Ochoco National Forest, Paulina Ranger District; Oregon; Gap Fuels and Vegetation Management Project EIS, 12148-12149 [2014-04705]
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12148
Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 42 / Tuesday, March 4, 2014 / Notices
validity of the methodology and
assumptions used; (3) ways to enhance
the quality, utility, and clarity of the
information to be collected; and (4)
ways to minimize the burden of the
collection of information on
respondents, including the use of
automated, electronic, mechanical, or
other technological collection
techniques or other forms of information
technology.
All comments received in response to
this notice, including names and
addresses when provided, will be a
matter of public record. Comments will
be summarized and included in the
submission request toward Office of
Management and Budget approval.
Send written comments to
Sandy Henning, District Ranger, Paulina
Ranger District, Ochoco National Forest,
3160 NE Third Street, Prineville, Oregon
97754. Alternately, electronic comments
may be sent to comments-pacific
northwest-ochoco@fs.fed.us. Electronic
comments must be submitted as part of
the actual email message, or as an
attachment in plain text (.txt), Microsoft
Word (.doc), rich text format (.rtf), or
portable document format (.pdf).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Marcy Anderson, Project Leader, at 3160
NE Third Street, Prineville, Oregon
97754, or at (541) 416–6463, or by email
at marcelleanderson@fs.fed.us.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
ADDRESSES:
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
Dated: February 25, 2014.
J Lenise Lago,
Deputy Chief, Business Operations.
Purpose and Need for Action
The general purpose of entering this
project area is to contribute to the
[FR Doc. 2014–04655 Filed 3–3–14; 8:45 am]
resiliency of the landscape and to
BILLING CODE 3411–15–P
promote vegetative conditions that are
similar to what occurred historically.
The project’s planning team is
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
considering management activities that
would promote and sustain late and old
Forest Service
structured stands, increase resistance of
forested vegetation to insects, disease
Ochoco National Forest, Paulina
and stand-replacing wildfire, and
Ranger District; Oregon; Gap Fuels
improve the condition of riparian
and Vegetation Management Project
vegetation.
EIS
Preliminary field work in the Gap
project area indicated that vegetation
AGENCY: Forest Service, USDA.
conditions in the project area have
ACTION: Notice of intent to prepare an
departed from the historic condition in
environmental impact statement.
several ways:
• Changes in tree species
SUMMARY: The Ochoco National Forest is compositions.
preparing an environmental impact
• A reduction in late and old
statement (EIS) to analyze the effects of
structured forest.
managing fuels and vegetation within
• A reduction in open-canopy stands.
the 38,145-acre Gap project area, which
• An increased risk of large-scale loss
is east of Prineville, Oregon. The project of forest to wildfire.
• An increased risk of insect
area includes National Forest System
infestation and/or disease that can
lands in the Upper North Fork Crooked
impact forested stands.
River and Horse Heaven Creek-Crooked
• A decline in the condition of
River Watersheds. The alternatives that
riparian vegetation.
will be analyzed include the proposed
The Purpose and Need was developed
action, no action, and additional
based upon direction from the Ochoco
alternatives that respond to issues
Forest Plan and opportunities identified
generated through the scoping process.
during preliminary field visits.
The Ochoco National Forest will give
1. There is a need to strategically
notice of the full environmental analysis
reduce forest vegetation density and fuel
and decision making process so
loadings towards a historic range of
interested and affected people may
variability to provide a range of forest
participate and contribute to the final
conditions and habitats that would
decision.
support historic disturbance processes,
DATES: Comments concerning the scope
native wildlife and plant species.
of the analysis must be received by
2. There is a need to increase or
April 3, 2014. The draft environmental
maintain large tree structure and to
impact statement is expected to be
maintain the abundance of early-seral
completed and available for public
and fire tolerant species compositions,
comment in November, 2014. The final
i.e. ponderosa pine, western larch and
environmental impact statement is
Douglas-fir.
3. There is a need to improve riparian
expected to be completed in March,
conditions and associated upland
2015.
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19:07 Mar 03, 2014
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Frm 00006
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Sfmt 4703
vegetation within Riparian Habitat
Conservation Areas (RHCAs) and
maintain and enhance hardwood
communities.
4. There is a need to contribute to the
local and regional economies by
providing timber and other wood fiber
products now and in the future.
