Notice of Availability of the Draft Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement for the West Mojave Route Network Project and Draft Land Use Plan Amendment to the California Desert Conservation Area Plan in the West Mojave Planning Area, Inyo, Kern, Los Angeles, Riverside, and San Bernardino Counties, CA, 11785-11786 [2018-05272]
Download as PDF
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 52 / Friday, March 16, 2018 / Notices
Authority: 43 CFR 8360.0–7 and 8364.1.
Jon D. Sherve,
Field Manager, Mount Lewis Field Office.
[FR Doc. 2018–05381 Filed 3–15–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–HC–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Land Management
[LLCAD08000.L12200000.DS0000.
18XL1109AF.LXSSB0010000]
Notice of Availability of the Draft
Supplemental Environmental Impact
Statement for the West Mojave Route
Network Project and Draft Land Use
Plan Amendment to the California
Desert Conservation Area Plan in the
West Mojave Planning Area, Inyo,
Kern, Los Angeles, Riverside, and San
Bernardino Counties, CA
Bureau of Land Management,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice of availability.
AGENCY:
In accordance with the
National Environmental Policy Act of
1969, as amended (NEPA), and the
Federal Land Policy and Management
Act of 1976, as amended, the Bureau of
Land Management (BLM) has prepared
a Draft Land Use Plan Amendment
(LUPA) and Draft Supplemental
Environmental Impact Statement
(DSEIS) for the West Mojave Route
Network Project (WMRNP) within the
West Mojave (WEMO) Planning Area of
the California Desert Conservation Area
(CDCA) and by this Notice is
announcing the opening of the 90-day
public comment period.
DATES: To ensure public comments will
be considered, the BLM must receive
written comments on the DSEIS/LUPA
within 90 days following the date the
Environmental Protection Agency
publishes its Notice of Availability in
the Federal Register. The BLM will
announce future meetings or hearings
and any other public participation
activities at least 15 days in advance
through public notices, media releases,
and/or mailings.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments
related to the WMRNP by any of the
following methods:
• Email: blm_ca_wemo_project@
blm.gov.
• Fax: 951–697–5299; Attn: WMRNP
Plan Amendment.
• Mail: Bureau of Land Management,
California Desert District, Attn: WMRNP
Plan Amendment, 22835 Calle San Juan
de Los Lagos, Moreno Valley, CA 92553.
Copies of the WMRNP Draft LUPA
and DS EIS are available in the
daltland on DSKBBV9HB2PROD with NOTICES
SUMMARY:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
21:54 Mar 15, 2018
Jkt 244001
California Desert District Office at the
above address; the Ridgecrest Field
Office, 300 S. Richmond Rd., Ridgecrest,
CA 93555; and the Barstow Field Office,
2601 Barstow Road, Barstow CA 92311.
Copies are also available online at
https://www.blm.gov/programs/
planning-and-nepa/plans-development/
california/west-mojave-plan-routenetwork.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Matt
Toedtli, Planning and Environmental
Coordinator, 2601 Barstow Road,
Barstow, CA 92311; telephone 760–252–
6026; email mtoedtli@blm.gov. Persons
who use a telecommunications device
for the deaf (TDD) may call the Federal
Relay Service at 1–800–877–8339 to
contact the above individual during
normal business hours. The service 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
WMRNP will delineate travel
management areas, adopt transportation
and travel management strategies, and
designate routes on public lands in the
WEMO Planning Area. The WEMO
Planning Area covers 9.4-million acres
of the CDCA in the western portion of
the Mojave Desert in southern
California, including parts of San
Bernardino, Los Angeles, Riverside,
Kern, and Inyo counties. The WMRNP
applies to the 3.1-million acres of public
lands within the WEMO Planning Area.
In March 2006, the BLM signed the
Record of Decision (ROD) for the WEMO
Plan and Amendment to the CDCA Plan.
