Notice of Intent To Conduct Scoping and To Prepare a Draft Environmental Impact Statement for the Proposed Chumash Heritage National Marine Sanctuary, 62512-62516 [2021-24609]
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62512
Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 215 / Wednesday, November 10, 2021 / Notices
Interested persons are
invited to submit written comments to
Adrienne Thomas, NOAA PRA Officer,
at Adrienne.thomas@noaa.gov. Please
reference OMB Control Number 0648–
0459 in the subject line of your
comments. Do not submit Confidential
Business Information or otherwise
sensitive or protected information.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Requests for additional information or
specific questions related to collection
activities should be directed to Cathy
Ross, PRA Coordinator, NOAA Ocean
Service, 1305 East-West Hwy,
catherine.ross@noaa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
ADDRESSES:
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I. Abstract
NOAA’s Office for Coastal
Management requests the extension of a
currently approved information
collection NOAA has, or is given,
authority under the Coastal Zone
Management Act (CZMA), annual
appropriations or other authorities, to
issue funds to coastal states, localities or
other recipients for planning,
conservation, acquisition, protection,
restoration, or construction projects.
The required information enables
NOAA to implement the Coastal and
Estuarine Land Conservation Program
(CZMA Section 307A), under its current
or future authorization, and facilitate
the review of similar projects under
different, but related, authorities,
including the National Estuarine
Research Reserve System (CZMA
Section 315) Land Acquisition and
Construction program, the Coastal Zone
Management Program’s low-cost
acquisition and construction program
(CZMA Section 306A), or the Fish and
Wildlife Coordination Act.
This collection covers the
development of state coastal land
conservation plans, and collection of
information specifically needed for
applying for and carrying out land
acquisition, restoration, and
construction projects, such as:
Appraisals, property surveys and site
plans, legal documentation such as
deeds, easements and/or plats, and
information needed for environmental
compliance reviews. Such information
is collected from project applicants or
sub-recipients, which are typically state
or local government agencies, but may
also include nongovernmental or tribal
organizations.
The information will be used in
evaluating project proposals, reviewing
the location and impact of proposed
activities, documenting compliance
with the National Environmental Policy
Act and other applicable statutes, and
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conducting due diligence on market
value, title encumbrances, property
boundaries, proper recording of legal
instruments. No changes are proposed
to the collection.
II. Method of Collection
Electronic formats are the preferred
method for submitting CELCP plans,
project applications, performance
reports and other required materials.
However, respondents may submit
materials in electronic or paper formats.
Project applications are normally
submitted electronically via Grants.gov
but may be submitted by mail in paper
form if electronic submittal is not a
viable option. Methods of submittal for
plans, performance reports or other
required materials may include
electronic submittal via email or NOAA
Grants Online, mail and facsimile
transmission of paper forms, or
submittal of electronic files on compact
disc.
III. Data
OMB Control Number: 0648–0459.
Form Number(s): None.
Type of Review: Regular submission
(extension of a currently approved
information collection).
Affected Public: State, Local, or Tribal
Government; not-for-profit institutions.
Estimated Number of Respondents:
50.
Estimated Time per Response: CELCP
Plans, 120 hours to develop, 35 hours to
revise or update; project application and
checklist, 20 hours; semi-annual and
annual reporting, 5 hours each.
Estimated Total Annual Burden
Hours: 1,410.
Estimated Total Annual Cost to
Public: $205 in recordkeeping/reporting
costs.
Respondent’s Obligation: Required to
Obtain or Retain Benefits.
Legal Authority: Coastal Zone
Management Act (16 U.S.C. 1451, et
seq).
IV. Request for Comments
We are soliciting public comments to
permit the Department/Bureau to: (a)
Evaluate whether the proposed
information collection is necessary for
the proper functions of the Department,
including whether the information will
have practical utility; (b) Evaluate the
accuracy of our estimate of the time and
cost burden for this proposed collection,
including the validity of the
methodology and assumptions used; (c)
Evaluate ways to enhance the quality,
utility, and clarity of the information to
be collected; and (d) Minimize the
reporting burden on those who are to
respond, including the use of automated
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collection techniques or other forms 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 may 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.
Sheleen Dumas,
Department PRA Clearance Officer, Office of
the Chief Information Officer, Commerce
Department.
[FR Doc. 2021–24603 Filed 11–9–21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–08–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
Notice of Intent To Conduct Scoping
and To Prepare a Draft Environmental
Impact Statement for the Proposed
Chumash Heritage National Marine
Sanctuary
Office of National Marine
Sanctuaries (ONMS), National Ocean
Service (NOS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Department of Commerce (DOC).
AGENCY:
Notice of intent to prepare a
draft environmental impact statement
and hold public scoping meetings;
request for comments.
ACTION:
In accordance with the
National Marine Sanctuaries Act
(NMSA), the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) is
initiating a process to consider
designating a portion of waters along
and offshore of the central coast of
California as a national marine
sanctuary. NOAA is initiating this
process based on the area’s qualities and
boundaries as described in the
community-based nomination 1
submitted on July 17, 2015, excluding
any geographical overlap of the
boundaries proposed for the Morro Bay
399 Area as described in the July 29,
SUMMARY:
1 https://nmsnominate.blob.core.windows.net/
nominate-prod/media/documents/nomination_
chumash_heritage_071715.pdf.
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Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 215 / Wednesday, November 10, 2021 / Notices
2021 Federal Register notice.2 The
designation process will be conducted
concurrently with a public process
under the National Environmental
Policy Act (NEPA) to prepare an
environmental impact statement. NOAA
is initiating this public scoping process
to invite comments on the scope and
significance of issues to be addressed in
the environmental impact statement that
are related to designating this area as a
national marine sanctuary. The results
of this scoping process will assist
NOAA in moving forward with the
designation process, including
preparation and release of draft
designation documents, and in
formulating alternatives for the draft
environmental impact statement,
including developing national marine
sanctuary boundaries, regulations, and a
management plan. This scoping process
will also inform the initiation of any
consultations with federal, state, or local
agencies, tribes, and other interested
parties, as appropriate.
