Draft Programmatic Candidate Conservation Agreement With Assurances for the Greater Sage-Grouse in Harney County, Oregon and Draft Environmental Assessment, 2683-2685 [2014-00600]
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Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 10 / Wednesday, January 15, 2014 / Notices
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seeking approval from OMB for the
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Section A.
wreier-aviles on DSK5TPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
A. Overview of Information Collection
Title of Information Collection:
Rehabilitation Mortgage Insurance
Underwriting Program Section 203(K)
Office of Single Family Program
Development.
OMB Approval Number: 2502–0527.
Type of Request: Extension of
currently approved collection.
Form Number: HUD–92700, HUD–
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Description of the need for the
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8,255 respondents are borrowers and
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Respondents (i.e. affected public):
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Estimated Number of Respondents:
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Estimated Number of Responses:
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Ways to enhance the quality, utility, and
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e.g., permitting electronic submission of
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HUD encourages interested parties to
submit comment in response to these
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Authority: Section 3507 of the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995, 44 U.S.C. Chapter 35.
Dated: January 10, 2014.
Laura M. Marin,
Associate General Deputy Assistant Secretary
for Housing—Associate Deputy Federal
Housing Commissioner.
[FR Doc. 2014–00642 Filed 1–14–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4210–67–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
[FWS–R1–ES–2013–N284;
FXES11120100000–145–FF01E00000]
Draft Programmatic Candidate
Conservation Agreement With
Assurances for the Greater SageGrouse in Harney County, Oregon and
Draft Environmental Assessment
Fish and Wildlife Service,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice of receipt; Notice of
availability; Request for comments.
AGENCY:
We, the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service (Service), have received
an application from the Harney Soil and
Water Conservation District (SWCD) for
an enhancement of survival (EOS)
permit under section 10(a)(1)(A) of the
Endangered Species Act of 1973, as
amended (ESA). The permit application
includes a draft programmatic candidate
conservation agreement with assurances
(CCAA) between the SWCD and the
Service for the greater sage-grouse
(Centrocercus urophasianus) in Harney
County, Oregon. The Service and SWCD
prepared the programmatic CCAA to
provide ranchers and farmers in Harney
County with the opportunity to
voluntarily conserve the greater sagegrouse and its habitat while carrying out
ranch and farm operations. The Service
also announces the availability of a draft
environmental assessment (EA) that has
been prepared in response to the permit
application in accordance with
requirements of the National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA). We
are making the draft CCAA and draft EA
SUMMARY:
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2683
available for public review and
comment.
DATES: To ensure consideration, please
send your written comments by
February 14, 2014.
ADDRESSES: To request further
information or submit written
comments, please use one of the
following methods, and note that your
information request or comments are in
reference to the Harney SWCD CCAA:
• Internet: Documents may be viewed
on the Internet at https://www.fws.gov/
oregonfwo/.
• Email: FW1HarneySWCDCCAA@
fws.gov. Include ‘‘Harney SWCD CCAA’’
in the subject line of the message or
comments.
• U.S. Mail: U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service, Bend Field Office, 63095
Deschutes Market Road, Bend, Oregon
97701.
• In-Person Viewing or Pickup:
Documents will be available for public
inspection by appointment during
normal business hours at the U.S. Fish
and Wildlife Service’s Bend Field
Office, 63095 Deschutes Market Road,
Bend, Oregon 97701; and at the Harney
Soil and Water Conservation District
Office, 530 Hwy 20 South, Hines,
Oregon.
• Fax: Bend Field Office, 541–383–
7638, Attn.: Harney SWCD CCAA.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Nancy Gilbert or Angela Sitz, Bend
Field Office (see ADDRESSES), telephone:
541–383–7146. If you use a
telecommunications device for the deaf,
please call the Federal Information
Relay Service at 800–877–8339.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
Private and other non-Federal
property owners are encouraged to enter
into CCAAs, in which they voluntarily
undertake management activities on
their properties to enhance, restore, or
maintain habitat benefiting species that
are proposed for listing under the ESA,
candidates for listing, or species that
may become candidates or proposed for
listing. Through a CCAA and its
associated EOS permit the Service
provides assurances to property owners
that they will not be subjected to
increased land use restrictions if the
covered species become listed under the
ESA in the future, provided certain
conditions are met. Application
requirements and issuance criteria for
enhancement of survival permits for
CCAAs are found in the Code of
Regulations (CFR) at 50 CFR 17.22(d)
and 17.32(d), respectively. See also our
joint policy on CCAAs, which we
published in the Federal Register with
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2684
Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 10 / Wednesday, January 15, 2014 / Notices
wreier-aviles on DSK5TPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
the Department of Commerce’s National
Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration, National Marine
Fisheries Service (64 FR 32726; June 17,
1999).
