Nomans Land Island National Wildlife Refuge, Town of Chilmark, Martha's Vineyard, MA, 62415-62417 [2010-25393]
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 195 / Friday, October 8, 2010 / Notices
interpret the Federal manufactured
housing construction and safety
standards in accordance with this
subsection;
(ii) Provide periodic
recommendations to the Secretary to
adopt, revise, and interpret the
procedural and enforcement regulations,
including regulations specifying the
permissible scope and conduct of
monitoring in accordance with
subsection (b);
(iii) Be organized and carry out its
business in a manner that guarantees a
fair opportunity for the expression and
consideration of various positions and
for public participation; and
(iv) Be deemed to be an advisory
committee not composed of Federal
employees.
Tentative Agenda
Convene
Federal Advisory Committee
preliminaries
Establish presence of Designated
Federal Official (DFO)
DFO Announcements
Call to Order
Roll Call/Establish Quorum
Welcome/Introductions/New Members
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Call for Committee Reports (status
information only)
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MHCC recommendations to the
Secretary to adopt, revise, and
interpret the Federal manufactured
housing construction and safety
standards
MHCC recommendations to the
Secretary to adopt, revise, and
interpret the procedural and
enforcement regulations
Proposals from HUD to MHCC
Adjourn
Dated: October 4, 2010.
David H. Stevens,
Assistant Secretary for Housing—Federal
Housing Commissioner.
[FR Doc. 2010–25443 Filed 10–7–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4210–67–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
U.S. Geological Survey
erowe on DSK5CLS3C1PROD with NOTICES
[USGS–8327CPDM2]
Notice of a Revision of a Currently
Approved Information Collection
(1028–0091)
Correction
In notice document 2010–24374
beginning on page 60134 in the issue of
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Wednesday, September 29, make the
following correction:
On page 60135, in the second line of
the section beginning with DATES,
‘‘December 28, 2010’’ should read
‘‘October 29, 2010’’.
[FR Doc. C1–2010–24374 Filed 10–7–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 1505–01–D
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
[FWS–R5–R–2010–N115; BAC–4311–K9–S3]
Nomans Land Island National Wildlife
Refuge, Town of Chilmark, Martha’s
Vineyard, MA
Fish and Wildlife Service,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice of availability of final
comprehensive conservation plan and
finding of no significant impact for
environmental assessment.
AGENCY:
We, the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service (Service), announce the
availability of our final comprehensive
conservation plan (CCP) and finding of
no significant impact (FONSI) for the
environmental assessment (EA) for
Nomans Land Island National Wildlife
Refuge (NWR). In this final CCP, we
describe how we will manage this
refuge for the next 15 years.
ADDRESSES: You may view or obtain
copies of the final CCP and FONSI by
any of the following methods. You may
request a hard copy or CD–ROM.
Agency Web site: Download a copy of
the document(s) at https://www.fws.gov/
northeast/planning/NomansLand/
ccphome.html.
Electronic mail:
northeastplanning@fws.gov. Include
‘‘Nomans Land Island final CCP’’ in the
subject line of the message.
U.S. Postal Service: Eastern
Massachusetts NWR Complex, 73 Weir
Hill Road, Sudbury, MA 01776.
In-Person Viewing or Pickup: Call
978–443–4661 to make an appointment
during regular business hours at the
above address.
Facsimile: 978–443–2898.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Libby Herland, Project Leader, Eastern
Massachusetts NWR Complex, 73 Weir
Hill Road, Sudbury, MA 01776; phone:
413–443–4661, or Carl Melberg,
Planning Team Leader, phone: 978–
443–4661; electronic mail:
Carl_Melberg@fws.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
Introduction
With this notice, we finalize the CCP
process for Nomans Land Island NWR,
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62415
which we started with the notice of
intent we published in the Federal
Register (69 FR 72210) on December 13,
2008. We prepared the EA/draft CCP in
compliance with the National
Environmental Policy Act of 1969
(NEPA) (42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.) and the
National Wildlife Refuge System
Administration Act of 1966
(Administration Act) (16 U.S.C. 668dd–
668ee), as amended by the National
Wildlife Refuge System Improvement
Act of 1997 (Improvement Act). We
released the EA/draft CCP to the public,
announcing and requesting comments
in a notice of availability in the Federal
Register (75 FR 30052) on May 28, 2010.
