Draft Environmental Impact Statement and Proposed Amendment of the Washington Department of Natural Resources Habitat Conservation Plan for Forested State Trust Lands, 23743-23745 [2012-9664]
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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 77 / Friday, April 20, 2012 / Notices
Authorities
The authorities of this action are the
Oil Pollution Act of 1990 (33 U.S.C.
2701 et seq.), the implementing Natural
Resource Damage Assessment
regulations found at 15 CFR Part 990,
and the Framework Agreement.
Dated: April 16, 2012.
Cynthia K. Dohner,
DOI Authorized Official.
[FR Doc. 2012–9581 Filed 4–18–12; 11:15 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–55–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
[FWS–R1–ES–2012–N081; 10120–1112–
0000–F2]
Draft Environmental Impact Statement
and Proposed Amendment of the
Washington Department of Natural
Resources Habitat Conservation Plan
for Forested State Trust Lands
Fish and Wildlife Service,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice of intent; announcement
of public scoping meetings; request for
comments.
AGENCY:
We, the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service (Service), intend to
conduct public scoping under the
National Environmental Policy Act
(NEPA) to gather information to prepare
a Draft Environmental Impact Statement
(DEIS) in anticipation of receiving an
application for an Incidental Take
Permit (ITP) amendment under section
10 of the Endangered Species Act (ESA)
from the Washington Department of
Natural Resources (WDNR) for their
1997 Habitat Conservation Plan (HCP)
for forested State trust lands. The HCP
amendment involves the proposed
replacement of an interim conservation
strategy for the threatened marbled
murrelet (Brachyramphus marmoratus),
which is currently being implemented
under the HCP, with a long-term
conservation strategy. The proposed
amendment to the HCP and the ITP is
exclusively limited to consideration of a
long-term conservation strategy for the
marbled murrelet on HCP-covered
lands.
SUMMARY:
To ensure consideration, please
send your written comments by May 21,
2012 (see ADDRESSES section).
Four public scoping meetings will be
held to discuss the DEIS, and we will
accept written comments at these
meetings. These meetings will be held
on the following dates and at the
following locations:
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
DATES:
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1. April 30, 2012, 6–8 p.m., WDNR,
Natural Resource Building, 1st Floor,
1111 Washington Street SE., Olympia,
WA 98504.
2. May 3, 2012, 6–8 p.m., WDNR,
Northwest Region Office, 919 N.
Township Street, Sedro Woolley, WA
98284.
3. May 8, 2012, 6–8 p.m., Wahkikum
County Courthouse, Pacific Cascade/
River Room, 25 River Street, Cathlamet,
WA 98612.
4. May 9, 2012, 6–8 p.m., WDNR,
Olympic Region Headquarters, 411
Tillicum Lane, Forks, WA 98331.
ADDRESSES: All comments concerning
the preparation of the DEIS, proposed
HCP amendment, and the NEPA process
may be submitted by one of the
following methods to WDNR. WDNR
will transmit all comments received to
the Service for review and
consideration:
• Email: sepacenter@dnr.wa.gov.
• U.S. Mail: SEPA Responsible
Official, Annie Szvetecz, Washington
Department of Natural Resources, SEPA
Center, P.O. Box 47001, Olympia, WA
98504–7001.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Mark Ostwald of the Service at (360)
753–9564 (phone);
Mark_Ostwald@fws.gov (email); or by
U.S. mail to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service, Washington Fish and Wildlife
Office, 510 Desmond Dr. SE., Suite 102,
Lacey, WA 98503; or, alternatively,
contact Annie Szvetecz, SEPA
Responsible Official, WDNR, at (360)
902–112 (phone);
sepacenter@dnr.wa.gov (email). In
addition, information on this proposed
action is also available at the WDNR’s
Web site at https://www.dnr.wa.gov/
ResearchScience/Topics/
TrustLandsHCP/Pages/
lm_hcp_marbled_murrelet_main.aspx
and the Service’s Web site at https://
www.fws.gov/wafwo/.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Meeting Location Accommodation
Persons needing reasonable
accommodations in order to attend and
participate in the public scoping
meetings should contact Mark Ostwald
with the Service or Annie Szvetecz with
the WDNR (see FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT above). In order to
allow sufficient time to process
requests, please call no later than one
week before the public meeting.
Information regarding this proposed
action is available in alternative formats
upon request.