DATES: Comments are due by January
10, 2022. NOAA will host virtual public
scoping meetings at the following dates
and times:
• Wednesday, December 8, 2021, 6
p.m.–9 p.m. Pacific Time
• Monday, December 13, 2021, 1 p.m.–
4 p.m. Pacific Time
• Thursday, January 6, 2022, 4 p.m.–7
p.m. Pacific Time
NOAA may end a meeting before the
time noted above if all those
participating have completed their oral
comments.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments
on this document by any of the
following methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: Go to
https://www.regulations.gov and enter
‘‘NOAA–NOS–2021–0080’’ in the
Search box. Click on the ‘‘Comment’’
icon, complete the required fields, and
enter or attach your comments.
• Mail: Send any hard copy public
comments by mail to: Paul Michel,
NOAA Sanctuaries West Coast Regional
Office, 99 Pacific Street, Building 100F,
Monterey, CA 93940.
• Public Scoping Meetings: Provide
oral comments during virtual public
scoping meetings, as described under
DATES. Webinar registration details and
additional information about how to
participate in these public scoping
meetings is available at
www.sanctuaries.noaa.gov/chumashheritage.
2 https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/
2021/07/29/2021-16134/commercial-leasing-forwind-power-development-on-the-outer-continentalshelf-ocs-offshore-morro-bay.
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Instructions: Comments sent by any
other method, to any other address or
individual, or received after the end of
the comment period, may not be
considered by NOAA. All comments
received are a part of the public record
and will generally be posted for public
viewing on https://www.regulations.gov
without change. All personal identifying
information (for example, name,
address, etc.), confidential business
information, or otherwise sensitive
information submitted voluntarily by
the commenter will be publicly
accessible. NOAA will accept
anonymous comments (enter ‘‘N/A’’ in
the required fields if you wish to remain
anonymous).
Paul
Michel, (831) 241–4217, paul.michel@
noaa.gov, West Coast Region Policy
Coordinator.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background on Sanctuary Nomination.
The National Marine Sanctuaries Act
(NMSA), 16 U.S.C. 1431 et seq.,
authorizes the Secretary of Commerce
(Secretary) to designate and protect as
national marine sanctuaries areas of the
marine environment that are of special
national significance due to their
conservation, recreational, ecological,
historical, scientific, cultural,
archeological, educational, or aesthetic
qualities. Day-to-day management of
national marine sanctuaries has been
delegated by the Secretary to the NOAA
Office of National Marine Sanctuaries
(ONMS). The primary objective of the
NMSA is to protect the resources of the
National Marine Sanctuary System.
In July 2015, Fred Collins, on behalf
of the Northern Chumash Tribal
Council, submitted a nomination to
NOAA through the Sanctuary
Nomination Process (79 FR 33851),
asking NOAA to consider designating an
area on the central California coast as a
national marine sanctuary. The
nomination has been endorsed by a
diverse coalition of organizations and
individuals at tribal, local, state,
regional, and national levels including
elected officials, businesses, recreational
users, conservation groups, fishing
associations, tourism companies,
museums, historical societies, and
education groups. The submitted
nomination package is available at:
https://nominate.noaa.gov/
nominations/. The nomination asks
NOAA to protect this nationally
significant area for its culturally and
biologically important resources. The
nomination also identifies opportunities
for NOAA to expand upon existing local
and state efforts to study, interpret, and
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manage the area’s unique cultural and
biological resources.
NOAA added the area to the
inventory of nominations that are
eligible for designation in October 2015
and extended it on the inventory in
September 2020 at the five-year interval
after a review of the nomination (85 FR
61935). NOAA is now initiating the
process to potentially designate the
nominated area, excluding any
geographical overlap of the boundaries
proposed for the Morro Bay 399 Area in
the July 29, 2021 Federal Register
Notice of Commercial Leasing for Wind
Power Development on the Outer
Continental Shelf (OCS) Offshore Morro
Bay, California, East and West
Extensions—Call for Information and
Nominations (86 FR 40869), as a
national marine sanctuary. The
proposed designation is consistent with
the Biden-Harris Administration’s
complementary goals to tackle the
climate crisis per Executive Order
14008,3 including by conserving and
restoring ocean and coastal habitats,
supporting tribally and locally led
stewardship, and advancing offshore
wind and other clean energy projects.
The proposed national marine
sanctuary would run along the mean
high tide line from approximately
Cambria at the terminal boundary of
Monterey Bay National Marine
Sanctuary (MBNMS), south along the
San Luis Obispo County coast,
excluding Morro Bay harbor and Port
San Luis, and then further south to
include the coast of Santa Barbara
County to approximately Gaviota Creek,
then offshore in a southwest direction
along the western end of Channel
Islands National Marine Sanctuary
(CINMS), southward to include
Rodriguez Seamount and shifting to the
northwest to include the Santa Lucia
Bank, to reconnect with the boundary
for MBNMS offshore Cambria, and
following that boundary eastward to the
point of origin at the shoreline. As
stated above, the proposed sanctuary
designation excludes the area that
geographically overlaps the proposed
Morro Bay 399 Area. NOAA estimates
the area encompassed in the proposed
designation is approximately 7,000
square miles. A map of the proposed
area can be found at https://sanctuaries.
noaa.gov/chumash-heritage.
The area contains unique and diverse
ecosystems essential to the heritage of
the Chumash, one of the few oceangoing bands among the First Peoples of
the Pacific Coast. The marine
3 https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/
2021/02/01/2021-02177/tackling-the-climate-crisisat-home-and-abroad.
