Canaan Valley National Wildlife Refuge, Tucker and Grant Counties, WV; Final Comprehensive Conservation Plan and Finding of No Significant Impact for Environmental Assessment, 12365-12367 [2011-4043]
Download as PDF
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with NOTICES
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 44 / Monday, March 7, 2011 / Notices
enhance the quality, utility, and clarity
of the information to be collected; (d)
ways to minimize the burden including
the use of automated collection
techniques or the use of other forms of
information technology; and (e) the
annual costs burden to respondents or
record keepers from the collection of
information (a total capital/startup costs
and operations and maintenance costs).
The comments that are submitted will
be summarized and included in the CBP
request for Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) approval. All comments
will become a matter of public record.
In this document CBP is soliciting
comments concerning the following
information collection:
Title: Bonded Warehouse Regulations.
OMB Number: 1651–0041.
Form Number: None.
Abstract: Owners or lessees desiring
to establish a bonded warehouse must
make written application to the U.S.
Customs and Border Protection (CBP)
port director where the warehouse is
located. The application must include
the warehouse location, a description of
the premises, and an indication of the
class of bonded warehouse permit
desired. Alterations to or relocation of a
bonded warehouse within the same CBP
port may be made by applying to the
CBP port director of the port in which
the facility is located. The authority to
establish and maintain a bonded
warehouse is set forth in 19 U.S.C. 1555,
and provided for by 19 CFR 19.2, 19
CFR 17, 19 CFR 19.3, 19 CFR 19.6, 19
CFR 19.14, and 19 CFR 19.36.
Current Actions: This submission is
being made to extend the expiration
date of this information collection with
no change to the burden hours or to the
information being collected.
Type of Review: Extension (without
change).
Affected Public: Businesses.
Estimated Number of Respondents:
198.
Estimated Number of Responses per
Respondent: 47.
Estimated Total Annual Responses:
9,254.
Estimated Time per Response: 32
minutes.
Estimated Total Annual Burden
Hours: 4,932.
Dated: March 1, 2011.
Tracey Denning,
Agency Clearance Officer, U.S. Customs and
Border Protection.
[FR Doc. 2011–5006 Filed 3–4–11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 9111–14–P
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DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Office of the Secretary
Vendor Outreach Workshop for Small
IT Businesses in the National Capitol
Region of the United States
Office of the Secretary, Interior.
Notice.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
The Office of Small and
Disadvantaged Business Utilization of
the Department of the Interior is hosting
a Vendor Outreach Workshop for small
IT businesses in the National Capitol
region of the United States that are
interested in doing business with the
Department. This outreach workshop
will review market contracting
opportunities for the attendees.
Business owners will be able to share
their individual perspectives with
Contracting Officers, Program Managers
and Small Business Specialists from the
Department.
DATES: The workshop will be held on
April 1, 2010 from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.
ADDRESSES: The workshop will be held
at the U.S. Department of the Interior
Main Auditorium, 1849 C Street, NW.,
Washington, DC 20240. Register online
at: https://www.doi.gov/osdbu.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Mark Oliver, Director, Office of Small
and Disadvantaged Business Utilization,
1951 Constitution Ave., NW., MS–320
SIB, Washington, DC 20240, telephone
1–877–375–9927 (Toll-Free).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: In
accordance with the Small Business
Act, as amended by Public Law 95–507,
the Department has the responsibility to
promote the use of small and small
disadvantaged business for its
acquisition of goods and services. The
Department is proud of its
accomplishments in meeting its
business goals for small, small
disadvantaged, 8(a), woman-owned,
HUBZone, and service-disabled veteranowned businesses. In Fiscal Year 2009,
the Department awarded 56 percent of
its $2.6 billion in contracts to small
businesses.
This fiscal year, the Office of Small
and Disadvantaged Business Utilization
is reaching out to our internal
stakeholders and the Department’s small
business community by conducting
several vendor outreach workshops. The
Department’s presenters will focus on
contracting and subcontracting
opportunities and how small IT
businesses can better market services
and products. Over 3,000 small IT
businesses have been targeted for this
event. If you are a small IT business
interested in working with the
SUMMARY:
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12365
Department, we urge you to register
online at: https://www.doi.gov/osdbu and
attend the workshop.
