Black Hills National Forest; Lawrence, Meade, Pennington, Custer, and Fall River Counties, South Dakota; Crook and Weston Counties, Wyoming; Revision of the Land and Resource Management Plan for the Black Hills National Forest, 57408-57409 [2021-22537]
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57408
Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 197 / Friday, October 15, 2021 / Notices
the collection of information that such
persons are not required to respond to
the collection of information unless it
displays a currently valid OMB control
number.
Food and Nutrition Service
Title: School Meals Operations Study:
Evaluation of the COVID–19 Child
Nutrition Waivers and Child Nutrition
Programs.
Control Number: 0584–0607.
Summary of Collection: This is a
revision to a currently approved
information collection for the School
Meals Operations Study: State Agency
COVID–19 Child Nutrition Waivers
Evaluation (which has been renamed for
this revision). This collection is
necessary to provide up-to-date
information about child nutrition (CN)
program operations, including the use
and impact of the COVID–19 CN
nationwide waivers required by the
Families First Coronavirus Response
Act (FFCRA) (Pub. L. 116–127). The
annual data collected from this study
allows the Food and Nutrition Service
(FNS) to describe and assess program
operations, provide input for legislation
and regulations on the CN programs,
develop pertinent technical assistance
and training for program staff at the
State and School Food Authority (SFA)
levels, and inform the budget process.
This information is necessary for FNS to
understand how recent and proposed
legislation, regulations, policies, and
initiatives change the CN program
operations. Because the COVID–19
pandemic has changed the way that
school meal programs operate, with
other CN programs such as the Child
and Adult Care Food Program and the
Summer Food Service Program being
used in place of or in combination with
the National School Lunch and School
Breakfast Programs to provide meals to
students, this study will collect
administrative and web survey data
from the States on each of these
programs, and web survey data from
SFAs on the programs that they operate.
Need and Use of the Information:
This mandatory study will collect data
from the State CN and School Food
Authority (SFA) directors. The State CN
directors will complete two online
surveys in 2021 and 2022 and two statelevel administrative data collections
covering Fiscal Years 2021 and 2022.
The SFA directors (including those of
private schools) will complete one
online survey in 2021/2022. The statelevel collection activities will focus
primarily on collecting the data needed
to meet the congressionally-mandated
reporting requirements for the
nationwide CN COVID–19 waivers
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:50 Oct 14, 2021
Jkt 256001
specified in section 2202 of the FFCRA
and used in Fiscal Years 2021 and 2022.
The survey for the SFA directors will
focus on the financial impacts of the
COVID–19 pandemic and program
operations during School Years 2020–
2021 and 2021–2022. FNS will use the
data to assess meal service levels to
determine coverage within and across
states, look for patterns and trends
across site types, and assess how the
waivers were used and how they
improved services to children since, in
the absence of these waivers, meal
service may not have been possible. The
information will also inform FNS’s
planning, policy, and guidance related
to state and local meal service
operations during future emergency
situations and unanticipated school
closures.
Description of Respondents: State,
Local, or Tribal Government and Notfor-Profit Institutions.
Number of Respondents: 1,339.
Frequency of Responses: Reporting:
Annually.
Total Burden Hours: 4,116.
Levi S. Harrell,
Departmental Information Collection
Clearance Officer.
[FR Doc. 2021–22656 Filed 10–14–21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410–30–P
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Forest Service
Black Hills National Forest; Lawrence,
Meade, Pennington, Custer, and Fall
River Counties, South Dakota; Crook
and Weston Counties, Wyoming;
Revision of the Land and Resource
Management Plan for the Black Hills
National Forest
Forest Service, Agriculture
(USDA).
ACTION: Notice of initiating the
assessment phase of the Land
Management plan revision for the Black
Hills National Forest.
AGENCY:
The Forest Service, U.S.
Department of Agriculture, is initiating
the Land Management Plan revision
process, pursuant to the 2012 Planning
Rule (36 CFR 219) and as directed by
the National Forest Management Act, for
the Black Hills National Forest (Black
Hills), located in western South Dakota
and northeastern Wyoming. This
process will result in a revised Land
Management Plan which will guide all
resource management activities on the
Black Hills National Forest for
approximately fifteen years. This notice
announces the initiation of the
SUMMARY:
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
assessment phase, the preliminary stage
of the plan revision process.
Assessments will identify and consider
relevant and readily accessible material
about ecological, social, and economic
conditions and trends in the planning
area, including best available scientific
information. Findings will be
documented in assessment reports.
Trends and conditions identified in the
assessments will then help describe a
need to change the existing plan and
inform the revision of the Forest Plan.