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environment provides a special sense of
place to coastal communities and
visitors because of its significant
historic, archaeological, cultural,
aesthetic and biological resources. The
area has special ecological qualities as
well, shaped by significant offshore
geologic features (e.g., Rodriguez
Seamount, Santa Lucia Bank and
Arguello Canyon). Seasonal upwelling
serves as the engine of the area’s high
biological productivity, supporting
dense aggregations of marine life. The
presence of a biogeographic transition
zone, where temperate waters from the
north meet the subtropics, creates an
area of nationally significant
biodiversity in sea birds, marine
mammals, invertebrates, and fishes. The
area is also known for its extensive kelp
forests, seagrass beds, and wetlands that
serve as nurseries for numerous
commercial fish species and as
important habitat for many threatened
and endangered species such as
humpback whales, blue whales, the
southern sea otter, black abalone, snowy
plovers and leatherback sea turtles.
The area being considered for
sanctuary designation also contains
more than 200 known shipwrecks. The
area off Point Conception is a significant
feature in California’s long maritime
history, with vessels regularly traversing
the coast and, on occasion, sinking in
this region. This collection of
shipwrecks and overall maritime
landscape are nationally significant
because of the representativeness of the
shipwrecks, their location on one of the
nation’s most historically important
transportation corridors, and the
potential for the discovery of other
shipwrecks and submerged pre-contact
cultural sites.
Proponents of the national marine
sanctuary have also highlighted the
maritime history and cultural heritage of
the Chumash Tribal nation with the
sanctuary proposal. Some of the earliest
documented human habitation of North
America is in this region and various
bands of Chumash and other indigenous
Tribes have deep cultural connections
to this area of central California. While
much of the coast of San Luis Obispo
and Santa Barbara counties has been
surveyed for Native American artifacts
and settlements, the continental shelf
may well hold yet undiscovered
paleoshorelines and archaeological
resources worthy of study and
conservation.
Coastal communities are spread along
the coastline of San Luis Obispo
County. There are two primary entry
points for vessels—Morro Bay and Port
San Luis. Further south in Santa Barbara
County, the coast is remote with more
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limited access, such as in and around
Vandenberg Space Force Base or
Hollister Ranch. Current human uses
include commercial and recreational
fishing, kayaking, surfing, diving,
wildlife watching, research and general
recreation such as beach walking or
boating.
I. Purpose and Need for Sanctuary
Designation
The purpose and need for the
designation is to fulfill the purposes and
policies outlined in Section 301(b) of
the NMSA, 16 U.S.C. 1431(b), including
to identify and designate as national
marine sanctuaries areas of the marine
environment which are of special
national significance, provide authority
for comprehensive and coordinated
conservation and management of these
marine areas, and to protect the
resources of these areas. In particular,
the proposed designation would:
• Develop coordinated and
collaborative marine science, education
and outreach, cultural heritage programs
to assist in managing the area’s
nationally significant resources;
• Highlight the many diverse human
activities, cultural connections and
maritime heritage of the area, from the
various First Nations to existing
activities in the area;
• Respond to community interest in
conserving the natural environments,
wildlife and cultural resources of this
area; and
• Provide additional conservation
and comprehensive ecosystem-based
management to address threats to the
nationally significant resources of the
proposed sanctuary.
II. Preliminary Description of Proposed
Action and Alternatives
NOAA’s proposed action is to
consider designating Chumash Heritage
National Marine Sanctuary, as described
in, Background on Sanctuary
Nomination, via the sanctuary
designation process detailed in section
304 of the NMSA (16 U.S.C. 1434). As
part of the sanctuary designation
process, NOAA will develop draft
designation documents including a draft
sanctuary management plan, proposed
sanctuary regulations, and proposed
terms of designation. Each national
marine sanctuary has management
programs developed with public input
and crafted to meet the specific issues
and resources found in that sanctuary.
The NEPA process for sanctuary
designation will include preparation of
a draft environmental impact statement
(DEIS) to consider alternatives and
describe potential effects of the
sanctuary designation on the human
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environment. The DEIS will evaluate a
reasonable range of action alternatives
that could include different options for
sanctuary regulations, potential
boundaries, and management plan
goals. The DEIS will also consider a No
Action Alternative, wherein NOAA
would not designate the proposed
sanctuary. The results of this scoping
process will assist NOAA in formulating
alternatives for the DEIS, including
options for sanctuary boundaries,
regulations, and a management plan.
Reasonable alternatives that are
identified during the scoping period
will be evaluated in the DEIS.
III. Summary of Expected Impacts of
Sanctuary Designation
The DEIS will identify and describe
the potential effects of the Proposed
Action, and reasonable alternatives, on
the human environment. Potential
impacts may include, but are not
limited to, impacts on the area’s:
Natural marine resources, including
habitats, plants, birds, sea turtles,
marine mammals, and special status
species; maritime, cultural and historic
resources, including Traditional
Cultural Properties and archaeological
sites; human uses and socioeconomics
of the area, such as research, recreation,
education, energy development, cultural
practices, fishing. Based on a
preliminary evaluation of the resources
listed above, NOAA expects potential
impacts of enhanced protection of the
area’s natural, cultural and historic
resources; improved planning and
coordination of research, monitoring,
and management actions; reducing
harmful human activities and
disturbance of special status species;
restoration of native habitat and species
populations; reducing threats and
stressors to resources; and minimal
disturbance during research or
restoration actions.
IV. Process for Sanctuary Designation
and Environmental Review
The designation process includes the
following well-established and highly
participatory stages:
1. Public Scoping Process—
Information collection and
characterization, including the
consideration of public comments
received during scoping;
2. Preparation of Draft Documents—
Preparation and release of draft
designation documents, including: A
DEIS, prepared pursuant to NEPA, that
identifies boundary and/or regulatory
alternatives; a draft management plan;
and a notice of proposed rulemaking to
define proposed sanctuary regulations.
Draft documents would be used to
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initiate consultations with federal, state,
or local agencies, tribes and other
interested parties, as appropriate;
3. Public Comment—Through public
meetings and in writing, allow for
public review and comment on the
DEIS, draft management plan, and
notice of proposed rulemaking;
4. Preparation of Final Documents—
Preparation and release of a final
environmental impact statement (FEIS),
final management plan, including a
response to public comments, and a
final rule and regulations.
