Washington Office; Fire and Aviation Management; Nationwide Aerial Application of Fire Retardant on National Forest System Land SEIS, 51403-51405 [2020-17651]
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51403
Notices
Federal Register
Vol. 85, No. 162
Thursday, August 20, 2020
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER
contains documents other than rules or
proposed rules that are applicable to the
public. Notices of hearings and investigations,
committee meetings, agency decisions and
rulings, delegations of authority, filing of
petitions and applications and agency
statements of organization and functions are
examples of documents appearing in this
section.
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Forest Service
Information Collection; Disposal of
Mineral Materials
Forest Service, USDA.
Notice; request for comment.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
In accordance with the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, the
Forest Service is seeking comments
from all interested individuals and
organizations on the extension of a
currently approved information
collection, Disposal of Mineral
Materials.
SUMMARY:
Comments must be received in
writing on or before October 19, 2020 to
be assured of consideration. Comments
received after that date will be
considered to the extent practicable.
ADDRESSES: Comments concerning this
notice should be addressed to Bradford
Campbell, Geologist, USDA Forest
Service, Minerals and Geology
Management, 26 Fort Missoula Road,
Missoula, MT 59804.
Comments also may be submitted via
facsimile to 303–275–5122 or by email
to: bradford.campbell@usda.gov.
The public may inspect comments
received at the USDA Forest Service
Rocky Mountain Region, Minerals and
Geology Management, 1617 Cole
Boulevard, Lakewood, CO 80401 during
normal business hours.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Bradford Campbell, Geologist, Minerals
and Geology Management Staff,
bradford.campbell@usda.gov or 406–
329–3523.
Individuals who use
telecommunication devices for the deaf
(TDD) may call the Federal Relay
Service (FRS) at 1–800–877–8339
twenty-four hours a day, every day of
the year, including holidays.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Title: Disposal of Mineral Materials.
jbell on DSKJLSW7X2PROD with NOTICES
DATES:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:01 Aug 19, 2020
Jkt 250001
OMB Number: 0596–0081.
Expiration Date of Approval:
December 31, 2020.
Type of Request: Renewal of a
currently approved collection.
Abstract: The Mineral Materials Act
of 1947, as amended, and the Multiple
Use Mining Act of 1955, as amended,
authorize the Secretary of Agriculture to
permit disposal of petrified wood and
common varieties of sand, stone, gravel,
pumice, pumicite, cinders, clay, and
other similar materials on lands
administered by the USDA Forest
Service.
Individuals, organizations,
companies, or corporations interested in
mining mineral materials on National
Forest System lands may contact their
local Forest Service office to inquire
about mining mineral materials
opportunities, to learn about areas on
which such activities are permitted, and
to request form FS–2800–9 (Contract of
Sale for Minerals Materials). Interested
parties are asked to provide information
that includes the purchaser’s name and
address, the location and dimensions of
the area to be mined, the kind of
material that will be mined, the quantity
of material to be mined, the sales price
of the mined material, the payment
schedule, the amount of the bond, and
the period of the contract.
The collected information enables the
Forest Service to document planned
operations, to prescribe the terms and
conditions the agency deems necessary
to protect surface resources, and to
affect a binding contract agreement.
Forest Service employees will evaluate
the collected information to ensure that
entities applying to mine mineral
materials are financially accountable
and will conduct their activities in
accordance with the mineral regulations
of Title 36, Code of Federal Regulations,
Part 228, Subpart C (36 CFR part 228).
If this information is not collected, the
Forest Service would be unable to
comply with Federal regulations to
mine mineral materials, and operations
could cause undue damage to surface
resources.
Estimate of Annual Burden: 2.5 hours.
Type of Respondents: Mineral
materials operators.
Estimated Annual Number of
Respondents: 2,626.
Estimated Annual Number of
Responses per Respondent: 1.
Estimated Total Annual Burden on
Respondents: 6,565 hours.
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Estimated annual number of
respondents is based on the average
number of respondents in 2014 through
2016. This number is lower than
previous renewal estimates, thus the
estimated total annual burden on
respondents is lower than the most
recent renewal.
Comment is invited: Comment is
invited on: (1) Whether this collection
of information is necessary for the stated
purposes and the proper performance of
the functions of the Agency, including
whether the information will have
practical or scientific utility; (2) the
accuracy of the Agency’s estimate of the
burden of the collection of information,
including the validity of the
methodology and assumptions used; (3)
ways to enhance the quality, utility, and
clarity of the information to be
collected; and (4) ways to minimize the
burden of the collection of information
on respondents, including the use of
automated, electronic, mechanical, or
other technological collection
techniques or other forms of information
technology.