DATES: In the fall and winter of 2021, the
public will be invited to engage and
participate in the assessment phase of
the revision process; engagement
opportunities will be posted on the
Black Hills National Forest Planning
website, located at https://
www.fs.usda.gov/goto/blackhills/forest
planrevision. The Black Hills will
conduct consultation with Tribes as part
of the assessment phase of revision.
Information will also be shared through
electronic mailing lists, social media,
and media outlets. If members of the
public are interested in learning more,
please visit the website listed above and
select the link to subscribe to updates
on the Black Hills Forest Plan Revision.
The public can also sign up by sending
an email to SM.FS.BlackhillFPR@
usda.gov.
The Forest Service will produce a set
of draft assessments for public review
and comment, expected around March
2022. The Forest Service will review
and incorporate public comments and
additional information from tribal
consultation on the draft assessments
and produce a final set of assessments
to inform plan revision for the Black
Hills National Forest. The Forest Service
may then initiate procedures pursuant
to the National Environmental Policy
Act (NEPA) to prepare a revised Land
Management Plan.
ADDRESSES: For questions about Land
Management Plan revision or comments
on initiating the assessment phase of
plan revision, please address mail to:
Black Hills National Forest, Attn: Lou
Conroy—Forest Plan Revision, 1019 N
5th Street, Custer, SD 57730, or via
email to SM.FS.BlackhillFPR@usda.gov.
All correspondence, including names
and addresses, will be part of the public
record.
More information on the planning
process can also be found on the Black
Hills National Forest Planning website
at https://www.fs.usda.gov/goto/
blackhills/forestplanrevision.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Lou
Conroy, Revision Team Leader, at
louie.conroy@usda.gov or by phone at
(605) 673–9200.
E:\FR\FM\15OCN1.SGM
15OCN1
Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 197 / Friday, October 15, 2021 / Notices
Individuals who use
telecommunication devices for the deaf/
hard-of-hearing (TDD) may call the
Federal Information Relay Service (FRS)
at 1–800–877–8339, 24 hours a day,
every day of the year, including
holidays.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
National Forest Management Act
(NFMA) of 1976 requires that the Forest
Service develop a Land and Resource
Management Plan, often called a Forest
Plan, for every national forest. Forest
Plans provide the strategic direction for
management of forest resources and are
amendable as conditions change over
time.
The Black Hills Forest Plan was first
released in 1983, revised in 1997, and
amended in 2006. The 2006 version
serves as the current Forest Plan for the
Black Hills National Forest.
This notice announces the start of the
first stage of the process, during which
updated information from the public,
Tribes, other government agencies, and
non-governmental parties, will be
compiled into assessment reports.
Information relevant to these reports
typically includes the status and trends
of ecological, social, and economic
conditions within the planning area and
across the broader landscape. Federal
Regulation (36 CFR 219.6) requires the
assessment of (1) Terrestrial ecosystems,
aquatic ecosystems, and watersheds; (2)
Air, soil, and water resources and
quality; (3) System drivers, including
dominant ecological processes,
disturbance regimes, and stressors, such
as natural succession, wildland fire,
invasive species, and climate change,
and the ability of terrestrial and aquatic
ecosytems in the plan area to adapt to
change; (4) Baseline assessment of
carbon stocks; (5) Threatened,
endangered, proposed, and candidate
species, and potential species of
conservation concern present in the
plan area; (6) Social, cultural, and
economic conditions; (7) Benefits
people obtain from the national forest
system planning area (ecosystem
services); (8) Multiple uses and their
contributions to local, regional, and
national economies; (9) Recreation
settings, opportunities and access, and
scenic character; (10); Renewable and
nonrenewable energy and mineral
resources; (11) Infrastructure, such as
recreational facilities and transporation
and utility corridors; (12) Areas of tribal
importance; (13) Cultural and historic
resources and uses; (14) Land status and
ownership and access patterns; and (15)
Existing designated areas located in the
plan area including wilderness and wild
and scenic rivers and potential need and
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:50 Oct 14, 2021
Jkt 256001
opportunity for additional designated
areas.
During this assessment phase, the
Forest Service invites other government
agencies, Tribes, non-governmental
parties, and the public to share
information about social, economic, and
environmental conditions of the Black
Hills National Forest and the broader
landscape. Existing information about
conditions on the Black Hills National
Forest, supplemented with information
gathered through public engagement
and tribal consultation, will be
integrated into final resource
assessments. The Forest Service will
host public outreach forums to share
progress and gather additional
information.
