
Security Strategy and Program; USG
Global Climate Change Strategy and
Program; Education and Training for
Youth; Afghanistan/Pakistan
Agriculture Strategy and Program; and
Rebuilding USAID Technical Capacity.
The MOU was vetted during the last
BIFAD meeting in October. It should be
ready for signing during the 159th
meeting with a brief ceremony.
Next, Gebisa Ejeta, last year’s World
Food Prize recipient, will present to the
Board a presentation, ‘‘Food Security:
the Science, Sociology and Economics
of Food Production and Access to
Food.’’ He will emphasize the critical
need to strengthen science-based
thinking within development planning
and implementation and rational
decision-making into the policy
formulation process. Dr. Ejeta is
VerDate Nov<24>2008
15:07 Mar 01, 2010
Jkt 220001
currently at Purdue University. Dr.
Easter will also be making a
presentation, with possible responder to
Dr. Ejeta.
During 2009, the Board held a number
of sessions and activities related to the
agricultural strategy for Afghanistan and
how universities can help USAID turn
battle space into development space.
This session will provide an update on
the Trilateral Af-Pak process, building
towards a conference later this spring in
Doha, Qatar. The conference will bring
together university representatives
managing on-the-ground agricultural
projects in Afghanistan with key
Afghans and Pakistanis, to develop a 5
year plan for integrating long-term
agricultural training and capacity
building into the agricultural
development strategy.
The devastating earthquake in Haiti
will be the focus of a session to
demonstrate how BIFAD and
universities can bring value to USAID
on Haiti, as well as the Caribbean
region. The session will be led by Board
member Dr. Elsa Murano, University of
Texas. Walter Bowen, Acting Director,
International Programs. Institute of Food
and Agricultural Sciences, University of
Florida, will share some experiences
University of Florida has had in Haiti.
His project, Watershed Initiative for
National Natural Environmental
Resources, is aimed at implementing
broad scale investments in sustainable
natural resource management at the
scale and density needed to produce
future positive landscape level
reductions in environmental,
infrastructural, and economic
vulnerability. The Latin America and
Caribbean Bureau (LAC) at USAID will
be intimately involved, and there will
be discussion on wider application
throughout the Caribbean region.
Concluding the morning session, John
Becker, USAID Office of Development
Partners, will make a presentation and
lead discussion on application of the
Bumpers Amendment. The Bumpers
Amendment forbids the United States
Agency for International Development
(USAID) from giving money to any
program that would increase the
production of a crop that could compete
with the United States on the world
market.
After an executive luncheon (closed
to the public) the Board will re-convene.
Scheduled as the afternoon’s first
session will be a follow-on to the
Board’s efforts to highlight the critical
role that Minority Serving Institutions
continue to play in international
agricultural development, particularly
in improving the livelihood of small
farmers. William DeLauder, Board
PO 00000
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 9990
9389
member and President-Emeritus of
Delaware State University, will lead the
session. This discussion is being
designed to open a new dialogue and
begin exploring effective partnering
with USAID.
Following the MSI panel, Montague
Demment, Director, Global Livestock
Collaborative Research Support Program
(CRSP), will lead a discussion on the
Borlaug Leap Program and other BIFAD
long-term training activities, in
cooperation with USAID’s Economic
Growth, Agricultural, and Trade Bureau
(EGAT). These are very important
programs that help build human and
institutional capacity in agriculture.
Concluding the afternoon session, the
Board will hear an update on BIFAD’s
efforts to establish a Joint Committee on
Operations, as called for in Title XII, to
increase the technical capacity of the
Board. Such a Committee would replace
the Strategic Partnership for
Agricultural Research and Education
(SPARE). Ray Miller, Director of
International Programs, University of
Maryland, will lead the discussion.
The Board meeting is open to the
public. The Board welcomes open
dialogue to promote greater focus on
critical issues facing USAID, the role of
universities in development, and
applications of U.S. scientific, technical
and institutional capabilities to
international agriculture. Note on Public
Comments: Due to time constraints
public comments to the Board will be
limited to three (3) minutes to
accommodate as many as possible. It is
preferred to have requests for comments
submitted to the Board in writing. Two
periods for public comment will be
provided during the Board meeting—
just before lunch and adjournment.