These outreach events are a new and
exciting opportunity for the
Department’s bureaus and offices to
improve their support for small
business. Additional scheduled events
are posted on the Office of Small and
Disadvantaged Business Utilization Web
site at https://www.doi.gov/osdbu.
Mark Oliver,
Director, Office of Small and Disadvantaged
Business Utilization.
[FR Doc. 2011–5126 Filed 3–4–11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–RK–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
[FWS–R5–R–2010–N269; BAC–4311–K9–S3]
Canaan Valley National Wildlife
Refuge, Tucker and Grant Counties,
WV; Final Comprehensive
Conservation Plan and Finding of No
Significant Impact for Environmental
Assessment
Fish and Wildlife Service,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice of availability.
AGENCY:
We, the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service (Service), announce the
availability of the final comprehensive
conservation plan (CCP) and finding of
no significant impact (FONSI) for the
environmental assessment (EA) for
Canaan Valley 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 a CD–ROM.
Agency Web site: Download a copy of
the document(s) at https://www.fws.gov/
northeast/planning/Canaan%20Valley/
ccphome.html.
E- mail: Send document requests to
northeastplanning@fws.gov. Include
‘‘Canaan Valley NWR CCP’’ in the
subject line of your e-mail.
U.S. Postal Service: Send document
requests to Ken Sturm, Acting Refuge
Manager, Canaan Valley NWR, 6263
Appalachian Highway, Davis, WV
26260–8061.
Fax: Attention: Ken Sturm, 304–866–
3852.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ken
Sturm, Acting Refuge Manager, Canaan
Valley NWR, 6263 Appalachian
Highway, Davis, WV 26260–8061;
phone: 304–866–3858; electronic mail:
ken_sturm@fws.gov.
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\07MRN1.SGM
07MRN1
12366
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 44 / Monday, March 7, 2011 / Notices
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with NOTICES
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Introduction
With this notice, we finalize the CCP
process for Canaan Valley NWR. We
started this plan’s development through
a notice in the Federal Register (72 FR
2709) on January 22, 2007. We released
the draft CCP/EA to the public,
announcing and requesting comments
in a notice of availability in the Federal
Register (75 FR 30423) on June 1, 2010.
The 16,193-acre Canaan Valley NWR
was established in 1994 to conserve and
protect fish and wildlife resources and
the unique wetland and upland habitats
of this high-elevation valley. The refuge
is located in Tucker County, WV, and
has an approved acquisition boundary
of 24,000 acres. It includes the largest
wetland complex in the State, and
encompasses the headwaters of the
Blackwater and Little Blackwater Rivers.
The refuge supports species of concern
at both the Federal and State levels,
including the West Virginia northern
flying squirrel, bald eagle, and the
Federally listed Cheat Mountain
salamander and Indiana bat. Its
dominant habitats include wet
meadows, peatlands, shrub and forested
swamps, beaver ponds and streams,
northern hardwood forest, old fields and
shrubland, and managed grassland.
Refuge visitors engage in wildlife
observation and photography,
environmental education,
interpretation, hunting, and fishing.
Management activities include
maintaining and perpetuating the
ecological integrity of the Canaan Valley
wetland complex, perpetuating the
ecological integrity of upland northern
hardwood and northern hardwoodconifer forests to sustain wildlife and
plant communities, providing a
diversity of successional habitats in
upland and wetland-edge shrublands,
grasslands, old fields, and hardwood
communities, and supporting wildlifedependent recreation and education.
We announce our decision and the
availability of the FONSI for the final
CCP for Canaan Valley NWR in
accordance with National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) (40
CFR 1506.6(b)) requirements. We
completed a thorough analysis of
impacts on the human environment,
which we included in the draft CCP/EA.
The CCP will guide us in managing
and administering Canaan Valley NWR
for the next 15 years. Alternative B, as
we described in the draft CCP/EA, is the
foundation for the final CCP.