On March 23, 2010, the Service
determined that listing the greater sagegrouse under the ESA (16 U.S.C. 1538)
was warranted, but precluded by the
need to address higher priority species
first. In anticipation of a listing decision
by the Service, the SWCD established
the Harney County Greater Sage-Grouse
Candidate Conservation Agreement with
Assurances Steering Committee
(Steering Committee) and requested
assistance from the Service in
developing a greater sage-grouse
conservation strategy for ranch and land
management activities that could offer
landowners assurances that their ranch
and farm practices could continue in the
event this species was listed under the
ESA. The Steering Committee is
comprised of local private landowners
and representatives from the SWCD, the
Service, Natural Resources Conservation
Service, Bureau of Land Management,
Oregon Department of Fish and
Wildlife, Oregon Department of State
Lands, Oregon State University
Extension, Eastern Oregon Agricultural
Research Center, The Nature
Conservancy, and the Harney County
Court. The Service, in coordination with
the SWCD and the Steering Committee,
developed the draft programmatic
CCAA. The intent of the CCAA is to use
voluntary, proactive conservation
measures to reduce or remove threats to
the greater sage-grouse in Harney
County, thereby potentially reducing the
need to list the species.
Proposed Action
The Service proposes to approve the
CCAA and to issue an EOS permit to
Harney SWCD for incidental take of
greater sage-grouse caused by covered
activities, if permit issuance criteria are
met. The proposed CCAA covers an area
of approximately 1.1 million acres of
privately owned lands within the range
of the greater sage-grouse in Harney
County, Oregon. The CCAA covers
numerous activities associated with
ranching, farming and some irrigated
agriculture. The CCAA contains a
comprehensive list of conservation
measures designed to avoid or minimize
potential threats to the greater sagegrouse on private rangelands. The
proposed term of the CCAA and EOS
permit is 30 years.
The CCAA is programmatic in nature.
A private landowner who wishes to
enroll in the CCAA would develop, in
coordination with the SWCD, a sitespecific plan (SSP) for the property to be
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14:04 Jan 14, 2014
Jkt 232001
enrolled. The SWCD would assist the
landowner in selecting appropriate
conservation measures from the CCAA
for their SSP that would address
specific threats to the greater sagegrouse associated with their property
and operations. If their SSP is approved
by the Service and the SWCD, the
landowner would receive coverage
under the EOS permit, through a
Certificate of Inclusion, for take of the
greater sage-grouse incidental to
conservation and ranching and farming
activities, should the species become
listed. Take authorization would
become effective upon listing as long as
the enrolled landowner is in compliance
with the terms and conditions of the
permit and the provisions of their SSP.
Consistent with our CCAA Policy (64
FR 32726), the conservation goal of the
proposed CCAA is to encourage
enhancement and protection of greater
sage-grouse habitat on non-Federal
lands by either maintaining or
modifying existing land uses so that
they are consistent with the
conservation needs of the greater sagegrouse. We can meet this conservation
goal with the use of a CCAA by giving
non-Federal landowners incentives to
implement conservation measures,
primarily through regulatory certainty
concerning land-use restrictions that
might otherwise apply should the
greater sage-grouse become listed under
the ESA.
National Environmental Policy Act
Compliance
The development of the CCAA and
the proposed issuance of an EOS permit
is a Federal action that triggers the need
for compliance with the NEPA, as
amended (42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.). We
have prepared a draft EA to analyze the
direct, indirect, and cumulative
environmental impacts of three
alternatives on the quality of the human
environment and other natural
resources:
Alternative 1 (No Action): Under the
No-Action alternative which represents
current management, there would not be
any Service-approved CCAA or SSPs
and no EOS permit or Certificates of
Inclusion addressing the greater sagegrouse within Harney County. Thus,
conservation measures associated with a
CCAA to reduce threats to the greater
sage-grouse in Harney County would
not be implemented and the regulatory
assurances associated with an EOS
permit, which are a major conservation
incentive to enrolled landowners,
would not be available. Ongoing efforts
by other local, State, and Federal
agencies and organizations to conserve
the greater sage-grouse would still be in
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
place in Harney County, however, the
ability to complement and enhance
these other efforts with a CCAA and
EOS permit would not be available.