5. The sanctuary designation and
regulations would take effect after the
end of a review period of forty-five days
of a continuous session of Congress.
During this same period, should the
designation include state waters, the
Governor of the state has the
opportunity to concurrently review the
terms of designation including
boundaries within state waters.
Schedule for the Decision-Making
Process
NOAA expects to make the DEIS and
other draft documents available to the
public by late 2022. NOAA expects to
make the FEIS available to the public in
Fall 2023. A Record of Decision and the
final management plan and final rule
will be completed no sooner than 30
days after the FEIS is made available to
the public, in accordance with 40 CFR
1506.11.
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NEPA Lead and Cooperating Agency
Roles
NOAA is the lead federal agency for
the NEPA process for the Proposed
Action. NOAA may invite other federal,
Tribal, or State and local government
agencies to become cooperating agencies
in the preparation of this EIS. NEPA
regulations specify that a cooperating
agency means any Federal agency (and
a State, Tribal, or local agency with
agreement of the lead agency) that has
jurisdiction by law or special expertise
with respect to any environmental
impact involved in a proposal (or a
reasonable alternative) (40 CFR
1508.1(e)).
V. Public Scoping Process
With this notice, NOAA is initiating
a public scoping process to gather input
from individuals, organizations, federal
agencies, and state, tribal, and local
governments on the proposed
designation of Chumash Heritage
National Marine Sanctuary. NOAA
intends to use this process to determine
the scope and significant issues to be
analyzed in depth in the DEIS, with
consideration of the scoping factors and
responsibilities provided in 40 CFR
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1501.9. NOAA specifically requests
comments on the following topics,
including the identification of potential
alternatives, information, and analyses
relevant to the proposed action:
• The spatial extent of the proposed
sanctuary and boundary alternatives
NOAA should consider, starting with
the boundary as described in Section.
Background on Sanctuary Nomination;
• the location, nature, and value of
the resources, including natural and
submerged cultural resources as well as
the indigenous heritage of the area, that
would be protected by a sanctuary;
• potential positive and negative
impacts to those resources;
• the management plan and
regulatory framework most appropriate
to the resources in the area, including
compatible and incompatible uses;
• the potential socioeconomic,
cultural, and biological impacts of
designation;
• the potential to highlight the
indigenous history and culture of the
area;
• the potential to support research
and advance scientific understanding;
• information regarding historic
properties in the area and the potential
effects to those historic properties to
support National Historic Preservation
Act compliance under Section 106;
• opportunities to benefit the ‘‘blue
economy’’ of the region, including
promoting sustainable tourism and
recreation;
• potential name for the new
sanctuary;
• the potential to advance multiple,
complementary priorities of the Federal
administration, the Department of
Commerce, and NOAA, including
conserving and restoring ocean and
coastal habitats, supporting Tribally and
locally led stewardship, and advancing
offshore wind and other clean energy
projects;
• the potential location of an
administrative office as well as coastal
education facilities including possibly a
visitor center; and
• other information relevant to the
designation and management of a new
sanctuary in this proposed area.
Comments may be submitted to
NOAA by January 10, 2022 using the
methods described in ADDRESSES.
NOAA will host public scoping
meetings during the public comment
period, as described under DATES.
VI. Anticipated Permits,
Authorizations, and Consultations
Federal, state, and local permits,
authorizations, or consultations may be
required for the Proposed Action,
including consultation or review under
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62515
the Endangered Species Act, 16 U.S.C.
1531 et seq., Magnuson-Stevens Fishery
Conservation and Management Act, 16
U.S.C. 1801 et seq., National Historic
Preservation Act, 54 U.S.C. 300101 et
seq., and Executive Order 13175,
consistency review under the Coastal
Zone Management Act, 16 U.S.C. 1451
et seq., and possibly reviews under
other laws and regulations determined
to be applicable to the proposed action.
To the fullest extent possible, NOAA
will prepare the DEIS concurrently with
and integrated with analyses required
by other Federal environmental review
requirements, and the DEIS will list all
Federal permits, licenses, and other
authorizations that must be obtained in
implementing the proposed action. See
40 CFR 1502.24.
Consultation Under Section 106 of the
National Historic Preservation Act and
Executive Order 13175
This notice confirms that NOAA will
coordinate its responsibilities under
section 106 of the National Historic
Preservation Act during the sanctuary
designation process and is soliciting
public and stakeholder input to meet
section 106 compliance requirements.
The section 106 consultation process
specifically applies to any agency
undertaking that may affect historic
properties. Pursuant to 36 CFR
800.16(1)(1), historic properties include:
‘‘Any prehistoric or historic district,
site, building, structure or object
included in, or eligible for inclusion in,
the National Register of Historic Places
maintained by the Secretary of the
Interior. The term includes artifacts,
records, and remains that are related to
and located within such properties. The
term includes properties of traditional
religious and cultural importance to an
Indian Tribe or Native Hawaiian
organization and that meet the National
Register criteria.’’
This notice also confirms that, with
respect to the proposed sanctuary
designation process, NOAA will fulfill
its responsibilities under Executive
Order 13175, ‘‘Consultation and
Coordination with Indian Tribal
Governments,’’ and NOAA
implementing policy and procedures.
Executive Order 13175 requires federal
agencies to establish procedures for
meaningful consultation and
coordination with Tribal officials in the
development of federal policies that
have Tribal implications. NOAA
implements Executive Order 13175
through the NOAA Administrative
Order 218–8 (Policy on Government-toGovernment Consultation with
Federally Recognized Indian Tribes and
Alaska Native Corporations), and the
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NOAA Tribal Consultation Handbook.
Under these policies and procedures,
NOAA offers affected federally
recognized Tribes government-togovernment consultation at the earliest
practicable time it can reasonably
anticipate that a proposed policy or
initiative may have Tribal implications.