All comments received in response to
this notice, including names and
addresses when provided, will be a
matter of public record. Comments will
be summarized and included in the
submission request toward Office of
Management and Budget approval.
Jacqueline Emanuel,
Acting Associate Deputy Chief, National
Forest System.
[FR Doc. 2020–18194 Filed 8–19–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3411–15–P
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Forest Service
Washington Office; Fire and Aviation
Management; Nationwide Aerial
Application of Fire Retardant on
National Forest System Land SEIS
Forest Service, Agriculture
(USDA).
ACTION: Notice of intent to prepare a
supplemental environmental impact
statement.
AGENCY:
The USDA Forest Service is
preparing a programmatic Supplemental
Environmental Impact Statement (SEIS)
for the Nationwide Aerial Application
of Fire Retardant on National Forest
System Land. The direction in the SEIS
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\20AUN1.SGM
20AUN1
51404
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 162 / Thursday, August 20, 2020 / Notices
will apply to use of aerially delivered
fire retardant on all National Forest
System land. The responsible official for
this action is the Deputy Chief of the
National Forest System.
DATES: The draft Supplemental EIS is
expected September 2020 and the final
EIS is expected September 2021.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Laura Conway (Natural Resource
Specialist) by email at laura.conway@
usda.gov or by phone at 406–329–3956,
between 8:00 a.m. and 4:30 p.m.,
Mountain Time, Monday through
Friday. Individuals who 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:
Purpose and Need for Action
The overall purpose in the Aerial
Application of Fire Retardant on
National Forest System Land
Environmental Impact Statement has
not changed. Adopting the proposed
action would give the Forest Service the
ability to reduce future wildfire
intensities and rates of spread under
certain circumstances until ground
forces can safely take suppression action
over the duration of an incident. High
fire intensities and rates of spread
greatly reduce the ability of groundbased firefighters to safely fight
wildland fires. In addition, the remote
locations and rugged topography
associated with many wildland fires can
delay the deployment of ground forces
for suppression. In some situations,
firefighters need the ability to quickly
reduce rates of spread and intensities of
wildland fires, often in remote
locations, until ground forces can safely
take suppression action or until a
wildfire is contained or controlled. The
purpose of Supplementing the
Environmental Impact Statement is to
address new information and changed
conditions since the signed decision in
2011.
jbell on DSKJLSW7X2PROD with NOTICES
Proposed Action
This proposal would allow aerially
applied fire retardants, included now or
in the future on the Forest Service
Qualified Products List, to be used on
National Forest System lands. The
current Qualified Products List can be
found at the following website: https://
www.fs.fed.us/rm/fire/wfcs/index.htm.
The proposal would protect resources
and continue to improve the
documentation of retardant effects
through reporting, monitoring, and
application coordination. Aerial
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:01 Aug 19, 2020
Jkt 250001
retardant drops are not allowed in
mapped avoidance areas for Endangered
Species Act Threatened, Endangered,
Proposed, or Candidate species; mapped
avoidance areas for certain Regional
Forester Sensitive Species; or in
waterways or their buffers, mapped or
not, where water is present; or
avoidance areas mapped by the local
unit. This national direction is
mandatory and would be implemented
in all cases except where human life or
public safety are threatened and
retardant use in the avoidance area
could be reasonably expected to
alleviate the fire threat. When an
application occurs inside avoidance
areas for any reason, hereafter referred
to as an intrusion, it would be reported,
assessed for impacts, monitored, and
remediated as necessary. Also included
is direction to better protect important
heritage, cultural, and tribal resources
and sacred sites based on site specific
recommendations.
This alternative includes the
following components: Aircraft
Operational Guidance; Avoidance Area
Mapping Requirements; Annual
Coordination and Reporting and
Monitoring Requirements; and
Procedures for environmental clearance
when there are additions to the
Qualified Products List.
Aircraft Operational Guidance
Operational guidance helps ensure
that retardant drops are not made within
waterways or mapped avoidance areas.
Whenever practical, as determined by
the agency administrator and incident
commander, the Forest Service will use
water, other suppressants, or less toxic
qualified fire retardants in areas
occupied by Endangered Species Act
Threatened, Endangered, Candidate or
Proposed species or their designated
critical habitats, or habitats for Regional
Forester Sensitive Species. Some of
these species and habitats require that
only water be used to protect their
habitat and populations; these habitats
and populations have been mapped as
avoidance areas. Incident commanders
and pilots are required to avoid aerial
application of fire retardant in mapped
avoidance areas for designated species
and habitat, or within the prescribed
buffers on either side of waterways with
water present.