Alternative 2 (Landowner-specific
CCAAs): Under this alternative,
landowners would develop individual
CCAAs with the Service for the greater
sage-grouse, and the Service would
issue EOS permits on a case by case
basis, if the permit issuance criteria are
met, to each landowner interested in
conserving the greater sage-grouse.
Developing individual CCAAs without
the guidance provided in a
programmatic CCAA would be more
expensive and time consuming for
landowners and the Service due to the
need to prepare separate ESA and NEPA
compliance documents and procedures
for each CCAA.
Alternative 3 (Proposed Action): The
proposed action alternative is issuance
of an EOS permit to the SWCD if the
permit issuance criteria are met, and the
implementation of the programmatic
CCAA. The programmatic CCAA
provides a streamlined process for nonFederal landowners to voluntarily
complete SSPs and be issued a
Certificate of Inclusion to receive
coverage under the EOS permit that
would be issued to the SWCD.
Public Comments
You may submit your comments and
materials by one of the methods listed
in the ADDRESSES section. We
specifically request information, views,
and opinions from the public on our
proposed Federal permit action,
including identification of any other
affected aspects of the human
environment not already identified in
the draft EA pursuant to NEPA
regulations at 40 CFR 1506.6. Further,
we specifically solicit information
regarding the adequacy of the CCAA
pursuant to the requirements for permits
at 50 CFR parts 13 and 17.
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, as well as supporting
documentation we use in preparing the
E:\FR\FM\15JAN1.SGM
15JAN1
Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 10 / Wednesday, January 15, 2014 / Notices
EA, will be available for public
inspection by appointment, during
normal business hours, at our Bend
Field Office (see ADDRESSES).
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Land Management
[LLNMF01000 L13110000.PP0000
14XL1109PF]
Next Steps
After completion of the EA based on
consideration of public comments on
the draft EA, we will determine whether
adoption of the proposed CCAA
warrants a finding of no significant
impact or whether an environmental
impact statement should be prepared.
We will evaluate the proposed CCAA as
well as any comments we receive on it,
to determine whether the CCAA would
meet the requirements for an EOS
permit under section 10(a)(1)(A) of the
ESA. We will also evaluate whether
issuance of an EOS permit would
comply with section 7 of the ESA by
conducting an intra-Service section 7
consultation on the proposed permit
action. We will consider the results of
this consultation, in combination with
the above findings, in our final analysis
to determine whether or not to issue an
EOS permit to the SWCD. The final
NEPA and permit decisions will not be
completed until after the end of the 30day comment period on this notice, and
will fully consider all comments
received during the comment period.
If we determine that the permit
issuance requirements are met, the
Service would issue an EOS permit to
the SWCD. The SWCD would then begin
processing applications from interested
landowners to develop SSPs that meet
the terms and conditions established in
the CCAA to receive coverage for the
incidental take of the greater sagegrouse. If the SSP is consistent with the
CCAA, the Service will issue a letter of
concurrence to the SWCD approving the
SSP, and the SWCD and landowner may
then sign a Certificate of Inclusion.
Authority
wreier-aviles on DSK5TPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
We provide this notice in accordance
with the requirements of section 10 of
the ESA (16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.), and
NEPA regulations (40 CFR 1501.7,
1506.6, and 1508.22).
Dated: December 19, 2013.
Hugh Morrison,
Acting Deputy Regional Director, Pacific
Region, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service,
Portland Oregon.
[FR Doc. 2014–00600 Filed 1–14–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–55–P
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Notice of Public Meeting, Farmington
District Resource Advisory Council
Meeting, New Mexico
Bureau of Land Management,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice of public meeting.
AGENCY:
In accordance with the
Federal Land Policy and Management
Act and the Federal Advisory
Committee Act, the Bureau of Land
Management’s (BLM) Farmington
District Resource Advisory Council
(RAC) will meet as indicated below.
