General Regulations; National Park System, Demonstrations, Sale or Distribution of Printed Matter, 37713-37717 [2013-15005]
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Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 121 / Monday, June 24, 2013 / Rules and Regulations
The Coast
Guard will enforce the safety zone listed
in 33 CFR 165.929(a)(76) as well as the
general regulations in 33 CFR 165.929,
Safety Zones; Annual events requiring
safety zones in the Captain of the Port
Lake Michigan zone, for the 2013
AWMRT Chicago Match Cup. This zone
will be enforced from 8 a.m. until 8 p.m.
on each day of August 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, and
11, 2013.
All vessels must obtain permission
from the Captain of the Port, Lake
Michigan, or the on-scene representative
to enter, move within, or exit a safety
zone. Vessels and persons granted
permission to enter the safety zone shall
obey all lawful orders or directions of
the Captain of the Port, Lake Michigan,
or a designated representative. Vessels
that wish to transit through the safety
zones may request permission from the
Captain of the Port Lake Michigan.
Requests must be made in advance and
approved by the Captain of the Port
before transits will be authorized.
Approvals will be granted on a case by
case basis. While within a safety zone,
all vessels shall operate at the minimum
speed necessary to maintain a safe
course.
This notice is issued under authority
of 33 CFR 165.929(a)(76), and 5 U.S.C.
552(a). In addition to this notice in the
Federal Register, the Coast Guard will
provide the maritime community with
advance notification of this event via
Broadcast Notice to Mariners that the
regulation is in effect. If the Captain of
the Port determines that the
enforcement of these safety zones need
not occur as stated in this notice, he or
she might suspend such enforcement
and notify the public of the suspension
via a Broadcast Notice to Mariners. The
Captain of the Port, Lake Michigan, or
his or her on-scene representatives may
be contacted on channel 16, VHF–FM.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Dated: June 3, 2013.
M.W. Sibley,
Captain, U.S. Coast Guard, Captain of the
Port, Lake Michigan.
[FR Doc. 2013–14956 Filed 6–21–13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 9110–04–P
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
SECURITY
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Coast Guard
33 CFR Part 165
[Docket No. USCG–2013–0020]
Safety Zone; Chicago Air and Water
Show; Lake Michigan; Chicago, IL
AGENCY:
Coast Guard, DHS.
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Notice of enforcement of
regulation.
ACTION:
SUMMARY: The Coast Guard will enforce
the safety zone on Lake Michigan near
Chicago, Illinois for the Chicago Air and
Water Show. This zone will be enforced
from 8:30 a.m. until 5 p.m. on each day
of August 14, 15, 16, 17, and 18, 2013.
This action is necessary and intended to
ensure safety of life on the navigable
waters during the 2013 Chicago Air and
Water Show. During the aforementioned
periods, the Coast Guard will enforce
restrictions upon, and control
movement of, vessels in the safety zone.
No person or vessel may enter the safety
zone while it is being enforced without
permission of the Captain of the Port,
Lake Michigan.
DATES: This regulation will be enforced
at the dates and times listed in the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section of
this notice.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: If
you have questions on this notice, call
or email MST1 Joseph McCollum,
Prevention Department, Coast Guard
Sector Lake Michigan, Milwaukee, WI at
(414) 747–7148, email
joseph.p.mccollum@uscg.mil.
The Coast
Guard will enforce the safety zone listed
in 33 CFR 165.929(a)(63) as well as the
general regulations in 33 CFR 165.929,
Safety Zones; Annual events requiring
safety zones in the Captain of the Port
Lake Michigan zone, for the Chicago Air
and Water Show. This zone will be
enforced from 8:30 a.m. until 5 p.m. on
each day of August 14, 15, 16, 17, and
18, 2013.
All vessels must obtain permission
from the Captain of the Port, Lake
Michigan, or his or her on-scene
representative to enter, move within, or
exit the safety zone. Vessels and persons
granted permission to enter the safety
zone shall obey all lawful orders or
directions of the Captain of the Port,
Lake Michigan, or a designated
representative. Vessels that wish to
transit through the safety zones may
request permission from the captain of
the Port Lake Michigan. Requests must
be made in advance and approved by
the Captain of the Port before transits
will be authorized. Approvals will be
granted on a case by case basis. While
within the safety zone, all vessels shall
operate at the minimum speed
necessary to maintain a safe course.
This notice is issued under authority
of 33 CFR 165.929(a)(63), Safety Zones;
Annual events requiring safety zones in
the Captain of the Port Lake Michigan
zone and 5 U.S.C. 552(a). In addition to
this notice in the Federal Register, the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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Coast Guard will provide the maritime
community with advance notification of
this event via Broadcast Notice to
Mariners or Local Notice to Mariners. If
the captain of the Port determines that
the enforcement of these safety zones
need not occur as stated in this notice,
he or she might suspend such
enforcement and notify the public of the
suspension via a Broadcast Notice to
Mariners. The Captain of the Port, Lake
Michigan, or his or her on-scene
representative may be contacted via
VHF Channel 16.
Dated: June 3, 2013.
M.W. Sibley,
Captain, U.S. Coast Guard, Captain of the
Port, Lake Michigan.
[FR Doc. 2013–14953 Filed 6–21–13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 9110–04–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
National Park Service
36 CFR Part 2
[NPS–WASO–REGS–8546; PXXVPADO515]
RIN 1024–AD91
General Regulations; National Park
System, Demonstrations, Sale or
Distribution of Printed Matter
National Park Service, Interior.
Final rule.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
SUMMARY: The National Park Service is
amending its interim regulations
governing demonstrations and the sale
or distribution of printed matter
applicable to most units of the National
Park System. The rule clarifies
provisions regarding permits for
demonstrations or distributing printed
matter and in management of two or
more small (non-permit) groups seeking
to use at the same time, an area that has
been designated as available for these
activities.
DATES: This rule is effective June 24,
2013.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Lee
Dickinson, Special Park Use Program
Manager, 1849 C St. NW., Washington,
DC, 20240 (202) 208–4206.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
On October 19, 2010, the National
Park Service (NPS) issued an interim
rule that revised regulations at 36 CFR
2.51 and 2.52 that governed
demonstrations and the sale or
distribution of printed matter applicable
to most areas of the National Park
System, and added two public conduct
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provisions to regulations at 36 CFR 2.31,
that prohibit harassing visitors and
obstructing public passageways. The
interim rule became effective
immediately upon publication in the
Federal Register October 19, 2010 (75
FR 64148) and requested public
comment.