These guidelines shall not require
pilots to fly in a manner that endangers
their aircraft or other aircraft or
structures, or that compromises the
safety of ground personnel or the public.
• Operational guidance to ensure
retardant drops are not made within
prescribed buffers on either side of
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Frm 00002
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
waterways or within mapped avoidance
areas for species:
Medium/Heavy Airtankers, Single
Engine Airtankers, and Helicopters:
When approaching mapped avoidance
areas, waterways, or riparian vegetation
visible to the pilot, the pilot will
terminate the application of retardant
approximately 300 feet before reaching
the mapped avoidance area or
waterway. When flying over a mapped
avoidance area waterway, or riparian
vegetation, the pilot will wait one
second after crossing the far border of an
avoidance area or bank of a waterway
before applying retardant. Pilots will
make adjustments for airspeed and
ambient conditions such as wind to
avoid the application of retardant
within the prescribed buffer zone or
mapped avoidance areas.
• Protection of cultural resources,
including historic properties, traditional
cultural resources, and sacred sites:
These resources cannot be mapped
using a national protocol or addressed
with a standard prescription that would
apply to all instances. Therefore, they
will be given case-by-case consideration
when ordering the aerial application of
fire retardant. As necessary, incident
commanders would consider the effects
of aerial applications on known or
suspected historic properties, any
identified traditional cultural resources,
and sacred sites. Cultural resources
specialists, archaeologists, and tribal
liaisons would assist in the
consideration of effects and alternatives
for protection.
Avoidance Areas Mapping
Requirements
Identified avoidance areas are:
• Aquatic Avoidance Areas:
Æ Waterways and their buffers
(including but not limited to perennial
streams, intermittent streams, lakes,
ponds, identified springs, reservoirs,
vernal pools, and riparian vegetation)
where water is present at the time of
retardant application.
Æ Aquatic buffer zones shall be no
less than 300 feet on either side of a
waterway.
• Endangered Species Act
Threatened, Endangered, Proposed, and
Candidate Species and Regional
Forester Sensitive Species Avoidance
Areas:
Æ Where aerial application of fire
retardant may affect one or more
federally listed threatened, Endangered,
Proposed or Candidate plant or animal
species or critical habitat, specify
avoidance areas to minimize impacts.
Æ Where aerial application of fire
retardant may impact certain Regional
Forester Sensitive Species or their
E:\FR\FM\20AUN1.SGM
20AUN1
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 162 / Thursday, August 20, 2020 / Notices
habitat, specify avoidance areas to
minimize impacts.
Æ Mapping of waterways that are dry
at the time of retardant application is
not required, but may be included in
avoidance areas where there is a
potential for downstream indirect
effects to occur.
Æ Avoidance Areas may be adjusted
for local conditions. Adjustments
related to Endangered Species Act
threatened, Endangered, Proposed, and
Candidate species will be coordinated
with the local offices of the United
States Department of Interior Fish and
Wildlife Service and National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration
National Marine Fisheries Service,
hereinafter referred to as the Services.
All forests and grasslands would
review and update maps annually,
following current national mapping
protocols.
jbell on DSKJLSW7X2PROD with NOTICES
Annual Coordination
The Forest Service would coordinate
annually with:
• Local services offices;
• Aviation managers and pilots; and
• Cooperators/other agencies.
Coordination would ensure
requirements of the provisions of the
proposal are met, maintain
relationships, and allow resolutions of
problems at the lowest level. Guidance
on coordination meetings would be
provided in an implementation guide.
Reporting and Monitoring
Requirements
The Forest Service would maintain a
database for reporting intrusions of
aerially applied fire retardant into
avoidance areas. Intrusion reporting
requirements would be described in an
implementation guide, including
requirements of upward reporting to the
Services for an intrusion report into an
avoidance area for a Threatened,
Endangered, Proposed, or Candidate
species or critical habitat. Annually, the
Forest Service would provide summary
reports of retardant use and intrusions,
as well as a listing of intrusions and a
summary of observations and actions for
each intrusion.