Background
In 1996, the WDNR released their
draft HCP for forest management
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
23743
activities covering 1.6 million acres of
forested State trust lands within the
range of the northern spotted owl (Strix
occidentalis caurina) in Washington. A
DEIS (dated March 1996) jointly
developed by the Service, National
Marine Fisheries Service, and the
WDNR was announced in the Federal
Register on April 5, 1996 (61 FR 15297).
The DEIS analyzed reasonable
management alternatives, including the
HCP. A notice of availability for the
Final EIS (FEIS) was published in the
Federal Register on November 1, 1996
(61 FR 56563). On January 30, 1997, the
Service issued an ITP (PRT No. 812521)
for the WDNR HCP. The Service’s ITP
decision and the availability of related
decision documents were announced in
the Federal Register on February 27,
1997 (62 FR 8980).
The WDNR HCP commits WDNR to
developing a long-term conservation
strategy for the marbled murrelet (HCP
IV. 39). However, during development
of the HCP, it was determined that there
was not enough scientific information to
credibly develop a long-term
conservation strategy for the marbled
murrelet on WDNR lands. For that
reason, the WDNR developed an interim
conservation strategy for the marbled
murrelet (HCP IV. 39), which is
currently being implemented. The
principal intent of the interim
conservation strategy was to locate
occupied marbled murrelet sites and not
foreclose future options for long-term
conservation of the marbled murrelet on
WDNR lands. Briefly, the interim
marbled murrelet conservation strategy
included the following: (1) Suitable
habitat blocks are identified, with
harvest on these blocks deferred; (2)
habitat relationship studies are
undertaken to determine the relative
importance, based on occupancy, of
identified habitat blocks; (3) following
completion of the habitat relationship
studies, the lowest quality habitat
blocks are made available for timber
harvest (these areas, in the poorest
quality habitats, were expected to
contain about 5 percent of the murreletoccupied sites on HCP-covered lands);
(4) the higher quality habitat blocks
identified from the habitat relationships
study are surveyed for marbled murrelet
occupancy, and occupied habitat are
protected, along with some unoccupied
habitat; and (5) development of a longterm conservation strategy for marbled
murrelets is undertaken on WDNR
lands.
For southwest Washington and the
Olympic Peninsula, the WDNR has
completed steps 1 through 4 listed
above. For step 5, the WDNR
contemplated proposing an amendment
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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 77 / Friday, April 20, 2012 / Notices
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
to the WDNR HCP once the long-term
conservation strategy for the marbled
murrelet was submitted to the Service.
An amendment to the HCP (and the ITP)
involves both Federal and State action
subject to NEPA (42 U.S.C. 4341) and
the State Environmental Policy Act (Ch.
43.21C RCW; SEPA), respectively. On
September 15, 2006, the Service
published a notice in the Federal
Register (71 FR 54515) announcing our
intent to conduct public scoping for the
HCP and ITP amendments in
anticipation of receiving an application
for an ITP amendment from the WDNR.
However, a proposed HCP amendment
was not submitted by the WDNR at that
time.
Proposed Action
We are now reinitiating the NEPA
scoping process with this Federal
Register notice. The Service and WDNR
have determined it is appropriate to
prepare the DEIS as joint lead agencies
pursuant to our respective authorities
under NEPA (40 C.F.R. 1501.5) and
SEPA (WAC 197–11–944) and to
reinitiate and expand public scoping
due to the passage of time since the
original scoping notice was issued.
Unlike the HCP amendment described
in the September 15, 2006, Federal
Register notice (71 FR 54515) that
involved a proposed long-term
conservation strategy for the marbled
murrelet in southwest Washington and
the Olympic Peninsula, the long-term
conservation strategy discussed herein
is for all WDNR lands within the range
of the marbled murrelet. The WDNR and
the Service both conclude that adequate
information is currently available that
can inform the proposal at the Statewide
WDNR scale.
The WDNR’s existing ITP authorizes
specific levels and types of incidental
take of the marbled murrelet. The
current ITP was principally structured
to meet the needs of the interim
conservation strategy for the marbled
murrelet, which the WDNR now desires
to replace with a long-term strategy. It
is possible that the long-term
conservation strategy may warrant a
revision of the ITP to address additional
incidental take of the marbled murrelet
not previously authorized. Accordingly,
the level of take, general locations of
potential incidental take, timing of
incidental take, minimization and
mitigation strategies, enhancement
activities, and research and monitoring
plans will be described in the long-term
conservation strategy for the marbled
murrelet and in the DEIS.