As more fully detailed in the
preamble to the interim rule, the NPS is
governed by the NPS Organic Act as
well as by First Amendment
jurisprudence. Currently consisting of
401 park units in all 50 states, the
District of Columbia, and various U.S
territories, the National Park System
encompasses more than 84 million
acres. These park units are located in a
wide range of environments as diverse
as the United States itself. The size of
these park units also varies
tremendously, ranging from WrangellSt. Elias National Park and National
Preserve, Alaska, at 13.2 million acres to
Thaddeus Kosciuszko National
Memorial, Pennsylvania, at 0.02 acres.
About one-third of the units of the
National Park System preserve nature’s
many and varied gifts to the Nation,
while the other two-thirds recognize
benchmarks of human history in
America.
The National Park System provides
habitat for 378 threatened or endangered
species, has more than 100 million
items in museum collections, has 1.5
million archaeological sites, and has
27,000 historic and prehistoric
structures. The National Park System
also has an extensive physical
infrastructure, which includes
thousands of buildings, tens of
thousands of miles of trails and roads,
and almost 30,000 housing units,
campground, and picnic areas as well as
3,000 water and wastewater treatment
systems.
According to the NPS Statistical
Abstract, in 2012 there were
approximately 282 million visits to
units of the National Park System that
offers visitors not only visual,
educational, and recreational
experiences but also inspirational,
contemplative, and spiritual
experiences. For neighboring Native
Americans, certain National Parks are
also considered sacred sites, where the
NPS asks visitors to respect these longstanding beliefs.
Equally important, the National Park
System has traditionally offered visitors
the opportunity to engage in
demonstration activity and the sale or
distribution of printed matter in
designated park areas. In that regard, the
NPS general regulations at 36 CFR 2.51
and 2.52, applicable to parks not subject
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to 36 CFR 7.96(g), have governed such
activities since 1983.
[Enacted] . . . to protect the natural and
cultural resources of the parks and to protect
visitors and property within the parks, [these
NPS general regulations] intended effect . . .
is to impose on those activities that involve
First Amendment consideration only those
narrow restrictions that are necessary to
protect park resources and to ensure the
management of park areas for public
enjoyment.
48 FR 30252, 30272, June 30, 1983.
In 2010, the U.S. Court of Appeals for
the District of Columbia Circuit issued
its decision in Boardley v. Department
of the Interior, 615 F.3d 508 (D.C. Cir.
2010), which stemmed from a
demonstration and leaflet-distribution
incident at Mount Rushmore National
Memorial, South Dakota, for which the
NPS had required a permit. The Court
of Appeals vacated §§ 2.51 and 2.52 in
their entirety, based on the system-wide
lack of an exception from the permit
requirement for individual and smallgroup activity in NPS-designated free
speech areas. The U.S. District Court for
the District of Columbia in Boardley v.
Department of the Interior, 605 F. Supp.
2d 8 (D.D.C. 2009), had earlier also
found fault with the NPS’s regulatory
definition of a demonstration.
Consistent with these judicial
decisions and in order to avoid a
regulatory vacuum that could impact
the NPS’s conservation mandate and the
use of park areas by the public, the NPS
issued the interim rule governing
demonstrations and the sale or
distribution of printed matter applicable
to most of the National Park System.
While retaining the park
superintendent’s ability to designate
available areas as well as the permit
requirement for large groups, the NPS
interim rule narrowed the definition of
what constitutes a demonstration;
created a small-group permit exception;
detailed how the NPS addresses
competing small (non-permit) groups
that seek to use the same designated
area; refined how applications are to be
processed; and prohibited harassment of
visitors by physical touch or by
obstruction of building entranceways,
sidewalks, and other public
passageways.
Consistent with evolving First
Amendment jurisprudence, the interim
rule as revised by this final rule is
intended to protect the natural and
cultural resources of the National Park
System and to protect visitors and
property within the parks by imposing
on demonstrators only the most limited
restrictions necessary to accomplish
those goals.
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Response to Comments and
Supplemental Explanation of the
Interim Regulations
When the interim rule was published,
the NPS requested public comments to
be submitted by December 19, 2010. The
NPS received four comments, each
through the Federal eRulemaking Portal
at https://www.regulations.gov. The NPS
reviewed the comments and, besides
reaffirming and incorporating by
reference its explanation found in its
earlier rulemaking, offers the following
responses to the issues raised.
One comment disagreed with the NPS
decision to exempt small groups of
under 25 persons from the requirement
to obtain a permit, and stated that all
individuals should be required to obtain
a permit, although through an easier
permit process. To be consistent with
the Court of Appeals decision in
Boardley, the NPS believes that it is
legally obligated to create a regulatory
small-group permit exception.
Another comment stated that small
groups that simply hand out printed
material should not be required to get a
permit, unless their activity involves
tables, signs, banners, or drums.
Consistent with the Court of Appeals
decision in Boardley, the NPS interim
rule created a small-group permit
exception for sale or distribution of
printed matter in designated free speech
areas. While the NPS interim rule at 36
CFR 2.52(b)(1) and this final rule allow
for small groups to sell or distribute
printed matter and use hand-carried
signs without a permit, the use of stages,
platforms or structures will require a
permit. As the NPS explained in the
preamble to the interim rule, this is
because the unregulated presence of
such structures would negatively impact
park resources and park visitors. A
permit allows the superintendent to
consider the impact of the proposed
equipment and to impose contentneutral, site-specific and reasonably
appropriate resource-protection and
safety conditions. Because a drum is a
musical instrument, such use would be
governed by the NPS audio disturbance
regulations found at 36 CFR
2.12(a)(1)(i)–(ii).
One comment thought that by
defining a small group as 25 or fewer
persons, too many groups fell within the
‘‘target’’ of the NPS interim rule. The
comment used the example of a school
field trip of 26 or more students and
chaperones, and expressed concern that
it might be considered an unlawful
demonstration if the participants
communicate or express their views at
a national park. The comment suggests
that the small-group permit exception
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should be enlarged to 50 persons, to
help accommodate normal school field
trip activity and other gatherings.