Nomans Land Island is a 628-acre
roadless island located approximately 3
miles south of Martha’s Vineyard,
Massachusetts. The refuge was
established in 1998 for the conservation
and management of migratory birds. We
first began managing a portion of the
eastern side of the island in 1970 as an
‘‘overlay’’ refuge under a joint
management agreement between the
U.S. Department of the Interior and the
U.S. Department of the Navy (Navy),
while it was still under Navy
management. In 1998, management of
the island was transferred to the
Service, and all 628 acres became
Nomans Land Island NWR.
This island has a unique history, from
its use by Native Americans as a
summer camp, to sheep grazing when
the island was privately owned in the
1800s, to use as a bombing range by the
Navy during World War II. Because
Nomans Land Island provides diverse
habitats including intertidal, freshwater
wetland, grassland, and shrubland
habitats, it serves an important role for
nesting landbirds and colonial
waterbirds, and is a stopover for
migratory birds and raptors, including
the peregrine falcon.
We announce our decision and the
availability of the FONSI for the final
CCP for Nomans Land Island NWR in
accordance with NEPA requirements.
The FONSI is included as Appendix K
in the final CCP. We completed a
thorough analysis of impacts on the
human environment, which we
included in the EA/draft CCP.
Alternative C, as we described in the
EA/draft CCP, is the foundation for the
final CCP.
Background
The Administration Act, as amended
by the Improvement Act, requires us to
develop a CCP for each national wildlife
refuge. The purpose for developing a
CCP is to provide refuge managers with
a 15-year plan for achieving refuge
purposes and contributing toward the
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mission of the National Wildlife Refuge
System (NWRS), consistent with sound
principles of fish and wildlife
management, conservation, legal
mandates, and our policies. In addition
to outlining broad management
direction on conserving wildlife and
their habitats, CCPs identify wildlifedependent recreational opportunities
available to the public, including
opportunities for hunting, fishing,
wildlife observation and photography,
and environmental education and
interpretation. We will review and
update the CCP at least every 15 years
in accordance with the Administration
Act.
CCP Alternatives, Including Selected
Alternative
Our EA/draft CCP addressed several
key issues, including the amount of
shrubland to manage, other priority
habitat types to conserve, land
protection and conservation priorities,
improving the visibility of the Service
and refuge, and ways to improve
opportunities for off-site public use
while ensuring the restoration and
protection of priority ecological and
cultural resources.
To address these issues and develop
a plan based on the purposes for
establishing the refuge, and the vision
and goals we identified, we identified
three alternatives in the EA. The
alternatives have some actions in
common, such as protecting and
monitoring federally listed species and
the regionally significant coastal
shrubland, controlling invasive plants
and wildlife diseases, monitoring
programs that benefit our resource
decisions, protecting cultural resources,
and distributing refuge revenue-sharing
payments to counties.
Other actions distinguish the
alternatives. Alternative A, or the ‘‘No
Action Alternative,’’ consists of our
current management activities. It serves
as the baseline against which to
compare the other two alternatives. Our
habitat management and visitor services
programs would not change under this
alternative. We would continue to use
the same tools and techniques, and not
expand existing facilities. Under
Alternative A, we would continue to
passively manage refuge lands, and the
Service would have minimal presence.
Habitat management would be limited
to continuing to passively oversee the
current 400 acres of shrub habitat, up to
150 acres of freshwater wetland
communities, 100 acres of marine
intertidal beach and rocky shore habitat,
and 15 acres of herbaceous upland dune
vegetation. We would continue minimal
monitoring of focal species as current
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staffing allows. We would provide
oversight and coordination to Navy
contaminant and unexploded ordnance
(UXO) cleanup.
The refuge would continue to be
closed to the public. Administration of
off-site visitor services, land protection,
and biological and law enforcement
activities would be handled by existing
staff from the Eastern Massachusetts
NWR Complex based in Sudbury,
Massachusetts, as funds and staffing
permit.