If a retardant drop occurs on a
cultural resource, a traditional cultural
property, or a sacred site, then the site
condition would be assessed by a
qualified archaeologist and reported to
the State Historic Preservation Officer
and, if appropriate, tribal
representatives including the Tribal
Historic Preservation Officer. If the
affected resource is a sacred site, or a
traditional cultural property, then tribal
notification and consultation would be
required as part of the determination of
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:01 Aug 19, 2020
Jkt 250001
effects. If the effect is found to be
adverse, then the agency would consult
with the tribe to determine an
appropriate course of action to mitigate
or resolve the adverse effect.
Procedures when there are Additions to
the Qualified Products List
Private companies submit retardants
to the Forest Service for qualification.
New products or new formulations of
existing products must meet the Forest
Service specification for long-term
retardant (United States Department of
Agriculture, Forest Service,
Specification 5100–304d Long-term
Retardant, Wildland Firefighting, posted
January 7, 2020 at: https://
www.fs.fed.us/rm/fire/wfcs/ret.htm)
before they are included on the
Qualified Products List. Any retardant
that meets the specifications and is
added to the Qualified Products List is
included in this proposal. In addition,
Endangered Species Act requirements
will be met as follows:
• Products or new formulations that
have the same or similar constituents as
evaluated in the biological assessment
and biological opinions, and do not
exceed the upper limits of those
components do not require additional
consultation. The Services will be
notified of additions to the Qualified
Products list.
• Products or new formulations that
do not meet the above criteria will result
in re-initiation of consultation with the
Services. The product is not eligible for
the Qualified Products List until all
required tests and consultation are
completed.
Responsible Official
The responsible official will be Chris
French, Deputy Chief, Forest System.
Nature of Decision To Be Made
The decision to be made is whether to
continue aerial application of fire
retardant, and if so, whether to do so
under the proposed action or any
potential alternatives.
Authority: 36 CFR 220.5.
Allen Rowley,
Associate Deputy Chief, National Forest
System.
[FR Doc. 2020–17651 Filed 8–19–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3411–15–P
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51405
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Forest Service
Information Collection; Request for
Comment; National Visitor Use
Monitoring
Forest Service, USDA.
Notice; request for comment.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
In accordance with the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, the
Forest Service is seeking comments
from all interested individuals and
organizations on the extension of a
currently approved information
collection, National Visitor Use
Monitoring (0596–0110).
DATES: Comments must be received in
writing on or before October 19, 2020 to
be assured of consideration. Comments
received after that date will be
considered to the extent practicable.
ADDRESSES: Comments concerning this
notice should be addressed to Dr.
Donald B.K. English, Recreation,
Heritage, and Volunteer Resources,
Mailstop 1125, Forest Service, USDA,
1400 Independence Ave. SW,
Washington, DC 20250–1125.
Comments also may be submitted via
facsimile to 202–205–1145 or by email
to: don.english@usda.gov. The public
may request copies of comments
received by emailing Dr. English.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Dr.
Donald B.K. English, Recreation,
Heritage, and Volunteer Resources staff,
at 202–205–9595. Individuals who use
telecommunication devices for the deaf
(TDD) may call the Federal Relay
Service (FRS) at 1–800–877–8339,
between 8 a.m. and 8 p.m. Eastern
Standard Time, Monday through Friday.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Title: National Visitor Use
Monitoring.
OMB Number: 0596–0110.
Expiration Date of Approval: August
31, 2017.
Type of Request: Extension with
revision.
Abstract: The Government
Performance and Results Act of 1993
requires that Federal agencies establish
measurable goals and monitor their
success at meeting those goals. Two of
the items the Forest Service must
measure are: (1) The number of visits
that occur on the National Forest
System lands for recreation and other
purposes, and (2) the views and
satisfaction levels of recreational
visitors to National Forest System lands
about the services, facilities, and
settings. The Agency receives requests
for this kind of information from a
variety of organizations, including
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\20AUN1.SGM
20AUN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 85, Number 162 (Thursday, August 20, 2020)]
[Notices]
[Pages 51403-51405]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2020-17651]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Forest Service
Washington Office; Fire and Aviation Management; Nationwide
Aerial Application of Fire Retardant on National Forest System Land
SEIS
AGENCY: Forest Service, Agriculture (USDA).
ACTION: Notice of intent to prepare a supplemental environmental impact
statement.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The USDA Forest Service is preparing a programmatic
Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement (SEIS) for the Nationwide
Aerial Application of Fire Retardant on National Forest System Land.