In order for the Service to evaluate
WDNR’s request for an ITP amendment,
the WDNR must submit the proposed
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18:17 Apr 19, 2012
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long-term conservation strategy for the
marbled murrelet to the Service for
analysis. The Service will ultimately
determine whether the WDNR HCP, as
amended by the long-term conservation
strategy for the marbled murrelet,
satisfies the ESA section 10 permit
issuance criteria and other applicable
laws and/or regulations.
In 2008, the WDNR released a
technical report entitled
Recommendations and Supporting
Analysis of Conservation Opportunities
for the Marbled Murrelet Long-Term
Conservation Strategy (https://
www.dnr.wa.gov/Publications/
lm_mamu_sci_team_report.pdf)
(Report). This Report was developed by
an interagency scientific team of
marbled murrelet experts and focused
on marbled murrelet conservation in
southwest Washington and the Olympic
Peninsula. The Report: Characterized
marbled murrelet ecology and life
history, recommended landscape
conservation approaches for WDNR
lands, described marbled murrelet
habitat assessment methods, reported
marbled murrelet habitat assessment
results, and described adaptive
management concepts. The Report
provided recommendations and analysis
for the WDNR and the Service to
consider while the WDNR develops a
long-term conservation strategy for the
marbled murrelet on the lands it
manages.
Statutory Requirements
Section 9 of the ESA (16 U.S.C. 1538)
and implementing regulations prohibit
the taking of animal species listed as
endangered or threatened. The term
‘‘take’’ is defined under the ESA (16
U.S.C. 1532(19)) to mean ‘‘harass, harm,
pursue, hunt, shoot, wound, kill, trap,
capture, or collect, or to attempt to
engage in any such conduct.’’ ‘‘Harm’’ is
defined by the Service to include
significant habitat modification or
degradation where it actually kills or
injures listed species by significantly
impairing essential behavioral patterns,
including breeding, feeding, and
sheltering (50 CFR 17.3). ‘‘Harass’’ is
defined by the Service as actions that
create the likelihood of injury to listed
species to such an extent as to
significantly disrupt normal behavior
patterns which include, but are not
limited to, breeding, feeding or
sheltering (50 CFR 17.3).
Section 10 of the ESA and
implementing regulations specify
requirements for the issuance of ITPs to
non-Federal landowners for the
incidental take of endangered and
threatened species. Such take must be
incidental to otherwise lawful activities,
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
not appreciably reduce the likelihood of
the survival and recovery of the species
in the wild, and the impacts of the take
on the listed species must be minimized
and mitigated by the permittee to the
maximum extent practicable. An
applicant for an ITP must prepare a HCP
describing the impacts that will likely
result from such taking, the
conservation program for minimizing
and mitigating those take impacts, the
funding available to implement the
conservation program, the alternatives
considered by the applicant to avoid
such taking, and the reason(s) such
alternatives are not being implemented.
NEPA requires that Federal agencies
conduct an environmental analysis of
their proposed actions to determine if
the actions may significantly affect the
human environment. Under NEPA, a
reasonable range of alternatives to a
proposed action is developed and
considered in the Federal agency’s
environmental review. Alternatives
considered for analysis in an EIS such
as the one contemplated herein may
include: Variations in the location,
amount, and type of conservation;
variations in the amount of active forest
management; adaptive management and
variations in adaptive management;
variations in permit duration; or a
combination of these elements and
others, and no action. In addition, an
EIS will identify any potentially
significant direct, indirect, and
cumulative impacts on biological
resources, land use, air quality, water
quality, water resources,
socioeconomics, and other
environmental issues that could occur
with the implementation of the
proposed action and alternatives. For
potentially significant impacts, the EIS
may identify avoidance, minimization,
or mitigation measures to reduce these
impacts, where feasible, to a level below
significance.
Scoping Meetings
See DATES above for the dates, times
and locations of the public scoping
meetings for development of a DEIS for
amending the WDNR HCP and ITP. The
purpose of the scoping process is to seek
the public’s views regarding the
appropriate range of alternatives that
should be analyzed in the DEIS, the
need, purpose, and objectives of the
proposal, the impacts that should be
considered, and existing environmental
information relevant to the analysis. The
scoping meetings will allocate time for
presentations by the Service and the
WDNR, followed by informal questions
and discussions. To ensure that a full
range of issues related to the anticipated
amendment are identified, we
E:\FR\FM\20APN1.SGM
20APN1
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 77 / Friday, April 20, 2012 / Notices
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encourage written comments from
interested parties.