The NPS believes that the interim
rule’s more narrowly limited definition
of demonstration already addressed this
concern. As the NPS explained in the
preamble to the interim rule:
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Application of the NPS’s narrowed
definition of a demonstration thus excludes
visitors who merely have tattoos or are
wearing baseball caps, T-shirts, or other
articles of clothing that convey a message; or
visitors whose vehicles merely display
bumper stickers. By limiting the definition of
what constitutes a demonstration, and by
explicitly excluding casual park use by
visitors or tourists which is not reasonably
likely to attract a crowd or onlookers—such
as when scout leaders or teachers engage in
discussions with their charges—the NPS
believes that the rule comports with the First
Amendment and is narrowly tailored to serve
significant government interests.
75 FR 64150, October 19, 2010.
The NPS’s selection of 25 persons as
the number of individuals that generally
qualify for the small-group permit
exception is also consistent with the
Court of Appeal’s decision in Boardley
that explicitly recognized that the
agency may decide where to draw that
line. 615 F.3d at 525. The NPS believes
that its determination is reasonable; it
also is identical to a long-standing
small-group permit exception in the
NPS’s special regulations for the
National Capital Region at 36 CFR
7.96(g)(2)(1).
One comment asked if sound systems
are allowed without a permit. This
question is answered by 36 CFR
2.12(a)(4), which requires individual(s)
who want to operate a public address
system in connection with
demonstrations and special events to
obtain a permit.
One comment asked if a small group
needs a permit to engage in
demonstration or printed matter
activities that are located outside of a
park-designated First Amendment area.
Consistent with the NPS’s interim
rule, demonstrations and printed matter
distributions are limited to locations
designated by the superintendent as
available for these activities. If a person
or group wishes to engage in such
activities in an area not designated by
the superintendent, the person or group
may request in writing that the
superintendent reconsider whether the
area should be designated as available
under 36 CFR 2.51(c). This regulation
does not alter a dissatisfied petitioner’s
right, if any, to challenge a
superintendent’s designation of any area
under 36 CFR 2.51(c) under the
Administrative Procedure Act.
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One comment stated that designated
free speech areas needed to be clearly
described to preserve the parks as
educational places and asked what steps
parks could take to avoid disturbances
there. The NPS believes that the interim
rule addressed these issues.
Specifically, 36 CFR 2.51(c)(2) provides
that the superintendent must designate
on a map, which must be available in
the office of the superintendent and by
public notice, the locations designated
as available for demonstrations and the
sale or distribution of printed matter. As
for concerns about disturbances there,
any NPS action must comport with
relevant First Amendment
jurisprudence.
It is firmly settled under our
Constitution that the public expression
of ideas may not be prohibited merely
because the ideas themselves are
offensive to some of their hearers. Street
v. New York, 394 U.S. 576, 592 (1969).
While speech is often provocative and
challenging, it is nevertheless protected
against censorship or punishment,
unless shown likely to produce a clear
and present danger of serious
substantive evil that rises far above
public inconvenience, annoyance or
unrest. Terminiello v. Chicago, 337 U.S.
1, 4 (1949). In response to a disturbance,
in a designated First Amendment area
or elsewhere, the NPS will take action
consistent with relevant First
Amendment jurisprudence. Such NPS
actions may generally center on whether
the unlawful disturbance violates the
NPS regulations, such as those
prohibiting harassment, obstruction, or
disorderly conduct at 36 CFR 2.31(a)(4)–
(5), and 2.34.
Finally, the NPS interim rule’s 36 CFR
2.51(b)(2) and 2.52(b)(2), and this final
rule request that an organizer, who
seeks to take advantage of the smallgroup permit exception, provide
reasonable notice to the superintendent
if the organizer has reason to believe
there may be an attempt to disrupt,
protest, or prevent the event. While not
mandatory, this voluntary notice
provision gives park officials an
opportunity to plan additional public
safety and resource protection measures.
The NPS had asked for comments at 75
FR 64151, October 19, 2010, whether
such notice should be made mandatory
in future regulations. The NPS received
no comments on this issue and will
defer to future rulemaking whether such
notice should be made mandatory.
Clarifications of the Interim
Regulations
After further internal review, the NPS
is making three clarifications and one
correction to the interim rule. Two
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clarifications, at 36 CFR 2.51(f) and
2.52(e), are intended to make the
regulatory text more explicit that the
superintendent must either issue a
permit or a written denial within ten
days of receiving a complete and fully
executed application. The ten-day
action deadline, to issue either a permit
or a written denial, was clearly part of
the NPS’s intention in the interim rule
and is consistent with the Court of
Appeals decision in Boardley, which
found the NPS’s regulatory deadline to
be reasonable under the Supreme
Court’s First Amendment jurisprudence.
615 F.3d at 519 (citing Thomas v.
Chicago Park District, 534 U.S. 316, 318
(2002)).
The third clarification, at 36 CFR
2.52(b)(4), inserts the phrase ‘‘to use.’’
Inadvertently omitted in the initial
rulemaking, the phrase clarifies the
situation when a park addresses two or
more (non-permitted) small groups that
are seeking to use the same designated
area at the same time. The paragraph is
identical to 36 CFR 2.51(b)(4), and has
been amended to read as set forth in the
regulatory text of this rule.
Finally, the NPS is making one
correction to fix a clerical error, by
deleting the word ‘‘and’’ at the end 36
CFR 2.52(b)(1)(i). The sentence has been
amended to read: None of the reasons
for denying a permit that are set out in
paragraph (e) of this section are present;.
Effective Date
This final rule is effective
immediately. To the extent it is a
substantive rule, it relieves a restriction
on permit applicants, in that it provides
more explicitly for a prompt response
by the superintendent to the
application. The other clarifications and
corrections in this rule, while necessary,
are essentially non-substantive. The
Department of the Interior also finds
that there is good cause for making this
rule effective immediately, pursuant to
the Administrative Procedure Act, 5
U.S.C. 553(d)(3) and 318 DM 6.25. As
noted above, the ten-day response
deadline was clearly part of NPS’s
intention in the interim rule. Because
this clarification makes the rule more
consistent with the Court of Appeals
decision in Boardley, it should go into
effect immediately. Moreover, there
would be a benefit to the public in
making the rule effective immediately,
in that it clarifies and corrects
provisions governing the permit
application process.