Background
The National Wildlife Refuge System
Administration Act of 1966 (16 U.S.C.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:54 Mar 04, 2011
Jkt 223001
668dd–668ee) (Administration Act), as
amended by the National Wildlife
Refuge System Improvement Act of
1997, 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 mission of the
National Wildlife Refuge System,
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 the
Selected Alternative
Our draft CCP/EA (75 FR 30423)
addressed several key issues, including
the improvement of early successional
habitat, the creation of trail connections
on- and off-refuge, and the need for
better hunter access.
To address these issues and develop
a plan based on the purposes for
establishing the refuge, and the vision
and goals we identified, four
alternatives were evaluated in the EA.
The alternatives have some actions in
common, such as protecting cultural
resources, controlling invasive plant
species, encouraging research that
benefits our resource decisions,
continuing to acquire land from willing
sellers within our approved refuge
boundary, and distributing refuge
revenue-sharing payments to counties.
Other actions distinguish the
alternatives. Alternative A, or the ‘‘No
Action Alternative,’’ is defined by our
current management activities. It serves
as the baseline against which to
compare the other three 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.
Alternative B, the ‘‘Service-Preferred
Alternative,’’ is designed to balance the
conservation of a mixed-forest matrix
landscape with the management of early
successional habitats and the protection
of wetlands. The habitat-type objectives
in the plan identify focal species whose
life and growth requirements would
guide management activities in each
PO 00000
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
respective habitat. We would facilitate
the removal of more deer from the
refuge by increasing access and opening
more lands to rifle hunting, and we
would officially open the refuge to
fishing. We would create more trail
connections, expand visitor center
hours, build a new environmental
education pavilion, and increase the
number of environmental education and
interpretation programs.
In Alternative C, we would increase
access and infrastructure to support
more priority public uses than any of
the other alternatives. We would create
a cross-valley trail that would run eastwest through the northern part of the
valley, and we would allow limited offtrail use in a designated area. With an
increase in public access and
infrastructure development, we
anticipate a greater need for monitoring
and control of invasive plants. We
would also encourage additional
research that would assess whether
increased public use affects wildlife
behavior, including nesting, feeding,
and resting. Within the biological
objectives, differences between this
alternative and the others are more
subtle, but generally emphasize early
successional habitat management over
forest stand improvement.
Alternative D strives to establish and
maintain the ecological integrity of
natural communities within the refuge.
Management would range from passive,
or ‘‘letting nature take its course,’’ to
actively manipulating vegetation to
create or hasten the development of
mature forest structural conditions
shaped by natural disturbances such as
infrequent fires, ice storms, and small
patch blow-downs. Under this
alternative, no particular wildlife
species would be a management focus.
We would promote research and
development of applied management
practices to sustain and enhance the
natural composition, patterns, and
processes within their natural range in
the Central Appalachian Forest. We
would limit new visitor services
infrastructure to already disturbed areas.
We would enhance hunting and fishing
opportunities in ways similar to
Alternatives B and C.
Comments
We solicited comments on the draft
CCP/EA for Canaan Valley NWR from
June 1, 2010, to July 16, 2010 (75 FR
30423). During the comment period, we
received 312 responses, both oral and
written. All comments we received were
evaluated. A summary of those
comments and our responses to them is
included as Appendix J in the CCP.
E:\FR\FM\07MRN1.SGM
07MRN1
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 44 / Monday, March 7, 2011 / Notices
Selected Alternative
After considering the comments we
received on our draft CCP/EA, we have
selected Alternative B for
implementation, for several reasons.
Alternative B comprises the mix of
actions that, in our professional
judgment, works best towards achieving
refuge purposes, our vision and goals,
and the goals of other State and regional
conservation plans. We also believe it
most effectively addresses the key issues
raised during the planning process. The
basis of our decision is detailed in the
FONSI, located in Appendix K of the
CCP.
Public Availability of Documents
You can view or obtain documents as
indicated under ADDRESSES.
Dated: January 19, 2011.
