Rogue River-Siskiyou National Forest; Oregon; Shasta Agness Landscape Restoration Project Environmental Impact Statement, 654-657 [2018-00049]
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Federal Register
Vol. 83, No. 4
Friday, January 5, 2018
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER
contains documents other than rules or
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DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Forest Service
Idaho and Southwestern Montana
(Beaverhead-Deerlodge, Boise,
Caribou-Targhee, Salmon-Challis, and
Sawtooth National Forests and Curlew
National Grassland); Nevada
(Humboldt-Toiyabe National Forest);
Utah (Ashley, Dixie, Fishlake, Manti-La
Sal, and Uinta-Wasatch-Cache National
Forests); Wyoming (Bridger-Teton
National Forest); and Wyoming/
Colorado (Medicine Bow-Routt
National Forest and Thunder Basin
National Grassland) Amendments to
Land Management Plans for Greater
Sage-Grouse Conservation
Forest Service, USDA.
Notice to Extend the Public
Scoping Period for the Notice of Intent
to Prepare an Environmental Impact
Statement for the Amendments to Land
Management Plans for Greater SageGrouse Conservation
AGENCY:
ACTION:
The Forest Service is issuing
this notice to advise the public of a 14day extension to the public scoping
period on the notice of intent to prepare
an environmental impact statement for
the amendments to land management
plans for greater sage-grouse
conservation.
SUMMARY:
Comments concerning the scope
of the analysis must be received by
January 19, 2018.
ADDRESSES: Send written comments to
Sage-grouse Amendment Comment,
USDA Forest Service Intermountain
Region, Federal Building, 324 25th
Street, Ogden, UT 84401. Comments
may also be sent via email to,
comments-intermtn-regional-office@
fs.fed.us, or via facsimile to 801–625–
5277.
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DATES:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
John
Shivik at 801–625–5667 or email
johnashivik@fs.fed.us. Individuals who
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use telecommunication devices for the
deaf (TDD) may call the Federal
Information Relay Service (FIRS) at 1–
800–877–8339 between 8 a.m. and 8
p.m., Eastern Time, Monday through
Friday.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
original notice of intent for public
comment on the greater sage-grouse
plan amendments was published in the
Federal Register on November 21, 2017
(82 FR 55346). The original notice of
intent provided a 45 day comment
period, which may be insufficient for
comment preparation from all interested
parties. As such, the comment period
for the original notice is being extended
by 14 days.
If the Forest Service amends land
management plans, we hereby give
notice that substantive requirements of
the 2012 Planning Rule (36 CFR 219)
likely to be directly related, and
therefore applicable, to the amendments
are in sections 219.8(b) (social and
economic sustainability), 219.9
(diversity of plant and animal
communities), and 219.10(a)(1)
(integrated resource management).
The public is encouraged to help
identify any issues, management
questions, or concerns that should be
addressed in plan amendment(s) or
policy or administrative action. The
Forest Service will work collaboratively
with interested parties to identify the
management direction that is best suited
to local, regional, and national needs
and concerns. The Forest Service will
use an interdisciplinary approach as it
considers the variety of resource issues
and concerns.
Dated: December 29, 2017.
Chris French,
Associate Deputy Chief, National Forest
System.
[FR Doc. 2018–00045 Filed 1–4–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3411–15–P
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Forest Service
Rogue River-Siskiyou National Forest;
Oregon; Shasta Agness Landscape
Restoration Project Environmental
Impact Statement
Forest Service, USDA.
Notice of intent to prepare an
environmental impact statement.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
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The USDA Forest Service,
Rogue River-Siskiyou National Forest
(RRSNF), Gold Beach Ranger District is
providing notice that it will prepare an
environmental impact statement (EIS)
for the Shasta Agness Landscape
Restoration Project, which would
implement multiple landscape
restoration actions on National Forest
System lands within an approximately
93,000-acre project planning area.
Restoration actions include vegetation
treatments, prescribed fire, sustainable
recreation, and sustainable roads
actions. In order to implement the
project, the Forest Service identified the
need for a project-specific amendment
to exempt commercial and
noncommercial thinning restoration
actions in unique oak and pine units
from the silviculture standard. This
notice identifies the planning rule
provisions likely to be directly related to
the plan amendment.
DATES: Comments concerning the scope
of the analysis must be received by
February 5, 2018. The draft
environmental impact statement is
expected early 2018, and the final
environmental impact statement is
expected fall of 2018.
ADDRESSES: Send written comments to
Rogue River-Siskiyou National Forest
(RRSNF), 3040 Biddle Road, Medford,
OR 97504.