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1431 et seq.; 42
U.S.C. 4321 et seq.; 40 CFR 1500–1508
(NEPA Implementing Regulations);
Companion Manual for NOAA
Administrative Order 216–6A.
John Armor,
Director, Office of National Marine
Sanctuaries, National Ocean Service,
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration.
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
The permits and related
documents are available for review
upon written request via email to
NMFS.Pr1Comments@noaa.gov.
[RTID 0648–XB573]
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Marine Mammals and Endangered
Species
Shasta McClenahan, Ph.D. (Permit Nos.
20532–01 and 25740) and Sara Young
(Permit No. 25786); at (301) 427–8401.
ADDRESSES:
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Notice; issuance of permits and
permit amendments.
AGENCY:
Notice is hereby given that
permits and permit amendments have
been issued to the following entities
under the Marine Mammal Protection
Act (MMPA) and the Endangered
Species Act (ESA), as applicable.
SUMMARY:
[FR Doc. 2021–24609 Filed 11–9–21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–NK–P
Notices
were published in the Federal Register
on the dates listed below that requests
for a permit or permit amendment had
been submitted by the below-named
applicants. To locate the Federal
Register notice that announced our
receipt of the application and a
complete description of the activities, go
to www.federalregister.gov and search
on the permit number provided in Table
1 below.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
TABLE 1—ISSUED PERMITS AND PERMIT AMENDMENTS
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with NOTICES
Permit No.
RTID
20532–01 .....
0648–XE766
25740 ...........
0648–XB363
25786 ...........
0648–XB299
Stephen John Trumble, Ph.D., Baylor University, 101
Bagby Avenue, Waco, TX 76706.
Center for Coastal Studies, 5 Holway Avenue,
Provincetown, MA 02657 (Responsible Party:
Richard Delaney).
NMFS’ Southwest Fisheries Science Center, 8901
La Jolla Shores Drive, La Jolla, CA 92037 (Responsible Party: George Watters, Ph.D.).
In compliance with the National
Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (42
U.S.C. 4321 et seq.), a final
determination has been made that the
activities proposed are categorically
excluded from the requirement to
prepare an environmental assessment or
environmental impact statement.
As required by the ESA, as applicable,
issuance of these permit was based on
a finding that such permits: (1) Were
applied for in good faith; (2) will not
operate to the disadvantage of such
endangered species; and (3) are
consistent with the purposes and
policies set forth in Section 2 of the
ESA.
Authority: The requested permits
have been issued under the MMPA of
1972, as amended (16 U.S.C. 1361 et
seq.), the regulations governing the
taking and importing of marine
mammals (50 CFR part 216), the ESA of
1973, as amended (16 U.S.C. 1531 et
seq.), and the regulations governing the
taking, importing, and exporting of
endangered and threatened species (50
CFR parts 222–226), as applicable.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:30 Nov 09, 2021
Previous Federal
Register Notice
Applicant
Jkt 256001
84 FR 10795; March 22,
2019.
86 FR 47478; August 25,
2021.
October 19, 2021.
86 FR 42790; August 5,
2021.
October 26, 2021.
Dated: November 4, 2021.
Julia M. Harrison,
Chief, Permits and Conservation Division,
Office of Protected Resources, National
Marine Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2021–24518 Filed 11–9–21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
[RTID 0648–XB567]
Endangered and Threatened Species;
Take of Anadromous Fish
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Notice of availability; proposed
evaluation and pending determinations
for five resource management plans in
the Hood Canal Basin.
AGENCY:
Notice is hereby given that
NMFS has drafted Proposed Evaluation
and Pending Determinations (PEPD) for
five resource management plans (RMPs)
for the rearing and releasing Chinook
SUMMARY:
PO 00000
Frm 00009
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Issuance date
October 26, 2021.
salmon, coho salmon, and chum
salmon, and for research of Puget Sound
Steelhead in the Hood Canal Basin of
Washington State. The RMPs are in the
form of hatchery and genetic
management plans (HGMPs) for
hatchery programs operated by Long
Live the Kings (LLTK), the Port Gamble
S’Klallam Tribe (PGST), the Skokomish
Tribe (ST), and Washington Department
of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW). In 2016
NMFS certified that the five HGMPs
satisfied limit 6 of the 4(d) rule. The
revised HGMPs will replace the versions
of the same plans now in place. NMFS
is notifying the public of the availability
and opportunity to comment on PEPDs
for the new programs. The hatchery
programs are intended to contribute to
fulfilling Federal tribal trust
responsibilities and treaty rights
guaranteed through treaties and
affirmed in U.S. v. Washington (1974).
The program operators submitted
revised HGMPs for the following
changes: (1) Improve the available
forage to southern resident killer
whales; and (2) investigate genetic
diversity of Puget Sound Steelhead and
the effects of release timing on marine
survival of fall Chinook salmon.
E:\FR\FM\10NON1.SGM
10NON1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 86, Number 215 (Wednesday, November 10, 2021)]
[Notices]
[Pages 62512-62516]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2021-24609]
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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
Notice of Intent To Conduct Scoping and To Prepare a Draft
Environmental Impact Statement for the Proposed Chumash Heritage
National Marine Sanctuary
AGENCY: Office of National Marine Sanctuaries (ONMS), National Ocean
Service (NOS), National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Department of Commerce (DOC).
ACTION: Notice of intent to prepare a draft environmental impact
statement and hold public scoping meetings; request for comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: In accordance with the National Marine Sanctuaries Act (NMSA),
the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) is
initiating a process to consider designating a portion of waters along
and offshore of the central coast of California as a national marine
sanctuary. NOAA is initiating this process based on the area's
qualities and boundaries as described in the community-based nomination
\1\ submitted on July 17, 2015, excluding any geographical overlap of
the boundaries proposed for the Morro Bay 399 Area as described in the
July 29,
[[Page 62513]]
2021 Federal Register notice.\2\ The designation process will be
conducted concurrently with a public process under the National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) to prepare an environmental impact
statement. NOAA is initiating this public scoping process to invite
comments on the scope and significance of issues to be addressed in the
environmental impact statement that are related to designating this
area as a national marine sanctuary. The results of this scoping
process will assist NOAA in moving forward with the designation
process, including preparation and release of draft designation
documents, and in formulating alternatives for the draft environmental
impact statement, including developing national marine sanctuary
boundaries, regulations, and a management plan. This scoping process
will also inform the initiation of any consultations with federal,
state, or local agencies, tribes, and other interested parties, as
appropriate.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ https://nmsnominate.blob.core.windows.net/nominate-prod/media/documents/nomination_chumash_heritage_071715.pdf.