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Compliance With Other Laws,
Executive Orders, and Department
Policy
investment, productivity, innovation, or
the ability of U.S.-based enterprises to
compete with foreign-based enterprises.
required. The rule only applies to
management and operation of NPS areas
outside the National Capital Region.
Regulatory Planning and Review
(Executive Orders 12866 and 13563)
Executive Order 12866 provides that
the Office of Information and Regulatory
Affairs in the Office of Management and
Budget will review all significant rules.
The Office of Information and
Regulatory Affairs has determined that
this rule is significant because it will
raise novel legal or policy issues. The
rule amends existing NPS interim
regulations applicable to most areas of
the National Park System, pertaining to
demonstrations and sale or distribution
of printed matter. The rule also clarifies
provisions governing permits for
demonstrations and sale or distribution
of printed matter and for managing
groups engaged in these activities.
Executive Order 13563 reaffirms the
principles of E.O. 12866 while calling
for improvements in the nation’s
regulatory system to promote
predictability, to reduce uncertainty,
and to use the best, most innovative,
and least burdensome tools for
achieving regulatory ends. The
executive order directs agencies to
consider regulatory approaches that
reduce burdens and maintain flexibility
and freedom of choice for the public
where these approaches are relevant,
feasible, and consistent with regulatory
objectives. E.O. 13563 emphasizes
further that regulations must be based
on the best available science and that
the rulemaking process must allow for
public participation and an open
exchange of ideas. We have developed
this rule in a manner consistent with
these requirements.
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
(UMRA)
This rule does not impose an
unfunded mandate on State, local, or
tribal governments or the private sector
of more than $100 million per year. The
rule does not have a significant or
unique effect on State, local, or tribal
governments or the private sector. A
statement containing the information
required by the UMRA, (2 U.S.C. 1531
et seq.) is not required.
Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
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Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
This rule will not have a significant
economic effect on a substantial number
of small entities under the RFA (5
U.S.C. 601 et seq.).
The rule only amends existing NPS
regulations to clarify regulatory text.
Other organizations with interest in the
rule will not be effected economically.
Small Business Regulatory Enforcement
Fairness Act (SBREFA)
This rule is not a major rule under 5
U.S.C. 804 (2), the SBREFA. This rule:
a. Does not have an annual effect on
the economy of $100 million or more.
b. Will not cause a major increase in
costs or prices for consumers,
individual industries, Federal, State, or
local government agencies, or
geographic regions.
c. Does not have significant adverse
effects on competition, employment,
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Takings (Executive Order 12630)
Under the criteria in section 2 of
Executive Order 12630, this rule does
not have significant takings
implications. It pertains specifically to
operation and management of locations
outside the NPS-National Capital
Region. A takings implication
assessment is not required.
Federalism (Executive Order 13132)
Under the criteria in section 1 of
Executive Order 13132, the rule does
not have sufficient federalism
implications to warrant the preparation
of Federalism summary impact
statement. A Federalism summary
impact statement is not required.
Civil Justice Reform (Executive Order
12988)
This rule complies with the
requirements of Executive Order 12988.
Specifically, this rule:
(a) Meets the criteria of section 3 (a)
requiring that all regulations be
reviewed to eliminate errors and
ambiguity and be written to minimize
litigation; and
(b) Meets the criteria of section 3 (b)
(2) requiring that all regulations be
written in clear language and contain
clear legal standards.
Consultation With Indian Tribes
(Executive Order 13175 and Department
Policy)
The Department of the Interior strives
to strengthen its government-togovernment relationship with Indian
tribes through a commitment to
consultation with Indian tribes and
recognition of their right to selfgovernance and tribal sovereignty. We
have evaluated this rule under the
Department’s consultation policy and
under the criteria in Executive Order
13175 and have determined that it has
no substantial direct effects on federally
recognized Indian tribes and that
consultation under the Department’s
tribal consultation policy is not
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This rule contains information
collection requirements, and a
submission under the PRA is required.
A Federal agency may not conduct or
sponsor and you are not required to
respond to a collection of information,
unless it displays a currently valid
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) control number. OMB has
approved the information collections in
this rule and has assigned control
number 1024–0026, expiring on June 30,
2013. We estimate the burden associated
with this information collection to be
thirty (30) minutes. The information
collection activities are necessary for the
public to obtain benefits in the form of
special park use permits.
National Environmental Policy Act
(NEPA)
This rule does not constitute a major
Federal action significantly affecting the
quality of the human environment. A
detailed statement under the NEPA of
1969 is not required because the rule is
covered by a categorical exclusion. We
have determined that the rule is
categorically excluded under 516 DM
12.5(A)(10) as it is a modification of
existing NPS regulations that does not
increase public use to the extent of
compromising the nature and character
of the area or causing physical damage
to it. Further, the rule will not result in
the introduction of incompatible uses
which might compromise the nature
and characteristics of the area or cause
physical damage to it. Finally, the rule
will not cause conflict with adjacent
ownerships or land uses, or cause a
nuisance to adjacent owners or
occupants. We have also determined
that the rule does not involve any of the
extraordinary circumstances listed in 43
CFR 46.215 that would require further
analysis under NEPA.
Effects on the Energy Supply (Executive
Order 13211)
This rule is not a significant energy
action under the definition in Executive
Order 13211. A Statement of Energy
Effects is not required.
List of Subjects in 36 CFR Part 2
Environmental protection, National
parks, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
In consideration of the foregoing, the
National Park Service amends 36 CFR
part 2 as set forth below:
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PART 2—RESOURCE PROTECTION,
PUBLIC USE AND RECREATION
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
1. The authority citation for Part 2
continues to read as follows:
40 CFR Part 52
■
[Docket No. EPA–R02–OAR–2012–0889;
FRL–9826–9]
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1, 3, 9a, 462(k).
2. In § 2.51 revise the introductory
text of paragraph (f) to read as follows:
■
§ 2.51
Demonstrations.