Public Comments
The primary purpose of the scoping
process is for the public to assist the
Service and WDNR in developing the
DEIS by identifying important issues
and alternatives related to WDNR’s
proposed HCP amendment. To
constructively guide the development of
the DEIS, the WDNR and Service jointly
identified the Need, Purpose, and
Objectives of the proposed action to be
consistent with those of the current
WDNR HCP as follows:
• Need: To obtain long-term certainty
for timber harvest and other
management activities on forested State
trust lands and to contribute to longterm conservation for the marbled
murrelet, consistent with commitments
in the 1997 Habitat Conservation Plan.
• Purpose: To develop a long-term
habitat conservation strategy for
marbled murrelets on forested State
trust lands in the six west-side planning
units, subject to DNR’s fiduciary
responsibility to the trust beneficiaries
as defined by law and the Service’s
responsibilities under the ESA.
• Objectives:
1. Trust Mandate: Generate revenue
and other benefits for each trust by
meeting DNR’s trust responsibilities,
including: Making trust property
productive, preserving the corpus of the
trust, exercising reasonable care and
skill in managing the trust, acting
prudently with respect to trust property,
acting with undivided loyalty to trust
beneficiaries, and acting impartially
with respect to current and future trust
beneficiaries.
2. Marbled Murrelet Habitat: Provide
forest conditions in strategic locations
on forested trust lands that minimize
and mitigate incidental take of marbled
murrelet resulting from DNR’s forest
management activities. In
accomplishing this objective, we expect
to make a significant contribution to
maintaining and protecting marbled
murrelet populations.
3. Active Management: Promote
active, innovative and sustainable
management on the forested trust land
base.
4. Operational Flexibility: Provide
flexibility to respond to new
information and site-specific conditions.
5. Implementation Certainty: Adopt
feasible, practical, and cost-effective
actions that are likely to be successful
and can be sustained throughout the life
of the HCP.
The Service requests that comments
be specific. In particular, we request
information regarding:
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18:17 Apr 19, 2012
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• Baseline environmental conditions
in the plan area;
• Need, Purpose, and Objectives
identified above;
• Other possible alternatives that
meet the Need, Purpose, and Objectives;
• Direct, indirect, and cumulative
impacts that implementation of a
proposed amendment or other
alternatives that are based upon the
Need, Purpose, and Objectives could
have on marbled murrelets and other
species, and their communities and
habitats;
• Marbled murrelet ecology;
• Potential adaptive management
and/or monitoring provisions;
• Funding issues;
• Other plans or projects that might
be relevant to this proposed project;
• Minimization and mitigation
concepts;
• Any other information pertinent to
evaluating the effects of the proposed
action on the human environment.
Comments regarding these issues as
they relate to management of WDNR
lands for marbled murrelet conservation
should be submitted by one of the
methods listed in ADDRESSES.
The WDNR and the Service intend to
develop an initial set of conceptual
alternatives to aid in the assessment of
the appropriate range of alternatives to
be analyzed in the DEIS. The conceptual
alternatives are intended to broadly
describe different approaches to the
long-term conservation strategy for the
marbled murrelet on WDNR HCPcovered lands for the purpose of public
feedback prior to refinement of
alternatives in the DEIS. We intend to
provide the public the opportunity to
comment on the initial set of conceptual
alternatives before completing the
selection of the range of alternatives that
will be formally presented in the DEIS.
We do not expect to publish a notice in
the Federal Register for this
opportunity. To enable the public to
comment on conceptual alternatives
before the DEIS is published, the
Service and the WDNR will announce
this opportunity on our respective web
sites (see FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT) and in other forms of media,
and we will also send notification to
people who respond to this scoping
notice, attend our public scoping
meeting attendees, or requests to be
notified.
The DEIS is expected to be completed
and available to the public in the winter
of 2012. Once the DEIS is prepared,
there will be an additional opportunity
announced for public comment on all
aspects and content of the DEIS through
a Federal Register notice of availability.
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23745
Public Availability of Comments
All comments and materials we
receive become part of the public record
associated with this action. Before
including your address, phone number,
email address, or other personal
identifying information in your
comments, 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. Comments and materials we
receive will be available for public
inspection by appointment, during
normal business hours, at our office (see
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT).