Proposed Action
The proposed action includes a
variety of management strategies and
activities, including commercial
thinning with follow-up precommercial
thinning and/or prescribed burning
(16,665 acres), precommercial thinning
with prescribed burning (3,340 acres),
meadow restoration (300 acres), riparian
restoration (9 sites), and aspen stand
restoration (30 sites). Implementation of
the proposed action would require some
connected actions; these include use of
temporary roads on existing disturbance
(23 miles), use of new temporary roads
(8 miles), and road reconstruction (3
miles). The proposal also includes
closure or decommissioning of 21 miles
of roads in the project area.
Responsible Official
The responsible official will be Kate
Klein, Forest Supervisor, Ochoco
National Forest, 3160 NE Third Street,
Prineville, Oregon 97754.
Nature of Decision To Be Made
Given the purpose and need, the
deciding official will review the
proposed action, the other alternatives,
and the environmental consequences in
order to decide whether and under what
circumstances fuels and vegetation
management will be implemented in the
Gap Fuels and Vegetation project area.
Preliminary Issues
The project’s interdisciplinary team
has developed a list of preliminary
issues that will be used during the
analysis of effects. Other issues may
arise as a result of public comment and
further analysis. Preliminary issues
include:
• Invasive Plant Species (Noxious
Weeds). Several populations of noxious
weeds are known to exist within the
project area. There is a risk that
management activities may exacerbate
the weed situation by spreading existing
populations or introducing new ones.
• Peck’s Mariposa Lily. Management
activities can improve habitat for this
sensitive species, but also risk
impacting individual plants and/or
habitat where it occurs in the project
area.
• Soil Productivity. Maintenance of
soil productivity is an important
objective for management of National
E:\FR\FM\04MRN1.SGM
04MRN1
Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 42 / Tuesday, March 4, 2014 / Notices
Forest Lands. When mechanized
equipment is used in the Forest, soil can
become displaced and compacted,
which can impact productivity.
• Water Quality. Management
activities can result in reduced shade on
streams, as well as contribute sediment
into the streams, which impacts water
quality and decreases habitat quality for
fish and other riparian fauna.
• Wildlife Habitat. Activities
intended to improve forest health and
resiliency may reduce habitat
effectiveness for some wildlife species,
including forest raptors and big game.
Scoping Process
This notice of intent initiates the
scoping process, which guides the
development of the environmental
impact statement.
It is important that reviewers provide
their comments at such times and in
such manner that they are useful to the
agency’s preparation of the
environmental impact statement.
Therefore, comments should be
provided prior to the close of the
comment period and should clearly
articulate the reviewer’s concerns and
contentions.
Comments received in response to
this solicitation, including names and
addresses of those who comment, will
be part of the public record for this
proposed action. Comments submitted
anonymously will be accepted and
considered.
Dated: February 25, 2014.
Sandra J. Henning,
District Ranger.
[FR Doc. 2014–04705 Filed 3–3–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410–11–P
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Forest Service
San Juan National Forest Resource
Advisory Committee
Forest Service, USDA.
Notice of meeting.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
The San Juan National Forest
Resource Advisory Committee (RAC)
will meet in Durango, Colorado. The
committee is authorized under the
Secure Rural Schools and Community
Self-Determination Act (Pub. L. 110–
343) (the Act) and operates in
compliance with the Federal Advisory
Committee Act. The purpose of the
committee is to improve collaborative
relationships and to provide advice and
recommendations to the Forest Service
concerning projects and funding
consistent with the title II of the Act.
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
SUMMARY:
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:07 Mar 03, 2014
Jkt 232001
12149
The meeting is open to the public. The
purpose of the meeting is to consider
and recommend new project proposals
and review past funded projects.
DATES: The meeting will be held from 9
a.m. to 1 p.m. on Tuesday, April 29,
2014.
All RAC meetings are subject to
cancellation. For status of meeting prior
to attendance, please contact the person
listed under FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT.
Meeting Accommodations: If you are
a person requiring reasonable
accommodation, please make requests
in advance for sign language
interpreting, assistive listening devices
or other reasonable accommodation for
access to the facility or proceedings by
contacting the person listed in the
section titled FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT. All reasonable
accommodation requests are managed
on a case by case basis.
The meeting will be held in
the Sonoran meetings rooms at the San
Juan Public Lands Center, 15 Burnett
Court, Durango, CO 81301.
Written comments may be submitted
as described under SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION. All comments, including
names and addresses when provided,
are placed in the record and are
available for public inspection and
copying. The public may inspect
comments received at the San Juan
Public Lands Center. Please call ahead
to facilitate entry into the building.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ann
Bond, San Juan National Forest
Resource Advisory Committee
Coordinator by phone at 970 385–1219
or via email at abond@fs.fed.us.
