Notice of Availability for the Final Environmental Impact Statement for the Proposed Gold Rock Mine Project, White Pine County, Nevada, 35676-35678 [2018-16093]
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35676
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 145 / Friday, July 27, 2018 / Notices
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DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Land Management
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[LLNVL00000. L51100000.GN0000.
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Notice of Availability for the Final
Environmental Impact Statement for
the Proposed Gold Rock Mine Project,
White Pine County, Nevada
Bureau of Land Management,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice of Availability for the
Final Environmental Impact Statement
for the Proposed Gold Rock Mine
Project, White Pine County, Nevada.
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) Bristlecone
Field Office, Ely, Nevada, has prepared
a Final Environmental Impact Statement
(EIS) for the Gold Rock Mine Project
(Project), White Pine County, Nevada,
and by this notice is announcing its
availability.
SUMMARY:
The BLM will not issue a final
decision on the proposal for a minimum
of 30 days after the date that the
Environmental Protection Agency
publishes its Notice of Availability in
the Federal Register.
ADDRESSES: Copies of the Final EIS for
the Gold Rock Mine Project and other
documents pertinent to this proposal
may be examined at the Bristlecone
Field Office: 702 North Industrial Way,
Ely, Nevada. The document is available
for download on the internet at: https://
on.doi.gov/1zAxyW9.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Maria Ryan, Project Manager, (775) 289–
1888; mmryan@blm.gov. Persons who
use a telecommunications device for the
deaf (TDD) may call the Federal Relay
Service (FRS) at 1–800–877–8339 to
contact the above individual during
normal business hours. The FRS 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 Gold
Rock Mine Project would involve
construction and operation of an openpit gold mine on public land in White
Pine County, Nevada. Midway Gold
U.S. was the original proponent. GRP
Gold Rock, LLC Inc. (GRP) purchased
the project in 2016. The project would
involve expansion of an existing open
pit and construction of two waste rock
disposal areas, heap leaching facilities
with an adsorption/desorption refining
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plant, a carbon-in-leach plant, a tailings
storage facility, roads, ancillary support
facilities, and exploration areas. A 69kV
power line would be built and tied into
an existing power line with the Pan
Mine located north of the project area.
Water with which GRP has rights would
be supplied via an existing well located
on BLM-administered lands south of the
main Project footprint. Construction and
mining operations would occur within
the fenced 8,757 acres and would
disturb 3,946 acres. The proposed action
also includes 200 acres of exploration
disturbance in addition to the 267 acres
of previously authorized exploration
outside the fenced area.
The Final EIS describes and analyzes
the proposed project site-specific
impacts (including cumulative effects)
on all affected resources. The Final EIS
describes eight alternatives: (1) The
Proposed Action; (2) the Northern
Power Line Route Alternative; (3) the
Southern Power Line Route Alternative;
(4) the Northwest Main Access Route
Alternative, Northern Power Line Route;
(5) the Northwest Main Access Route
Alternative, Southern Power Line Route;
(6) the Modified County Road Re-Route
Alternative; (7) the Western Tailings
Storage Facility Alternative; and (8) the
No Action Alternative.
1. Proposed Action
The proposed Project would be
constructed and operated in the same
geographic area as the reclaimed and
closed Easy Junior Mine. The proposed
Project consists of an open pit, two
waste rock disposal areas, a heap leach
pad and processing ponds, a carbon-inleach plant, a tailings storage facility,
haul and access roads, growth medium
stockpiles, ancillary support facilities,
and exploration associated with mining
operation. Also under the Proposed
Action, a 69-kV transmission line would
extend south from the Pan Mine, east of
and parallel to the approved Pan Mine
Southwest Power Line, then extend
southeast to the mine area. The site
would be accessed using the existing
main access route from US 50 on Green
Springs Road (CR 5), then west on BLM
Road 1179 (BLM 1179)/CR 1204, then
south on Easy Junior Road (CR 1177) to
the proposed mine area. Also under the
Proposed Action, a county road that
currently passes through the Gold Rock
Mine Project area would be re-located
onto existing and new BLM and county
roads. Total disturbance in the project
area would be approximately 3,946
acres.