\2\ https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2021/07/29/2021-16134/commercial-leasing-for-wind-power-development-on-the-outer-continental-shelf-ocs-offshore-morro-bay.
DATES: Comments are due by January 10, 2022. NOAA will host virtual
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
public scoping meetings at the following dates and times:
Wednesday, December 8, 2021, 6 p.m.-9 p.m. Pacific Time
Monday, December 13, 2021, 1 p.m.-4 p.m. Pacific Time
Thursday, January 6, 2022, 4 p.m.-7 p.m. Pacific Time
NOAA may end a meeting before the time noted above if all those
participating have completed their oral comments.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments on this document by any of the
following methods:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: Go to https://www.regulations.gov and enter ``NOAA-NOS-2021-0080'' in the Search box.
Click on the ``Comment'' icon, complete the required fields, and enter
or attach your comments.
Mail: Send any hard copy public comments by mail to: Paul
Michel, NOAA Sanctuaries West Coast Regional Office, 99 Pacific Street,
Building 100F, Monterey, CA 93940.
Public Scoping Meetings: Provide oral comments during
virtual public scoping meetings, as described under DATES. Webinar
registration details and additional information about how to
participate in these public scoping meetings is available at
www.sanctuaries.noaa.gov/chumash-heritage.
Instructions: Comments sent by any other method, to any other
address or individual, or received after the end of the comment period,
may not be considered by NOAA. All comments received are a part of the
public record and will generally be posted for public viewing on
https://www.regulations.gov without change. All personal identifying
information (for example, name, address, etc.), confidential business
information, or otherwise sensitive information submitted voluntarily
by the commenter will be publicly accessible. NOAA will accept
anonymous comments (enter ``N/A'' in the required fields if you wish to
remain anonymous).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Paul Michel, (831) 241-4217,
[email protected], West Coast Region Policy Coordinator.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Background on Sanctuary Nomination.
The National Marine Sanctuaries Act (NMSA), 16 U.S.C. 1431 et seq.,
authorizes the Secretary of Commerce (Secretary) to designate and
protect as national marine sanctuaries areas of the marine environment
that are of special national significance due to their conservation,
recreational, ecological, historical, scientific, cultural,
archeological, educational, or aesthetic qualities. Day-to-day
management of national marine sanctuaries has been delegated by the
Secretary to the NOAA Office of National Marine Sanctuaries (ONMS). The
primary objective of the NMSA is to protect the resources of the
National Marine Sanctuary System.
In July 2015, Fred Collins, on behalf of the Northern Chumash
Tribal Council, submitted a nomination to NOAA through the Sanctuary
Nomination Process (79 FR 33851), asking NOAA to consider designating
an area on the central California coast as a national marine sanctuary.
The nomination has been endorsed by a diverse coalition of
organizations and individuals at tribal, local, state, regional, and
national levels including elected officials, businesses, recreational
users, conservation groups, fishing associations, tourism companies,
museums, historical societies, and education groups. The submitted
nomination package is available at: https://nominate.noaa.gov/nominations/. The nomination asks NOAA to protect this nationally
significant area for its culturally and biologically important
resources. The nomination also identifies opportunities for NOAA to
expand upon existing local and state efforts to study, interpret, and
manage the area's unique cultural and biological resources.
NOAA added the area to the inventory of nominations that are
eligible for designation in October 2015 and extended it on the
inventory in September 2020 at the five-year interval after a review of
the nomination (85 FR 61935). NOAA is now initiating the process to
potentially designate the nominated area, excluding any geographical
overlap of the boundaries proposed for the Morro Bay 399 Area in the
July 29, 2021 Federal Register Notice of Commercial Leasing for Wind
Power Development on the Outer Continental Shelf (OCS) Offshore Morro
Bay, California, East and West Extensions--Call for Information and
Nominations (86 FR 40869), as a national marine sanctuary. The proposed
designation is consistent with the Biden-Harris Administration's
complementary goals to tackle the climate crisis per Executive Order
14008,\3\ including by conserving and restoring ocean and coastal
habitats, supporting tribally and locally led stewardship, and
advancing offshore wind and other clean energy projects.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2021/02/01/2021-02177/tackling-the-climate-crisis-at-home-and-abroad.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposed national marine sanctuary would run along the mean
high tide line from approximately Cambria at the terminal boundary of
Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary (MBNMS), south along the San
Luis Obispo County coast, excluding Morro Bay harbor and Port San Luis,
and then further south to include the coast of Santa Barbara County to
approximately Gaviota Creek, then offshore in a southwest direction
along the western end of Channel Islands National Marine Sanctuary
(CINMS), southward to include Rodriguez Seamount and shifting to the
northwest to include the Santa Lucia Bank, to reconnect with the
boundary for MBNMS offshore Cambria, and following that boundary
eastward to the point of origin at the shoreline. As stated above, the
proposed sanctuary designation excludes the area that geographically
overlaps the proposed Morro Bay 399 Area. NOAA estimates the area
encompassed in the proposed designation is approximately 7,000 square
miles. A map of the proposed area can be found at https://sanctuaries.noaa.gov/chumash-heritage.