The direction in the SEIS
[[Page 51404]]
will apply to use of aerially delivered fire retardant on all National
Forest System land. The responsible official for this action is the
Deputy Chief of the National Forest System.
DATES: The draft Supplemental EIS is expected September 2020 and the
final EIS is expected September 2021.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Laura Conway (Natural Resource
Specialist) by email at [email protected] or by phone at 406-329-
3956, between 8:00 a.m. and 4:30 p.m., Mountain Time, Monday through
Friday. Individuals who 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:
Purpose and Need for Action
The overall purpose in the Aerial Application of Fire Retardant on
National Forest System Land Environmental Impact Statement has not
changed. Adopting the proposed action would give the Forest Service the
ability to reduce future wildfire intensities and rates of spread under
certain circumstances until ground forces can safely take suppression
action over the duration of an incident. High fire intensities and
rates of spread greatly reduce the ability of ground-based firefighters
to safely fight wildland fires. In addition, the remote locations and
rugged topography associated with many wildland fires can delay the
deployment of ground forces for suppression. In some situations,
firefighters need the ability to quickly reduce rates of spread and
intensities of wildland fires, often in remote locations, until ground
forces can safely take suppression action or until a wildfire is
contained or controlled. The purpose of Supplementing the Environmental
Impact Statement is to address new information and changed conditions
since the signed decision in 2011.
Proposed Action
This proposal would allow aerially applied fire retardants,
included now or in the future on the Forest Service Qualified Products
List, to be used on National Forest System lands. The current Qualified
Products List can be found at the following website: https://www.fs.fed.us/rm/fire/wfcs/index.htm. The proposal would protect
resources and continue to improve the documentation of retardant
effects through reporting, monitoring, and application coordination.
Aerial retardant drops are not allowed in mapped avoidance areas for
Endangered Species Act Threatened, Endangered, Proposed, or Candidate
species; mapped avoidance areas for certain Regional Forester Sensitive
Species; or in waterways or their buffers, mapped or not, where water
is present; or avoidance areas mapped by the local unit. This national
direction is mandatory and would be implemented in all cases except
where human life or public safety are threatened and retardant use in
the avoidance area could be reasonably expected to alleviate the fire
threat. When an application occurs inside avoidance areas for any
reason, hereafter referred to as an intrusion, it would be reported,
assessed for impacts, monitored, and remediated as necessary. Also
included is direction to better protect important heritage, cultural,
and tribal resources and sacred sites based on site specific
recommendations.
This alternative includes the following components: Aircraft
Operational Guidance; Avoidance Area Mapping Requirements; Annual
Coordination and Reporting and Monitoring Requirements; and Procedures
for environmental clearance when there are additions to the Qualified
Products List.
Aircraft Operational Guidance
Operational guidance helps ensure that retardant drops are not made
within waterways or mapped avoidance areas.
Whenever practical, as determined by the agency administrator and
incident commander, the Forest Service will use water, other
suppressants, or less toxic qualified fire retardants in areas occupied
by Endangered Species Act Threatened, Endangered, Candidate or Proposed
species or their designated critical habitats, or habitats for Regional
Forester Sensitive Species. Some of these species and habitats require
that only water be used to protect their habitat and populations; these
habitats and populations have been mapped as avoidance areas. Incident
commanders and pilots are required to avoid aerial application of fire
retardant in mapped avoidance areas for designated species and habitat,
or within the prescribed buffers on either side of waterways with water
present.
These guidelines shall not require pilots to fly in a manner that
endangers their aircraft or other aircraft or structures, or that
compromises the safety of ground personnel or the public.
Operational guidance to ensure retardant drops are not
made within prescribed buffers on either side of waterways or within
mapped avoidance areas for species:
Medium/Heavy Airtankers, Single Engine Airtankers, and Helicopters:
When approaching mapped avoidance areas, waterways, or riparian
vegetation visible to the pilot, the pilot will terminate the
application of retardant approximately 300 feet before reaching the
mapped avoidance area or waterway. When flying over a mapped avoidance
area waterway, or riparian vegetation, the pilot will wait one second
after crossing the far border of an avoidance area or bank of a
waterway before applying retardant. Pilots will make adjustments for
airspeed and ambient conditions such as wind to avoid the application
of retardant within the prescribed buffer zone or mapped avoidance
areas.