DATES: The RAC will meet on February
11 and 12, 2014, at the Farmington
District Office, 6251 College Blvd., Suite
A, Farmington, NM 87402, from 9 a.m.–
4 p.m. The public may send written
comments to the RAC at the BLM
Farmington District Office, 6251 College
Blvd., Suite A, Farmington, NM 87402.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Christine Horton, BLM Farmington
District Office, 6251 College Blvd., Suite
A, Farmington, NM 87402, 505–564–
7633. Persons who use a
telecommunications device for the deaf
(TDD) may call the Federal Information
Relay Service (FIRS) at 1–800–877–8229
to contact the above individual during
normal business hours. The FIRS is
available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week,
to leave a message or question with the
above individual. You will receive a
reply during normal business hours.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The 10member Farmington District RAC
advises the Secretary of the Interior,
through the BLM, on a variety of
planning and management issues
associated with public land
management in the BLM’s Farmington
District. Planned agenda items include:
Opening remarks from the BLM
Farmington District Manager; the
Mancos/Gallup Shale Resource
Management Plan Amendment ongoing
planning effort; the Glade Run
Recreation Area Recreation and Travel
Management Plan; Wild horse gathers
for the Farmington District; and Taos
Field Office planning updates and
´
briefing (including the Rıo Grande del
Norte National Monument Plan, Cebolla
Oil and Gas leases, Taos Field Office
fuel wood standards, the Dixon Citizens
group cell tower appeal, and the Ohkay
Owingeh Exchange request). A
conference telephone line has been set
up for the meeting. Contact Christine
SUMMARY:
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2685
Horton at 505–564–7633 at least 2 days
before the meeting to reserve a line. Due
to a limited number of available lines,
the conference line is available on a
first-come first-served basis. All RAC
meetings are open to the public. On
Wednesday, February 12, 2014, at 2
p.m., members of the public will have
the opportunity to make comments to
the RAC, during an hour-long public
comment period. Persons wishing to
make comments during the public
comment period should register in
person with the BLM by 1 p.m. on
February 12, 2014, at the meeting
location. If you wish to make a comment
during the comment period through the
conference line, inform Christine
Horton when you call to reserve the
conference line. Depending on the
number of commenters, the length of
comments may be limited. The BLM
appreciates any and all comments.
Michael H. Tupper,
Deputy State Director, Lands and Resources.
[FR Doc. 2014–00632 Filed 1–14–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–FB–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Land Management
[LLOR912000.L10600000.DF0000.
14XL1116AF; HAG14–0047]
Notice of Public Meetings, Western
Oregon Resource Advisory
Committees
Bureau of Land Management,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice of Public Meetings.
AGENCY:
In accordance with the
Federal Land Policy and Management
Act (FLPMA) and the Federal Advisory
Committee Act of 1972 (FACA), the U.S.
Department of the Interior, Bureau of
Land Management (BLM) western
Oregon Resource Advisory Committees,
will meet as indicated below.
DATES: Roseburg District: Monday,
February 24, 9 a.m.–4 p.m.; Monday,
March 3, 9 a.m.–4 p.m.; Monday, March
17, 9 a.m.–4 p.m.; Monday, March 31,
9 a.m.–4 p.m.
Salem District: Thursday, February 27
from 9 a.m.–4 p.m.
Eugene District: Thursday and Friday,
March 13–14 from 8 a.m.–5 p.m. each
day.
SUMMARY:
The meetings will be held at
the following addresses in western
Oregon. The point of contact for each
meeting is also listed:
Roseburg District Resource Advisory
Committee: Jake Winn, 777 NW Garden
ADDRESSES:
E:\FR\FM\15JAN1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 79, Number 10 (Wednesday, January 15, 2014)]
[Notices]
[Pages 2683-2685]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2014-00600]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
[FWS-R1-ES-2013-N284; FXES11120100000-145-FF01E00000]
Draft Programmatic Candidate Conservation Agreement With
Assurances for the Greater Sage-Grouse in Harney County, Oregon and
Draft Environmental Assessment
AGENCY: Fish and Wildlife Service, Interior.
ACTION: Notice of receipt; Notice of availability; Request for
comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: We, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Service), have
received an application from the Harney Soil and Water Conservation
District (SWCD) for an enhancement of survival (EOS) permit under
section 10(a)(1)(A) of the Endangered Species Act of 1973, as amended
(ESA). The permit application includes a draft programmatic candidate
conservation agreement with assurances (CCAA) between the SWCD and the
Service for the greater sage-grouse (Centrocercus urophasianus) in
Harney County, Oregon. The Service and SWCD prepared the programmatic
CCAA to provide ranchers and farmers in Harney County with the
opportunity to voluntarily conserve the greater sage-grouse and its
habitat while carrying out ranch and farm operations. The Service also
announces the availability of a draft environmental assessment (EA)
that has been prepared in response to the permit application in
accordance with requirements of the National Environmental Policy Act
(NEPA). We are making the draft CCAA and draft EA available for public
review and comment.
DATES: To ensure consideration, please send your written comments by
February 14, 2014.