In January 2011, the U.S. District Court
for the Northern District of California
partially remanded the 2006 WEMO
Plan Amendment ROD back to the BLM
and directed the BLM to amend the
CDCA Plan and reconsider route
designation throughout the WEMO
Planning Area, as well as other specified
issues in the 2006 WEMO Plan (Center
for Biological Diversity v. U.S. Bureau of
Land Management Order Re: Remedy
(N.D. Cal. Jan 28, 2011)). The court’s
order: (1) Invalidated the ‘‘decision
tree’’ instrument used to evaluate and
designate routes; (2) found that the
authorization of off-highway vehicles
(OHV) routes that were not in existence
in 1980 were inconsistent with the
governing land use plan; (3) found that
there was not a reasonable range of
alternatives to the proposed action,
including an inadequate discussion of
the No Action alternative; and (4) found
that BLM had done an inadequate
analysis of impacts from the route
network and the grazing program to
specific resource values, including soils,
PO 00000
Frm 00117
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
11785
cultural resources, certain biological
resources, and air quality.
On September 13, 2011, the BLM
issued a Notice of Intent (amended May
2, 2013, 78 FR 25758), inviting
comments on the proposed scope and
content of the WMRNP. The WMRNP
includes a LUPA to the CDCA Plan for
livestock grazing, recreation, and motor
vehicle access elements for the WEMO
Planning Area; an associated travel
management framework; and activityplan level route designations and
implementation strategies. The lands
covered in the WMRNP are those that
are within livestock grazing allotments
or designated as ‘‘Limited’’ to
designated routes for motorized access.
Areas ‘‘Closed’’ to motorized access are
not proposed for change in this plan
amendment and are not within the
scope of the planning effort.
The 9.4-million acres WEMO
Planning Area includes several large
Department of Defense facilities,
covering almost 3 million acres; a
portion of one national park; 3 million
acres of private lands; and
approximately 100,000 acres of State
lands, including Red Rock Canyon State
Park. The planning area is also adjacent
to four national parks/preserves and
four national forests. Much of the
planning area is managed as part of the
BLM’s National Landscape Conservation
System, including 18 wilderness areas,
three wilderness study areas, and
portions of the Pacific Crest Trail and
the Old Spanish National Historic Trail.
The planning area also includes 60
Areas of Critical Environmental
Concern, five California Desert National
Conservation Lands, seven National
Register Archaeological or Historic
Districts, and four Critical Habitat Units
for the federally listed desert tortoise.
The planning area also includes eight
OHV Open Areas that provide major
points of ingress to and egress from the
adjacent areas ‘‘Limited’’ to designated
routes on public land. No changes are
proposed to these OHV Open Areas or
their boundaries.
The BLM used a public scoping
process to determine issues, impacts,
and possible alternatives that could
influence the scope of the
environmental analysis, and to help
guide the agency from planning-level
decision-making to route designation in
order to comply with the court order.
The BLM initially published a Notice
of Availability for the DSEIS for the
West Mojave Route Network Project in
March 2015, which was made available
for public comment. Concurrently, the
BLM was considering amending the
CDCA Plan through the Desert
Renewable Energy Conservation Plan
E:\FR\FM\16MRN1.SGM
16MRN1
daltland on DSKBBV9HB2PROD with NOTICES
11786
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 52 / Friday, March 16, 2018 / Notices
(DRECP). The DRECP is a landscapescale plan that considered renewable
energy development and conservation
in the CDCA. The DRECP LUPA was
completed in September 2016, and
included changes to land use allocations
and management of those allocations.
Based on public comment associated
with the DRECP, the BLM decided to
issue a new DS EIS for the West Mojave
Route Network Project. The new DSEIS
considers the DRECP LUPA’s changes in
the CDCA Plan.