Individuals who use
telecommunication devices for the deaf
(TDD) may call the Federal Information
Relay Service (FIRS) at 1–800–877–8339
between 8:00 a.m. and 8:00 p.m.,
Eastern Standard Time, Monday
through Friday. Please make requests in
advance for sign language interpreting,
assistive listening devices or other
reasonable accommodation for access to
the facility or proceedings by contacting
the person listed FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Additional RAC information, including
the meeting agenda and the meeting
summary/minutes can be found at the
following Web site: https://
www.fs.usda.gov/sanjuan/. The agenda
will include time for people to make
oral statements of three minutes or less.
Individuals wishing to make an oral
statement should request in writing by
April 15, 2014 to be scheduled on the
agenda. Anyone who would like to
bring related matters to the attention of
the committee may file written
statements with the committee staff
before or after the meeting. Written
comments and requests for time for oral
comments must be sent to Ann Bond,
San Juan National Forest RAC
Coordinator, San Juan Public Lands
Center, 15 Burnett Court, Durango, CO
81301; or by email to abond@fs.fed.us,
or via facsimile to 970 375–2331.
Dated: February 25, 2014.
Ron J. Archuleta,
Acting San Juan National Forest Supervisor.
ADDRESSES:
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Fmt 4703
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[FR Doc. 2014–04706 Filed 3–3–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3511–15–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
Foreign-Trade Zones Board
[B–19–2014]
Foreign-Trade Zone 238—Dublin,
Virginia; Application for
Reorganization under Alternative Site
Framework
An application has been submitted to
the Foreign-Trade Zones (FTZ) Board by
the New River Valley Economic
Development Alliance, Inc., grantee of
FTZ 238, requesting authority to
reorganize the zone under the
alternative site framework (ASF)
adopted by the FTZ Board (15 CFR
400.2(c)). The ASF is an option for
grantees for the establishment or
reorganization of zones and can permit
significantly greater flexibility in the
designation of new subzones or ‘‘usagedriven’’ FTZ sites for operators/users
located within a grantee’s ‘‘service area’’
in the context of the FTZ Board’s
standard 2,000-acre activation limit for
a zone. The application was submitted
pursuant to the Foreign-Trade Zones
Act, as amended (19 U.S.C. 81a–81u),
and the regulations of the Board (15 CFR
part 400). It was formally docketed on
February 26, 2014.
FTZ 238 was approved by the Board
on August 5, 1999 (Board Order 1047,
64 FR 8/24/99). The current zone
includes the following sites: Site 1 (35
acres)—warehouse facilities within the
New River Valley Airport, VA Route
100, Dublin; and, Site 2 (15 acres)—
facility located at 4100 Bob White Blvd.,
Pulaski.
The grantee’s proposed service area
under the ASF would include the
Counties of Alleghany, Amherst,
Bedford, Bland, Botetourt, Campbell,
Carroll, Craig, Floyd, Franklin, Giles,
Grayson, Henry, Montgomery, Patrick,
Pittsylvania, Pulaski, Roanoke,
E:\FR\FM\04MRN1.SGM
04MRN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 79, Number 42 (Tuesday, March 4, 2014)]
[Notices]
[Pages 12148-12149]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2014-04705]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Forest Service
Ochoco National Forest, Paulina Ranger District; Oregon; Gap
Fuels and Vegetation Management Project EIS
AGENCY: Forest Service, USDA.
ACTION: Notice of intent to prepare an environmental impact statement.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Ochoco National Forest is preparing an environmental
impact statement (EIS) to analyze the effects of managing fuels and
vegetation within the 38,145-acre Gap project area, which is east of
Prineville, Oregon. The project area includes National Forest System
lands in the Upper North Fork Crooked River and Horse Heaven Creek-
Crooked River Watersheds. The alternatives that will be analyzed
include the proposed action, no action, and additional alternatives
that respond to issues generated through the scoping process. The
Ochoco National Forest will give notice of the full environmental
analysis and decision making process so interested and affected people
may participate and contribute to the final decision.
DATES: Comments concerning the scope of the analysis must be received
by April 3, 2014. The draft environmental impact statement is expected
to be completed and available for public comment in November, 2014. The
final environmental impact statement is expected to be completed in
March, 2015.