Comments may also be submitted
online at https://cara.ecosystemmanagement.org/Public//
CommentInput?Project=49607; or via
the Gold Beach Ranger District facsimile
at 541–247–3641; or the RRSNF
facsimile at (541) 618–2400.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Craig Trulock, Deputy Forest
Supervisor, ctrulock@fs.fed.us, 541–
618–2032. Individuals who use
telecommunication devices for the deaf
may call the Federal Information Relay
Service at 1–800–877–8339 between 8
a.m. and 8 p.m., Eastern Time, Monday
through Friday.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
Purpose and Need
As a result of past fire exclusion and
vegetation management regimes
conducted within the project area,
current ecosystem conditions have
departed from natural conditions and
exhibit lower compositions of certain
species, plant communities, and habitat
types. The result is that some of these
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rare, highly specialized, and unique
habitat types and plant associations are
in decline and at risk of being lost or
greatly reduced.
Oak and pine savannahs and
woodlands have suffered substantial
losses in both areal extent and
ecological integrity due to fire
suppression and the resulting invading
conifers. Composition, structure, and
important habitat types associated with
oak and pine vegetation communities
are transitioning to a closed-canopy
Douglas-fir forest, which is resulting in
reduction and loss of these unique
habitats.
The overall purpose of the project is
to restore resilience and ecological
integrity to unique ecosystems and to
aquatic and riparian habitats, to
conserve and accelerate the
development of late-successional forests
while preserving species diversity, and
to provide a diverse range of highquality, sustainable recreation
opportunities supported by an
environmentally sustainable road
system.
Proposed Action
Proposed project management
activities include: Restoring unique oak
savannahs and woodlands; restoring
sugar pine and Jeffrey pine savannahs
and woodlands; accelerating
development of late seral forest
structures; reducing spread of the PortOrford-cedar root disease via roadside
sanitation; implementing burn blocks of
prescribed fire in and between thinning
restoration units; improving water
quality; rehabilitating soils impacted by
past management activities and natural
events; enhancing habitat conditions in
aquatic and riparian areas for
endangered and threatened fish species;
reducing hydrologic impacts of excess
or poorly designed roads; and managing
recreational opportunities and needs in
a sustainable manner.
Variable and radial density thinning
along with application of prescribed fire
would be the primary restoration
actions for the oak, pine, and plantation
units. In order to optimize terrain
features and weather windows and to
achieve low-intensity prescribed fire
conditions, burning would occur during
spring-like conditions and include
blocks of land between identified
restoration thinning units. Roadside
sanitation via removal of POC along
identified road prisms would address
the spread of root disease. Changes in
road maintenance levels would address
both water quality and sustainable
recreation needs. Campground and trail
maintenance and closures would
address sustainable recreation needs.
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The RTV Plan would identify highpriority sites within the three
watersheds analyzed and provide
management direction to ensure RTV
persistence and protection. This and
future projects within those watersheds
would follow that guidance.
Portions of the project restoration
units are located within the designated
Fishhook Late Successional Reserve
(LSR), which is geographically nested
within the designated Southwest
Oregon (SWOR) LSR, per the evaluation
found in the SWOR Late-successional
Reserve Assessment (USDA Forest
Service and USDI Bureau of Land
Management 1995). Because of this, the
proposed radial and variable density
thinning to reduce competition around
shade-intolerant oaks and pines, the
restoration of forest structures and
patterns, POC sanitation, and the
reintroduction of ecological process and
disturbance regimes (fire) all would be
required to maintain consistency with
the 1989 Siskiyou Land Resources
Management Plan (LRMP) and as
amended by the NWFP. The NWFP
provides standards, guidelines, goals,
and desired conditions for protecting
and maintaining LSR resources.
However, proposed commercial and
noncommercial restoration thinning in
older LSR stands would not comply
with one NWFP silviculture standard:
C–12, which prohibits harvest in stand
over 80 years old in LSR (LRMP and
NWFP; USDA Forest Service 1989; as
amended by USDA Forest Service, USDI
Bureau of Land Management, 1994);
incorporated by reference and available
at: https://www.fs.usda.gov/detail/
rogue-siskiyou/landmanagement/
?cid=stelprdb5315100). Therefore, after
all reasonable stipulations to minimize
adverse environmental impacts on
National Forest LSR resources have
been included, a project-specific forest
plan amendment is required. This
amendment would be the only
exemption to Plan standards, and all
other standards and guidelines would
be unaffected.
When proposing a Forest Plan
amendment, the 2012 planning rule (36
CFR 219), as amended, requires the
responsible official to provide in the
initial notice ‘‘which substantive
requirements of §§ 219.8 through 219.11
are likely to be directly related to the
amendment’’ (36 CFR 219.13 (b)(2)).