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2. Northern Power Line Route
Alternative
The Northern Power Line Route
Alternative was developed to minimize
potential impacts to Greater sage-grouse
and its habitat due to surface
disturbance and from raptors using the
power line between the Pan Mine and
the Project as a perch to hunt for prey.
This power line route would be shorter
than the Proposed Action power line
route. Fewer acres of Greater sagegrouse Priority Habitat Management
Area (PHMA) and General Habitat
Management Area (GHMA) would be
disturbed and fewer acres of PHMA and
GHMA would be located within 600
meters of the power line, as compared
to the Proposed Action.
3. Southern Power Line Route
Alternative
The Southern Power Line Route
Alternative also was developed to
minimize potential impacts to Greater
sage-grouse and its habitat due to
surface disturbance and from raptors
using the power line as a perch to hunt
for prey. This power line route would be
shorter than Proposed Action power
line route or the Northern Power Line
Route Alternative. Fewer acres of PHMA
and GHMA would be disturbed and
fewer acres of PHMA and GHMA would
be located within 600 meters of the
power line, as compared to the
Proposed Action power line or Northern
Power Line Route Alternative.
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4. Northwest Main Access Route
Alternative, Northern Power Line Route
The Northwest Main Access Route
Alternative, Northern Power Line Route
was developed to address concerns
about potential noise impacts to Greater
sage-grouse. It would include the
benefits of the Northern Power Line
Route Alternative, and would move
most mine-related traffic away from
known active Greater sage-grouse leks.
This alternative would also contribute
to fewer potential vehicular collisions
with big game due to its distance away
from a known migration route for the
Ruby Mountain mule deer herd.
5. Northwest Main Access Route
Alternative, Southern Power Line Route
The Northwest Main Access Route
Alternative, Southern Power Line Route
was developed to address concerns
about potential noise impacts to Greater
sage-grouse. It would include the
benefits of the Southern Power Line
Route Alternative and would move most
mine-related traffic away from known
active Greater sage-grouse leks. This
alternative would also contribute to
fewer vehicular collisions with big game
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due to its distance away from a known
migration route for the Ruby Mountain
mule deer herd.
6. Modified County Road Re-Route
Alternative
The Modified County Road Re-route
Alternative was developed to lessen
impacts to GHMA. This alternative
would involve use of existing roads
rather than construction of a segment of
new road in Greater sage-grouse habitat.
7. Western Tailings Storage Facility
Alternative
The Western Tailings Storage Facility
Alternative was developed to address
concerns about potential surface
disturbance impacts to PHMA and loss
of mule deer crucial winter range.
Under this alternative, the tailings
storage facility would be located to the
west of the heap leach pile, outside of
mule deer crucial winter range. The
mine area’s eastern fence line would be
shifted to the west to minimize
restriction of movement for Ruby mule
deer herd in their crucial winter range.
8. No Action Alternative
The No Action Alternative would not
include any activities associated with
the Proposed Action. Mineral resources
in these areas of expansion would
remain undeveloped. The construction
and operation of the open pit, waste
rock disposal areas, heap leach
facilities, mill, tailings storage facility,
and support facilities would not occur
as currently proposed under the
Proposed Action. The county road
would not be re-routed. The exploration
activities previously authorized under
NVN–90376 for the project would
continue, however. NEPA requires
analysis of the No Action Alternative.
The BLM’s Preferred Alternative is a
combination of the Northwest Main
Access Route Alternative, Southern
Power Line Route (Alternative 5); the
Modified County Road Re-route
Alternative (Alternative 6); and the
Western Tailings Storage Facility
Alternative (Alternative 7). This
Preferred Alternative would involve
construction and operation of a shorter
power line route than the Proposed
Action by following the Southern Power
Line Route. This power line would
minimize surface disturbance impacts to
PHMA and GHMA, as well as minimize
potential raven and raptor predation of
Greater sage-grouse. Total acres of
surface disturbance in the Preferred
Alternative are PHMA 1,872; GHMA
1,641.
In addition, the Preferred Alternative
would use the Northwest Main Access
Route, which would be located farther
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35677
from known active leks than the
Proposed Action, minimizing potential
noise impacts to Greater sage-grouse.