Wendi Weber,
Acting Regional Director, U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service.
[FR Doc. 2011–4043 Filed 3–7–11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–55–P
DEPARTMENT OF INTERIOR
National Park Service
Proposed Information Collection;
Visibility Valuation Survey Pilot Study
National Park Service, U.S.
Department of the Interior.
ACTION: Notice; request for comments.
AGENCY:
We (National Park Service)
will ask the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) to approve the
information collection (IC) described
below. As required by the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 and as part of our
continuing efforts to reduce paperwork
and respondent burden, we invite the
general public and other Federal
agencies to take this opportunity to
comment on this IC. We may not
conduct or sponsor, and a person is not
required to respond to, a collection of
information unless it displays a
currently valid OMB control number.
DATES: Public comments must be
submitted on or before May 6, 2011.
ADDRESSES: Direct all written comments
on this IC to Dr. Bruce Peacock, Chief,
Social Science Division, Natural
Resource Program Center, National Park
Service, 1201 Oakridge Drive, Fort
Collins, CO 80525–5596 (mail);
Bruce_Peacock@nps.gov (e-mail); or
970–267–2106 (phone).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Susan Johnson, Air Resources Division,
National Park Service, 12795 W.
Alameda Parkway, P.O. Box 25287,
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with NOTICES
SUMMARY:
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17:54 Mar 04, 2011
Jkt 223001
Denver, Colorado 80225 (mail);
Susan_Johnson@nps.gov (e-mail); or
(303) 987–6694 (phone).
I. Abstract
The Clean Air Act (Sections 169A,
169B, and 110(a)(2)(j)) charges the NPS
with an ‘‘affirmative responsibility to
protect air quality related values
(including visibility).’’ The NPS believes
the value of visibility changes should be
represented in cost-benefit analyses
regarding state and Federal efforts that
may affect visibility (including the
Regional Haze Rule, Title 40, Part 51 of
the Code of Federal Regulations).
Updated estimates of visibility benefits
are required because the studies
conducted in the 1970s and 1980s do
not reflect current baseline visibility
conditions in national parks and
wilderness areas.
The NPS plans to conduct a
nationwide stated preference survey to
estimate the value of visibility changes
in national parks and wilderness areas.
Survey development and pre-testing
have already been conducted under a
previous IC (OMB Control Number
1024–0255). The purpose of this IC is to
conduct a pilot study to test the survey
instrument and implementation
procedures prior to the full survey. After
the pilot is completed, the NPS will
submit a revised IC request to OMB for
the full survey.
II. Data
OMB Number: None. This is a new
collection.
Title: Visibility Valuation Survey Pilot
Study.
Type of Request: New.
Affected Public: Individuals or
households.
Respondent Obligation: Voluntary.
Estimated Number of Respondents:
1,676 potential respondents; 800
responses.
Estimated Time and frequency of
Response: This is a one-time survey
estimated to take 20 minutes per
respondent to complete.
Estimated Total Annual Burden
Hours: 267 hours.
III. Request for Comments
Comments are invited on: (1) The
practical utility of the information being
gathered; (2) the accuracy of the burden
hour estimate; (3) ways to enhance the
quality, utility, and clarity of the
information to be collected; and (4)
ways to minimize the burden to
respondents, including use of
automated information techniques or
other forms of information technology.
Comments submitted in response to this
notice will be summarized and/or
PO 00000
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12367
included in the request for OMB
approval. All comments will become a
matter of public record. While you can
ask us in your comment to withhold
personal identifying information from
public review, we cannot guarantee that
we will be able to do so.
Dated: February 28, 2011.
Robert Gordon,
Information Collection Clearance Officer,
National Park Service.
[FR Doc. 2011–4983 Filed 3–4–11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4312–52–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
National Park Service
Denali National Park and Preserve
Aircraft Overflights Advisory Council
Within the Alaska Region Meeting
Notice of meeting for the Denali
National Park and Preserve Aircraft
Overflights Advisory Council within the
Alaska Region.