Whether a rule provision is likely to be
directly related to an amendment is
determined by any one of the following:
The purpose for the amendment, a
beneficial effect of the amendment, a
substantial adverse effect of the
amendment, or a lessening of plan
protections by the amendment. Based
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on this amendment proposal and
requirements of the planning rule, the
following substantive requirements of
the 36 CFR 219 planning regulations
would likely be directly related to the
proposed amendment:
§ 219.8(a)(1)(i)—[ . . . the plan must
include plan components to maintain or
restore . . . ] Interdependence of
terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems in the
plan area;
§ 219.8(a)(1)(ii) Contributions of the
plan area to ecological conditions
within the broader landscape influenced
by the plan area;
§ 219.8(a)(1)(iii) Conditions in the
broader landscape that may influence
the sustainability of resources and
ecosystems within the plan area;
§ 219.8(a)(1)(iv) System drivers,
including dominant ecological
processes, disturbance regimes, and
stressors, such as natural succession,
wildland fire, invasive species, and
climate change; and the ability of
terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems on the
plan area to adapt to change;
§ 219.8(a)(1)(v) Wildland fire and
opportunities to restore fire adapted
ecosystems;
§ 219.8(a)(1)(vi) Opportunities for
landscape scale restoration;
§ 219.8(a)(2)(ii) Soils and soil
productivity, including guidance to
reduce soil erosion and sedimentation.
§ 219.8(a)(2)(iii) Water quality;
§ 219.8(a)(3)(i)—[ . . . the plan must
include plan components to maintain or
restore the ecological integrity of
riparian areas in the plan area . . . ]
including plan components to maintain
or restore structure, function,
composition, and connectivity . . . ;
§ 219.8(a)(3)(ii) Plans must establish
width(s) for riparian management zones;
§ 219.8(b)(1)—[ . . . the plan must
include plan components to guide the
plan area’s contribution to social and
economic sustainability . . . ] Social,
cultural and economic conditions
relevant to the area influenced by the
plan;
§ 219.8(b)(2) Sustainable recreation;
including recreation settings,
opportunities, and access; and scenic
character;
§ 219.8(b)(3) Multiple uses that
contribute to local, regional, and
national economies in a sustainable
manner;
§ 219.8(b)(4) Ecosystem services;
§ 219.8(b)(5) Cultural and historic
resources and uses;
§ 219.9(a)(1)—[ . . . plan must provide
for the diversity of plant and animal
communities and include plan
components to maintain or restore . . . ]
Ecosystem integrity;
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§ 219.9(a)(2)(i) Key characteristics
associated with terrestrial and aquatic
ecosystem types;
§ 219.9(a)(2)(ii) Rare aquatic and
terrestrial plant and animal
communities;
§ 219.9(a)(2)(iii) The diversity of
native tree species similar to that
existing in the plan area;
§ 219.9(b)(1)—[ . . . plan must
provide for the diversity of plant and
animal communities and must include
plan components to maintain or restore
additional species-specific plan
components . . . ] Provide the ecological
conditions necessary to: contribute to
the recovery of federally listed
threatened and endangered species,
conserve proposed and candidate
species, and maintain a viable
population of each species of
conservation concern within the plan
area . . . ;
§ 219.9(c)—[ . . . plan must provide
for the diversity of plant and animal
communities and must include plan
components to maintain or restore
additional species-specific plan
components . . . ] Species of
conservation concern . . . for which the
regional forester has determined that the
best available scientific information
indicates substantial concern about the
species’ capability to persist over the
long-term in the plan area;
§ 219.10(a)(1)—[ . . . plan must
include plan components . . . for
integrated resource management to
provide for ecosystem services and
multiple uses in the plan area . . . the
responsible official shall consider: . . . ]
Aesthetic values, cultural and heritage
resources, ecosystem services, fish and
wildlife species, forage, grazing and
rangelands, habitat and habitat
connectivity, recreation settings and
opportunities, riparian areas, scenery,
soil, surface water quality, timber,
vegetation, viewsheds;
§ 219.10(a)(5) Habitat conditions,
subject to the requirements of § 219.9,
for wildlife, fish, and plants commonly
enjoyed and used by the public; for
hunting, fishing, trapping, gathering,
observing, subsistence, and other
activities (in collaboration with
federally recognized Tribes, Alaska
Native Corporations, other Federal
agencies, and State and local
governments);
§ 219.10(a)(7) Reasonably foreseeable
risks to ecological, social, and economic
sustainability;
§ 219.10(a)(8) System drivers,
including dominant ecological
processes, disturbance regimes, and
stressors, such as natural succession,
wildland fire, invasive species, and
climate change; and the ability of the
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terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems on the
plan area to adapt to change (§ 219.8);
§ 219.11(c)—[ . . . plan must include
plan components . . . and other plan
content regarding timber management
within Forest Service authority and the
inherent capability of the plan area,
. . . ] Timber harvest for purposes other
than timber production . . . as a tool to
assist in achieving or maintaining one or
more applicable desired conditions or
objectives of the plan in order to protect
other multiple-use values, and for
salvage, sanitation, or public health or
safety. Examples of using timber harvest
to protect other multiple use values may
include improving wildlife or fish
habitat, thinning to reduce fire risk, or
restoring meadow or savanna
ecosystems where trees have invaded;
If this proposed project-specific
amendment is determined to be directly
related to the substantive rule
requirements, the responsible official
must apply those requirements within
the scope and scale of the amendment
and, if necessary, make adjustments to
the amendment to meet these rule
requirements (36 CFR 219.13 (b)(5) and
(6)).