This route could contribute to fewer
vehicular collisions with big game due
to its distance from a known migration
route for Area 10 mule deer. The
Preferred Alternative would use existing
roads for the county road re-route as
presented under the Modified County
Road Re-route, minimizing new ground
disturbance and impacts to GHMA.
The Preferred Alternative would
incorporate the Western Tailings
Storage Facility Alternative by shifting
the tailings storage facility and related
mine facility locations westward which
would minimize surface disturbance in
PHMA and mule deer crucial winter
range and also would slightly increase
the surface disturbance in GHMA.
The BLM identified action
alternatives that would minimize
impacts to the Greater sage-grouse, as
well as mitigation measures to further
avoid or minimize direct and indirect
impacts PHMA and GHMA. In addition,
the proponent committed to effective
environmental protection measures,
including mitigation measures to offset
residual (long-term un-reclaimed) direct
surface disturbance.
The BLM prepared the Draft EIS in
conjunction with its four cooperating
agencies: The Duckwater Shoshone
Tribe of the Duckwater Reservation,
Nevada; White Pine County Board of
County Commissioners; Eureka County
Board of Commissioners; and the
Nevada Department of Wildlife
(NDOW). After issuance of the Draft EIS,
in accordance with a Memorandum of
Understanding between the BLM
Nevada State Office and California
State Office, and the Nevada
Department of Conservation and
Natural Resources, and the USFS
Humboldt-Toiyabe National Forest
completed on April 1, 2016, the BLM
added the Nevada Department of
Conservation and Natural Resources
Sagebrush Ecosystem Technical Team
(SETT) as a fifth cooperating agency.
The BLM prepared and published a
notice in the Ely Times, the Eureka
Sentinel, the High Desert Advocate, and
the Reno Gazette-Journal informing the
public of the availability of the Draft EIS
for review. The public was invited to
provide written comments on the Draft
EIS during the 45-day comment period.
The BLM conducted public meetings in
Ely, Eureka, and Reno during the review
period for the Draft EIS.
A total of 26 individual comment
submittals containing 253 discrete
comments were received from the
cooperating agencies, the public, the
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
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(EPA), and the internal BLM review.
The BLM considered all comments and
incorporated them, as appropriate, into
the FEIS. Those who submitted
comments on the Draft EIS expressed
concerns about the handling of leach
solution and potentially acid-generating
waste rock, and potential impacts to
groundwater quality; loss of mule deer
crucial winter range; potential impacts
to Greater sage-grouse and their habitat;
potential indirect impacts to the
Railroad Valley springfish; loss of access
to livestock grazing lands, including
herding routes; long-term impacts to
forage resource health in areas impacted
by the proposed project; increased
public accessibility to the area and
impacts on private property; potential
impacts on wild horses; potential
impacts on Traditional Cultural
Properties; socioeconomic impacts to
the communities of Ely and Eureka, and
to White Pine and Eureka counties; and
particulate matter emissions and
impacts to air quality. There were also
comments received in general support
for the mine. These public comments
resulted in the addition of clarifying
text, but did not significantly change the
analysis. The proponent submitted a
plan of operations for the Project in
March 2013, and the BLM and EPA
published notices of the availability of
the Draft EIS in the Federal Register in
February 2015. There have been several
delays to completion of this Final EIS
since 2013 due to sale of the mine,
issuance of the Nevada and Northeast
California Greater Sage-Grouse Land
Use Plan Amendment (2015), and
requests by the proponent to further
address air quality concerns in 2016.The
BLM has maintained on-going
coordination and consultation with the
Duckwater Shoshone Tribe. Both the
BLM and GRP have committed to
ongoing coordination through the life of
the mine and have a Programmatic
Agreement in place with the Nevada
State Historic Preservation Office to
address issues that arise.
Following a 30-day Final EIS
availability and review period, the BLM
will issue a Record of Decision (ROD).
The decision reached in the ROD will be
subject to appeal to the Interior Board of
Land Appeals. The 30-day appeal
period will begin with the issuance of
the ROD.
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Authority: 40 CFR 1506.6 and 40 CFR
1506.10.