Under Alternative B, we would
emphasize more active monitoring and
management of all refuge habitats to
support focal species whose habitat
needs also benefit other species of
conservation concern in the region. In
particular, the alternative emphasizes
active habitat management for breeding
and migrating priority bird species of
conservation concern identified by
national, regional, and State
conservation plans.
With the addition of seasonal
biological and law enforcement staff,
under Alternative B, we would also
implement a more active prescribed
burning regime, invasive species and
predator control programs, and better
enforcement of the no-public-access
policy. We would actively monitor and
manage beach/nesting species such as
terns, plovers, and rare plants, and
consider the introduction of the New
England cottontail. We would improve
our visitor services through partnerships
and working with them to develop
programs and facilities on their lands
that help increase awareness of the
refuge’s biological and cultural
resources. Finally, our biological
program would be enhanced through
partnerships that would increase our
ability to conduct surveys and long-term
monitoring.
Alternative C was identified as the
Service-preferred alternative in the
EA/draft CCP. It allows the 400 acres of
critical migration stopover shrub habitat
to be influenced by natural processes
such as succession over the next 15
years, with minimal management. It
allows coastal processes of wind and
wave action to shape the current 15
acres of herbaceous upland dune
vegetation, 100 acres of marine
intertidal beach and rocky shore
habitats, and almost 150 acres of
freshwater wetlands. Under this
alternative, we also would continue to
study the feasibility of introducing New
England cottontail on the refuge.
The alternative recognizes the island
as one of the few opportunities in the
Northeast region of the United States for
wilderness designation and proposes
pursuing formal designation as a unit of
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the National Wilderness Preservation
System. It also recognizes the need to
coordinate with the Navy annually to
promote communication, exchange
information on Navy operations and
management planning, and facilitate
cleanup of contaminants and UXO on
the refuge. We would also closely
coordinate with the Navy and the
Massachusetts State Historic
Preservation Office for any proposed
ground-disturbing activity. We would
monitor vegetation changes every 3
years through aerial photography and/or
site visitation. We would establish a fire
regime to manage shrub habitat as
needed, and we would monitor invasive
plant species annually and control those
that threaten healthy ecosystems.
Existing refuge complex staff would
enhance the visitor services program
through a broader array of off-site
programming and outreach through
partnership opportunities as they arise,
similar to, but to a lesser extent than
would take place under the other
alternatives.
Comments
We invited comments on the EA/draft
CCP during a public review and
comment period, from May 28 through
July 3, 2010, and held a public meeting
on June 23, 2010, in the Town of
Chilmark, Massachusetts.
We received 24 unique letters and
oral comments representing individuals,
organizations, and State agencies. We
made modifications to the draft that are
outlined in Appendix J, ‘‘Summary of
Public Comments and Service’s
Response on the Environmental
Assessment and Draft Comprehensive
Conservation Plan for Nomans Land
Island National Wildlife Refuge’’ in the
final CCP. Highlights of some of the
changes are listed below:
1. We were made aware of additional
partnership opportunities on Martha’s
Vineyard and have modified the final
CCP to reflect these opportunities (pages
4–7 through 4–8). We also inserted
language in the Rationale to Objective
2.2 (page 4–30) that these partnerships
would potentially provide additional
resources to increase our visitor services
capacity from what we originally
proposed.
2. We added language to Chapter 4 in
the final CCP (page 4–11) stating that
although it would not be possible to
clean up the island to pre-bombing
conditions, we would continue to work
with the Navy and Federal and State
regulators for the 5-year site reviews as
required by the Comprehensive
Environmental Response,
Compensation, and Liability Act. If, at
some point in the future, there is a
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 195 / Friday, October 8, 2010 / Notices
major advance in technology that would
allow the extraction of UXOs without
massive ground disturbance or impact
to wildlife, then additional cleanup
might warrant further consideration at
that time.
3. We included language in our
Habitat Management and Protection
summary in Chapter 4 of the final CCP
(page 4–14) and biological rationales
[Objectives 1.1 (page 4–19) and 1.2
(page 4–24)] to work with the
Massachusetts Natural Heritage and
Endangered Species Program to evaluate
the appropriateness of altering the
frequency of prescription burns to
incorporate rare plant management, and
for tern restoration efforts.