*
*
*
*
*
(f) Processing the application. The
superintendent must issue a permit or a
written denial within ten days of
receiving a complete and fully executed
application. A permit will be approved
unless:
*
*
*
*
*
3. In § 2.52 revise paragraph (b)(1)(i),
paragraph (b)(4), and the introductory
text of paragraph (e) to read as follows:
■
§ 2.52 Sale or distribution of printed
matter.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(1) * * *
(i) None of the reasons for denying a
permit that are set out in paragraph (e)
of this section are present;
*
*
*
*
*
(4) In the event that two or more
groups taking advantage of the small
group permit exception seek to use the
same designated available area at the
same time, and the area cannot
reasonably accommodate multiple
occupancy, the superintendent will,
whenever possible, direct the later
arriving group to relocate to another
nearby designated available area.
*
*
*
*
*
(e) Processing the application. The
superintendent must issue a permit or a
written denial within ten days of
receiving a complete and fully executed
application. A permit will be approved
unless:
*
*
*
*
*
Dated: June 12, 2013.
Michael J. Bean,
Acting Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary
for Fish and Wildlife and Parks.
[FR Doc. 2013–15005 Filed 6–21–13; 8:45 am]
ehiers on DSK2VPTVN1PROD with RULES
BILLING CODE 4312–EJ–P
VerDate Mar<15>2010
15:17 Jun 21, 2013
Jkt 229001
Adequacy Status of the Submitted
2009 and 2025 PM2.5 Motor Vehicle
Emission Budgets for Transportation
Conformity Purposes for New Jersey
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Notice of adequacy.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: In this action, EPA is
notifying the public that we have found
that the motor vehicle emissions
budgets for PM2.5 and NOX in the
submitted maintenance plans for the
New Jersey portions of the New YorkNorthern New Jersey-Long Island, NYNJ-CT, and Philadelphia-Wilmington,
PA-NJ-DE, PM2.5 nonattainment areas to
be adequate for transportation
conformity purposes. The transportation
conformity rule requires that the EPA
conduct a public process and make an
affirmative decision on the adequacy of
budgets before they can be used by
metropolitan planning organizations in
conformity determinations. As a result
of our finding, two metropolitan
planning organizations in New Jersey
(the North Jersey Transportation
Planning Authority and the Delaware
Valley Regional Planning Commission)
must use the new 2009 and 2025 PM2.5
budgets for future transportation
conformity determinations.
DATES: This finding is effective July 9,
2013.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Matt
Laurita, Air Programs Branch,
Environmental Protection Agency—
Region 2, 290 Broadway, 25th Floor,
New York, New York 10007–1866, (212)
637–3895, laurita.matthew@epa.gov.
The finding and the response to
comments will be available at EPA’s
conformity Web site: https://
www.epa.gov/otaq/stateresources/
transconf/adequacy.htm.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
On December 26, 2012, New Jersey
submitted redesignation requests and
maintenance plans to EPA for both the
New York-Northern New Jersey-Long
Island, NY-NJ-CT (Northern New
Jersey), and Philadelphia-Wilmington,
PA-NJ-DE (Southern New Jersey), PM2.5
nonattainment areas. The purpose of
New Jersey’s submittal was to request a
redesignation to attainment for both the
1997 and 2006 PM2.5 National Ambient
PO 00000
Frm 00017
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
37717
Air Quality Standards (NAAQS) and
submit a state implementation plan to
provide for maintenance of the standard
for the first ten years of a 20-year
maintenance period. New Jersey’s
request was pursuant to EPA’s findings
that that the Northern New Jersey area
had attained the 1997 (75 FR 69589) and
2006 (77 FR 76867) PM2.5 NAAQS, and
that the Southern New Jersey area had
attained the 1997 (77 FR 28782) and
2006 (78 FR 882) PM2.5 NAAQS, based
on ambient air quality monitoring data.
New Jersey’s submittal included motor
vehicle emissions budgets (‘‘budgets’’)
for 2009 and 2025 for use by the State’s
metropolitan planning organizations in
making transportation conformity
determinations. On September 12, 2012,
EPA posted the availability of the
budgets our Web site for the purpose of
soliciting public comments. The
comment period closed on October 12,
2012, and we received no comments.
New Jersey developed these budgets,
as required, for the last year of its
maintenance plan, 2025, and an
additional year, 2009, for the purpose of
establishing budgets for the near-term
based on EPA’s MOVES model.
Previously established and approved
budgets had been based on MOBILE6.2.
New Jersey also determined that budgets
based on annual emissions of direct
PM2.5 and NOX, a precursor, are
appropriate for the 2006 daily standard
because exceedences of the standard
were not isolated to one particular
season; therefore, the budgets being
found adequate today will be used by
transportation agencies to meet
conformity requirements for both the
annual and daily standards.
The 2009 budgets were developed
without an accompanying full emissions
inventory. EPA believes that this
approach is approvable and is
consistent with attainment and
maintenance of both the 1997 and 2006
PM2.5 standards because of our earlier
determinations that both the Northern
New Jersey and Southern New Jersey
PM2.5 nonattainment areas had attained
the standards based on monitored air
quality that included the year 2009.
The budgets for 2025 reflect the total
on-road emissions for 2025, plus an
allocation from the available NOX and
PM2.5 safety margins. Under 40 CFR
93.101, the term ‘‘safety margin’’ is the
difference between the attainment level
(from all sources) and the projected
level of emissions (from all sources) in
the maintenance plan. The safety
margin can be allocated to the
transportation sector; however, the total
emissions must remain below the
attainment level. New Jersey chose to
add 8% of the available safety margin to
E:\FR\FM\24JNR1.SGM
24JNR1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 78, Number 121 (Monday, June 24, 2013)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 37713-37717]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2013-15005]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
National Park Service
36 CFR Part 2
[NPS-WASO-REGS-8546; PXXVPADO515]
RIN 1024-AD91
General Regulations; National Park System, Demonstrations, Sale
or Distribution of Printed Matter
AGENCY: National Park Service, Interior.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The National Park Service is amending its interim regulations
governing demonstrations and the sale or distribution of printed matter
applicable to most units of the National Park System. The rule
clarifies provisions regarding permits for demonstrations or
distributing printed matter and in management of two or more small
(non-permit) groups seeking to use at the same time, an area that has
been designated as available for these activities.