ADDRESSES: To request further information or submit written comments,
please use one of the following methods, and note that your information
request or comments are in reference to the Harney SWCD CCAA:
Internet: Documents may be viewed on the Internet at
https://www.fws.gov/oregonfwo/.
Email: FW1HarneySWCDCCAA@fws.gov. Include ``Harney SWCD
CCAA'' in the subject line of the message or comments.
U.S. Mail: U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Bend Field
Office, 63095 Deschutes Market Road, Bend, Oregon 97701.
In-Person Viewing or Pickup: Documents will be available
for public inspection by appointment during normal business hours at
the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service's Bend Field Office, 63095 Deschutes
Market Road, Bend, Oregon 97701; and at the Harney Soil and Water
Conservation District Office, 530 Hwy 20 South, Hines, Oregon.
Fax: Bend Field Office, 541-383-7638, Attn.: Harney SWCD
CCAA.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Nancy Gilbert or Angela Sitz, Bend
Field Office (see ADDRESSES), telephone: 541-383-7146. If you use a
telecommunications device for the deaf, please call the Federal
Information Relay Service at 800-877-8339.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
Private and other non-Federal property owners are encouraged to
enter into CCAAs, in which they voluntarily undertake management
activities on their properties to enhance, restore, or maintain habitat
benefiting species that are proposed for listing under the ESA,
candidates for listing, or species that may become candidates or
proposed for listing. Through a CCAA and its associated EOS permit the
Service provides assurances to property owners that they will not be
subjected to increased land use restrictions if the covered species
become listed under the ESA in the future, provided certain conditions
are met. Application requirements and issuance criteria for enhancement
of survival permits for CCAAs are found in the Code of Regulations
(CFR) at 50 CFR 17.22(d) and 17.32(d), respectively. See also our joint
policy on CCAAs, which we published in the Federal Register with
[[Page 2684]]
the Department of Commerce's National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration, National Marine Fisheries Service (64 FR 32726; June
17, 1999).
On March 23, 2010, the Service determined that listing the greater
sage-grouse under the ESA (16 U.S.C. 1538) was warranted, but precluded
by the need to address higher priority species first. In anticipation
of a listing decision by the Service, the SWCD established the Harney
County Greater Sage-Grouse Candidate Conservation Agreement with
Assurances Steering Committee (Steering Committee) and requested
assistance from the Service in developing a greater sage-grouse
conservation strategy for ranch and land management activities that
could offer landowners assurances that their ranch and farm practices
could continue in the event this species was listed under the ESA. The
Steering Committee is comprised of local private landowners and
representatives from the SWCD, the Service, Natural Resources
Conservation Service, Bureau of Land Management, Oregon Department of
Fish and Wildlife, Oregon Department of State Lands, Oregon State
University Extension, Eastern Oregon Agricultural Research Center, The
Nature Conservancy, and the Harney County Court. The Service, in
coordination with the SWCD and the Steering Committee, developed the
draft programmatic CCAA. The intent of the CCAA is to use voluntary,
proactive conservation measures to reduce or remove threats to the
greater sage-grouse in Harney County, thereby potentially reducing the
need to list the species.
Proposed Action
The Service proposes to approve the CCAA and to issue an EOS permit
to Harney SWCD for incidental take of greater sage-grouse caused by
covered activities, if permit issuance criteria are met. The proposed
CCAA covers an area of approximately 1.1 million acres of privately
owned lands within the range of the greater sage-grouse in Harney
County, Oregon. The CCAA covers numerous activities associated with
ranching, farming and some irrigated agriculture. The CCAA contains a
comprehensive list of conservation measures designed to avoid or
minimize potential threats to the greater sage-grouse on private
rangelands. The proposed term of the CCAA and EOS permit is 30 years.
The CCAA is programmatic in nature. A private landowner who wishes
to enroll in the CCAA would develop, in coordination with the SWCD, a
site-specific plan (SSP) for the property to be enrolled. The SWCD
would assist the landowner in selecting appropriate conservation
measures from the CCAA for their SSP that would address specific
threats to the greater sage-grouse associated with their property and
operations. If their SSP is approved by the Service and the SWCD, the
landowner would receive coverage under the EOS permit, through a
Certificate of Inclusion, for take of the greater sage-grouse
incidental to conservation and ranching and farming activities, should
the species become listed. Take authorization would become effective
upon listing as long as the enrolled landowner is in compliance with
the terms and conditions of the permit and the provisions of their SSP.