4. We added language to several
sections in Chapter 3 and Chapter 4 in
the final CCP to incorporate more life
history information and to refine our
biological objectives and management
actions for piping plover (pages 3–33,
3–35, 4–21, 4–23, and 4–24). This is due
to the presence of a breeding pair on the
island for the first time in 30 years.
5. We corrected typographical and
grammatical errors identified by
reviewers.
Selected Alternative
After considering the comments we
received on our EA/draft CCP, we have
selected Alternative C for
implementation, for several reasons.
Alternative C comprises the mix of
actions that, in our professional
judgment, works best toward achieving
refuge purposes, our vision and goals,
and the goals of other State and regional
conservation plans, and it is most
consistent with the principles of sound
fish and wildlife management. We also
believe it most effectively addresses the
key issues raised during the planning
process. The basis of our decision is
detailed in Appendix K, Finding of No
Significant Impact, in the final CCP.
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Dated: September 9, 2010.
James G. Geiger,
Acting Regional Director, Northeast Region,
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Hadley, MA
01035.
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Draft Environmental Impact Statement
for the Proposed Manzanita Band of
Kumeyaay Indians Fee-to-Trust
Transfer and Casino Project, Calexico,
CA
Bureau of Indian Affairs,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice of availability.
AGENCY:
The Bureau of Indian Affairs
(BIA), as lead agency, and the National
Indian Gaming Commission, the City of
Calexico, and the Manzanita Band of
Kumeyaay Indians as cooperating
agencies, intend to file a Draft
Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS)
with the Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) for the Tribe’s proposed
60.8-acre fee-to-trust transfer and casino
project to be located in Calexico,
California, and that the DEIS is now
available for public review and
comment. This notice provides a 75-day
public comment period, which adds a
30-day extension to the normal 45-day
public comment period.
DATES: The DEIS will be available for
public comment beginning October 8,
2010. Written comments on the DEIS
must arrive by December 22, 2010. A
public hearing will be held on
Wednesday, November 10, 2010 from
6 p.m. to 9 p.m. or until the last public
comment is received.
ADDRESSES: You may mail or hand carry
written comments to Dale Risling,
Acting Regional Director, Pacific
Regional Office, Bureau of Indian
Affairs, 2800 Cottage Way, Sacramento,
California 95825. A public hearing will
be held at: City of Calexico, 608 Heber
Avenue, Calexico, California 92231. See
the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section
of this notice for directions on
submitting comments and for locations
where the DEIS will be available for
review.
SUMMARY:
John
Rydzik (916) 978–6051.
You can view or obtain documents as
indicated under ADDRESSES.
BILLING CODE 4310–55–P
Bureau of Indian Affairs
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Public Availability of Documents
[FR Doc. 2010–25393 Filed 10–7–10; 8:45 am]
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
The Tribe
proposes that 60.8 acres of land be taken
into trust for the purpose of developing
a casino facility. The property is located
at the northernmost gateway to the City
of Calexico, a California/Mexico border
city of growing importance in
international trade. The project site is
situated at the southwest quadrant of
State Highway 111 and Jasper Road and
is bounded on the south and west by the
Central Main and Dogwood Canals. The
60.8-acre parcel is undeveloped former
agricultural land and is located within
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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62417
the City of Calexico’s proposed 111
Calexico Place project site, a
commercial highway development
project that was approved by the City of
Calexico City Council on May 5, 2010.
The proposed action consists of the
fee-to-trust transfer of the project site,
Federal review (by the National Indian
Gaming Commission) of the
development and management contract,
and development of the proposed
project. The proposed project includes a
459,621-square-foot casino facility on
the 60.8-acre parcel. The casino facility
would include an approximately
93,880-square-foot casino; 63,000 square
feet of food/beverage and retail
components; a 38,660-square-foot
entertainment venue; and 218,081
square feet of other operational facilities
(e.g., back of house area, central plant).
In addition, there will be a 46,000square-foot banquet/meeting hall and
200-room hotel. The casino will have
2,000 slot machines and 45 gaming
tables. There will be three guest
restaurants and one employee dining
room. A swimming pool and 6,000space parking facility will also be
developed within the project area.