DATES: This rule is effective June 24, 2013.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Lee Dickinson, Special Park Use
Program Manager, 1849 C St. NW., Washington, DC, 20240 (202) 208-4206.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
On October 19, 2010, the National Park Service (NPS) issued an
interim rule that revised regulations at 36 CFR 2.51 and 2.52 that
governed demonstrations and the sale or distribution of printed matter
applicable to most areas of the National Park System, and added two
public conduct
[[Page 37714]]
provisions to regulations at 36 CFR 2.31, that prohibit harassing
visitors and obstructing public passageways. The interim rule became
effective immediately upon publication in the Federal Register October
19, 2010 (75 FR 64148) and requested public comment.
As more fully detailed in the preamble to the interim rule, the NPS
is governed by the NPS Organic Act as well as by First Amendment
jurisprudence. Currently consisting of 401 park units in all 50 states,
the District of Columbia, and various U.S territories, the National
Park System encompasses more than 84 million acres. These park units
are located in a wide range of environments as diverse as the United
States itself. The size of these park units also varies tremendously,
ranging from Wrangell-St. Elias National Park and National Preserve,
Alaska, at 13.2 million acres to Thaddeus Kosciuszko National Memorial,
Pennsylvania, at 0.02 acres. About one-third of the units of the
National Park System preserve nature's many and varied gifts to the
Nation, while the other two-thirds recognize benchmarks of human
history in America.
The National Park System provides habitat for 378 threatened or
endangered species, has more than 100 million items in museum
collections, has 1.5 million archaeological sites, and has 27,000
historic and prehistoric structures. The National Park System also has
an extensive physical infrastructure, which includes thousands of
buildings, tens of thousands of miles of trails and roads, and almost
30,000 housing units, campground, and picnic areas as well as 3,000
water and wastewater treatment systems.
According to the NPS Statistical Abstract, in 2012 there were
approximately 282 million visits to units of the National Park System
that offers visitors not only visual, educational, and recreational
experiences but also inspirational, contemplative, and spiritual
experiences. For neighboring Native Americans, certain National Parks
are also considered sacred sites, where the NPS asks visitors to
respect these long-standing beliefs.
Equally important, the National Park System has traditionally
offered visitors the opportunity to engage in demonstration activity
and the sale or distribution of printed matter in designated park
areas. In that regard, the NPS general regulations at 36 CFR 2.51 and
2.52, applicable to parks not subject to 36 CFR 7.96(g), have governed
such activities since 1983.
[Enacted] . . . to protect the natural and cultural resources of
the parks and to protect visitors and property within the parks,
[these NPS general regulations] intended effect . . . is to impose
on those activities that involve First Amendment consideration only
those narrow restrictions that are necessary to protect park
resources and to ensure the management of park areas for public
enjoyment.
48 FR 30252, 30272, June 30, 1983.
In 2010, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia
Circuit issued its decision in Boardley v. Department of the Interior,
615 F.3d 508 (D.C. Cir. 2010), which stemmed from a demonstration and
leaflet-distribution incident at Mount Rushmore National Memorial,
South Dakota, for which the NPS had required a permit. The Court of
Appeals vacated Sec. Sec. 2.51 and 2.52 in their entirety, based on
the system-wide lack of an exception from the permit requirement for
individual and small-group activity in NPS-designated free speech
areas. The U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia in Boardley
v. Department of the Interior, 605 F. Supp. 2d 8 (D.D.C. 2009), had
earlier also found fault with the NPS's regulatory definition of a
demonstration.
Consistent with these judicial decisions and in order to avoid a
regulatory vacuum that could impact the NPS's conservation mandate and
the use of park areas by the public, the NPS issued the interim rule
governing demonstrations and the sale or distribution of printed matter
applicable to most of the National Park System. While retaining the
park superintendent's ability to designate available areas as well as
the permit requirement for large groups, the NPS interim rule narrowed
the definition of what constitutes a demonstration; created a small-
group permit exception; detailed how the NPS addresses competing small
(non-permit) groups that seek to use the same designated area; refined
how applications are to be processed; and prohibited harassment of
visitors by physical touch or by obstruction of building entranceways,
sidewalks, and other public passageways.
Consistent with evolving First Amendment jurisprudence, the interim
rule as revised by this final rule is intended to protect the natural
and cultural resources of the National Park System and to protect
visitors and property within the parks by imposing on demonstrators
only the most limited restrictions necessary to accomplish those goals.
Response to Comments and Supplemental Explanation of the Interim
Regulations
When the interim rule was published, the NPS requested public
comments to be submitted by December 19, 2010. The NPS received four
comments, each through the Federal eRulemaking Portal at https://www.regulations.gov. The NPS reviewed the comments and, besides
reaffirming and incorporating by reference its explanation found in its
earlier rulemaking, offers the following responses to the issues
raised.
One comment disagreed with the NPS decision to exempt small groups
of under 25 persons from the requirement to obtain a permit, and stated
that all individuals should be required to obtain a permit, although
through an easier permit process. To be consistent with the Court of
Appeals decision in Boardley, the NPS believes that it is legally
obligated to create a regulatory small-group permit exception.
Another comment stated that small groups that simply hand out
printed material should not be required to get a permit, unless their
activity involves tables, signs, banners, or drums. Consistent with the
Court of Appeals decision in Boardley, the NPS interim rule created a
small-group permit exception for sale or distribution of printed matter
in designated free speech areas. While the NPS interim rule at 36 CFR
2.52(b)(1) and this final rule allow for small groups to sell or
distribute printed matter and use hand-carried signs without a permit,
the use of stages, platforms or structures will require a permit. As
the NPS explained in the preamble to the interim rule, this is because
the unregulated presence of such structures would negatively impact
park resources and park visitors. A permit allows the superintendent to
consider the impact of the proposed equipment and to impose content-
neutral, site-specific and reasonably appropriate resource-protection
and safety conditions. Because a drum is a musical instrument, such use
would be governed by the NPS audio disturbance regulations found at 36
CFR 2.12(a)(1)(i)-(ii).
One comment thought that by defining a small group as 25 or fewer
persons, too many groups fell within the ``target'' of the NPS interim
rule. The comment used the example of a school field trip of 26 or more
students and chaperones, and expressed concern that it might be
considered an unlawful demonstration if the participants communicate or
express their views at a national park. The comment suggests that the
small-group permit exception
[[Page 37715]]
should be enlarged to 50 persons, to help accommodate normal school
field trip activity and other gatherings.