Protection of cultural resources, including historic
properties, traditional cultural resources, and sacred sites:
These resources cannot be mapped using a national protocol or
addressed with a standard prescription that would apply to all
instances. Therefore, they will be given case-by-case consideration
when ordering the aerial application of fire retardant. As necessary,
incident commanders would consider the effects of aerial applications
on known or suspected historic properties, any identified traditional
cultural resources, and sacred sites. Cultural resources specialists,
archaeologists, and tribal liaisons would assist in the consideration
of effects and alternatives for protection.
Avoidance Areas Mapping Requirements
Identified avoidance areas are:
Aquatic Avoidance Areas:
[cir] Waterways and their buffers (including but not limited to
perennial streams, intermittent streams, lakes, ponds, identified
springs, reservoirs, vernal pools, and riparian vegetation) where water
is present at the time of retardant application.
[cir] Aquatic buffer zones shall be no less than 300 feet on either
side of a waterway.
Endangered Species Act Threatened, Endangered, Proposed,
and Candidate Species and Regional Forester Sensitive Species Avoidance
Areas:
[cir] Where aerial application of fire retardant may affect one or
more federally listed threatened, Endangered, Proposed or Candidate
plant or animal species or critical habitat, specify avoidance areas to
minimize impacts.
[cir] Where aerial application of fire retardant may impact certain
Regional Forester Sensitive Species or their
[[Page 51405]]
habitat, specify avoidance areas to minimize impacts.
[cir] Mapping of waterways that are dry at the time of retardant
application is not required, but may be included in avoidance areas
where there is a potential for downstream indirect effects to occur.
[cir] Avoidance Areas may be adjusted for local conditions.
Adjustments related to Endangered Species Act threatened, Endangered,
Proposed, and Candidate species will be coordinated with the local
offices of the United States Department of Interior Fish and Wildlife
Service and National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration National
Marine Fisheries Service, hereinafter referred to as the Services.
All forests and grasslands would review and update maps annually,
following current national mapping protocols.
Annual Coordination
The Forest Service would coordinate annually with:
Local services offices;
Aviation managers and pilots; and
Cooperators/other agencies.
Coordination would ensure requirements of the provisions of the
proposal are met, maintain relationships, and allow resolutions of
problems at the lowest level. Guidance on coordination meetings would
be provided in an implementation guide.
Reporting and Monitoring Requirements
The Forest Service would maintain a database for reporting
intrusions of aerially applied fire retardant into avoidance areas.
Intrusion reporting requirements would be described in an
implementation guide, including requirements of upward reporting to the
Services for an intrusion report into an avoidance area for a
Threatened, Endangered, Proposed, or Candidate species or critical
habitat. Annually, the Forest Service would provide summary reports of
retardant use and intrusions, as well as a listing of intrusions and a
summary of observations and actions for each intrusion.
If a retardant drop occurs on a cultural resource, a traditional
cultural property, or a sacred site, then the site condition would be
assessed by a qualified archaeologist and reported to the State
Historic Preservation Officer and, if appropriate, tribal
representatives including the Tribal Historic Preservation Officer. If
the affected resource is a sacred site, or a traditional cultural
property, then tribal notification and consultation would be required
as part of the determination of effects. If the effect is found to be
adverse, then the agency would consult with the tribe to determine an
appropriate course of action to mitigate or resolve the adverse effect.
Procedures when there are Additions to the Qualified Products List
Private companies submit retardants to the Forest Service for
qualification. New products or new formulations of existing products
must meet the Forest Service specification for long-term retardant
(United States Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Specification
5100-304d Long-term Retardant, Wildland Firefighting, posted January 7,
2020 at: https://www.fs.fed.us/rm/fire/wfcs/ret.htm) before they are
included on the Qualified Products List. Any retardant that meets the
specifications and is added to the Qualified Products List is included
in this proposal. In addition, Endangered Species Act requirements will
be met as follows:
Products or new formulations that have the same or similar
constituents as evaluated in the biological assessment and biological
opinions, and do not exceed the upper limits of those components do not
require additional consultation. The Services will be notified of
additions to the Qualified Products list.
Products or new formulations that do not meet the above
criteria will result in re-initiation of consultation with the
Services. The product is not eligible for the Qualified Products List
until all required tests and consultation are completed.
Responsible Official
The responsible official will be Chris French, Deputy Chief, Forest
System.
Nature of Decision To Be Made
The decision to be made is whether to continue aerial application
of fire retardant, and if so, whether to do so under the proposed
action or any potential alternatives.
Authority: 36 CFR 220.5.
Allen Rowley,
Associate Deputy Chief, National Forest System.
[FR Doc. 2020-17651 Filed 8-19-20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3411-15-P