Authority
The environmental review of this
proposed action will be conducted in
accordance with the requirements of
NEPA, the Council on Environmental
Quality Regulations (40 CFR 1500–
1508), other applicable Federal laws and
regulations, and policies and procedures
of the Service. This notice is being
furnished in accordance with 40 CFR
1501.7 of NEPA to obtain suggestions
and information from other agencies
and the public on the scope of issues
and alternatives to be addressed in the
DEIS.
Dated: April 2, 2012.
Richard Hannan,
Deputy Regional Director, Pacific Region, U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service, Portland, Oregon.
[FR Doc. 2012–9664 Filed 4–19–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–55–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
[FWS–R8–ES–2012–N050; FF08E00000–
FXES11120800000F2–123–F2]
Proposed Low-Effect Habitat
Conservation Plan for the Bay
Checkerspot Butterfly and Serpentine
Grasslands, City of San Jose, Santa
Clara County, CA
Fish and Wildlife Service,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice of availability: request
for comment.
AGENCY:
We, the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service, have received an
application from Hoa Cam Tieu
(applicant) for a 3-year incidental take
permit for three species under the
Endangered Species Act of 1973, as
amended (Act). The application
SUMMARY:
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 77, Number 77 (Friday, April 20, 2012)]
[Notices]
[Pages 23743-23745]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2012-9664]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
[FWS-R1-ES-2012-N081; 10120-1112-0000-F2]
Draft Environmental Impact Statement and Proposed Amendment of
the Washington Department of Natural Resources Habitat Conservation
Plan for Forested State Trust Lands
AGENCY: Fish and Wildlife Service, Interior.
ACTION: Notice of intent; announcement of public scoping meetings;
request for comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: We, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Service), intend to
conduct public scoping under the National Environmental Policy Act
(NEPA) to gather information to prepare a Draft Environmental Impact
Statement (DEIS) in anticipation of receiving an application for an
Incidental Take Permit (ITP) amendment under section 10 of the
Endangered Species Act (ESA) from the Washington Department of Natural
Resources (WDNR) for their 1997 Habitat Conservation Plan (HCP) for
forested State trust lands. The HCP amendment involves the proposed
replacement of an interim conservation strategy for the threatened
marbled murrelet (Brachyramphus marmoratus), which is currently being
implemented under the HCP, with a long-term conservation strategy. The
proposed amendment to the HCP and the ITP is exclusively limited to
consideration of a long-term conservation strategy for the marbled
murrelet on HCP-covered lands.
DATES: To ensure consideration, please send your written comments by
May 21, 2012 (see ADDRESSES section).
Four public scoping meetings will be held to discuss the DEIS, and
we will accept written comments at these meetings. These meetings will
be held on the following dates and at the following locations:
1. April 30, 2012, 6-8 p.m., WDNR, Natural Resource Building, 1st
Floor, 1111 Washington Street SE., Olympia, WA 98504.
2. May 3, 2012, 6-8 p.m., WDNR, Northwest Region Office, 919 N.
Township Street, Sedro Woolley, WA 98284.
3. May 8, 2012, 6-8 p.m., Wahkikum County Courthouse, Pacific
Cascade/River Room, 25 River Street, Cathlamet, WA 98612.
4. May 9, 2012, 6-8 p.m., WDNR, Olympic Region Headquarters, 411
Tillicum Lane, Forks, WA 98331.
ADDRESSES: All comments concerning the preparation of the DEIS,
proposed HCP amendment, and the NEPA process may be submitted by one of
the following methods to WDNR. WDNR will transmit all comments received
to the Service for review and consideration:
Email: sepacenter@dnr.wa.gov.
U.S. Mail: SEPA Responsible Official, Annie Szvetecz,
Washington Department of Natural Resources, SEPA Center, P.O. Box
47001, Olympia, WA 98504-7001.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mark Ostwald of the Service at (360)
753-9564 (phone); Mark_Ostwald@fws.gov (email); or by U.S. mail to the
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Washington Fish and Wildlife Office,
510 Desmond Dr. SE., Suite 102, Lacey, WA 98503; or, alternatively,
contact Annie Szvetecz, SEPA Responsible Official, WDNR, at (360) 902-
112 (phone); sepacenter@dnr.wa.gov (email). In addition, information on
this proposed action is also available at the WDNR's Web site at https://www.dnr.wa.gov/ResearchScience/Topics/TrustLandsHCP/Pages/lm_hcp_marbled_murrelet_main.aspx and the Service's Web site at https://www.fws.gov/wafwo/.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Meeting Location Accommodation
Persons needing reasonable accommodations in order to attend and
participate in the public scoping meetings should contact Mark Ostwald
with the Service or Annie Szvetecz with the WDNR (see FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT above). In order to allow sufficient time to
process requests, please call no later than one week before the public
meeting. Information regarding this proposed action is available in
alternative formats upon request.