BIA, serving as the lead agency for
compliance with the National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA),
published a Notice of Intent to prepare
the EIS for the proposed action in the
Federal Register on March 6, 2008. In
addition, BIA held a public scoping
meeting on March 27, 2008, at the
County of Imperial’s Board of
Supervisors Chamber Room in the City
of El Centro, California. From that
scoping meeting, a range of project
alternatives were developed and
subsequently analyzed in the DEIS,
including: (1) Alternative A—Proposed
Action, (2) Alternative B—Reduced
Casino, and (3) Alternative C—No
Action. Environmental issues addressed
in the DEIS include land resources,
water resources, air quality, biological
resources, cultural and paleontological
resources, socioeconomic conditions,
transportation, land use and agriculture,
public services, noise, hazardous
materials, visual resources,
environmental justice, growth inducing
effects, indirect effects, cumulative
effects, and mitigation measures.
Directions for Submitting Comments
Please include on the first page of
your written comments your name,
return address, and the phrase ‘‘DEIS
Comments, Manzanita Band of
Kumeyaay Indians, 60.8-Acre Fee-toTrust Casino Project, Calexico,
California.’’
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 75, Number 195 (Friday, October 8, 2010)]
[Notices]
[Pages 62415-62417]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2010-25393]
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DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
[FWS-R5-R-2010-N115; BAC-4311-K9-S3]
Nomans Land Island National Wildlife Refuge, Town of Chilmark,
Martha's Vineyard, MA
AGENCY: Fish and Wildlife Service, Interior.
ACTION: Notice of availability of final comprehensive conservation plan
and finding of no significant impact for environmental assessment.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: We, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Service), announce the
availability of our final comprehensive conservation plan (CCP) and
finding of no significant impact (FONSI) for the environmental
assessment (EA) for Nomans Land Island National Wildlife Refuge (NWR).
In this final CCP, we describe how we will manage this refuge for the
next 15 years.
ADDRESSES: You may view or obtain copies of the final CCP and FONSI by
any of the following methods. You may request a hard copy or CD-ROM.
Agency Web site: Download a copy of the document(s) at https://www.fws.gov/northeast/planning/NomansLand/ccphome.html.
Electronic mail: northeastplanning@fws.gov. Include ``Nomans Land
Island final CCP'' in the subject line of the message.
U.S. Postal Service: Eastern Massachusetts NWR Complex, 73 Weir
Hill Road, Sudbury, MA 01776.
In-Person Viewing or Pickup: Call 978-443-4661 to make an
appointment during regular business hours at the above address.
Facsimile: 978-443-2898.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Libby Herland, Project Leader, Eastern
Massachusetts NWR Complex, 73 Weir Hill Road, Sudbury, MA 01776; phone:
413-443-4661, or Carl Melberg, Planning Team Leader, phone: 978-443-
4661; electronic mail: Carl_Melberg@fws.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Introduction
With this notice, we finalize the CCP process for Nomans Land
Island NWR, which we started with the notice of intent we published in
the Federal Register (69 FR 72210) on December 13, 2008. We prepared
the EA/draft CCP in compliance with the National Environmental Policy
Act of 1969 (NEPA) (42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.) and the National Wildlife
Refuge System Administration Act of 1966 (Administration Act) (16
U.S.C. 668dd-668ee), as amended by the National Wildlife Refuge System
Improvement Act of 1997 (Improvement Act). We released the EA/draft CCP
to the public, announcing and requesting comments in a notice of
availability in the Federal Register (75 FR 30052) on May 28, 2010.
Nomans Land Island is a 628-acre roadless island located
approximately 3 miles south of Martha's Vineyard, Massachusetts. The
refuge was established in 1998 for the conservation and management of
migratory birds. We first began managing a portion of the eastern side
of the island in 1970 as an ``overlay'' refuge under a joint management
agreement between the U.S. Department of the Interior and the U.S.
Department of the Navy (Navy), while it was still under Navy
management. In 1998, management of the island was transferred to the
Service, and all 628 acres became Nomans Land Island NWR.