Possible Alternatives
The Shasta Agness Landscape
Restoration Project has emphasized
early and substantive collaboration in
its development. Robust engagement
and contributions to project location,
design, and proposed restoration
components were derived from
collaboration with members of the Wild
Rivers Coast Forest Collaborative
(WRCFC). As a result of that
collaboration, additional District
analyses, and public input from scoping
comments, the Forest Service identified
and evaluated four alternatives,
including the no action alternative. The
proposed action is a slightly modified
version of the proposed scoping action
described in the initial scoping letter.
The other two action alternatives
include varying degrees and types of
recreational opportunities and
restoration treatments. All action
alternatives were related to proposals
put forth by the WRCFC as evaluated by
Forest staff. The no action alternative
provides the baseline conditions with
which to compare the action
alternatives; it assumes conditions
which would occur if no decision
related to this project were
implemented.
Responsible Official
The responsible official for this
decision will be the Forest Supervisor
for the Rogue River-Siskiyou National
Forest.
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Nature of Decision To Be Made
The Forest Supervisor will decide
where, and whether or not, to take
action to meet desired conditions within
the planning area. The responsible
official also will decide how to mitigate
any potential impacts of these actions
and will determine when and how
possible effects monitoring would take
place. The final project decision and
rationale will be documented in a
Record of Decision supported by a final
EIS.
Per 36 CFR 218.7(a)(2), this is a
project proposing to implement a land
management plan and is not authorized
under the Healthy Forests Restoration
Act (HFRA). Therefore, it is subject to
both subparts A and B of 36 CFR 218,
Project-level Predecisional
Administrative Review Process.
Decisions by the Forest Supervisor to
approve project-specific plan
amendments are subject to the
Administrative Review Process of 36
CFR 218 Subpart A, in accordance with
36 CFR 219.59 (b). The term ‘‘project
specific’’ refers to amendments that
would only apply to the proposed
project and would not apply to any
future management actions.
Prior Scoping
Besides ongoing public collaboration
with the WRCFC, the Forest Service’s
project scoping proposal to develop an
environmental assessment (EA) was first
introduced to the broader public
through the Forest Service’s schedule of
proposed action (SOPA) on June 14,
2016. A legal notice to initiate the 30day NEPA public comment scoping
period for the proposed action was
published June 15, 2016 in the Curry
County Reporter and in the Grants Pass
Daily Courier. The proposed action and
detailed maps were made available on
the USFS website: https://
www.fs.usda.gov/projects/roguesiskiyou/landmanagement/projects.
Additionally, a public comment scoping
letter dated June 15, 2016, was mailed
via post to over 200 and electronically
sent to over 60 individuals,
organizations, and agencies who had
expressed interest in being informed of
projects on the Gold Beach Ranger
District. Letters summarized the
proposed action and included directions
to the Forest’s website for more
information. The formal scoping period
ended July 15, 2016. During the scoping
period, the Forest Service received
input from 13 commenters representing
a spectrum of individuals and groups
from Oregon and Idaho. Comments
received also were posted on the project
website and can be viewed here: https://
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www.fs.fed.us/nepa/nepa_project_
exp.php?project=49607.
The project originally was released for
scoping comments as an environmental
assessment (EA) as described above.
Subsequent to the initial EA scoping
efforts and based on the overall project
scope and complexity—including its
associated analyses—it was determined
that an EIS would better provide a more
appropriate vehicle than an EA for
evaluating project information
important to the public and decisionmaker. Though the Forest Service
anticipates and intends that this project
will be beneficial for landscape
restoration, due to these complex
circumstances, the Forest Service
proposes to develop an EIS to ensure
sufficient analysis and to further the
intent of NEPA.
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Scoping Process
Comments and submittals already
received during the previously
conducted public scoping comment
period are part of the record and have
been considered during further
development of the project and its draft
EIS and need not be re-submitted for the
commenter to retain standing in the
event of possible future objections.