Seward Meridian, Alaska
T. 18 N., R. 5 E., accepted January 5, 2018
T. 19 N., R. 5 E., accepted January 5, 2018
T. 20 N., R. 4 E., accepted January 5, 2018
T. 20 N., R. 7 E., accepted January 5, 2018
T. 21 N., R. 5 E., accepted January 5, 2018
T. 21 N., R. 6 E., accepted January 5, 2018
Mindy Seal,
Field Manager, Bristlecone Field Office.
[FR Doc. 2018–16093 Filed 7–26–18; 8:45 am]
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Bureau of Land Management
T. 22 N., R. 5 E., accepted January 5, 2018
T. 22 N., R. 6 E., accepted January 5, 2018
Kateel River Meridian, Alaska
[LLAK940000.L14100000.BX0000.
18X.LXSS001L0100]
T. 2 S., R. 40 W., accepted July 10, 2018
T. 3 S., R. 40 W., accepted July 10, 2018
Filing of Plats of Survey: Alaska
Umiat Meridian, Alaska
Bureau of Land Management,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice of official filing.
T. 10 N., R. 2 E., accepted July 9, 2018
T. 10 N., R. 4 E., accepted July 9, 2018
T. 10 N., R. 5 E., accepted July 9, 2018
T. 11 N., R. 2 E., accepted July 9, 2018
T. 11 N., R. 3 E., accepted July 9, 2018
T. 11 N., R. 4 E., accepted July 9, 2018
AGENCY:
The plats of survey of lands
described in this notice are scheduled to
be officially filed in the Bureau of Land
Management (BLM), Alaska State Office,
Anchorage, Alaska. The surveys, which
were executed at the request of the U.S.
Coast Guard, the Bureau of Indian
Affairs and BLM, are necessary for the
management of these lands.
DATES: Protests must be received by the
BLM by August 27, 2018.
ADDRESSES: A copy of the plats may be
obtained from the Alaska Public
Information Center at the BLM Alaska
State Office, 222 W 7th Avenue,
Anchorage, Alaska 99513, upon
required payment. The plats may be
viewed at this location at no cost. Please
use this address when filing written
protests.
SUMMARY:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Douglas N. Haywood, Chief, Branch of
Cadastral Survey, Bureau of Land
Management, Alaska State Office, 222
W. 7th Avenue, Anchorage, Alaska
99513; 1–907–271–5481; dhaywood@
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 the above
individual during normal business
hours. The FRS 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 lands
surveyed are:
U.S. Survey No. 4901, accepted May
14, 2018.
Copper River Meridian, Alaska
T. 58 S., R. 78 E., accepted March 5, 2018
T. 58 S., R. 79 E., accepted March 5, 2018
T. 59 S., R. 78 E., accepted March 5, 2018
T. 59 S., R. 79 E., accepted March 5, 2018
T. 13 S., R. 7 W., accepted March 5, 2018
Fairbanks Meridian, Alaska
T. 6 S., R. 15 W., accepted March 27, 2018
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A person or party who wishes to
protest one or more plats of survey
identified above must file a written
notice of protest with the State Director
for Alaska, BLM. The notice of protest
must identify the plat(s) of survey that
the person or party wishes to protest.
The notice of protest must be filed
before the scheduled date of official
filing for the plat(s) of survey being
protested. Any notice of protest filed
after the scheduled date of official filing
will not be considered. A notice of
protest is considered filed on the date it
is received by the State Director for
Alaska during regular business hours; if
received after regular business hours, a
notice of protest will be considered filed
the next business day. A written
statement of reasons in support of a
protest, if not filed with the notice of
protest, must be filed with the State
Director for Alaska within 30 calendar
days after the notice of protest is filed.
If a notice of protest against a plat of
survey is received prior to the
scheduled date of official filing, the
official filing of the plat of survey
identified in the notice of protest will be
stayed pending consideration of the
protest. A plat of survey will not be
officially filed until the dismissal or
resolution of all protests of the plat.
Before including your address, phone
number, email address, or other
personal identifying information in a
notice of protest or statement of reasons,
you should be aware that the documents
you submit, including your personal
identifying information, may be made
publicly available in their entirety at
any time. While you can ask us to
withhold your personal identifying
information from public review, we
cannot guarantee that we will be able to
do so.