Those wishing to attend the meeting
or obtain additional information about
BIFAD should contact Dr. Ronald S.
Senykoff, Executive Director and
Designated Federal Officer for BIFAD.
Write him in care of the U.S. Agency for
International Development, Ronald
Reagan Building, Office of Development
Partners, 1300 Pennsylvania Avenue,
NW., Room 6.7–153, Washington, DC
20523–2110 or telephone him at (202)
712–0218 or fax (202) 216–3124.
Ronald S. Senykoff,
Executive Director and USAID Designated
Federal Officer for BIFAD, Office of
Development Partners, U.S. Agency for
International Development.
[FR Doc. 2010–4285 Filed 3–1–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE P
E:\FR\FM\02MRN1.SGM
02MRN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 75, Number 40 (Tuesday, March 2, 2010)]
[Notices]
[Pages 9388-9389]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2010-4285]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
AGENCY FOR INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT
Board for International Food and Agricultural Development; One
Hundred and Fifty-Ninth Meeting; Notice of Meeting
Pursuant to the Federal Advisory Committee Act, notice is hereby
given of the one hundred and fifty-ninth meeting of the Board for
International Food and Agricultural Development (BIFAD). The meeting
will be held from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. on March 3, 2010 at the National
Press Club located at 529 14th St., NW., Washington, DC. ``Higher
Education: A Critical Partner in Global Agricultural Development'' will
be the central theme of BIFAD's initiatives and the March meeting.
Dr. Robert Easter, Chairman of BIFAD, will preside over the
proceedings. Dr. Easter is Interim Chancellor for the University of
Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
The confirmation of Dr. Rajiv Shah as USAID's new administrator
will define the work of BIFAD, consistent with
[[Page 9389]]
BIFAD's legislative mandate, for the foreseeable future. Accordingly,
the 159th BIFAD meeting will attempt to respond to Dr. Shah's
priorities. Dr. Shah brings a strong background in global food security
issues. Within this context comes the recognition that only through
broad-based partnerships and multidisciplinary approaches will the US
achieve priority foreign assistance goals in a dramatically changed
development world. It is in the spirit of the Title XII mandates and in
view of today's development realities, underpinned by complex socio-
economic conditions and regional conflicts, that BIFAD is leading as a
``gateway'' to the university community.
It is expected that Dr. Shah will participate in the meeting and
present to the Board his vision and priorities for the Agency. If the
situation in Haiti or other unanticipated contingencies preclude him
from attending, Karen Turner, the Director of the Office of Development
Partners or Carol Grigsby, the Office's Deputy Director, will represent
the Administrator. In the event that new BIFAD members are announced,
there is a possibility that they could be officially sworn in by
Administrator Shah, or Director Turner or Deputy Director Grigsby.
The Board and USAID have been collaborating closely to develop a
Memorandum of Understanding to define our strategic partnership. The
purpose of the MOU is to set forth the understandings and intentions of
USAID and BIFAD with regard to shared goals and to mobilize the
capacities of U.S. universities to implement program components under
Section 103 (Agriculture, Rural Development and Nutrition) and 103A
(Agriculture Research) of the Foreign Assistance Act. Five key areas
were identified for maximum collaboration: USG Food Security Strategy
and Program; USG Global Climate Change Strategy and Program; Education
and Training for Youth; Afghanistan/Pakistan Agriculture Strategy and
Program; and Rebuilding USAID Technical Capacity. The MOU was vetted
during the last BIFAD meeting in October. It should be ready for
signing during the 159th meeting with a brief ceremony.
Next, Gebisa Ejeta, last year's World Food Prize recipient, will
present to the Board a presentation, ``Food Security: the Science,
Sociology and Economics of Food Production and Access to Food.'' He
will emphasize the critical need to strengthen science-based thinking
within development planning and implementation and rational decision-
making into the policy formulation process. Dr. Ejeta is currently at
Purdue University. Dr. Easter will also be making a presentation, with
possible responder to Dr. Ejeta.