Furthermore, the draft EIS, including
analysis of the project-specific plan
amendment, is anticipated to be filed
with the Enviromental Protection
Agency (EPA) and available for public
review and a designated 45-day public
comment by early 2018. The EPA will
publish a Notice of Availability of the
draft EIS in the Federal Register. At
such time, detailed instructions for how
to submit comments regarding both the
project-specific plan amendment and
the draft EIS will be provided.
Comments received, including names
and addresses of those who comment,
will be part of the public record for this
proposed action and will be available
for public inspection. Comments
submitted anonymously will be
accepted and considered; however,
anonymous comments will not afford
the Agency the ability to provide the
respondent with subsequent
environmental documents, nor will
those who submit anonymous
comments have standing to object to the
subsequent decision under 36 CFR 218.
Access and review for documents
related to information in this notice is
available at: https://www.fs.fed.us/nepa/
nepa_project_exp.php?project=49607.
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Dated: December 21, 2017.
Glenn P. Casamassa,
Associate Deputy Chief, National Forest
System.
[FR Doc. 2018–00049 Filed 1–4–18; 8:45 am]
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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
International Trade Administration
[Docket No.: 160721646–6646–01]
RIN No. 0625–XC022
Applications To Serve as
Accountability Agents in the Asia
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Privacy Recognition for Processors
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International Trade
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ACTION: Notice of opportunity for
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serve as Accountability Agents in the
Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation
(APEC) Privacy Recognition for
Processors (PRP) system.
AGENCY:
The International Trade
Administration’s Office of Digital
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interested organizations to submit
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act as an Accountability Agent for U.S.based companies that are subject to
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DATES: Applications may be submitted
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ADDRESSES: Please submit applications
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attention: Michael Rose, Office of Digital
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FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: All
questions concerning this notice should
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telephone at (202) 815–0374 (this is not
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michael.rose@trade.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: In 2004,
Leaders of the 21 APEC economies 1
SUMMARY:
1 The 21 APEC economies are Australia, Brunei
Darussalam, Canada, Chile, the People’s Republic of
China, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Japan, the Republic
of Korea, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Papua
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endorsed the ‘‘APEC Privacy
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The Leaders’ Declaration instructs APEC
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commenced participation in the CBPR
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[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 4 (Friday, January 5, 2018)]
[Notices]
[Pages 654-657]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2018-00049]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Forest Service
Rogue River-Siskiyou National Forest; Oregon; Shasta Agness
Landscape Restoration Project Environmental Impact Statement
AGENCY: Forest Service, USDA.
ACTION: Notice of intent to prepare an environmental impact statement.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The USDA Forest Service, Rogue River-Siskiyou National Forest
(RRSNF), Gold Beach Ranger District is providing notice that it will
prepare an environmental impact statement (EIS) for the Shasta Agness
Landscape Restoration Project, which would implement multiple landscape
restoration actions on National Forest System lands within an
approximately 93,000-acre project planning area. Restoration actions
include vegetation treatments, prescribed fire, sustainable recreation,
and sustainable roads actions. In order to implement the project, the
Forest Service identified the need for a project-specific amendment to
exempt commercial and noncommercial thinning restoration actions in
unique oak and pine units from the silviculture standard. This notice
identifies the planning rule provisions likely to be directly related
to the plan amendment.
DATES: Comments concerning the scope of the analysis must be received
by February 5, 2018. The draft environmental impact statement is
expected early 2018, and the final environmental impact statement is
expected fall of 2018.
ADDRESSES: Send written comments to Rogue River-Siskiyou National
Forest (RRSNF), 3040 Biddle Road, Medford, OR 97504.
Comments may also be submitted online at https://cara.ecosystem-management.org/Public//CommentInput?Project=49607; or via the Gold
Beach Ranger District facsimile at 541-247-3641; or the RRSNF facsimile
at (541) 618-2400.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Craig Trulock, Deputy Forest
Supervisor, [email protected], 541-618-2032. Individuals who use
telecommunication devices for the deaf may call the Federal Information
Relay Service at 1-800-877-8339 between 8 a.m. and 8 p.m., Eastern
Time, Monday through Friday.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Purpose and Need
As a result of past fire exclusion and vegetation management
regimes conducted within the project area, current ecosystem conditions
have departed from natural conditions and exhibit lower compositions of
certain species, plant communities, and habitat types. The result is
that some of these
[[Page 655]]
rare, highly specialized, and unique habitat types and plant
associations are in decline and at risk of being lost or greatly
reduced.