The area contains unique and diverse ecosystems essential to the
heritage of the Chumash, one of the few ocean-going bands among the
First Peoples of the Pacific Coast. The marine
[[Page 62514]]
environment provides a special sense of place to coastal communities
and visitors because of its significant historic, archaeological,
cultural, aesthetic and biological resources. The area has special
ecological qualities as well, shaped by significant offshore geologic
features (e.g., Rodriguez Seamount, Santa Lucia Bank and Arguello
Canyon). Seasonal upwelling serves as the engine of the area's high
biological productivity, supporting dense aggregations of marine life.
The presence of a biogeographic transition zone, where temperate waters
from the north meet the subtropics, creates an area of nationally
significant biodiversity in sea birds, marine mammals, invertebrates,
and fishes. The area is also known for its extensive kelp forests,
seagrass beds, and wetlands that serve as nurseries for numerous
commercial fish species and as important habitat for many threatened
and endangered species such as humpback whales, blue whales, the
southern sea otter, black abalone, snowy plovers and leatherback sea
turtles.
The area being considered for sanctuary designation also contains
more than 200 known shipwrecks. The area off Point Conception is a
significant feature in California's long maritime history, with vessels
regularly traversing the coast and, on occasion, sinking in this
region. This collection of shipwrecks and overall maritime landscape
are nationally significant because of the representativeness of the
shipwrecks, their location on one of the nation's most historically
important transportation corridors, and the potential for the discovery
of other shipwrecks and submerged pre-contact cultural sites.
Proponents of the national marine sanctuary have also highlighted
the maritime history and cultural heritage of the Chumash Tribal nation
with the sanctuary proposal. Some of the earliest documented human
habitation of North America is in this region and various bands of
Chumash and other indigenous Tribes have deep cultural connections to
this area of central California. While much of the coast of San Luis
Obispo and Santa Barbara counties has been surveyed for Native American
artifacts and settlements, the continental shelf may well hold yet
undiscovered paleoshorelines and archaeological resources worthy of
study and conservation.
Coastal communities are spread along the coastline of San Luis
Obispo County. There are two primary entry points for vessels--Morro
Bay and Port San Luis. Further south in Santa Barbara County, the coast
is remote with more limited access, such as in and around Vandenberg
Space Force Base or Hollister Ranch. Current human uses include
commercial and recreational fishing, kayaking, surfing, diving,
wildlife watching, research and general recreation such as beach
walking or boating.
I. Purpose and Need for Sanctuary Designation
The purpose and need for the designation is to fulfill the purposes
and policies outlined in Section 301(b) of the NMSA, 16 U.S.C. 1431(b),
including to identify and designate as national marine sanctuaries
areas of the marine environment which are of special national
significance, provide authority for comprehensive and coordinated
conservation and management of these marine areas, and to protect the
resources of these areas. In particular, the proposed designation
would:
Develop coordinated and collaborative marine science,
education and outreach, cultural heritage programs to assist in
managing the area's nationally significant resources;
Highlight the many diverse human activities, cultural
connections and maritime heritage of the area, from the various First
Nations to existing activities in the area;
Respond to community interest in conserving the natural
environments, wildlife and cultural resources of this area; and
Provide additional conservation and comprehensive
ecosystem-based management to address threats to the nationally
significant resources of the proposed sanctuary.
II. Preliminary Description of Proposed Action and Alternatives
NOAA's proposed action is to consider designating Chumash Heritage
National Marine Sanctuary, as described in, Background on Sanctuary
Nomination, via the sanctuary designation process detailed in section
304 of the NMSA (16 U.S.C. 1434). As part of the sanctuary designation
process, NOAA will develop draft designation documents including a
draft sanctuary management plan, proposed sanctuary regulations, and
proposed terms of designation. Each national marine sanctuary has
management programs developed with public input and crafted to meet the
specific issues and resources found in that sanctuary. The NEPA process
for sanctuary designation will include preparation of a draft
environmental impact statement (DEIS) to consider alternatives and
describe potential effects of the sanctuary designation on the human
environment. The DEIS will evaluate a reasonable range of action
alternatives that could include different options for sanctuary
regulations, potential boundaries, and management plan goals. The DEIS
will also consider a No Action Alternative, wherein NOAA would not
designate the proposed sanctuary. The results of this scoping process
will assist NOAA in formulating alternatives for the DEIS, including
options for sanctuary boundaries, regulations, and a management plan.
Reasonable alternatives that are identified during the scoping period
will be evaluated in the DEIS.
III. Summary of Expected Impacts of Sanctuary Designation
The DEIS will identify and describe the potential effects of the
Proposed Action, and reasonable alternatives, on the human environment.
Potential impacts may include, but are not limited to, impacts on the
area's: Natural marine resources, including habitats, plants, birds,
sea turtles, marine mammals, and special status species; maritime,
cultural and historic resources, including Traditional Cultural
Properties and archaeological sites; human uses and socioeconomics of
the area, such as research, recreation, education, energy development,
cultural practices, fishing. Based on a preliminary evaluation of the
resources listed above, NOAA expects potential impacts of enhanced
protection of the area's natural, cultural and historic resources;
improved planning and coordination of research, monitoring, and
management actions; reducing harmful human activities and disturbance
of special status species; restoration of native habitat and species
populations; reducing threats and stressors to resources; and minimal
disturbance during research or restoration actions.
IV. Process for Sanctuary Designation and Environmental Review
The designation process includes the following well-established and
highly participatory stages:
1. Public Scoping Process--Information collection and
characterization, including the consideration of public comments
received during scoping;
2. Preparation of Draft Documents--Preparation and release of draft
designation documents, including: A DEIS, prepared pursuant to NEPA,
that identifies boundary and/or regulatory alternatives; a draft
management plan; and a notice of proposed rulemaking to define proposed
sanctuary regulations. Draft documents would be used to
[[Page 62515]]
initiate consultations with federal, state, or local agencies, tribes
and other interested parties, as appropriate;
3. Public Comment--Through public meetings and in writing, allow
for public review and comment on the DEIS, draft management plan, and
notice of proposed rulemaking;
4. Preparation of Final Documents--Preparation and release of a
final environmental impact statement (FEIS), final management plan,
including a response to public comments, and a final rule and
regulations.