Responsible Official: The responsible
official for the revision of the land and
resource management plan for the Black
Hills National Forest is Jeff Tomac,
Forest Supervisor, Black Hills National
Forest, 1019 N 5th Street, Custer, SD
57730, phone 605–673–9200.
Dated: September 27, 2021.
Barnie Gyant,
Associate Deputy Chief, National Forest
System.
[FR Doc. 2021–22537 Filed 10–14–21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3411–15–P
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Rural Business-Cooperative Service
Rural Housing Service
Rural Utilities Service
[Docket No. RBS–21–BUSINESS–0034]
Strategic Economic and Community
Development Program
Rural Business-Cooperative
Service, Rural Housing Service, and
Rural Utilities Service, USDA.
ACTION: Notice of solicitation of
applications.
AGENCY:
The Deputy Under Secretary
for Rural Development (RD) is seeking
applications for the Strategic Economic
and Community Development (SECD)
priority, as reauthorized by Section
6401of the Agriculture Improvement
Act, 2018 (2018 Farm Bill) with
modifications, for projects that support
multi-jurisdictional and multi-sectoral
strategic community investment plans.
In Fiscal Year (FY) 2022, the Agency
will implement SECD by reserving loan
and or grant funds from the
appropriations of the programs covered
by this funding priority. This notice
describes the requirements by which the
Agency will consider projects eligible
SUMMARY:
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
57409
for the covered programs’ reserved
appropriated funds and the information
needed to submit an application.
DATES: To apply for SECD funding in FY
2022, applicants must submit Form RD
1980–88, ‘‘Strategic Economic and
Community Development (Section
6401),’’ with their program application
to the appropriate covered program.
Each of the seven covered programs
have different established deadlines for
receipt of applications. Please refer to
the Agency website or the appropriate
covered program’s Federal Register
Notice for deadline information. All
applicants are responsible for any
expenses incurred in preparing and
submitting applications.
ADDRESSES: This notice will be
announced on www.Grants.gov. SECD
applications, with the exception of
Community Connect Grant Program
SECD applications, must be submitted
to the USDA Rural Development Office
servicing the area where the project is
located. A list of the USDA Rural
Development State Offices can be found
at: https://www.rd.usda.gov/about-rd/
state-offices. Community Connect
applicants must submit SECD
applications electronically at: https://
www.rd.usda.gov/community-connect.
For lenders assigned an OneRD Loan
Guarantee Initiative Customer
Relationship Manager (CRM), SECD
applications must be submitted to their
assigned CRM.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
more information, please contact your
respective Rural Development State
Office listed here: https://
www.rd.usda.gov/about-rd/state-offices.
For all other inquiries, you may
contact Greg Batson, Rural Development
Innovation Center, U.S. Department of
Agriculture, Stop 0793, 1400
Independence Avenue SW, Washington,
DC 20250–0783, Telephone: (573) 239–
2945. Email: gregory.batson@usda.gov.
A checklist of all required application
information for regional planning
priority can be found at: https://
www.rd.usda.gov/programs-services/
strategic-economic-and-communitydevelopment.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
Section 6401 of the Agriculture
Improvement Act of 2018 (2018 Farm
Bill) re-authorized Section 6025 of the
Agricultural Act of 2014 (2014 Farm
Bill) with some modifications. Section
6401 of the 2018 Farm Bill enables the
Secretary of Agriculture to prioritize
projects that support multijurisdictional and multi-sectoral
strategic community investment plans
E:\FR\FM\15OCN1.SGM
15OCN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 86, Number 197 (Friday, October 15, 2021)]
[Notices]
[Pages 57408-57409]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2021-22537]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Forest Service
Black Hills National Forest; Lawrence, Meade, Pennington, Custer,
and Fall River Counties, South Dakota; Crook and Weston Counties,
Wyoming; Revision of the Land and Resource Management Plan for the
Black Hills National Forest
AGENCY: Forest Service, Agriculture (USDA).
ACTION: Notice of initiating the assessment phase of the Land
Management plan revision for the Black Hills National Forest.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Forest Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture, is
initiating the Land Management Plan revision process, pursuant to the
2012 Planning Rule (36 CFR 219) and as directed by the National Forest
Management Act, for the Black Hills National Forest (Black Hills),
located in western South Dakota and northeastern Wyoming. This process
will result in a revised Land Management Plan which will guide all
resource management activities on the Black Hills National Forest for
approximately fifteen years. This notice announces the initiation of
the assessment phase, the preliminary stage of the plan revision
process. Assessments will identify and consider relevant and readily
accessible material about ecological, social, and economic conditions
and trends in the planning area, including best available scientific
information. Findings will be documented in assessment reports. Trends
and conditions identified in the assessments will then help describe a
need to change the existing plan and inform the revision of the Forest
Plan.