Consistent with our CCAA Policy (64 FR 32726), the conservation
goal of the proposed CCAA is to encourage enhancement and protection of
greater sage-grouse habitat on non-Federal lands by either maintaining
or modifying existing land uses so that they are consistent with the
conservation needs of the greater sage-grouse. We can meet this
conservation goal with the use of a CCAA by giving non-Federal
landowners incentives to implement conservation measures, primarily
through regulatory certainty concerning land-use restrictions that
might otherwise apply should the greater sage-grouse become listed
under the ESA.
National Environmental Policy Act Compliance
The development of the CCAA and the proposed issuance of an EOS
permit is a Federal action that triggers the need for compliance with
the NEPA, as amended (42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.). We have prepared a draft
EA to analyze the direct, indirect, and cumulative environmental
impacts of three alternatives on the quality of the human environment
and other natural resources:
Alternative 1 (No Action): Under the No-Action alternative which
represents current management, there would not be any Service-approved
CCAA or SSPs and no EOS permit or Certificates of Inclusion addressing
the greater sage-grouse within Harney County. Thus, conservation
measures associated with a CCAA to reduce threats to the greater sage-
grouse in Harney County would not be implemented and the regulatory
assurances associated with an EOS permit, which are a major
conservation incentive to enrolled landowners, would not be available.
Ongoing efforts by other local, State, and Federal agencies and
organizations to conserve the greater sage-grouse would still be in
place in Harney County, however, the ability to complement and enhance
these other efforts with a CCAA and EOS permit would not be available.
Alternative 2 (Landowner-specific CCAAs): Under this alternative,
landowners would develop individual CCAAs with the Service for the
greater sage-grouse, and the Service would issue EOS permits on a case
by case basis, if the permit issuance criteria are met, to each
landowner interested in conserving the greater sage-grouse. Developing
individual CCAAs without the guidance provided in a programmatic CCAA
would be more expensive and time consuming for landowners and the
Service due to the need to prepare separate ESA and NEPA compliance
documents and procedures for each CCAA.
Alternative 3 (Proposed Action): The proposed action alternative is
issuance of an EOS permit to the SWCD if the permit issuance criteria
are met, and the implementation of the programmatic CCAA. The
programmatic CCAA provides a streamlined process for non-Federal
landowners to voluntarily complete SSPs and be issued a Certificate of
Inclusion to receive coverage under the EOS permit that would be issued
to the SWCD.
Public Comments
You may submit your comments and materials by one of the methods
listed in the ADDRESSES section. We specifically request information,
views, and opinions from the public on our proposed Federal permit
action, including identification of any other affected aspects of the
human environment not already identified in the draft EA pursuant to
NEPA regulations at 40 CFR 1506.6. Further, we specifically solicit
information regarding the adequacy of the CCAA pursuant to the
requirements for permits at 50 CFR parts 13 and 17.
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, as well as supporting documentation we use in preparing the
[[Page 2685]]
EA, will be available for public inspection by appointment, during
normal business hours, at our Bend Field Office (see ADDRESSES).
Next Steps
After completion of the EA based on consideration of public
comments on the draft EA, we will determine whether adoption of the
proposed CCAA warrants a finding of no significant impact or whether an
environmental impact statement should be prepared. We will evaluate the
proposed CCAA as well as any comments we receive on it, to determine
whether the CCAA would meet the requirements for an EOS permit under
section 10(a)(1)(A) of the ESA. We will also evaluate whether issuance
of an EOS permit would comply with section 7 of the ESA by conducting
an intra-Service section 7 consultation on the proposed permit action.
We will consider the results of this consultation, in combination with
the above findings, in our final analysis to determine whether or not
to issue an EOS permit to the SWCD. The final NEPA and permit decisions
will not be completed until after the end of the 30-day comment period
on this notice, and will fully consider all comments received during
the comment period.
If we determine that the permit issuance requirements are met, the
Service would issue an EOS permit to the SWCD. The SWCD would then
begin processing applications from interested landowners to develop
SSPs that meet the terms and conditions established in the CCAA to
receive coverage for the incidental take of the greater sage-grouse. If
the SSP is consistent with the CCAA, the Service will issue a letter of
concurrence to the SWCD approving the SSP, and the SWCD and landowner
may then sign a Certificate of Inclusion.
Authority
We provide this notice in accordance with the requirements of
section 10 of the ESA (16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.), and NEPA regulations
(40 CFR 1501.7, 1506.6, and 1508.22).
Dated: December 19, 2013.
Hugh Morrison,
Acting Deputy Regional Director, Pacific Region, U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service, Portland Oregon.
[FR Doc. 2014-00600 Filed 1-14-14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310-55-P