5. The sanctuary designation and regulations would take effect
after the end of a review period of forty-five days of a continuous
session of Congress. During this same period, should the designation
include state waters, the Governor of the state has the opportunity to
concurrently review the terms of designation including boundaries
within state waters.
Schedule for the Decision-Making Process
NOAA expects to make the DEIS and other draft documents available
to the public by late 2022. NOAA expects to make the FEIS available to
the public in Fall 2023. A Record of Decision and the final management
plan and final rule will be completed no sooner than 30 days after the
FEIS is made available to the public, in accordance with 40 CFR
1506.11.
NEPA Lead and Cooperating Agency Roles
NOAA is the lead federal agency for the NEPA process for the
Proposed Action. NOAA may invite other federal, Tribal, or State and
local government agencies to become cooperating agencies in the
preparation of this EIS. NEPA regulations specify that a cooperating
agency means any Federal agency (and a State, Tribal, or local agency
with agreement of the lead agency) that has jurisdiction by law or
special expertise with respect to any environmental impact involved in
a proposal (or a reasonable alternative) (40 CFR 1508.1(e)).
V. Public Scoping Process
With this notice, NOAA is initiating a public scoping process to
gather input from individuals, organizations, federal agencies, and
state, tribal, and local governments on the proposed designation of
Chumash Heritage National Marine Sanctuary. NOAA intends to use this
process to determine the scope and significant issues to be analyzed in
depth in the DEIS, with consideration of the scoping factors and
responsibilities provided in 40 CFR 1501.9. NOAA specifically requests
comments on the following topics, including the identification of
potential alternatives, information, and analyses relevant to the
proposed action:
The spatial extent of the proposed sanctuary and boundary
alternatives NOAA should consider, starting with the boundary as
described in Section. Background on Sanctuary Nomination;
the location, nature, and value of the resources,
including natural and submerged cultural resources as well as the
indigenous heritage of the area, that would be protected by a
sanctuary;
potential positive and negative impacts to those
resources;
the management plan and regulatory framework most
appropriate to the resources in the area, including compatible and
incompatible uses;
the potential socioeconomic, cultural, and biological
impacts of designation;
the potential to highlight the indigenous history and
culture of the area;
the potential to support research and advance scientific
understanding;
information regarding historic properties in the area and
the potential effects to those historic properties to support National
Historic Preservation Act compliance under Section 106;
opportunities to benefit the ``blue economy'' of the
region, including promoting sustainable tourism and recreation;
potential name for the new sanctuary;
the potential to advance multiple, complementary
priorities of the Federal administration, the Department of Commerce,
and NOAA, including conserving and restoring ocean and coastal
habitats, supporting Tribally and locally led stewardship, and
advancing offshore wind and other clean energy projects;
the potential location of an administrative office as well
as coastal education facilities including possibly a visitor center;
and
other information relevant to the designation and
management of a new sanctuary in this proposed area.
Comments may be submitted to NOAA by January 10, 2022 using the
methods described in ADDRESSES. NOAA will host public scoping meetings
during the public comment period, as described under DATES.
VI. Anticipated Permits, Authorizations, and Consultations
Federal, state, and local permits, authorizations, or consultations
may be required for the Proposed Action, including consultation or
review under the Endangered Species Act, 16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.,
Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act, 16 U.S.C.
1801 et seq., National Historic Preservation Act, 54 U.S.C. 300101 et
seq., and Executive Order 13175, consistency review under the Coastal
Zone Management Act, 16 U.S.C. 1451 et seq., and possibly reviews under
other laws and regulations determined to be applicable to the proposed
action. To the fullest extent possible, NOAA will prepare the DEIS
concurrently with and integrated with analyses required by other
Federal environmental review requirements, and the DEIS will list all
Federal permits, licenses, and other authorizations that must be
obtained in implementing the proposed action. See 40 CFR 1502.24.
Consultation Under Section 106 of the National Historic Preservation
Act and Executive Order 13175
This notice confirms that NOAA will coordinate its responsibilities
under section 106 of the National Historic Preservation Act during the
sanctuary designation process and is soliciting public and stakeholder
input to meet section 106 compliance requirements. The section 106
consultation process specifically applies to any agency undertaking
that may affect historic properties. Pursuant to 36 CFR 800.16(1)(1),
historic properties include: ``Any prehistoric or historic district,
site, building, structure or object included in, or eligible for
inclusion in, the National Register of Historic Places maintained by
the Secretary of the Interior. The term includes artifacts, records,
and remains that are related to and located within such properties. The
term includes properties of traditional religious and cultural
importance to an Indian Tribe or Native Hawaiian organization and that
meet the National Register criteria.''
This notice also confirms that, with respect to the proposed
sanctuary designation process, NOAA will fulfill its responsibilities
under Executive Order 13175, ``Consultation and Coordination with
Indian Tribal Governments,'' and NOAA implementing policy and
procedures. Executive Order 13175 requires federal agencies to
establish procedures for meaningful consultation and coordination with
Tribal officials in the development of federal policies that have
Tribal implications. NOAA implements Executive Order 13175 through the
NOAA Administrative Order 218-8 (Policy on Government-to-Government
Consultation with Federally Recognized Indian Tribes and Alaska Native
Corporations), and the
[[Page 62516]]
NOAA Tribal Consultation Handbook. Under these policies and procedures,
NOAA offers affected federally recognized Tribes government-to-
government consultation at the earliest practicable time it can
reasonably anticipate that a proposed policy or initiative may have
Tribal implications.
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1431 et seq.; 42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.; 40 CFR
1500-1508 (NEPA Implementing Regulations); Companion Manual for NOAA
Administrative Order 216-6A.
John Armor,
Director, Office of National Marine Sanctuaries, National Ocean
Service, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
[FR Doc. 2021-24609 Filed 11-9-21; 8:45 am]
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