The NPS believes that the interim rule's more narrowly limited
definition of demonstration already addressed this concern. As the NPS
explained in the preamble to the interim rule:
Application of the NPS's narrowed definition of a demonstration
thus excludes visitors who merely have tattoos or are wearing
baseball caps, T-shirts, or other articles of clothing that convey a
message; or visitors whose vehicles merely display bumper stickers.
By limiting the definition of what constitutes a demonstration, and
by explicitly excluding casual park use by visitors or tourists
which is not reasonably likely to attract a crowd or onlookers--such
as when scout leaders or teachers engage in discussions with their
charges--the NPS believes that the rule comports with the First
Amendment and is narrowly tailored to serve significant government
interests.
75 FR 64150, October 19, 2010.
The NPS's selection of 25 persons as the number of individuals that
generally qualify for the small-group permit exception is also
consistent with the Court of Appeal's decision in Boardley that
explicitly recognized that the agency may decide where to draw that
line. 615 F.3d at 525. The NPS believes that its determination is
reasonable; it also is identical to a long-standing small-group permit
exception in the NPS's special regulations for the National Capital
Region at 36 CFR 7.96(g)(2)(1).
One comment asked if sound systems are allowed without a permit.
This question is answered by 36 CFR 2.12(a)(4), which requires
individual(s) who want to operate a public address system in connection
with demonstrations and special events to obtain a permit.
One comment asked if a small group needs a permit to engage in
demonstration or printed matter activities that are located outside of
a park-designated First Amendment area.
Consistent with the NPS's interim rule, demonstrations and printed
matter distributions are limited to locations designated by the
superintendent as available for these activities. If a person or group
wishes to engage in such activities in an area not designated by the
superintendent, the person or group may request in writing that the
superintendent reconsider whether the area should be designated as
available under 36 CFR 2.51(c). This regulation does not alter a
dissatisfied petitioner's right, if any, to challenge a
superintendent's designation of any area under 36 CFR 2.51(c) under the
Administrative Procedure Act.
One comment stated that designated free speech areas needed to be
clearly described to preserve the parks as educational places and asked
what steps parks could take to avoid disturbances there. The NPS
believes that the interim rule addressed these issues. Specifically, 36
CFR 2.51(c)(2) provides that the superintendent must designate on a
map, which must be available in the office of the superintendent and by
public notice, the locations designated as available for demonstrations
and the sale or distribution of printed matter. As for concerns about
disturbances there, any NPS action must comport with relevant First
Amendment jurisprudence.
It is firmly settled under our Constitution that the public
expression of ideas may not be prohibited merely because the ideas
themselves are offensive to some of their hearers. Street v. New York,
394 U.S. 576, 592 (1969). While speech is often provocative and
challenging, it is nevertheless protected against censorship or
punishment, unless shown likely to produce a clear and present danger
of serious substantive evil that rises far above public inconvenience,
annoyance or unrest. Terminiello v. Chicago, 337 U.S. 1, 4 (1949). In
response to a disturbance, in a designated First Amendment area or
elsewhere, the NPS will take action consistent with relevant First
Amendment jurisprudence. Such NPS actions may generally center on
whether the unlawful disturbance violates the NPS regulations, such as
those prohibiting harassment, obstruction, or disorderly conduct at 36
CFR 2.31(a)(4)-(5), and 2.34.
Finally, the NPS interim rule's 36 CFR 2.51(b)(2) and 2.52(b)(2),
and this final rule request that an organizer, who seeks to take
advantage of the small-group permit exception, provide reasonable
notice to the superintendent if the organizer has reason to believe
there may be an attempt to disrupt, protest, or prevent the event.
While not mandatory, this voluntary notice provision gives park
officials an opportunity to plan additional public safety and resource
protection measures. The NPS had asked for comments at 75 FR 64151,
October 19, 2010, whether such notice should be made mandatory in
future regulations. The NPS received no comments on this issue and will
defer to future rulemaking whether such notice should be made
mandatory.
Clarifications of the Interim Regulations
After further internal review, the NPS is making three
clarifications and one correction to the interim rule. Two
clarifications, at 36 CFR 2.51(f) and 2.52(e), are intended to make the
regulatory text more explicit that the superintendent must either issue
a permit or a written denial within ten days of receiving a complete
and fully executed application. The ten-day action deadline, to issue
either a permit or a written denial, was clearly part of the NPS's
intention in the interim rule and is consistent with the Court of
Appeals decision in Boardley, which found the NPS's regulatory deadline
to be reasonable under the Supreme Court's First Amendment
jurisprudence. 615 F.3d at 519 (citing Thomas v. Chicago Park District,
534 U.S. 316, 318 (2002)).
The third clarification, at 36 CFR 2.52(b)(4), inserts the phrase
``to use.'' Inadvertently omitted in the initial rulemaking, the phrase
clarifies the situation when a park addresses two or more (non-
permitted) small groups that are seeking to use the same designated
area at the same time. The paragraph is identical to 36 CFR 2.51(b)(4),
and has been amended to read as set forth in the regulatory text of
this rule.
Finally, the NPS is making one correction to fix a clerical error,
by deleting the word ``and'' at the end 36 CFR 2.52(b)(1)(i). The
sentence has been amended to read: None of the reasons for denying a
permit that are set out in paragraph (e) of this section are present;.
Effective Date
This final rule is effective immediately. To the extent it is a
substantive rule, it relieves a restriction on permit applicants, in
that it provides more explicitly for a prompt response by the
superintendent to the application. The other clarifications and
corrections in this rule, while necessary, are essentially non-
substantive. The Department of the Interior also finds that there is
good cause for making this rule effective immediately, pursuant to the
Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. 553(d)(3) and 318 DM 6.25. As
noted above, the ten-day response deadline was clearly part of NPS's
intention in the interim rule. Because this clarification makes the
rule more consistent with the Court of Appeals decision in Boardley, it
should go into effect immediately. Moreover, there would be a benefit
to the public in making the rule effective immediately, in that it
clarifies and corrects provisions governing the permit application
process.
[[Page 37716]]
Compliance With Other Laws, Executive Orders, and Department Policy
Regulatory Planning and Review (Executive Orders 12866 and 13563)
Executive Order 12866 provides that the Office of Information and
Regulatory Affairs in the Office of Management and Budget will review
all significant rules. The Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs
has determined that this rule is significant because it will raise
novel legal or policy issues. The rule amends existing NPS interim
regulations applicable to most areas of the National Park System,
pertaining to demonstrations and sale or distribution of printed
matter. The rule also clarifies provisions governing permits for
demonstrations and sale or distribution of printed matter and for
managing groups engaged in these activities.