Background
In 1996, the WDNR released their draft HCP for forest management
activities covering 1.6 million acres of forested State trust lands
within the range of the northern spotted owl (Strix occidentalis
caurina) in Washington. A DEIS (dated March 1996) jointly developed by
the Service, National Marine Fisheries Service, and the WDNR was
announced in the Federal Register on April 5, 1996 (61 FR 15297). The
DEIS analyzed reasonable management alternatives, including the HCP. A
notice of availability for the Final EIS (FEIS) was published in the
Federal Register on November 1, 1996 (61 FR 56563). On January 30,
1997, the Service issued an ITP (PRT No. 812521) for the WDNR HCP. The
Service's ITP decision and the availability of related decision
documents were announced in the Federal Register on February 27, 1997
(62 FR 8980).
The WDNR HCP commits WDNR to developing a long-term conservation
strategy for the marbled murrelet (HCP IV. 39). However, during
development of the HCP, it was determined that there was not enough
scientific information to credibly develop a long-term conservation
strategy for the marbled murrelet on WDNR lands. For that reason, the
WDNR developed an interim conservation strategy for the marbled
murrelet (HCP IV. 39), which is currently being implemented. The
principal intent of the interim conservation strategy was to locate
occupied marbled murrelet sites and not foreclose future options for
long-term conservation of the marbled murrelet on WDNR lands. Briefly,
the interim marbled murrelet conservation strategy included the
following: (1) Suitable habitat blocks are identified, with harvest on
these blocks deferred; (2) habitat relationship studies are undertaken
to determine the relative importance, based on occupancy, of identified
habitat blocks; (3) following completion of the habitat relationship
studies, the lowest quality habitat blocks are made available for
timber harvest (these areas, in the poorest quality habitats, were
expected to contain about 5 percent of the murrelet-occupied sites on
HCP-covered lands); (4) the higher quality habitat blocks identified
from the habitat relationships study are surveyed for marbled murrelet
occupancy, and occupied habitat are protected, along with some
unoccupied habitat; and (5) development of a long-term conservation
strategy for marbled murrelets is undertaken on WDNR lands.
For southwest Washington and the Olympic Peninsula, the WDNR has
completed steps 1 through 4 listed above. For step 5, the WDNR
contemplated proposing an amendment
[[Page 23744]]
to the WDNR HCP once the long-term conservation strategy for the
marbled murrelet was submitted to the Service. An amendment to the HCP
(and the ITP) involves both Federal and State action subject to NEPA
(42 U.S.C. 4341) and the State Environmental Policy Act (Ch. 43.21C
RCW; SEPA), respectively. On September 15, 2006, the Service published
a notice in the Federal Register (71 FR 54515) announcing our intent to
conduct public scoping for the HCP and ITP amendments in anticipation
of receiving an application for an ITP amendment from the WDNR.
However, a proposed HCP amendment was not submitted by the WDNR at that
time.
Proposed Action
We are now reinitiating the NEPA scoping process with this Federal
Register notice. The Service and WDNR have determined it is appropriate
to prepare the DEIS as joint lead agencies pursuant to our respective
authorities under NEPA (40 C.F.R. 1501.5) and SEPA (WAC 197-11-944) and
to reinitiate and expand public scoping due to the passage of time
since the original scoping notice was issued.
Unlike the HCP amendment described in the September 15, 2006,
Federal Register notice (71 FR 54515) that involved a proposed long-
term conservation strategy for the marbled murrelet in southwest
Washington and the Olympic Peninsula, the long-term conservation
strategy discussed herein is for all WDNR lands within the range of the
marbled murrelet. The WDNR and the Service both conclude that adequate
information is currently available that can inform the proposal at the
Statewide WDNR scale.
The WDNR's existing ITP authorizes specific levels and types of
incidental take of the marbled murrelet. The current ITP was
principally structured to meet the needs of the interim conservation
strategy for the marbled murrelet, which the WDNR now desires to
replace with a long-term strategy. It is possible that the long-term
conservation strategy may warrant a revision of the ITP to address
additional incidental take of the marbled murrelet not previously
authorized. Accordingly, the level of take, general locations of
potential incidental take, timing of incidental take, minimization and
mitigation strategies, enhancement activities, and research and
monitoring plans will be described in the long-term conservation
strategy for the marbled murrelet and in the DEIS.