Oak and pine savannahs and woodlands have suffered substantial
losses in both areal extent and ecological integrity due to fire
suppression and the resulting invading conifers. Composition,
structure, and important habitat types associated with oak and pine
vegetation communities are transitioning to a closed-canopy Douglas-fir
forest, which is resulting in reduction and loss of these unique
habitats.
The overall purpose of the project is to restore resilience and
ecological integrity to unique ecosystems and to aquatic and riparian
habitats, to conserve and accelerate the development of late-
successional forests while preserving species diversity, and to provide
a diverse range of high-quality, sustainable recreation opportunities
supported by an environmentally sustainable road system.
Proposed Action
Proposed project management activities include: Restoring unique
oak savannahs and woodlands; restoring sugar pine and Jeffrey pine
savannahs and woodlands; accelerating development of late seral forest
structures; reducing spread of the Port-Orford-cedar root disease via
roadside sanitation; implementing burn blocks of prescribed fire in and
between thinning restoration units; improving water quality;
rehabilitating soils impacted by past management activities and natural
events; enhancing habitat conditions in aquatic and riparian areas for
endangered and threatened fish species; reducing hydrologic impacts of
excess or poorly designed roads; and managing recreational
opportunities and needs in a sustainable manner.
Variable and radial density thinning along with application of
prescribed fire would be the primary restoration actions for the oak,
pine, and plantation units. In order to optimize terrain features and
weather windows and to achieve low-intensity prescribed fire
conditions, burning would occur during spring-like conditions and
include blocks of land between identified restoration thinning units.
Roadside sanitation via removal of POC along identified road prisms
would address the spread of root disease. Changes in road maintenance
levels would address both water quality and sustainable recreation
needs. Campground and trail maintenance and closures would address
sustainable recreation needs. The RTV Plan would identify high-priority
sites within the three watersheds analyzed and provide management
direction to ensure RTV persistence and protection. This and future
projects within those watersheds would follow that guidance.
Portions of the project restoration units are located within the
designated Fishhook Late Successional Reserve (LSR), which is
geographically nested within the designated Southwest Oregon (SWOR)
LSR, per the evaluation found in the SWOR Late-successional Reserve
Assessment (USDA Forest Service and USDI Bureau of Land Management
1995). Because of this, the proposed radial and variable density
thinning to reduce competition around shade-intolerant oaks and pines,
the restoration of forest structures and patterns, POC sanitation, and
the reintroduction of ecological process and disturbance regimes (fire)
all would be required to maintain consistency with the 1989 Siskiyou
Land Resources Management Plan (LRMP) and as amended by the NWFP. The
NWFP provides standards, guidelines, goals, and desired conditions for
protecting and maintaining LSR resources.
However, proposed commercial and noncommercial restoration thinning
in older LSR stands would not comply with one NWFP silviculture
standard: C-12, which prohibits harvest in stand over 80 years old in
LSR (LRMP and NWFP; USDA Forest Service 1989; as amended by USDA Forest
Service, USDI Bureau of Land Management, 1994); incorporated by
reference and available at: https://www.fs.usda.gov/detail/rogue-siskiyou/landmanagement/?cid=stelprdb5315100). Therefore, after all
reasonable stipulations to minimize adverse environmental impacts on
National Forest LSR resources have been included, a project-specific
forest plan amendment is required. This amendment would be the only
exemption to Plan standards, and all other standards and guidelines
would be unaffected.
When proposing a Forest Plan amendment, the 2012 planning rule (36
CFR 219), as amended, requires the responsible official to provide in
the initial notice ``which substantive requirements of Sec. Sec.
[thinsp]219.8 through 219.11 are likely to be directly related to the
amendment'' (36 CFR 219.13 (b)(2)). Whether a rule provision is likely
to be directly related to an amendment is determined by any one of the
following: The purpose for the amendment, a beneficial effect of the
amendment, a substantial adverse effect of the amendment, or a
lessening of plan protections by the amendment. Based on this amendment
proposal and requirements of the planning rule, the following
substantive requirements of the 36 CFR 219 planning regulations would
likely be directly related to the proposed amendment:
Sec. 219.8(a)(1)(i)--[ . . . the plan must include plan components
to maintain or restore . . . ] Interdependence of terrestrial and
aquatic ecosystems in the plan area;
Sec. 219.8(a)(1)(ii) Contributions of the plan area to ecological
conditions within the broader landscape influenced by the plan area;
Sec. 219.8(a)(1)(iii) Conditions in the broader landscape that may
influence the sustainability of resources and ecosystems within the
plan area;
Sec. 219.8(a)(1)(iv) System drivers, including dominant ecological
processes, disturbance regimes, and stressors, such as natural
succession, wildland fire, invasive species, and climate change; and
the ability of terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems on the plan area to
adapt to change;
Sec. 219.8(a)(1)(v) Wildland fire and opportunities to restore
fire adapted ecosystems;
Sec. 219.8(a)(1)(vi) Opportunities for landscape scale
restoration;
Sec. 219.8(a)(2)(ii) Soils and soil productivity, including
guidance to reduce soil erosion and sedimentation.