During previous project scoping, the
public raised the following
transportation and management
concerns:
• Need for a good inventory and
accurate information related to the
existing environment;
• Documentation and use of the
regulatory criteria (43 CFR 8342.1) for
route minimization;
• Mitigation for loss of access;
• Sensitive resource protection;
• Maintenance of access for various
types of recreational, scientific, and
other uses;
• Access to private lands;
• Trespass;
• Regional connectivity;
• Improving GIS and on-the-ground
information for the public; and
• Implementation strategies such as
signing, monitoring, and law
enforcement.
In addition, a substantial number of
comments indicated issues and needs
associated with specific routes and
route areas in the WEMO transportation
system, and included recommendations
on the designation of specific routes,
including limiting use to street-legal
vehicles. A few comments were also
received on livestock grazing issues and
the scope of the supplemental grazing
program analysis.
In response to court order and on-theground changes since 2006, the DS EIS/
LUPA, through four different
alternatives, also includes consideration
of the cumulative effects of the
transportation system alternatives to
resource values—particularly air
quality, soils, cultural resources, certain
biological resources, and certain
sensitive species—as well as cumulative
effects of livestock grazing and potential
cumulative loss of recreational access
opportunities. In response to public
input, access considerations focused on
maintaining a viable transportation
network, diversifying recreational
opportunities, providing access for
specific users (e.g., rockhounds,
motorcyclists, scientific and educational
activities, and non-motorized users),
dealing with conflicts among users, and
maintaining commercial access needs.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
21:54 Mar 15, 2018
Jkt 244001
The draft plan amendments address
specific CDCA Plan inconsistencies
with regulation and policies in the
WEMO Planning Area, including
amending language that limits the route
network to routes that existed in 1980
and travel management guidance for
route designations. Changes are
proposed to the land-use plan
guidelines for stopping, parking, and
camping adjacent to routes in Limited
Access Areas within the WEMO
Planning Area, and to establish a
regional minimization strategy for the
route network. Through Alternative 2,
changes are also considered to the
livestock grazing program that would
reallocate forage from livestock use to
wildlife use and ecosystem function in
desert tortoise critical habitat for active
allotments or allotments that become
vacant. In addition, the Draft considers
plan-level decisions modifying
motorized use on four specific lakebeds,
including Cuddeback Dry Lake, and
competitive motorized use of routes.
The Draft also considers activity-level
travel management plans. Four
alternatives are evaluated, including a
No Action alternative.
Finally, the Draft includes activitylevel specific route designation
alternatives, based on the 43 CFR 8342.1
criteria and different thresholds for
minimization or closure. The preferred
alternative would designate a
sustainable travel network and
transportation system of approximately
6,300 miles from an inventory of about
16,000 miles of linear transportation
features within the WEMO Planning
Area, as compared to the current
network of approximately 6,000 miles.
The designated route network addresses
the need for public, authorized, and
administrative access to and across
BLM-managed lands, including
motorized, non-motorized, and nonmechanized modes of travel, while
balancing the need to protect sensitive
desert resources, and minimizing the
impact to those resources.
The preferred alternative also
includes network-wide minimization
measures that would limit the extent of
off-route stopping and parking
throughout the planning area to (1)
Minimize impacts to undisturbed
habitat; (2) Enhance watersheds; and (3)
Protect adjacent sensitive resources.
Other measures are based on proximity
to sensitive resources, such as riparian
systems, that would enhance these
resources throughout the planning area.
The preferred alternative provides for
designated camping and staging areas to
direct intensive use to manageable
locations.
PO 00000
Frm 00118
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Please note that public comments and
information submitted, including
names, street addresses, and email
addresses of persons who submit
comments, will be available for public
review and disclosure at the above
address during regular business hours (8
a.m. to 4 p.m.), Monday through Friday,
except holidays.
Before including your address, phone
number, email address, or other
personal identifying information in your
comment, you should be aware that
your entire comment—including your
personal identifying information—may
be made publicly available at any time.
While you can request to withhold your
personal identifying information from
public review, BLM cannot guarantee
that we will be able to do so.
Authority: 40 CFR 1506.6, 40 CFR
1506.10, 43 CFR 1610.2.