ACTION:
The National Park Service
(NPS) announces a meeting of the
Denali National Park and Preserve
Aircraft Overflights Advisory Council.
The purpose of this meeting is to
discuss mitigation of impacts from
aircraft overflights at Denali National
Park and Preserve. The Aircraft
Overflights Advisory Council is
authorized to operate in accordance
with the provisions of the Federal
Advisory Committee Act.
Public Availability of Comments:
These meetings are open to the public
and will have time allocated for public
testimony. The public is welcome to
present written or oral comments to the
Aircraft Overflights Advisory Council.
Each meeting will be recorded and
meeting minutes will be available upon
request from the park superintendent for
public inspection approximately six
weeks after each meeting. Before
including your address, telephone
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.
DATES: The Denali National Park and
Preserve Aircraft Overflights Advisory
Council meeting will be held on
Thursday, March 24, 2011, from 9 a.m.
to 5 p.m., Alaska Standard Time. The
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\07MRN1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 76, Number 44 (Monday, March 7, 2011)]
[Notices]
[Pages 12365-12367]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2011-4043]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
[FWS-R5-R-2010-N269; BAC-4311-K9-S3]
Canaan Valley National Wildlife Refuge, Tucker and Grant
Counties, WV; Final Comprehensive Conservation Plan and Finding of No
Significant Impact for Environmental Assessment
AGENCY: Fish and Wildlife Service, Interior.
ACTION: Notice of availability.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: We, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Service), announce the
availability of the final comprehensive conservation plan (CCP) and
finding of no significant impact (FONSI) for the environmental
assessment (EA) for Canaan Valley 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 a CD-ROM.
Agency Web site: Download a copy of the document(s) at https://www.fws.gov/northeast/planning/Canaan%20Valley/ccphome.html.
E- mail: Send document requests to northeastplanning@fws.gov.
Include ``Canaan Valley NWR CCP'' in the subject line of your e-mail.
U.S. Postal Service: Send document requests to Ken Sturm, Acting
Refuge Manager, Canaan Valley NWR, 6263 Appalachian Highway, Davis, WV
26260-8061.
Fax: Attention: Ken Sturm, 304-866-3852.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ken Sturm, Acting Refuge Manager,
Canaan Valley NWR, 6263 Appalachian Highway, Davis, WV 26260-8061;
phone: 304-866-3858; electronic mail: ken_sturm@fws.gov.
[[Page 12366]]
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Introduction
With this notice, we finalize the CCP process for Canaan Valley
NWR. We started this plan's development through a notice in the Federal
Register (72 FR 2709) on January 22, 2007. We released the draft CCP/EA
to the public, announcing and requesting comments in a notice of
availability in the Federal Register (75 FR 30423) on June 1, 2010.
The 16,193-acre Canaan Valley NWR was established in 1994 to
conserve and protect fish and wildlife resources and the unique wetland
and upland habitats of this high-elevation valley. The refuge is
located in Tucker County, WV, and has an approved acquisition boundary
of 24,000 acres. It includes the largest wetland complex in the State,
and encompasses the headwaters of the Blackwater and Little Blackwater
Rivers. The refuge supports species of concern at both the Federal and
State levels, including the West Virginia northern flying squirrel,
bald eagle, and the Federally listed Cheat Mountain salamander and
Indiana bat. Its dominant habitats include wet meadows, peatlands,
shrub and forested swamps, beaver ponds and streams, northern hardwood
forest, old fields and shrubland, and managed grassland.
Refuge visitors engage in wildlife observation and photography,
environmental education, interpretation, hunting, and fishing.
Management activities include maintaining and perpetuating the
ecological integrity of the Canaan Valley wetland complex, perpetuating
the ecological integrity of upland northern hardwood and northern
hardwood-conifer forests to sustain wildlife and plant communities,
providing a diversity of successional habitats in upland and wetland-
edge shrublands, grasslands, old fields, and hardwood communities, and
supporting wildlife-dependent recreation and education.
We announce our decision and the availability of the FONSI for the
final CCP for Canaan Valley NWR in accordance with National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) (40 CFR 1506.6(b)) requirements. We
completed a thorough analysis of impacts on the human environment,
which we included in the draft CCP/EA.