This island has a unique history, from its use by Native Americans
as a summer camp, to sheep grazing when the island was privately owned
in the 1800s, to use as a bombing range by the Navy during World War
II. Because Nomans Land Island provides diverse habitats including
intertidal, freshwater wetland, grassland, and shrubland habitats, it
serves an important role for nesting landbirds and colonial waterbirds,
and is a stopover for migratory birds and raptors, including the
peregrine falcon.
We announce our decision and the availability of the FONSI for the
final CCP for Nomans Land Island NWR in accordance with NEPA
requirements. The FONSI is included as Appendix K in the final CCP. We
completed a thorough analysis of impacts on the human environment,
which we included in the EA/draft CCP.
Alternative C, as we described in the EA/draft CCP, is the
foundation for the final CCP.
Background
The Administration Act, as amended by the Improvement Act, requires
us to develop a CCP for each national wildlife refuge. The purpose for
developing a CCP is to provide refuge managers with a 15-year plan for
achieving refuge purposes and contributing toward the
[[Page 62416]]
mission of the National Wildlife Refuge System (NWRS), consistent with
sound principles of fish and wildlife management, conservation, legal
mandates, and our policies. In addition to outlining broad management
direction on conserving wildlife and their habitats, CCPs identify
wildlife-dependent recreational opportunities available to the public,
including opportunities for hunting, fishing, wildlife observation and
photography, and environmental education and interpretation. We will
review and update the CCP at least every 15 years in accordance with
the Administration Act.
CCP Alternatives, Including Selected Alternative
Our EA/draft CCP addressed several key issues, including the amount
of shrubland to manage, other priority habitat types to conserve, land
protection and conservation priorities, improving the visibility of the
Service and refuge, and ways to improve opportunities for off-site
public use while ensuring the restoration and protection of priority
ecological and cultural resources.
To address these issues and develop a plan based on the purposes
for establishing the refuge, and the vision and goals we identified, we
identified three alternatives in the EA. The alternatives have some
actions in common, such as protecting and monitoring federally listed
species and the regionally significant coastal shrubland, controlling
invasive plants and wildlife diseases, monitoring programs that benefit
our resource decisions, protecting cultural resources, and distributing
refuge revenue-sharing payments to counties.
Other actions distinguish the alternatives. Alternative A, or the
``No Action Alternative,'' consists of our current management
activities. It serves as the baseline against which to compare the
other two alternatives. Our habitat management and visitor services
programs would not change under this alternative. We would continue to
use the same tools and techniques, and not expand existing facilities.
Under Alternative A, we would continue to passively manage refuge
lands, and the Service would have minimal presence. Habitat management
would be limited to continuing to passively oversee the current 400
acres of shrub habitat, up to 150 acres of freshwater wetland
communities, 100 acres of marine intertidal beach and rocky shore
habitat, and 15 acres of herbaceous upland dune vegetation. We would
continue minimal monitoring of focal species as current staffing
allows. We would provide oversight and coordination to Navy contaminant
and unexploded ordnance (UXO) cleanup.
The refuge would continue to be closed to the public.
Administration of off-site visitor services, land protection, and
biological and law enforcement activities would be handled by existing
staff from the Eastern Massachusetts NWR Complex based in Sudbury,
Massachusetts, as funds and staffing permit.
Under Alternative B, we would emphasize more active monitoring and
management of all refuge habitats to support focal species whose
habitat needs also benefit other species of conservation concern in the
region. In particular, the alternative emphasizes active habitat
management for breeding and migrating priority bird species of
conservation concern identified by national, regional, and State
conservation plans.
With the addition of seasonal biological and law enforcement staff,
under Alternative B, we would also implement a more active prescribed
burning regime, invasive species and predator control programs, and
better enforcement of the no-public-access policy. We would actively
monitor and manage beach/nesting species such as terns, plovers, and
rare plants, and consider the introduction of the New England
cottontail. We would improve our visitor services through partnerships
and working with them to develop programs and facilities on their lands
that help increase awareness of the refuge's biological and cultural
resources. Finally, our biological program would be enhanced through
partnerships that would increase our ability to conduct surveys and
long-term monitoring.