Sec. 219.8(a)(2)(iii) Water quality;
Sec. 219.8(a)(3)(i)--[ . . . the plan must include plan components
to maintain or restore the ecological integrity of riparian areas in
the plan area . . . ] including plan components to maintain or restore
structure, function, composition, and connectivity . . . ;
Sec. 219.8(a)(3)(ii) Plans must establish width(s) for riparian
management zones;
Sec. 219.8(b)(1)--[ . . . the plan must include plan components to
guide the plan area's contribution to social and economic
sustainability . . . ] Social, cultural and economic conditions
relevant to the area influenced by the plan;
Sec. 219.8(b)(2) Sustainable recreation; including recreation
settings, opportunities, and access; and scenic character;
Sec. 219.8(b)(3) Multiple uses that contribute to local, regional,
and national economies in a sustainable manner;
Sec. 219.8(b)(4) Ecosystem services;
Sec. 219.8(b)(5) Cultural and historic resources and uses;
Sec. 219.9(a)(1)--[ . . . plan must provide for the diversity of
plant and animal communities and include plan components to maintain or
restore . . . ] Ecosystem integrity;
[[Page 656]]
Sec. 219.9(a)(2)(i) Key characteristics associated with
terrestrial and aquatic ecosystem types;
Sec. 219.9(a)(2)(ii) Rare aquatic and terrestrial plant and animal
communities;
Sec. 219.9(a)(2)(iii) The diversity of native tree species similar
to that existing in the plan area;
Sec. 219.9(b)(1)--[ . . . plan must provide for the diversity of
plant and animal communities and must include plan components to
maintain or restore additional species-specific plan components . . . ]
Provide the ecological conditions necessary to: contribute to the
recovery of federally listed threatened and endangered species,
conserve proposed and candidate species, and maintain a viable
population of each species of conservation concern within the plan area
. . . ;
Sec. 219.9(c)--[ . . . plan must provide for the diversity of
plant and animal communities and must include plan components to
maintain or restore additional species-specific plan components . . . ]
Species of conservation concern . . . for which the regional forester
has determined that the best available scientific information indicates
substantial concern about the species' capability to persist over the
long-term in the plan area;
Sec. 219.10(a)(1)--[ . . . plan must include plan components . . .
for integrated resource management to provide for ecosystem services
and multiple uses in the plan area . . . the responsible official shall
consider: . . . ] Aesthetic values, cultural and heritage resources,
ecosystem services, fish and wildlife species, forage, grazing and
rangelands, habitat and habitat connectivity, recreation settings and
opportunities, riparian areas, scenery, soil, surface water quality,
timber, vegetation, viewsheds;
Sec. 219.10(a)(5) Habitat conditions, subject to the requirements
of Sec. 219.9, for wildlife, fish, and plants commonly enjoyed and
used by the public; for hunting, fishing, trapping, gathering,
observing, subsistence, and other activities (in collaboration with
federally recognized Tribes, Alaska Native Corporations, other Federal
agencies, and State and local governments);
Sec. 219.10(a)(7) Reasonably foreseeable risks to ecological,
social, and economic sustainability;
Sec. 219.10(a)(8) System drivers, including dominant ecological
processes, disturbance regimes, and stressors, such as natural
succession, wildland fire, invasive species, and climate change; and
the ability of the terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems on the plan area
to adapt to change (Sec. 219.8);
Sec. 219.11(c)--[ . . . plan must include plan components . . .
and other plan content regarding timber management within Forest
Service authority and the inherent capability of the plan area, . . . ]
Timber harvest for purposes other than timber production . . . as a
tool to assist in achieving or maintaining one or more applicable
desired conditions or objectives of the plan in order to protect other
multiple-use values, and for salvage, sanitation, or public health or
safety. Examples of using timber harvest to protect other multiple use
values may include improving wildlife or fish habitat, thinning to
reduce fire risk, or restoring meadow or savanna ecosystems where trees
have invaded;
If this proposed project-specific amendment is determined to be
directly related to the substantive rule requirements, the responsible
official must apply those requirements within the scope and scale of
the amendment and, if necessary, make adjustments to the amendment to
meet these rule requirements (36 CFR 219.13 (b)(5) and (6)).