Authority: 43 U.S.C. Chap. 3.
Douglas N. Haywood,
Chief Cadastral Surveyor, Alaska.
[FR Doc. 2018–16095 Filed 7–26–18; 8:45 am]
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 145 (Friday, July 27, 2018)]
[Notices]
[Pages 35676-35678]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2018-16093]
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DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Land Management
[LLNVL00000. L51100000.GN0000. LVEMF1604790. 241A.18X; MO#4500101127]
Notice of Availability for the Final Environmental Impact
Statement for the Proposed Gold Rock Mine Project, White Pine County,
Nevada
AGENCY: Bureau of Land Management, Interior.
ACTION: Notice of Availability for the Final Environmental Impact
Statement for the Proposed Gold Rock Mine Project, White Pine County,
Nevada.
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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) Bristlecone
Field Office, Ely, Nevada, has prepared a Final Environmental Impact
Statement (EIS) for the Gold Rock Mine Project (Project), White Pine
County, Nevada, and by this notice is announcing its availability.
DATES: The BLM will not issue a final decision on the proposal for a
minimum of 30 days after the date that the Environmental Protection
Agency publishes its Notice of Availability in the Federal Register.
ADDRESSES: Copies of the Final EIS for the Gold Rock Mine Project and
other documents pertinent to this proposal may be examined at the
Bristlecone Field Office: 702 North Industrial Way, Ely, Nevada. The
document is available for download on the internet at: https://on.doi.gov/1zAxyW9.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Maria Ryan, Project Manager, (775)
289-1888; [email protected]. Persons who use a telecommunications device
for the deaf (TDD) may call the Federal Relay Service (FRS) at 1-800-
877-8339 to contact the above individual during normal business hours.
The FRS 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 Gold Rock Mine Project would involve
construction and operation of an open-pit gold mine on public land in
White Pine County, Nevada. Midway Gold U.S. was the original proponent.
GRP Gold Rock, LLC Inc. (GRP) purchased the project in 2016. The
project would involve expansion of an existing open pit and
construction of two waste rock disposal areas, heap leaching facilities
with an adsorption/desorption refining plant, a carbon-in-leach plant,
a tailings storage facility, roads, ancillary support facilities, and
exploration areas. A 69kV power line would be built and tied into an
existing power line with the Pan Mine located north of the project
area. Water with which GRP has rights would be supplied via an existing
well located on BLM-administered lands south of the main Project
footprint. Construction and mining operations would occur within the
fenced 8,757 acres and would disturb 3,946 acres. The proposed action
also includes 200 acres of exploration disturbance in addition to the
267 acres of previously authorized exploration outside the fenced area.
The Final EIS describes and analyzes the proposed project site-
specific impacts (including cumulative effects) on all affected
resources. The Final EIS describes eight alternatives: (1) The Proposed
Action; (2) the Northern Power Line Route Alternative; (3) the Southern
Power Line Route Alternative; (4) the Northwest Main Access Route
Alternative, Northern Power Line Route; (5) the Northwest Main Access
Route Alternative, Southern Power Line Route; (6) the Modified County
Road Re-Route Alternative; (7) the Western Tailings Storage Facility
Alternative; and (8) the No Action Alternative.
1. Proposed Action
The proposed Project would be constructed and operated in the same
geographic area as the reclaimed and closed Easy Junior Mine. The
proposed Project consists of an open pit, two waste rock disposal
areas, a heap leach pad and processing ponds, a carbon-in-leach plant,
a tailings storage facility, haul and access roads, growth medium
stockpiles, ancillary support facilities, and exploration associated
with mining operation. Also under the Proposed Action, a 69-kV
transmission line would extend south from the Pan Mine, east of and
parallel to the approved Pan Mine Southwest Power Line, then extend
southeast to the mine area. The site would be accessed using the
existing main access route from US 50 on Green Springs Road (CR 5),
then west on BLM Road 1179 (BLM 1179)/CR 1204, then south on Easy
Junior Road (CR 1177) to the proposed mine area. Also under the
Proposed Action, a county road that currently passes through the Gold
Rock Mine Project area would be re-located onto existing and new BLM
and county roads. Total disturbance in the project area would be
approximately 3,946 acres.