The CCP will guide us in managing and administering Canaan Valley
NWR for the next 15 years. Alternative B, as we described in the draft
CCP/EA, is the foundation for the final CCP.
Background
The National Wildlife Refuge System Administration Act of 1966 (16
U.S.C. 668dd-668ee) (Administration Act), as amended by the National
Wildlife Refuge System Improvement Act of 1997, 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 mission of the National
Wildlife Refuge System, 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 the Selected Alternative
Our draft CCP/EA (75 FR 30423) addressed several key issues,
including the improvement of early successional habitat, the creation
of trail connections on- and off-refuge, and the need for better hunter
access.
To address these issues and develop a plan based on the purposes
for establishing the refuge, and the vision and goals we identified,
four alternatives were evaluated in the EA. The alternatives have some
actions in common, such as protecting cultural resources, controlling
invasive plant species, encouraging research that benefits our resource
decisions, continuing to acquire land from willing sellers within our
approved refuge boundary, and distributing refuge revenue-sharing
payments to counties.
Other actions distinguish the alternatives. Alternative A, or the
``No Action Alternative,'' is defined by our current management
activities. It serves as the baseline against which to compare the
other three 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.
Alternative B, the ``Service-Preferred Alternative,'' is designed
to balance the conservation of a mixed-forest matrix landscape with the
management of early successional habitats and the protection of
wetlands. The habitat-type objectives in the plan identify focal
species whose life and growth requirements would guide management
activities in each respective habitat. We would facilitate the removal
of more deer from the refuge by increasing access and opening more
lands to rifle hunting, and we would officially open the refuge to
fishing. We would create more trail connections, expand visitor center
hours, build a new environmental education pavilion, and increase the
number of environmental education and interpretation programs.
In Alternative C, we would increase access and infrastructure to
support more priority public uses than any of the other alternatives.
We would create a cross-valley trail that would run east-west through
the northern part of the valley, and we would allow limited off-trail
use in a designated area. With an increase in public access and
infrastructure development, we anticipate a greater need for monitoring
and control of invasive plants. We would also encourage additional
research that would assess whether increased public use affects
wildlife behavior, including nesting, feeding, and resting. Within the
biological objectives, differences between this alternative and the
others are more subtle, but generally emphasize early successional
habitat management over forest stand improvement.
Alternative D strives to establish and maintain the ecological
integrity of natural communities within the refuge. Management would
range from passive, or ``letting nature take its course,'' to actively
manipulating vegetation to create or hasten the development of mature
forest structural conditions shaped by natural disturbances such as
infrequent fires, ice storms, and small patch blow-downs. Under this
alternative, no particular wildlife species would be a management
focus. We would promote research and development of applied management
practices to sustain and enhance the natural composition, patterns, and
processes within their natural range in the Central Appalachian Forest.
We would limit new visitor services infrastructure to already disturbed
areas. We would enhance hunting and fishing opportunities in ways
similar to Alternatives B and C.
Comments
We solicited comments on the draft CCP/EA for Canaan Valley NWR
from June 1, 2010, to July 16, 2010 (75 FR 30423). During the comment
period, we received 312 responses, both oral and written. All comments
we received were evaluated. A summary of those comments and our
responses to them is included as Appendix J in the CCP.
[[Page 12367]]
Selected Alternative
After considering the comments we received on our draft CCP/EA, we
have selected Alternative B for implementation, for several reasons.
Alternative B comprises the mix of actions that, in our professional
judgment, works best towards achieving refuge purposes, our vision and
goals, and the goals of other State and regional conservation plans. We
also believe it most effectively addresses the key issues raised during
the planning process. The basis of our decision is detailed in the
FONSI, located in Appendix K of the CCP.
Public Availability of Documents
You can view or obtain documents as indicated under ADDRESSES.
Dated: January 19, 2011.
Wendi Weber,
Acting Regional Director, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
[FR Doc. 2011-4043 Filed 3-7-11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310-55-P