Jerome E. Perez,
California State Director.
[FR Doc. 2018–05272 Filed 3–15–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–40–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Land Management
[LLWY920000. L51040000.FI0000.
18XL5017AR]
Notice of Proposed Reinstatement of
Terminated Oil and Gas Lease
WYW184371, Wyoming
Bureau of Land Management,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice of proposed
reinstatement.
AGENCY:
As provided for under the
Mineral Leasing Act of 1920, as
amended, the Bureau of Land
Management (BLM) received a petition
from Anadarko E&P Onshore LLC for
reinstatement of competitive oil and gas
lease WYW184371 for land in Converse
County, Wyoming. The lessee filed the
petition on time, along with all rentals
due since the lease terminated under the
law. No leases affecting this land were
issued before the petition was filed. The
BLM proposes to reinstate the lease.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Chris Hite, Branch Chief for Fluid
Minerals Adjudication, Bureau of Land
Management, Wyoming State Office,
5353 Yellowstone Road, P.O. Box 1828,
Cheyenne, Wyoming 82003; phone:
307–775–6176; email: chite@blm.gov.
Persons who use a
telecommunications device for the deaf
may call the Federal Relay Service (FRS)
at 1–800–877–8339 to contact Mr. Hite
during normal business hours. The FRS
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\16MRN1.SGM
16MRN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 52 (Friday, March 16, 2018)]
[Notices]
[Pages 11785-11786]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2018-05272]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Land Management
[LLCAD08000.L12200000.DS0000.18XL1109AF.LXSSB0010000]
Notice of Availability of the Draft Supplemental Environmental
Impact Statement for the West Mojave Route Network Project and Draft
Land Use Plan Amendment to the California Desert Conservation Area Plan
in the West Mojave Planning Area, Inyo, Kern, Los Angeles, Riverside,
and San Bernardino Counties, CA
AGENCY: Bureau of Land Management, Interior.
ACTION: Notice of availability.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: In accordance with the National Environmental Policy Act of
1969, as amended (NEPA), and the Federal Land Policy and Management Act
of 1976, as amended, the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) has prepared a
Draft Land Use Plan Amendment (LUPA) and Draft Supplemental
Environmental Impact Statement (DSEIS) for the West Mojave Route
Network Project (WMRNP) within the West Mojave (WEMO) Planning Area of
the California Desert Conservation Area (CDCA) and by this Notice is
announcing the opening of the 90-day public comment period.
DATES: To ensure public comments will be considered, the BLM must
receive written comments on the DSEIS/LUPA within 90 days following the
date the Environmental Protection Agency publishes its Notice of
Availability in the Federal Register. The BLM will announce future
meetings or hearings and any other public participation activities at
least 15 days in advance through public notices, media releases, and/or
mailings.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments related to the WMRNP by any of the
following methods:
Email: [email protected].
Fax: 951-697-5299; Attn: WMRNP Plan Amendment.
Mail: Bureau of Land Management, California Desert
District, Attn: WMRNP Plan Amendment, 22835 Calle San Juan de Los
Lagos, Moreno Valley, CA 92553.