[[Page 35677]]
2. Northern Power Line Route Alternative
The Northern Power Line Route Alternative was developed to minimize
potential impacts to Greater sage-grouse and its habitat due to surface
disturbance and from raptors using the power line between the Pan Mine
and the Project as a perch to hunt for prey. This power line route
would be shorter than the Proposed Action power line route. Fewer acres
of Greater sage-grouse Priority Habitat Management Area (PHMA) and
General Habitat Management Area (GHMA) would be disturbed and fewer
acres of PHMA and GHMA would be located within 600 meters of the power
line, as compared to the Proposed Action.
3. Southern Power Line Route Alternative
The Southern Power Line Route Alternative also was developed to
minimize potential impacts to Greater sage-grouse and its habitat due
to surface disturbance and from raptors using the power line as a perch
to hunt for prey. This power line route would be shorter than Proposed
Action power line route or the Northern Power Line Route Alternative.
Fewer acres of PHMA and GHMA would be disturbed and fewer acres of PHMA
and GHMA would be located within 600 meters of the power line, as
compared to the Proposed Action power line or Northern Power Line Route
Alternative.
4. Northwest Main Access Route Alternative, Northern Power Line Route
The Northwest Main Access Route Alternative, Northern Power Line
Route was developed to address concerns about potential noise impacts
to Greater sage-grouse. It would include the benefits of the Northern
Power Line Route Alternative, and would move most mine-related traffic
away from known active Greater sage-grouse leks. This alternative would
also contribute to fewer potential vehicular collisions with big game
due to its distance away from a known migration route for the Ruby
Mountain mule deer herd.
5. Northwest Main Access Route Alternative, Southern Power Line Route
The Northwest Main Access Route Alternative, Southern Power Line
Route was developed to address concerns about potential noise impacts
to Greater sage-grouse. It would include the benefits of the Southern
Power Line Route Alternative and would move most mine-related traffic
away from known active Greater sage-grouse leks. This alternative would
also contribute to fewer vehicular collisions with big game due to its
distance away from a known migration route for the Ruby Mountain mule
deer herd.
6. Modified County Road Re-Route Alternative
The Modified County Road Re-route Alternative was developed to
lessen impacts to GHMA. This alternative would involve use of existing
roads rather than construction of a segment of new road in Greater
sage-grouse habitat.
7. Western Tailings Storage Facility Alternative
The Western Tailings Storage Facility Alternative was developed to
address concerns about potential surface disturbance impacts to PHMA
and loss of mule deer crucial winter range. Under this alternative, the
tailings storage facility would be located to the west of the heap
leach pile, outside of mule deer crucial winter range. The mine area's
eastern fence line would be shifted to the west to minimize restriction
of movement for Ruby mule deer herd in their crucial winter range.
8. No Action Alternative
The No Action Alternative would not include any activities
associated with the Proposed Action. Mineral resources in these areas
of expansion would remain undeveloped. The construction and operation
of the open pit, waste rock disposal areas, heap leach facilities,
mill, tailings storage facility, and support facilities would not occur
as currently proposed under the Proposed Action. The county road would
not be re-routed. The exploration activities previously authorized
under NVN-90376 for the project would continue, however. NEPA requires
analysis of the No Action Alternative.
The BLM's Preferred Alternative is a combination of the Northwest
Main Access Route Alternative, Southern Power Line Route (Alternative
5); the Modified County Road Re-route Alternative (Alternative 6); and
the Western Tailings Storage Facility Alternative (Alternative 7). This
Preferred Alternative would involve construction and operation of a
shorter power line route than the Proposed Action by following the
Southern Power Line Route. This power line would minimize surface
disturbance impacts to PHMA and GHMA, as well as minimize potential
raven and raptor predation of Greater sage-grouse. Total acres of
surface disturbance in the Preferred Alternative are PHMA 1,872; GHMA
1,641.