Executive Order 13563 reaffirms the principles of E.O. 12866 while
calling for improvements in the nation's regulatory system to promote
predictability, to reduce uncertainty, and to use the best, most
innovative, and least burdensome tools for achieving regulatory ends.
The executive order directs agencies to consider regulatory approaches
that reduce burdens and maintain flexibility and freedom of choice for
the public where these approaches are relevant, feasible, and
consistent with regulatory objectives. E.O. 13563 emphasizes further
that regulations must be based on the best available science and that
the rulemaking process must allow for public participation and an open
exchange of ideas. We have developed this rule in a manner consistent
with these requirements.
Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
This rule will not have a significant economic effect on a
substantial number of small entities under the RFA (5 U.S.C. 601 et
seq.).
The rule only amends existing NPS regulations to clarify regulatory
text. Other organizations with interest in the rule will not be
effected economically.
Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act (SBREFA)
This rule is not a major rule under 5 U.S.C. 804 (2), the SBREFA.
This rule:
a. Does not have an annual effect on the economy of $100 million or
more.
b. Will not cause a major increase in costs or prices for
consumers, individual industries, Federal, State, or local government
agencies, or geographic regions.
c. Does not have significant adverse effects on competition,
employment, investment, productivity, innovation, or the ability of
U.S.-based enterprises to compete with foreign-based enterprises.
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (UMRA)
This rule does not impose an unfunded mandate on State, local, or
tribal governments or the private sector of more than $100 million per
year. The rule does not have a significant or unique effect on State,
local, or tribal governments or the private sector. A statement
containing the information required by the UMRA, (2 U.S.C. 1531 et
seq.) is not required.
Takings (Executive Order 12630)
Under the criteria in section 2 of Executive Order 12630, this rule
does not have significant takings implications. It pertains
specifically to operation and management of locations outside the NPS-
National Capital Region. A takings implication assessment is not
required.
Federalism (Executive Order 13132)
Under the criteria in section 1 of Executive Order 13132, the rule
does not have sufficient federalism implications to warrant the
preparation of Federalism summary impact statement. A Federalism
summary impact statement is not required.
Civil Justice Reform (Executive Order 12988)
This rule complies with the requirements of Executive Order 12988.
Specifically, this rule:
(a) Meets the criteria of section 3 (a) requiring that all
regulations be reviewed to eliminate errors and ambiguity and be
written to minimize litigation; and
(b) Meets the criteria of section 3 (b) (2) requiring that all
regulations be written in clear language and contain clear legal
standards.
Consultation With Indian Tribes (Executive Order 13175 and Department
Policy)
The Department of the Interior strives to strengthen its
government-to-government relationship with Indian tribes through a
commitment to consultation with Indian tribes and recognition of their
right to self-governance and tribal sovereignty. We have evaluated this
rule under the Department's consultation policy and under the criteria
in Executive Order 13175 and have determined that it has no substantial
direct effects on federally recognized Indian tribes and that
consultation under the Department's tribal consultation policy is not
required. The rule only applies to management and operation of NPS
areas outside the National Capital Region.
Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
This rule contains information collection requirements, and a
submission under the PRA is required. A Federal agency may not conduct
or sponsor and you are not required to respond to a collection of
information, unless it displays a currently valid Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) control number. OMB has approved the information
collections in this rule and has assigned control number 1024-0026,
expiring on June 30, 2013. We estimate the burden associated with this
information collection to be thirty (30) minutes. The information
collection activities are necessary for the public to obtain benefits
in the form of special park use permits.
National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA)
This rule does not constitute a major Federal action significantly
affecting the quality of the human environment. A detailed statement
under the NEPA of 1969 is not required because the rule is covered by a
categorical exclusion. We have determined that the rule is
categorically excluded under 516 DM 12.5(A)(10) as it is a modification
of existing NPS regulations that does not increase public use to the
extent of compromising the nature and character of the area or causing
physical damage to it. Further, the rule will not result in the
introduction of incompatible uses which might compromise the nature and
characteristics of the area or cause physical damage to it. Finally,
the rule will not cause conflict with adjacent ownerships or land uses,
or cause a nuisance to adjacent owners or occupants. We have also
determined that the rule does not involve any of the extraordinary
circumstances listed in 43 CFR 46.215 that would require further
analysis under NEPA.
Effects on the Energy Supply (Executive Order 13211)
This rule is not a significant energy action under the definition
in Executive Order 13211. A Statement of Energy Effects is not
required.
List of Subjects in 36 CFR Part 2
Environmental protection, National parks, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
In consideration of the foregoing, the National Park Service amends
36 CFR part 2 as set forth below:
[[Page 37717]]
PART 2--RESOURCE PROTECTION, PUBLIC USE AND RECREATION
0
1. The authority citation for Part 2 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1, 3, 9a, 462(k).
0
2. In Sec. 2.51 revise the introductory text of paragraph (f) to read
as follows:
Sec. 2.51 Demonstrations.
* * * * *
(f) Processing the application. The superintendent must issue a
permit or a written denial within ten days of receiving a complete and
fully executed application. A permit will be approved unless:
* * * * *
0
3. In Sec. 2.52 revise paragraph (b)(1)(i), paragraph (b)(4), and the
introductory text of paragraph (e) to read as follows:
Sec. 2.52 Sale or distribution of printed matter.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(1) * * *
(i) None of the reasons for denying a permit that are set out in
paragraph (e) of this section are present;
* * * * *
(4) In the event that two or more groups taking advantage of the
small group permit exception seek to use the same designated available
area at the same time, and the area cannot reasonably accommodate
multiple occupancy, the superintendent will, whenever possible, direct
the later arriving group to relocate to another nearby designated
available area.
* * * * *
(e) Processing the application. The superintendent must issue a
permit or a written denial within ten days of receiving a complete and
fully executed application. A permit will be approved unless:
* * * * *
Dated: June 12, 2013.
Michael J. Bean,
Acting Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary for Fish and Wildlife and
Parks.
[FR Doc. 2013-15005 Filed 6-21-13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4312-EJ-P