Alternative C was identified as the Service-preferred alternative
in the EA/draft CCP. It allows the 400 acres of critical migration
stopover shrub habitat to be influenced by natural processes such as
succession over the next 15 years, with minimal management. It allows
coastal processes of wind and wave action to shape the current 15 acres
of herbaceous upland dune vegetation, 100 acres of marine intertidal
beach and rocky shore habitats, and almost 150 acres of freshwater
wetlands. Under this alternative, we also would continue to study the
feasibility of introducing New England cottontail on the refuge.
The alternative recognizes the island as one of the few
opportunities in the Northeast region of the United States for
wilderness designation and proposes pursuing formal designation as a
unit of the National Wilderness Preservation System. It also recognizes
the need to coordinate with the Navy annually to promote communication,
exchange information on Navy operations and management planning, and
facilitate cleanup of contaminants and UXO on the refuge. We would also
closely coordinate with the Navy and the Massachusetts State Historic
Preservation Office for any proposed ground-disturbing activity. We
would monitor vegetation changes every 3 years through aerial
photography and/or site visitation. We would establish a fire regime to
manage shrub habitat as needed, and we would monitor invasive plant
species annually and control those that threaten healthy ecosystems.
Existing refuge complex staff would enhance the visitor services
program through a broader array of off-site programming and outreach
through partnership opportunities as they arise, similar to, but to a
lesser extent than would take place under the other alternatives.
Comments
We invited comments on the EA/draft CCP during a public review and
comment period, from May 28 through July 3, 2010, and held a public
meeting on June 23, 2010, in the Town of Chilmark, Massachusetts.
We received 24 unique letters and oral comments representing
individuals, organizations, and State agencies. We made modifications
to the draft that are outlined in Appendix J, ``Summary of Public
Comments and Service's Response on the Environmental Assessment and
Draft Comprehensive Conservation Plan for Nomans Land Island National
Wildlife Refuge'' in the final CCP. Highlights of some of the changes
are listed below:
1. We were made aware of additional partnership opportunities on
Martha's Vineyard and have modified the final CCP to reflect these
opportunities (pages 4-7 through 4-8). We also inserted language in the
Rationale to Objective 2.2 (page 4-30) that these partnerships would
potentially provide additional resources to increase our visitor
services capacity from what we originally proposed.
2. We added language to Chapter 4 in the final CCP (page 4-11)
stating that although it would not be possible to clean up the island
to pre-bombing conditions, we would continue to work with the Navy and
Federal and State regulators for the 5-year site reviews as required by
the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability
Act. If, at some point in the future, there is a
[[Page 62417]]
major advance in technology that would allow the extraction of UXOs
without massive ground disturbance or impact to wildlife, then
additional cleanup might warrant further consideration at that time.
3. We included language in our Habitat Management and Protection
summary in Chapter 4 of the final CCP (page 4-14) and biological
rationales [Objectives 1.1 (page 4-19) and 1.2 (page 4-24)] to work
with the Massachusetts Natural Heritage and Endangered Species Program
to evaluate the appropriateness of altering the frequency of
prescription burns to incorporate rare plant management, and for tern
restoration efforts.
4. We added language to several sections in Chapter 3 and Chapter 4
in the final CCP to incorporate more life history information and to
refine our biological objectives and management actions for piping
plover (pages 3-33, 3-35, 4-21, 4-23, and 4-24). This is due to the
presence of a breeding pair on the island for the first time in 30
years.
5. We corrected typographical and grammatical errors identified by
reviewers.
Selected Alternative
After considering the comments we received on our EA/draft CCP, we
have selected Alternative C for implementation, for several reasons.
Alternative C comprises the mix of actions that, in our professional
judgment, works best toward achieving refuge purposes, our vision and
goals, and the goals of other State and regional conservation plans,
and it is most consistent with the principles of sound fish and
wildlife management. We also believe it most effectively addresses the
key issues raised during the planning process. The basis of our
decision is detailed in Appendix K, Finding of No Significant Impact,
in the final CCP.
Public Availability of Documents
You can view or obtain documents as indicated under ADDRESSES.
Dated: September 9, 2010.
James G. Geiger,
Acting Regional Director, Northeast Region, U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service, Hadley, MA 01035.
[FR Doc. 2010-25393 Filed 10-7-10; 8:45 am]
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