In order for the Service to evaluate WDNR's request for an ITP
amendment, the WDNR must submit the proposed long-term conservation
strategy for the marbled murrelet to the Service for analysis. The
Service will ultimately determine whether the WDNR HCP, as amended by
the long-term conservation strategy for the marbled murrelet, satisfies
the ESA section 10 permit issuance criteria and other applicable laws
and/or regulations.
In 2008, the WDNR released a technical report entitled
Recommendations and Supporting Analysis of Conservation Opportunities
for the Marbled Murrelet Long-Term Conservation Strategy (https://www.dnr.wa.gov/Publications/lm_mamu_sci_team_report.pdf) (Report).
This Report was developed by an interagency scientific team of marbled
murrelet experts and focused on marbled murrelet conservation in
southwest Washington and the Olympic Peninsula. The Report:
Characterized marbled murrelet ecology and life history, recommended
landscape conservation approaches for WDNR lands, described marbled
murrelet habitat assessment methods, reported marbled murrelet habitat
assessment results, and described adaptive management concepts. The
Report provided recommendations and analysis for the WDNR and the
Service to consider while the WDNR develops a long-term conservation
strategy for the marbled murrelet on the lands it manages.
Statutory Requirements
Section 9 of the ESA (16 U.S.C. 1538) and implementing regulations
prohibit the taking of animal species listed as endangered or
threatened. The term ``take'' is defined under the ESA (16 U.S.C.
1532(19)) to mean ``harass, harm, pursue, hunt, shoot, wound, kill,
trap, capture, or collect, or to attempt to engage in any such
conduct.'' ``Harm'' is defined by the Service to include significant
habitat modification or degradation where it actually kills or injures
listed species by significantly impairing essential behavioral
patterns, including breeding, feeding, and sheltering (50 CFR 17.3).
``Harass'' is defined by the Service as actions that create the
likelihood of injury to listed species to such an extent as to
significantly disrupt normal behavior patterns which include, but are
not limited to, breeding, feeding or sheltering (50 CFR 17.3).
Section 10 of the ESA and implementing regulations specify
requirements for the issuance of ITPs to non-Federal landowners for the
incidental take of endangered and threatened species. Such take must be
incidental to otherwise lawful activities, not appreciably reduce the
likelihood of the survival and recovery of the species in the wild, and
the impacts of the take on the listed species must be minimized and
mitigated by the permittee to the maximum extent practicable. An
applicant for an ITP must prepare a HCP describing the impacts that
will likely result from such taking, the conservation program for
minimizing and mitigating those take impacts, the funding available to
implement the conservation program, the alternatives considered by the
applicant to avoid such taking, and the reason(s) such alternatives are
not being implemented.
NEPA requires that Federal agencies conduct an environmental
analysis of their proposed actions to determine if the actions may
significantly affect the human environment. Under NEPA, a reasonable
range of alternatives to a proposed action is developed and considered
in the Federal agency's environmental review. Alternatives considered
for analysis in an EIS such as the one contemplated herein may include:
Variations in the location, amount, and type of conservation;
variations in the amount of active forest management; adaptive
management and variations in adaptive management; variations in permit
duration; or a combination of these elements and others, and no action.
In addition, an EIS will identify any potentially significant direct,
indirect, and cumulative impacts on biological resources, land use, air
quality, water quality, water resources, socioeconomics, and other
environmental issues that could occur with the implementation of the
proposed action and alternatives. For potentially significant impacts,
the EIS may identify avoidance, minimization, or mitigation measures to
reduce these impacts, where feasible, to a level below significance.
Scoping Meetings
See DATES above for the dates, times and locations of the public
scoping meetings for development of a DEIS for amending the WDNR HCP
and ITP. The purpose of the scoping process is to seek the public's
views regarding the appropriate range of alternatives that should be
analyzed in the DEIS, the need, purpose, and objectives of the
proposal, the impacts that should be considered, and existing
environmental information relevant to the analysis. The scoping
meetings will allocate time for presentations by the Service and the
WDNR, followed by informal questions and discussions. To ensure that a
full range of issues related to the anticipated amendment are
identified, we
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encourage written comments from interested parties.