During 2009, the Board held a number of sessions and activities
related to the agricultural strategy for Afghanistan and how
universities can help USAID turn battle space into development space.
This session will provide an update on the Trilateral Af-Pak process,
building towards a conference later this spring in Doha, Qatar. The
conference will bring together university representatives managing on-
the-ground agricultural projects in Afghanistan with key Afghans and
Pakistanis, to develop a 5 year plan for integrating long-term
agricultural training and capacity building into the agricultural
development strategy.
The devastating earthquake in Haiti will be the focus of a session
to demonstrate how BIFAD and universities can bring value to USAID on
Haiti, as well as the Caribbean region. The session will be led by
Board member Dr. Elsa Murano, University of Texas. Walter Bowen, Acting
Director, International Programs. Institute of Food and Agricultural
Sciences, University of Florida, will share some experiences University
of Florida has had in Haiti. His project, Watershed Initiative for
National Natural Environmental Resources, is aimed at implementing
broad scale investments in sustainable natural resource management at
the scale and density needed to produce future positive landscape level
reductions in environmental, infrastructural, and economic
vulnerability. The Latin America and Caribbean Bureau (LAC) at USAID
will be intimately involved, and there will be discussion on wider
application throughout the Caribbean region.
Concluding the morning session, John Becker, USAID Office of
Development Partners, will make a presentation and lead discussion on
application of the Bumpers Amendment. The Bumpers Amendment forbids the
United States Agency for International Development (USAID) from giving
money to any program that would increase the production of a crop that
could compete with the United States on the world market.
After an executive luncheon (closed to the public) the Board will
re-convene. Scheduled as the afternoon's first session will be a
follow-on to the Board's efforts to highlight the critical role that
Minority Serving Institutions continue to play in international
agricultural development, particularly in improving the livelihood of
small farmers. William DeLauder, Board member and President-Emeritus of
Delaware State University, will lead the session. This discussion is
being designed to open a new dialogue and begin exploring effective
partnering with USAID.
Following the MSI panel, Montague Demment, Director, Global
Livestock Collaborative Research Support Program (CRSP), will lead a
discussion on the Borlaug Leap Program and other BIFAD long-term
training activities, in cooperation with USAID's Economic Growth,
Agricultural, and Trade Bureau (EGAT). These are very important
programs that help build human and institutional capacity in
agriculture.
Concluding the afternoon session, the Board will hear an update on
BIFAD's efforts to establish a Joint Committee on Operations, as called
for in Title XII, to increase the technical capacity of the Board. Such
a Committee would replace the Strategic Partnership for Agricultural
Research and Education (SPARE). Ray Miller, Director of International
Programs, University of Maryland, will lead the discussion.
The Board meeting is open to the public. The Board welcomes open
dialogue to promote greater focus on critical issues facing USAID, the
role of universities in development, and applications of U.S.
scientific, technical and institutional capabilities to international
agriculture. Note on Public Comments: Due to time constraints public
comments to the Board will be limited to three (3) minutes to
accommodate as many as possible. It is preferred to have requests for
comments submitted to the Board in writing. Two periods for public
comment will be provided during the Board meeting--just before lunch
and adjournment.
Those wishing to attend the meeting or obtain additional
information about BIFAD should contact Dr. Ronald S. Senykoff,
Executive Director and Designated Federal Officer for BIFAD. Write him
in care of the U.S. Agency for International Development, Ronald Reagan
Building, Office of Development Partners, 1300 Pennsylvania Avenue,
NW., Room 6.7-153, Washington, DC 20523-2110 or telephone him at (202)
712-0218 or fax (202) 216-3124.
Ronald S. Senykoff,
Executive Director and USAID Designated Federal Officer for BIFAD,
Office of Development Partners, U.S. Agency for International
Development.
[FR Doc. 2010-4285 Filed 3-1-10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE P