Notice of Availability of the Ray Land Exchange Final Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement/Proposed Resource Management Plan Amendments, Arizona, 33284-33285 [2019-14714]
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Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 134 / Friday, July 12, 2019 / Notices
clarity of the information to be
collected; and (5) how might the BLM
minimize the burden of this collection
on the respondents, including through
the use of information technology.
Comments that you submit in
response to this notice are a matter of
public record. We will include or
summarize each comment in our request
to OMB to approve this ICR. 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 ask us in your comment
to withhold your personal identifying
information from public review, we
cannot guarantee that we will be able to
do so.
Abstract: This collection enables the
BLM to learn the extent and qualities of
Federal coal resources; evaluate the
environmental impacts of coal leasing
and development; determine the
qualifications of prospective lessees to
acquire and hold Federal coal leases;
and ensure lessee compliance with
applicable statutes, regulations, and
lease terms and conditions.
Title of Collection: Coal Management.
OMB Control Number: 1004–0073.
Form Numbers: 3440–1, Application
and License to Mine Coal (Free Use);
and 3400–12, Coal Lease.
Type of Review: Extension of a
currently approved collection.
Respondents/Affected Public:
Applicants for, and holders of, coal
exploration licenses; applicants/bidders
for, and holders of, coal leases;
applicants for, and holders of, licenses
to mine coal; and surface owners and
State and tribal governments whose
lands overlie coal deposits.
Total Estimated Number of Annual
Respondents: 1,017.
Total Estimated Number of Annual
Responses: 1,017.
Estimated Completion Time per
Response: Varies from 1 to 800 hours.
Total Estimated Number of Annual
Burden Hours: 19,897.
Respondent’s Obligation: Required to
obtain and retain benefit.
Frequency of Collection: On occasion.
Total Estimated Annual Nonhour
Burden Cost: $943,153.
An agency may not conduct or
sponsor and a person is not required to
respond to a collection of information
unless it displays a currently valid OMB
control number.
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The authority for this action is the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44
U.S.C. 3501 et seq.).
Jean Sonneman,
Bureau of Land Management, Information
Collection Clearance Officer.
[FR Doc. 2019–14790 Filed 7–11–19; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–84–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Land Management
[XXX.LLAZG02000.71220000.KD0000.
LVTFA0958340; AZA3116]
Notice of Availability of the Ray Land
Exchange Final Supplemental
Environmental Impact Statement/
Proposed Resource Management Plan
Amendments, Arizona
Bureau of Land Management,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice of availability.
AGENCY:
In accordance with the
National Environmental Policy Act of
1969, as amended, and Federal Land
Policy and Management Act of 1976, as
amended, the Bureau of Land
Management (BLM), Gila District,
Tucson Field Office has prepared a
Final Supplemental Environmental
Impact Statement (EIS)/Proposed
Resource Management Plan (RMP)
Amendments for the Ray Land
Exchange and by this notice is
announcing its availability.
DATES: BLM planning regulations state
that any person who meets the
conditions as described in the
regulations may protest the BLM’s
proposed RMP amendments, which will
change certain land tenure designations
from ‘‘retention’’ to ‘‘disposal’’ for the
Phoenix, Lower Sonoran, and Safford
RMPs. A person who meets the
conditions and files a protest must file
the protest within 30 days of the date
that the Environmental Protection
Agency publishes its Notice of
Availability in the Federal Register.
ADDRESSES: You may review the Final
Supplemental EIS/Proposed RMP
Amendments for the Ray Land
Exchange at https://go.usa.gov/xEnKR.
Instructions for filing a protest with the
Director of the BLM regarding the
Proposed RMP Amendments may be
found online at https://www.blm.gov/
programs/planning-and-nepa/publicparticipation/filing-a-plan-protest and
at 43 CFR 1610.6–2.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Project Manager Michael Werner,
telephone 602–417–9561; address: One
North Central Avenue, Suite 800,
SUMMARY:
PO 00000
Frm 00067
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Phoenix, AZ 85004–4427; email:
mwerner@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 Mr. Werner during normal
business hours. The FRS is available 24
hours a day, 7 days a week, to leave a
message or question. You will receive a
reply during normal business hours.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The BLM
Gila District, Tucson Field Office, is
issuing the Final Supplemental EIS/
Proposed RMP Amendments for the Ray
Land Exchange to supplement the
environmental impact analysis in the
original Ray Land Exchange/RMP
Amendments Final EIS completed by
the BLM in 1999. ASARCO LLC
(ASARCO) proposed the Ray Land
Exchange with the BLM in order to
acquire up to 10,976 acres of public
lands and federally owned mineral
estate adjacent to its Ray Complex (Ray
Mine and associated processing
facilities near Hayden, AZ) and in the
Casa Grande, AZ vicinity (the Selected
Lands). In exchange, ASARCO is
offering to the BLM 7,304 acres of
private lands identified by the BLM as
desirable for consolidating checkerboard
land ownership and improving access to
existing Federal land for traditional uses
such as hunting and other recreation
(the Offered Lands).
Through the exchange, the BLM has
an opportunity to improve resource
management efficiency by disposing of
heavily encumbered, isolated, and
difficult-to-manage public lands; and
support Secretarial Order 3373 by
acquiring lands that will consolidate
ownership patterns in order to improve
public access and conserve important
natural resources. By acquiring the
Selected Lands, ASARCO is seeking to
consolidate its land holdings within and
near areas of ongoing mineral
development and to use the Selected
Lands to support current and future
mining-related operations.
The Proposed Action and alternatives
presented and analyzed in the Final
Supplemental EIS are the same as those
presented and analyzed in the 1999
Final EIS. The Final Supplemental EIS
supplements the 1999 Final EIS by
providing clarifying analysis of
potential environmental impacts of the
land exchange and alternatives.
Specifically, the Final Supplemental EIS
analyzes and compares the effects of the
land exchange on the foreseeable
mining operations conducted on Federal
lands under BLM regulations (the No
Action Alternative) with the effects of
the land exchange on the foreseeable
mining operations conducted all or
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12JYN1
jbell on DSK3GLQ082PROD with NOTICES
Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 134 / Friday, July 12, 2019 / Notices
partially on private lands under
applicable State and Federal laws (the
Proposed Action and action
alternatives). The Final Supplemental
EIS summarizes cumulative impacts
from the land exchange on all resources
and land uses, including an evaluation
of potential impacts to Native American
traditional values. The Final
Supplemental EIS also addresses any
significant new information or
circumstances that are relevant to
analyzing the impacts of the land
exchange or RMP amendments.
The Proposed Action (Agency
Preferred Alternative) is to complete the
Ray Land Exchange between the BLM
and ASARCO. The Selected Lands
consist of public lands that total 8,196
acres of full estate and 2,780 acres of
subsurface mineral estate only in Pinal
and Gila Counties in Arizona. The
Offered Lands consist of ASARCO
owned lands that total 6,944 acres of
full estate and 360 acres of surface estate
only located in Pinal and Mohave
Counties in Arizona. The Offered Lands
are private inholdings within the
jurisdictional boundaries of the Tucson
and Kingman Field Offices of the BLM.
The Final Supplemental EIS also
includes a No Action Alternative under
which no land exchange would occur
nor would the Phoenix, Lower Sonoran,
or Safford District RMPs need to be
amended. Two additional action
alternatives are also analyzed. The
Buckeye Land Exchange Alternative
involves reducing the total acreages
disposed of and acquired in the land
exchange. The amount of the Selected
Lands under this alternative is reduced
to approximately 10,176 acres from
approximately 10,976 acres by
excluding about 800 acres in the Copper
Butte area, and removing 640 acres of
the McCracken Mountains Parcels from
the Offered Lands. The Copper Butte
Land Exchange Alternative also
involves a reduced acreage exchange.
The Copper Butte Land Exchange
Alternative would reduce the total
acreage of the Selected Lands to
approximately 9,161 acres from
approximately 10,976 acres by
excluding acres in the Copper Butte
area, and removing 1,703 acres of the
McCracken Mountains Parcels from the
Offered Lands.
RMP amendments to the Phoenix,
Lower Sonoran, and Safford RMPs are
required, as most of the Selected Lands
have not been designated for disposal
through previous BLM planning
processes. The BLM’s selected RMP
Amendments decisions will change
certain land tenure designations from
‘‘retention’’ to ‘‘disposal’’ of 10,976
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16:55 Jul 11, 2019
Jkt 247001
acres for the Phoenix, Lower Sonoran,
and Safford RMPs:
1. Approximately 9,906 acres
designated in the Phoenix RMP as part
of the White Canyon Resource
Conservation Area to be changed from
retention to disposal; and
2. Approximately 637 acres
designated in the Lower Sonoran RMP
to be changed from retention to
disposal; and
3. Approximately 433 acres
designated in the Safford District RMP
as part of the former Safford District
Long-Term Management Area to be
changed from retention to disposal.
The Proposed Action and alternatives
presented and analyzed in the Final
Supplemental EIS are the same as those
presented and analyzed in the Final EIS.
However, since updated appraisals
revealed in 2018 that the value of the
Selected Lands had increased, omitting
some of these lands will be necessary to
comply with the statutory requirement
that the Federal and private lands to be
exchanged be in equal value, with no
more than a 25 percent cash
equalization payment included.
Therefore, the BLM’s final decision will
require a modification of the Proposed
Action presented in the Final
Supplemental EIS. Based on the 2018
appraisals, BLM likely would dispose of
only 9,339 acres (7,196 acres of full
estate and 2,143 acres of subsurface
mineral estate only, the surface of which
is owned by ASARCO). ASARCO would
be required to make up the difference in
value with a cash equalization payment.
The BLM was not required to conduct
scoping for the Supplemental EIS.
However, the agency has conducted
public outreach activities to inform the
public and answer questions regarding
the proposed land exchange. The efforts
included conducting four public
meetings, contacting persons on an
updated mailing list persons via
postcard and newsletter, providing a
detailed project website, and
interviewing key stakeholders to present
the land exchange details and answer
questions.
The formal 90-day public comment
period for the Draft Supplemental EIS
began on November 17, 2017, with the
publication of a Notice of Availability
by the Environmental Protection Agency
in the Federal Register (82 FR 54408),
and ended on February 16, 2018. Public
comments were used to inform this
Final Supplemental EIS and proposed
plan amendments. Public comments
resulted in the addition of clarifying
text, but did not significantly change the
environmental analysis or proposed
plan amendment decisions. The BLM
has responded to substantive comments
PO 00000
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
33285
and made appropriate revisions to the
Final Supplemental EIS, or explained
why a comment did not warrant a
change.
All protests on the land tenure
designation changes from ‘‘retention’’ to
‘‘disposal’’ must be in writing and
submitted, as set forth in the DATES and
ADDRESSES sections.
The BLM Director will render a
written decision on each land use plan
protest. The decision will be mailed to
the protesting party. The decision of the
BLM Director shall be the final decision
of the Department of the Interior on
each land use plan protest. Responses to
land use plan protest issues will be
compiled and formalized in a Director’s
Protest Resolution Report made
available following issuance of the
decisions.
Upon resolution of all land use plan
protests, the BLM will issue a Record of
Decision, which will include
information on any further
opportunities for public involvement.
Before including your address, phone
number, email address, or other
personal identifying information in your
protest, you should be aware that your
entire protest—including your personal
identifying information—may be made
publicly available at any time. While
you can ask us in your protest to
withhold your personal identifying
information from public review, we
cannot guarantee that we will be able to
do so.
(Authority: 40 CFR 1506.6, 40 CFR 1506.10,
43 CFR 1610.2, 43 CFR 1610.5)
A. Scott Feldhausen,
Gila District Manager.
[FR Doc. 2019–14714 Filed 7–11–19; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–32–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Land Management
[LLWY921000, L71220000.EU0000,
LVTFKX899020,18XL8069TF, WYW182550]
Notice of Realty Action: NonCompetitive (Direct) Sale of Public
Lands in Big Horn County, WY (Merit,
10.53 Acres)
Bureau of Land Management,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice of realty action.
AGENCY:
The Bureau of Land
Management (BLM) proposes a noncompetitive (direct) sale of 10.53 acres
of public land in Big Horn County,
Wyoming, to Merit Energy Company for
the purpose of resolving an inadvertent
unauthorized use of public lands. The
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\12JYN1.SGM
12JYN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 84, Number 134 (Friday, July 12, 2019)]
[Notices]
[Pages 33284-33285]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2019-14714]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Land Management
[XXX.LLAZG02000.71220000.KD0000.LVTFA0958340; AZA3116]
Notice of Availability of the Ray Land Exchange Final
Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement/Proposed Resource
Management Plan Amendments, Arizona
AGENCY: Bureau of Land Management, Interior.
ACTION: Notice of availability.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: In accordance with the National Environmental Policy Act of
1969, as amended, and Federal Land Policy and Management Act of 1976,
as amended, the Bureau of Land Management (BLM), Gila District, Tucson
Field Office has prepared a Final Supplemental Environmental Impact
Statement (EIS)/Proposed Resource Management Plan (RMP) Amendments for
the Ray Land Exchange and by this notice is announcing its
availability.
DATES: BLM planning regulations state that any person who meets the
conditions as described in the regulations may protest the BLM's
proposed RMP amendments, which will change certain land tenure
designations from ``retention'' to ``disposal'' for the Phoenix, Lower
Sonoran, and Safford RMPs. A person who meets the conditions and files
a protest must file the protest within 30 days of the date that the
Environmental Protection Agency publishes its Notice of Availability in
the Federal Register.
ADDRESSES: You may review the Final Supplemental EIS/Proposed RMP
Amendments for the Ray Land Exchange at https://go.usa.gov/xEnKR.
Instructions for filing a protest with the Director of the BLM
regarding the Proposed RMP Amendments may be found online at https://www.blm.gov/programs/planning-and-nepa/public-participation/filing-a-plan-protest and at 43 CFR 1610.6-2.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Project Manager Michael Werner,
telephone 602-417-9561; address: One North Central Avenue, Suite 800,
Phoenix, AZ 85004-4427; email: [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 Mr. Werner during normal
business hours. The FRS is available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, to
leave a message or question. You will receive a reply during normal
business hours.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The BLM Gila District, Tucson Field Office,
is issuing the Final Supplemental EIS/Proposed RMP Amendments for the
Ray Land Exchange to supplement the environmental impact analysis in
the original Ray Land Exchange/RMP Amendments Final EIS completed by
the BLM in 1999. ASARCO LLC (ASARCO) proposed the Ray Land Exchange
with the BLM in order to acquire up to 10,976 acres of public lands and
federally owned mineral estate adjacent to its Ray Complex (Ray Mine
and associated processing facilities near Hayden, AZ) and in the Casa
Grande, AZ vicinity (the Selected Lands). In exchange, ASARCO is
offering to the BLM 7,304 acres of private lands identified by the BLM
as desirable for consolidating checkerboard land ownership and
improving access to existing Federal land for traditional uses such as
hunting and other recreation (the Offered Lands).
Through the exchange, the BLM has an opportunity to improve
resource management efficiency by disposing of heavily encumbered,
isolated, and difficult-to-manage public lands; and support Secretarial
Order 3373 by acquiring lands that will consolidate ownership patterns
in order to improve public access and conserve important natural
resources. By acquiring the Selected Lands, ASARCO is seeking to
consolidate its land holdings within and near areas of ongoing mineral
development and to use the Selected Lands to support current and future
mining-related operations.
The Proposed Action and alternatives presented and analyzed in the
Final Supplemental EIS are the same as those presented and analyzed in
the 1999 Final EIS. The Final Supplemental EIS supplements the 1999
Final EIS by providing clarifying analysis of potential environmental
impacts of the land exchange and alternatives. Specifically, the Final
Supplemental EIS analyzes and compares the effects of the land exchange
on the foreseeable mining operations conducted on Federal lands under
BLM regulations (the No Action Alternative) with the effects of the
land exchange on the foreseeable mining operations conducted all or
[[Page 33285]]
partially on private lands under applicable State and Federal laws (the
Proposed Action and action alternatives). The Final Supplemental EIS
summarizes cumulative impacts from the land exchange on all resources
and land uses, including an evaluation of potential impacts to Native
American traditional values. The Final Supplemental EIS also addresses
any significant new information or circumstances that are relevant to
analyzing the impacts of the land exchange or RMP amendments.
The Proposed Action (Agency Preferred Alternative) is to complete
the Ray Land Exchange between the BLM and ASARCO. The Selected Lands
consist of public lands that total 8,196 acres of full estate and 2,780
acres of subsurface mineral estate only in Pinal and Gila Counties in
Arizona. The Offered Lands consist of ASARCO owned lands that total
6,944 acres of full estate and 360 acres of surface estate only located
in Pinal and Mohave Counties in Arizona. The Offered Lands are private
inholdings within the jurisdictional boundaries of the Tucson and
Kingman Field Offices of the BLM.
The Final Supplemental EIS also includes a No Action Alternative
under which no land exchange would occur nor would the Phoenix, Lower
Sonoran, or Safford District RMPs need to be amended. Two additional
action alternatives are also analyzed. The Buckeye Land Exchange
Alternative involves reducing the total acreages disposed of and
acquired in the land exchange. The amount of the Selected Lands under
this alternative is reduced to approximately 10,176 acres from
approximately 10,976 acres by excluding about 800 acres in the Copper
Butte area, and removing 640 acres of the McCracken Mountains Parcels
from the Offered Lands. The Copper Butte Land Exchange Alternative also
involves a reduced acreage exchange. The Copper Butte Land Exchange
Alternative would reduce the total acreage of the Selected Lands to
approximately 9,161 acres from approximately 10,976 acres by excluding
acres in the Copper Butte area, and removing 1,703 acres of the
McCracken Mountains Parcels from the Offered Lands.
RMP amendments to the Phoenix, Lower Sonoran, and Safford RMPs are
required, as most of the Selected Lands have not been designated for
disposal through previous BLM planning processes. The BLM's selected
RMP Amendments decisions will change certain land tenure designations
from ``retention'' to ``disposal'' of 10,976 acres for the Phoenix,
Lower Sonoran, and Safford RMPs:
1. Approximately 9,906 acres designated in the Phoenix RMP as part
of the White Canyon Resource Conservation Area to be changed from
retention to disposal; and
2. Approximately 637 acres designated in the Lower Sonoran RMP to
be changed from retention to disposal; and
3. Approximately 433 acres designated in the Safford District RMP
as part of the former Safford District Long-Term Management Area to be
changed from retention to disposal.
The Proposed Action and alternatives presented and analyzed in the
Final Supplemental EIS are the same as those presented and analyzed in
the Final EIS. However, since updated appraisals revealed in 2018 that
the value of the Selected Lands had increased, omitting some of these
lands will be necessary to comply with the statutory requirement that
the Federal and private lands to be exchanged be in equal value, with
no more than a 25 percent cash equalization payment included.
Therefore, the BLM's final decision will require a modification of the
Proposed Action presented in the Final Supplemental EIS. Based on the
2018 appraisals, BLM likely would dispose of only 9,339 acres (7,196
acres of full estate and 2,143 acres of subsurface mineral estate only,
the surface of which is owned by ASARCO). ASARCO would be required to
make up the difference in value with a cash equalization payment.
The BLM was not required to conduct scoping for the Supplemental
EIS. However, the agency has conducted public outreach activities to
inform the public and answer questions regarding the proposed land
exchange. The efforts included conducting four public meetings,
contacting persons on an updated mailing list persons via postcard and
newsletter, providing a detailed project website, and interviewing key
stakeholders to present the land exchange details and answer questions.
The formal 90-day public comment period for the Draft Supplemental
EIS began on November 17, 2017, with the publication of a Notice of
Availability by the Environmental Protection Agency in the Federal
Register (82 FR 54408), and ended on February 16, 2018. Public comments
were used to inform this Final Supplemental EIS and proposed plan
amendments. Public comments resulted in the addition of clarifying
text, but did not significantly change the environmental analysis or
proposed plan amendment decisions. The BLM has responded to substantive
comments and made appropriate revisions to the Final Supplemental EIS,
or explained why a comment did not warrant a change.
All protests on the land tenure designation changes from
``retention'' to ``disposal'' must be in writing and submitted, as set
forth in the DATES and ADDRESSES sections.
The BLM Director will render a written decision on each land use
plan protest. The decision will be mailed to the protesting party. The
decision of the BLM Director shall be the final decision of the
Department of the Interior on each land use plan protest. Responses to
land use plan protest issues will be compiled and formalized in a
Director's Protest Resolution Report made available following issuance
of the decisions.
Upon resolution of all land use plan protests, the BLM will issue a
Record of Decision, which will include information on any further
opportunities for public involvement. Before including your address,
phone number, email address, or other personal identifying information
in your protest, you should be aware that your entire protest--
including your personal identifying information--may be made publicly
available at any time. While you can ask us in your protest to withhold
your personal identifying information from public review, we cannot
guarantee that we will be able to do so.
(Authority: 40 CFR 1506.6, 40 CFR 1506.10, 43 CFR 1610.2, 43 CFR
1610.5)
A. Scott Feldhausen,
Gila District Manager.
[FR Doc. 2019-14714 Filed 7-11-19; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310-32-P