Possible Alternatives
The Shasta Agness Landscape Restoration Project has emphasized
early and substantive collaboration in its development. Robust
engagement and contributions to project location, design, and proposed
restoration components were derived from collaboration with members of
the Wild Rivers Coast Forest Collaborative (WRCFC). As a result of that
collaboration, additional District analyses, and public input from
scoping comments, the Forest Service identified and evaluated four
alternatives, including the no action alternative. The proposed action
is a slightly modified version of the proposed scoping action described
in the initial scoping letter. The other two action alternatives
include varying degrees and types of recreational opportunities and
restoration treatments. All action alternatives were related to
proposals put forth by the WRCFC as evaluated by Forest staff. The no
action alternative provides the baseline conditions with which to
compare the action alternatives; it assumes conditions which would
occur if no decision related to this project were implemented.
Responsible Official
The responsible official for this decision will be the Forest
Supervisor for the Rogue River-Siskiyou National Forest.
Nature of Decision To Be Made
The Forest Supervisor will decide where, and whether or not, to
take action to meet desired conditions within the planning area. The
responsible official also will decide how to mitigate any potential
impacts of these actions and will determine when and how possible
effects monitoring would take place. The final project decision and
rationale will be documented in a Record of Decision supported by a
final EIS.
Per 36 CFR 218.7(a)(2), this is a project proposing to implement a
land management plan and is not authorized under the Healthy Forests
Restoration Act (HFRA). Therefore, it is subject to both subparts A and
B of 36 CFR 218, Project-level Predecisional Administrative Review
Process.
Decisions by the Forest Supervisor to approve project-specific plan
amendments are subject to the Administrative Review Process of 36 CFR
218 Subpart A, in accordance with 36 CFR 219.59 (b). The term ``project
specific'' refers to amendments that would only apply to the proposed
project and would not apply to any future management actions.
Prior Scoping
Besides ongoing public collaboration with the WRCFC, the Forest
Service's project scoping proposal to develop an environmental
assessment (EA) was first introduced to the broader public through the
Forest Service's schedule of proposed action (SOPA) on June 14, 2016. A
legal notice to initiate the 30-day NEPA public comment scoping period
for the proposed action was published June 15, 2016 in the Curry County
Reporter and in the Grants Pass Daily Courier. The proposed action and
detailed maps were made available on the USFS website: https://www.fs.usda.gov/projects/rogue-siskiyou/landmanagement/projects.
Additionally, a public comment scoping letter dated June 15, 2016, was
mailed via post to over 200 and electronically sent to over 60
individuals, organizations, and agencies who had expressed interest in
being informed of projects on the Gold Beach Ranger District. Letters
summarized the proposed action and included directions to the Forest's
website for more information. The formal scoping period ended July 15,
2016. During the scoping period, the Forest Service received input from
13 commenters representing a spectrum of individuals and groups from
Oregon and Idaho. Comments received also were posted on the project
website and can be viewed here: https://
[[Page 657]]
www.fs.fed.us/nepa/nepa_project_exp.php?project=49607.
The project originally was released for scoping comments as an
environmental assessment (EA) as described above. Subsequent to the
initial EA scoping efforts and based on the overall project scope and
complexity--including its associated analyses--it was determined that
an EIS would better provide a more appropriate vehicle than an EA for
evaluating project information important to the public and decision-
maker. Though the Forest Service anticipates and intends that this
project will be beneficial for landscape restoration, due to these
complex circumstances, the Forest Service proposes to develop an EIS to
ensure sufficient analysis and to further the intent of NEPA.
Scoping Process
Comments and submittals already received during the previously
conducted public scoping comment period are part of the record and have
been considered during further development of the project and its draft
EIS and need not be re-submitted for the commenter to retain standing
in the event of possible future objections. Furthermore, the draft EIS,
including analysis of the project-specific plan amendment, is
anticipated to be filed with the Enviromental Protection Agency (EPA)
and available for public review and a designated 45-day public comment
by early 2018. The EPA will publish a Notice of Availability of the
draft EIS in the Federal Register. At such time, detailed instructions
for how to submit comments regarding both the project-specific plan
amendment and the draft EIS will be provided.
Comments received, including names and addresses of those who
comment, will be part of the public record for this proposed action and
will be available for public inspection. Comments submitted anonymously
will be accepted and considered; however, anonymous comments will not
afford the Agency the ability to provide the respondent with subsequent
environmental documents, nor will those who submit anonymous comments
have standing to object to the subsequent decision under 36 CFR 218.
Access and review for documents related to information in this
notice is available at: https://www.fs.fed.us/nepa/nepa_project_exp.php?project=49607.
Dated: December 21, 2017.
Glenn P. Casamassa,
Associate Deputy Chief, National Forest System.
[FR Doc. 2018-00049 Filed 1-4-18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3411-15-P