Copies of the WMRNP Draft LUPA and DS EIS are available in the
California Desert District Office at the above address; the Ridgecrest
Field Office, 300 S. Richmond Rd., Ridgecrest, CA 93555; and the
Barstow Field Office, 2601 Barstow Road, Barstow CA 92311. Copies are
also available online at https://www.blm.gov/programs/planning-and-nepa/plans-development/california/west-mojave-plan-route-network.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Matt Toedtli, Planning and
Environmental Coordinator, 2601 Barstow Road, Barstow, CA 92311;
telephone 760-252-6026; email [email protected]. Persons who use a
telecommunications device for the deaf (TDD) may call the Federal Relay
Service at 1-800-877-8339 to contact the above individual during normal
business hours. The service 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 WMRNP will delineate travel management
areas, adopt transportation and travel management strategies, and
designate routes on public lands in the WEMO Planning Area. The WEMO
Planning Area covers 9.4-million acres of the CDCA in the western
portion of the Mojave Desert in southern California, including parts of
San Bernardino, Los Angeles, Riverside, Kern, and Inyo counties. The
WMRNP applies to the 3.1-million acres of public lands within the WEMO
Planning Area. In March 2006, the BLM signed the Record of Decision
(ROD) for the WEMO Plan and Amendment to the CDCA Plan. In January
2011, the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California
partially remanded the 2006 WEMO Plan Amendment ROD back to the BLM and
directed the BLM to amend the CDCA Plan and reconsider route
designation throughout the WEMO Planning Area, as well as other
specified issues in the 2006 WEMO Plan (Center for Biological Diversity
v. U.S. Bureau of Land Management Order Re: Remedy (N.D. Cal. Jan 28,
2011)). The court's order: (1) Invalidated the ``decision tree''
instrument used to evaluate and designate routes; (2) found that the
authorization of off-highway vehicles (OHV) routes that were not in
existence in 1980 were inconsistent with the governing land use plan;
(3) found that there was not a reasonable range of alternatives to the
proposed action, including an inadequate discussion of the No Action
alternative; and (4) found that BLM had done an inadequate analysis of
impacts from the route network and the grazing program to specific
resource values, including soils, cultural resources, certain
biological resources, and air quality.
On September 13, 2011, the BLM issued a Notice of Intent (amended
May 2, 2013, 78 FR 25758), inviting comments on the proposed scope and
content of the WMRNP. The WMRNP includes a LUPA to the CDCA Plan for
livestock grazing, recreation, and motor vehicle access elements for
the WEMO Planning Area; an associated travel management framework; and
activity-plan level route designations and implementation strategies.
The lands covered in the WMRNP are those that are within livestock
grazing allotments or designated as ``Limited'' to designated routes
for motorized access. Areas ``Closed'' to motorized access are not
proposed for change in this plan amendment and are not within the scope
of the planning effort.
The 9.4-million acres WEMO Planning Area includes several large
Department of Defense facilities, covering almost 3 million acres; a
portion of one national park; 3 million acres of private lands; and
approximately 100,000 acres of State lands, including Red Rock Canyon
State Park. The planning area is also adjacent to four national parks/
preserves and four national forests. Much of the planning area is
managed as part of the BLM's National Landscape Conservation System,
including 18 wilderness areas, three wilderness study areas, and
portions of the Pacific Crest Trail and the Old Spanish National
Historic Trail. The planning area also includes 60 Areas of Critical
Environmental Concern, five California Desert National Conservation
Lands, seven National Register Archaeological or Historic Districts,
and four Critical Habitat Units for the federally listed desert
tortoise.
The planning area also includes eight OHV Open Areas that provide
major points of ingress to and egress from the adjacent areas
``Limited'' to designated routes on public land. No changes are
proposed to these OHV Open Areas or their boundaries.
The BLM used a public scoping process to determine issues, impacts,
and possible alternatives that could influence the scope of the
environmental analysis, and to help guide the agency from planning-
level decision-making to route designation in order to comply with the
court order.
The BLM initially published a Notice of Availability for the DSEIS
for the West Mojave Route Network Project in March 2015, which was made
available for public comment. Concurrently, the BLM was considering
amending the CDCA Plan through the Desert Renewable Energy Conservation
Plan
[[Page 11786]]
(DRECP). The DRECP is a landscape-scale plan that considered renewable
energy development and conservation in the CDCA. The DRECP LUPA was
completed in September 2016, and included changes to land use
allocations and management of those allocations. Based on public
comment associated with the DRECP, the BLM decided to issue a new DS
EIS for the West Mojave Route Network Project. The new DSEIS considers
the DRECP LUPA's changes in the CDCA Plan.