Public Comments
The primary purpose of the scoping process is for the public to
assist the Service and WDNR in developing the DEIS by identifying
important issues and alternatives related to WDNR's proposed HCP
amendment. To constructively guide the development of the DEIS, the
WDNR and Service jointly identified the Need, Purpose, and Objectives
of the proposed action to be consistent with those of the current WDNR
HCP as follows:
Need: To obtain long-term certainty for timber harvest and
other management activities on forested State trust lands and to
contribute to long-term conservation for the marbled murrelet,
consistent with commitments in the 1997 Habitat Conservation Plan.
Purpose: To develop a long-term habitat conservation
strategy for marbled murrelets on forested State trust lands in the six
west-side planning units, subject to DNR's fiduciary responsibility to
the trust beneficiaries as defined by law and the Service's
responsibilities under the ESA.
Objectives:
1. Trust Mandate: Generate revenue and other benefits for each
trust by meeting DNR's trust responsibilities, including: Making trust
property productive, preserving the corpus of the trust, exercising
reasonable care and skill in managing the trust, acting prudently with
respect to trust property, acting with undivided loyalty to trust
beneficiaries, and acting impartially with respect to current and
future trust beneficiaries.
2. Marbled Murrelet Habitat: Provide forest conditions in strategic
locations on forested trust lands that minimize and mitigate incidental
take of marbled murrelet resulting from DNR's forest management
activities. In accomplishing this objective, we expect to make a
significant contribution to maintaining and protecting marbled murrelet
populations.
3. Active Management: Promote active, innovative and sustainable
management on the forested trust land base.
4. Operational Flexibility: Provide flexibility to respond to new
information and site-specific conditions.
5. Implementation Certainty: Adopt feasible, practical, and cost-
effective actions that are likely to be successful and can be sustained
throughout the life of the HCP.
The Service requests that comments be specific. In particular, we
request information regarding:
Baseline environmental conditions in the plan area;
Need, Purpose, and Objectives identified above;
Other possible alternatives that meet the Need, Purpose,
and Objectives;
Direct, indirect, and cumulative impacts that
implementation of a proposed amendment or other alternatives that are
based upon the Need, Purpose, and Objectives could have on marbled
murrelets and other species, and their communities and habitats;
Marbled murrelet ecology;
Potential adaptive management and/or monitoring
provisions;
Funding issues;
Other plans or projects that might be relevant to this
proposed project;
Minimization and mitigation concepts;
Any other information pertinent to evaluating the effects
of the proposed action on the human environment.
Comments regarding these issues as they relate to management of
WDNR lands for marbled murrelet conservation should be submitted by one
of the methods listed in ADDRESSES.
The WDNR and the Service intend to develop an initial set of
conceptual alternatives to aid in the assessment of the appropriate
range of alternatives to be analyzed in the DEIS. The conceptual
alternatives are intended to broadly describe different approaches to
the long-term conservation strategy for the marbled murrelet on WDNR
HCP-covered lands for the purpose of public feedback prior to
refinement of alternatives in the DEIS. We intend to provide the public
the opportunity to comment on the initial set of conceptual
alternatives before completing the selection of the range of
alternatives that will be formally presented in the DEIS. We do not
expect to publish a notice in the Federal Register for this
opportunity. To enable the public to comment on conceptual alternatives
before the DEIS is published, the Service and the WDNR will announce
this opportunity on our respective web sites (see FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT) and in other forms of media, and we will also send
notification to people who respond to this scoping notice, attend our
public scoping meeting attendees, or requests to be notified.
The DEIS is expected to be completed and available to the public in
the winter of 2012. Once the DEIS is prepared, there will be an
additional opportunity announced for public comment on all aspects and
content of the DEIS through a Federal Register notice of availability.
Public Availability of Comments
All comments and materials we receive become part of the public
record associated with this action. Before including your address,
phone number, email address, or other personal identifying information
in your comments, 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. Comments and materials we
receive will be available for public inspection by appointment, during
normal business hours, at our office (see FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT).
Authority
The environmental review of this proposed action will be conducted
in accordance with the requirements of NEPA, the Council on
Environmental Quality Regulations (40 CFR 1500-1508), other applicable
Federal laws and regulations, and policies and procedures of the
Service. This notice is being furnished in accordance with 40 CFR
1501.7 of NEPA to obtain suggestions and information from other
agencies and the public on the scope of issues and alternatives to be
addressed in the DEIS.
Dated: April 2, 2012.
Richard Hannan,
Deputy Regional Director, Pacific Region, U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service, Portland, Oregon.
[FR Doc. 2012-9664 Filed 4-19-12; 8:45 am]
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