DATES: In the fall and winter of 2021, the public will be invited to
engage and participate in the assessment phase of the revision process;
engagement opportunities will be posted on the Black Hills National
Forest Planning website, located at https://www.fs.usda.gov/goto/blackhills/forestplanrevision. The Black Hills will conduct
consultation with Tribes as part of the assessment phase of revision.
Information will also be shared through electronic mailing lists,
social media, and media outlets. If members of the public are
interested in learning more, please visit the website listed above and
select the link to subscribe to updates on the Black Hills Forest Plan
Revision. The public can also sign up by sending an email to
[email protected].
The Forest Service will produce a set of draft assessments for
public review and comment, expected around March 2022. The Forest
Service will review and incorporate public comments and additional
information from tribal consultation on the draft assessments and
produce a final set of assessments to inform plan revision for the
Black Hills National Forest. The Forest Service may then initiate
procedures pursuant to the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) to
prepare a revised Land Management Plan.
ADDRESSES: For questions about Land Management Plan revision or
comments on initiating the assessment phase of plan revision, please
address mail to: Black Hills National Forest, Attn: Lou Conroy--Forest
Plan Revision, 1019 N 5th Street, Custer, SD 57730, or via email to
[email protected]. All correspondence, including names and
addresses, will be part of the public record.
More information on the planning process can also be found on the
Black Hills National Forest Planning website at https://www.fs.usda.gov/goto/blackhills/forestplanrevision.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Lou Conroy, Revision Team Leader, at
[email protected] or by phone at (605) 673-9200.
[[Page 57409]]
Individuals who use telecommunication devices for the deaf/hard-of-
hearing (TDD) may call the Federal Information Relay Service (FRS) at
1-800-877-8339, 24 hours a day, every day of the year, including
holidays.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The National Forest Management Act (NFMA) of
1976 requires that the Forest Service develop a Land and Resource
Management Plan, often called a Forest Plan, for every national forest.
Forest Plans provide the strategic direction for management of forest
resources and are amendable as conditions change over time.
The Black Hills Forest Plan was first released in 1983, revised in
1997, and amended in 2006. The 2006 version serves as the current
Forest Plan for the Black Hills National Forest.
This notice announces the start of the first stage of the process,
during which updated information from the public, Tribes, other
government agencies, and non-governmental parties, will be compiled
into assessment reports. Information relevant to these reports
typically includes the status and trends of ecological, social, and
economic conditions within the planning area and across the broader
landscape. Federal Regulation (36 CFR 219.6) requires the assessment of
(1) Terrestrial ecosystems, aquatic ecosystems, and watersheds; (2)
Air, soil, and water resources and quality; (3) System drivers,
including dominant ecological processes, disturbance regimes, and
stressors, such as natural succession, wildland fire, invasive species,
and climate change, and the ability of terrestrial and aquatic
ecosytems in the plan area to adapt to change; (4) Baseline assessment
of carbon stocks; (5) Threatened, endangered, proposed, and candidate
species, and potential species of conservation concern present in the
plan area; (6) Social, cultural, and economic conditions; (7) Benefits
people obtain from the national forest system planning area (ecosystem
services); (8) Multiple uses and their contributions to local,
regional, and national economies; (9) Recreation settings,
opportunities and access, and scenic character; (10); Renewable and
nonrenewable energy and mineral resources; (11) Infrastructure, such as
recreational facilities and transporation and utility corridors; (12)
Areas of tribal importance; (13) Cultural and historic resources and
uses; (14) Land status and ownership and access patterns; and (15)
Existing designated areas located in the plan area including wilderness
and wild and scenic rivers and potential need and opportunity for
additional designated areas.
During this assessment phase, the Forest Service invites other
government agencies, Tribes, non-governmental parties, and the public
to share information about social, economic, and environmental
conditions of the Black Hills National Forest and the broader
landscape. Existing information about conditions on the Black Hills
National Forest, supplemented with information gathered through public
engagement and tribal consultation, will be integrated into final
resource assessments. The Forest Service will host public outreach
forums to share progress and gather additional information.
Responsible Official: The responsible official for the revision of
the land and resource management plan for the Black Hills National
Forest is Jeff Tomac, Forest Supervisor, Black Hills National Forest,
1019 N 5th Street, Custer, SD 57730, phone 605-673-9200.
Dated: September 27, 2021.
Barnie Gyant,
Associate Deputy Chief, National Forest System.
[FR Doc. 2021-22537 Filed 10-14-21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3411-15-P