During previous project scoping, the public raised the following
transportation and management concerns:
Need for a good inventory and accurate information related
to the existing environment;
Documentation and use of the regulatory criteria (43 CFR
8342.1) for route minimization;
Mitigation for loss of access;
Sensitive resource protection;
Maintenance of access for various types of recreational,
scientific, and other uses;
Access to private lands;
Trespass;
Regional connectivity;
Improving GIS and on-the-ground information for the
public; and
Implementation strategies such as signing, monitoring, and
law enforcement.
In addition, a substantial number of comments indicated issues and
needs associated with specific routes and route areas in the WEMO
transportation system, and included recommendations on the designation
of specific routes, including limiting use to street-legal vehicles. A
few comments were also received on livestock grazing issues and the
scope of the supplemental grazing program analysis.
In response to court order and on-the-ground changes since 2006,
the DS EIS/LUPA, through four different alternatives, also includes
consideration of the cumulative effects of the transportation system
alternatives to resource values--particularly air quality, soils,
cultural resources, certain biological resources, and certain sensitive
species--as well as cumulative effects of livestock grazing and
potential cumulative loss of recreational access opportunities. In
response to public input, access considerations focused on maintaining
a viable transportation network, diversifying recreational
opportunities, providing access for specific users (e.g., rockhounds,
motorcyclists, scientific and educational activities, and non-motorized
users), dealing with conflicts among users, and maintaining commercial
access needs.
The draft plan amendments address specific CDCA Plan
inconsistencies with regulation and policies in the WEMO Planning Area,
including amending language that limits the route network to routes
that existed in 1980 and travel management guidance for route
designations. Changes are proposed to the land-use plan guidelines for
stopping, parking, and camping adjacent to routes in Limited Access
Areas within the WEMO Planning Area, and to establish a regional
minimization strategy for the route network. Through Alternative 2,
changes are also considered to the livestock grazing program that would
reallocate forage from livestock use to wildlife use and ecosystem
function in desert tortoise critical habitat for active allotments or
allotments that become vacant. In addition, the Draft considers plan-
level decisions modifying motorized use on four specific lakebeds,
including Cuddeback Dry Lake, and competitive motorized use of routes.
The Draft also considers activity-level travel management plans. Four
alternatives are evaluated, including a No Action alternative.
Finally, the Draft includes activity-level specific route
designation alternatives, based on the 43 CFR 8342.1 criteria and
different thresholds for minimization or closure. The preferred
alternative would designate a sustainable travel network and
transportation system of approximately 6,300 miles from an inventory of
about 16,000 miles of linear transportation features within the WEMO
Planning Area, as compared to the current network of approximately
6,000 miles. The designated route network addresses the need for
public, authorized, and administrative access to and across BLM-managed
lands, including motorized, non-motorized, and non-mechanized modes of
travel, while balancing the need to protect sensitive desert resources,
and minimizing the impact to those resources.
The preferred alternative also includes network-wide minimization
measures that would limit the extent of off-route stopping and parking
throughout the planning area to (1) Minimize impacts to undisturbed
habitat; (2) Enhance watersheds; and (3) Protect adjacent sensitive
resources. Other measures are based on proximity to sensitive
resources, such as riparian systems, that would enhance these resources
throughout the planning area. The preferred alternative provides for
designated camping and staging areas to direct intensive use to
manageable locations.
Please note that public comments and information submitted,
including names, street addresses, and email addresses of persons who
submit comments, will be available for public review and disclosure at
the above address during regular business hours (8 a.m. to 4 p.m.),
Monday through Friday, except holidays.
Before including your address, phone number, email address, or
other personal identifying information in your comment, you should be
aware that your entire comment--including your personal identifying
information--may be made publicly available at any time. While you can
request to withhold your personal identifying information from public
review, BLM cannot guarantee that we will be able to do so.
Authority: 40 CFR 1506.6, 40 CFR 1506.10, 43 CFR 1610.2.
Jerome E. Perez,
California State Director.
[FR Doc. 2018-05272 Filed 3-15-18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310-40-P