ADDRESSES: Send written comments to Sandy Henning, District Ranger,
Paulina Ranger District, Ochoco National Forest, 3160 NE Third Street,
Prineville, Oregon 97754. Alternately, electronic comments may be sent
to comments-pacificnorthwest-ochoco@fs.fed.us. Electronic comments must
be submitted as part of the actual email message, or as an attachment
in plain text (.txt), Microsoft Word (.doc), rich text format (.rtf),
or portable document format (.pdf).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Marcy Anderson, Project Leader, at
3160 NE Third Street, Prineville, Oregon 97754, or at (541) 416-6463,
or by email at marcelleanderson@fs.fed.us.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Purpose and Need for Action
The general purpose of entering this project area is to contribute
to the resiliency of the landscape and to promote vegetative conditions
that are similar to what occurred historically. The project's planning
team is considering management activities that would promote and
sustain late and old structured stands, increase resistance of forested
vegetation to insects, disease and stand-replacing wildfire, and
improve the condition of riparian vegetation.
Preliminary field work in the Gap project area indicated that
vegetation conditions in the project area have departed from the
historic condition in several ways:
Changes in tree species compositions.
A reduction in late and old structured forest.
A reduction in open-canopy stands.
An increased risk of large-scale loss of forest to
wildfire.
An increased risk of insect infestation and/or disease
that can impact forested stands.
A decline in the condition of riparian vegetation.
The Purpose and Need was developed based upon direction from the
Ochoco Forest Plan and opportunities identified during preliminary
field visits.
1. There is a need to strategically reduce forest vegetation
density and fuel loadings towards a historic range of variability to
provide a range of forest conditions and habitats that would support
historic disturbance processes, native wildlife and plant species.
2. There is a need to increase or maintain large tree structure and
to maintain the abundance of early-seral and fire tolerant species
compositions, i.e. ponderosa pine, western larch and Douglas-fir.
3. There is a need to improve riparian conditions and associated
upland vegetation within Riparian Habitat Conservation Areas (RHCAs)
and maintain and enhance hardwood communities.
4. There is a need to contribute to the local and regional
economies by providing timber and other wood fiber products now and in
the future.
Proposed Action
The proposed action includes a variety of management strategies and
activities, including commercial thinning with follow-up precommercial
thinning and/or prescribed burning (16,665 acres), precommercial
thinning with prescribed burning (3,340 acres), meadow restoration (300
acres), riparian restoration (9 sites), and aspen stand restoration (30
sites). Implementation of the proposed action would require some
connected actions; these include use of temporary roads on existing
disturbance (23 miles), use of new temporary roads (8 miles), and road
reconstruction (3 miles). The proposal also includes closure or
decommissioning of 21 miles of roads in the project area.
Responsible Official
The responsible official will be Kate Klein, Forest Supervisor,
Ochoco National Forest, 3160 NE Third Street, Prineville, Oregon 97754.
Nature of Decision To Be Made
Given the purpose and need, the deciding official will review the
proposed action, the other alternatives, and the environmental
consequences in order to decide whether and under what circumstances
fuels and vegetation management will be implemented in the Gap Fuels
and Vegetation project area.
Preliminary Issues
The project's interdisciplinary team has developed a list of
preliminary issues that will be used during the analysis of effects.
Other issues may arise as a result of public comment and further
analysis. Preliminary issues include:
Invasive Plant Species (Noxious Weeds). Several
populations of noxious weeds are known to exist within the project
area. There is a risk that management activities may exacerbate the
weed situation by spreading existing populations or introducing new
ones.
Peck's Mariposa Lily. Management activities can improve
habitat for this sensitive species, but also risk impacting individual
plants and/or habitat where it occurs in the project area.
Soil Productivity. Maintenance of soil productivity is an
important objective for management of National
[[Page 12149]]
Forest Lands. When mechanized equipment is used in the Forest, soil can
become displaced and compacted, which can impact productivity.
Water Quality. Management activities can result in reduced
shade on streams, as well as contribute sediment into the streams,
which impacts water quality and decreases habitat quality for fish and
other riparian fauna.
Wildlife Habitat. Activities intended to improve forest
health and resiliency may reduce habitat effectiveness for some
wildlife species, including forest raptors and big game.
Scoping Process
This notice of intent initiates the scoping process, which guides
the development of the environmental impact statement.
It is important that reviewers provide their comments at such times
and in such manner that they are useful to the agency's preparation of
the environmental impact statement. Therefore, comments should be
provided prior to the close of the comment period and should clearly
articulate the reviewer's concerns and contentions.
Comments received in response to this solicitation, including names
and addresses of those who comment, will be part of the public record
for this proposed action. Comments submitted anonymously will be
accepted and considered.
Dated: February 25, 2014.
Sandra J. Henning,
District Ranger.
[FR Doc. 2014-04705 Filed 3-3-14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410-11-P