In addition, the Preferred Alternative would use the Northwest Main
Access Route, which would be located farther from known active leks
than the Proposed Action, minimizing potential noise impacts to Greater
sage-grouse. This route could contribute to fewer vehicular collisions
with big game due to its distance from a known migration route for Area
10 mule deer. The Preferred Alternative would use existing roads for
the county road re-route as presented under the Modified County Road
Re-route, minimizing new ground disturbance and impacts to GHMA.
The Preferred Alternative would incorporate the Western Tailings
Storage Facility Alternative by shifting the tailings storage facility
and related mine facility locations westward which would minimize
surface disturbance in PHMA and mule deer crucial winter range and also
would slightly increase the surface disturbance in GHMA.
The BLM identified action alternatives that would minimize impacts
to the Greater sage-grouse, as well as mitigation measures to further
avoid or minimize direct and indirect impacts PHMA and GHMA. In
addition, the proponent committed to effective environmental protection
measures, including mitigation measures to offset residual (long-term
un-reclaimed) direct surface disturbance.
The BLM prepared the Draft EIS in conjunction with its four
cooperating agencies: The Duckwater Shoshone Tribe of the Duckwater
Reservation, Nevada; White Pine County Board of County Commissioners;
Eureka County Board of Commissioners; and the Nevada Department of
Wildlife (NDOW). After issuance of the Draft EIS, in accordance with a
Memorandum of Understanding between the BLM Nevada State Office and
California State Office, and the Nevada Department of Conservation and
Natural Resources, and the USFS Humboldt-Toiyabe National Forest
completed on April 1, 2016, the BLM added the Nevada Department of
Conservation and Natural Resources Sagebrush Ecosystem Technical Team
(SETT) as a fifth cooperating agency.
The BLM prepared and published a notice in the Ely Times, the
Eureka Sentinel, the High Desert Advocate, and the Reno Gazette-Journal
informing the public of the availability of the Draft EIS for review.
The public was invited to provide written comments on the Draft EIS
during the 45-day comment period. The BLM conducted public meetings in
Ely, Eureka, and Reno during the review period for the Draft EIS.
A total of 26 individual comment submittals containing 253 discrete
comments were received from the cooperating agencies, the public, the
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
[[Page 35678]]
(EPA), and the internal BLM review. The BLM considered all comments and
incorporated them, as appropriate, into the FEIS. Those who submitted
comments on the Draft EIS expressed concerns about the handling of
leach solution and potentially acid-generating waste rock, and
potential impacts to groundwater quality; loss of mule deer crucial
winter range; potential impacts to Greater sage-grouse and their
habitat; potential indirect impacts to the Railroad Valley springfish;
loss of access to livestock grazing lands, including herding routes;
long-term impacts to forage resource health in areas impacted by the
proposed project; increased public accessibility to the area and
impacts on private property; potential impacts on wild horses;
potential impacts on Traditional Cultural Properties; socioeconomic
impacts to the communities of Ely and Eureka, and to White Pine and
Eureka counties; and particulate matter emissions and impacts to air
quality. There were also comments received in general support for the
mine. These public comments resulted in the addition of clarifying
text, but did not significantly change the analysis. The proponent
submitted a plan of operations for the Project in March 2013, and the
BLM and EPA published notices of the availability of the Draft EIS in
the Federal Register in February 2015. There have been several delays
to completion of this Final EIS since 2013 due to sale of the mine,
issuance of the Nevada and Northeast California Greater Sage-Grouse
Land Use Plan Amendment (2015), and requests by the proponent to
further address air quality concerns in 2016.The BLM has maintained on-
going coordination and consultation with the Duckwater Shoshone Tribe.
Both the BLM and GRP have committed to ongoing coordination through the
life of the mine and have a Programmatic Agreement in place with the
Nevada State Historic Preservation Office to address issues that arise.
Following a 30-day Final EIS availability and review period, the
BLM will issue a Record of Decision (ROD). The decision reached in the
ROD will be subject to appeal to the Interior Board of Land Appeals.
The 30-day appeal period will begin with the issuance of the ROD.
Authority: 40 CFR 1506.6 and 40 CFR 1506.10.
Mindy Seal,
Field Manager, Bristlecone Field Office.
[FR Doc. 2018-16093 Filed 7-26-18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310-HC-P