Notice of Intent To Prepare a Draft Environmental Impact Statement for the Pearl River Flood Risk Management Project, Pearl River Watershed, Rankin and Hinds Counties, Mississippi, 31738-31740 [2023-10599]
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31738
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 96 / Thursday, May 18, 2023 / Notices
complete description of the activities, go
to https://www.federalregister.gov and
search on the permit number provided
in Table 1 below.
TABLE 1—ISSUED PERMITS
Permit No.
RTID
24378–01 .......
0648–XC630
25686 .............
0648–XB542
26919 .............
0648–XC724
27027 .............
0648–XC718
27077 .............
0648–XC750
27099 .............
0648–XC782
27225 .............
0648–XC783
27267 .............
0648–XC816
27272 .............
0648–XC768
The University of Alaska Southeast, 1332 Seward Ave,
Sitka, AK 99835 (Responsible Party: Jan Straley).
NMFS Southeast Fisheries Science Center, 75 Virginia
Beach, Miami, FL (Responsible Party: Lisa
Desfosse, Ph.D.).
Georgia Department of Natural Resources, 2070 U.S.
Highway 278 Southeast, Social Circle, GA 30025
(Responsible Party: Matt Elliott).
Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve, P.O. Box
140, Gustavus, AK 99826 (Responsible Party:
Thomas Schaff).
WSP Wild Water Productions Limited, St Stephen’s
Avenue, Bristol, BS1 1YL, United Kingdom (Responsible Party: Joanna Barwick).
Pacific Whale Foundation (Responsible Party: Jens
Curie), 300 Ma’alaea Rd. Ste. 211, Wailuku, Hawaii
96793.
Sea Research Foundation, Inc. dba Mystic Aquarium,
55 Coogan Boulevard, Mystic, CT 06355 (Responsible Party: Katie Cubina).
The Maryland Zoo in Baltimore, 1876 Mansion House
Drive, Baltimore, MD 21217 (Responsible Party:
Ellen Bronson, DVM).
Stellwagen Bank National Marine Sanctuary, 175 Edward Foster Road, Scituate, MA 02066 (Responsible
Party: David Wiley, Ph.D.).
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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.
Dated: May 12, 2023.
Julia M. Harrison,
Chief, Permits and Conservation Division,
Office of Protected Resources, National
Marine Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2023–10561 Filed 5–17–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:05 May 17, 2023
Previous Federal Register
notice
Applicant
Jkt 259001
87 FR 80527, December 30,
2022.
86 FR 59997, October 29, 2021
April 28, 2023.
88 FR 7080, February 2, 2023 ...
April 14, 2023.
88 FR 4975, January 26, 2023 ...
April 28, 2023.
88 FR 8408, February 9, 2023 ...
April 11, 2023.
88 FR 10294, February 17, 2023
April 28, 2023.
88 FR 10299, February 17, 2023
April 20, 2023.
88 FR 15681, March 14, 2023 ....
April 28, 2023.
88 FR 9870, February 15, 2023
April 20, 2023.
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE
Department of the Army, Corps of
Engineers
Notice of Intent To Prepare a Draft
Environmental Impact Statement for
the Pearl River Flood Risk
Management Project, Pearl River
Watershed, Rankin and Hinds
Counties, Mississippi
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers,
Department of the Army, DoD.
ACTION: Notice of intent to prepare a
draft environmental impact statement
for the Pearl River Flood Risk
Management Project, Pearl River
Watershed, Rankin and Hinds Counties,
Mississippi.
AGENCY:
The U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers (USACE) intends to prepare a
draft environmental impact statement
(DEIS) for the Pearl River Flood Risk
Management Project in Rankin and
Hinds Counties, Mississippi to analyze
flood risk management plans that can be
implemented under section 3104 of the
Water Resources Development Act
(WRDA) of 2007. This notice updates
the original Notice of Intent declaring
the Rankin-Hinds Pearl River Flood and
Drainage Control District, the nonFederal interest (NFI) and USACE’s
intent to conduct a Feasibility Study
SUMMARY:
PO 00000
Frm 00070
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Issuance date
April 5, 2023.
and EIS process, which was published
in the Federal Register on July 25, 2013.
USACE is now preparing a DEIS to
identify the national economic
development (NED) plan by comparing
the level of flood protection provided by
the alternatives presented in the NFI’s
section 211 Study (Alternatives A and
C) and two new USACE alternatives
(Alternative A1 and Combination/
Hybrid Plan, as allowed for by section
3104); assess the environmental
acceptability and technical feasibility of
the alternatives; and provide the
Secretary the necessary information to
choose a plan to implement.
Additionally, consistent with section
1176 of WRDA 2018, the DEIS will
assess potential downstream impacts to
the Pearl River Basin.
DATES: All comments and suggestions
must be submitted by June 20, 2023.
ADDRESSES: To ensure the Corps has
sufficient time to consider public input
in the preparation of the Draft EIS,
scoping comments should be submitted
by email at PearlRiverFRM@
usace.army.mil, by surface mail to U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers, CEMVK–
PMP, 4155 Clay Street, Vicksburg,
Mississippi 39183–3435, or at the
Scoping Meeting(s).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Questions and comments regarding the
proposed project should reference ‘‘the
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 96 / Thursday, May 18, 2023 / Notices
Pearl River Flood Risk Management
Project’’ and be directed to Eric
Williams at eric.m.williams@
usace.army.mil or (504) 862–2862.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background: Section 3104 of WRDA
2007 modified the ‘‘Pearl River Basin
Project’’ originally authorized by section
401(e)(3) of WRDA 1986 to authorize the
Secretary to ‘‘construct the project
generally in accordance with the plan
described in the ‘Pearl River Watershed,
Mississippi, Feasibility Study Main
Report, Preliminary Draft’, dated
February 2007’’ subject to subsection
(c). Section 3104(c) provides that ‘‘[i]f
the Secretary determines under
subsection (b) that the locally preferred
plan provides a level of flood damage
reduction that is equal to or greater than
the level of flood damage reduction
provided by the national economic
development plan and that the locally
preferred plan is environmentally
acceptable and technically feasible, the
Secretary may construct the project
identified as the national economic
development plan, or the locally
preferred plan, or some combination
thereof.’’
The NFI prepared a draft feasibility
study/environmental impact statement
(Study) under section 211 of the Water
Resources Development Act (WRDA) of
1996 and submitted it to the Office of
the Assistant Secretary of the Army for
Civil Works (OASA(CW)) in July 2022
for review. Since then, OASA(CW) and
USACE have been working with the NFI
on resolving identified issues with the
NFI section 211 Study.
For the past 100 years, headwater
flooding of the Pearl River has caused
disruption to citizens and businesses
throughout the Jackson, Mississippi,
metropolitan area, putting over 5,000
commercial and residential structures at
risk of flood damage. Five of the highest
river stages on record have occurred in
the past 20 years. The greatest flood risk
is borne by minority and low-income
communities. Jackson has struggled
with population loss and lost economic
opportunity.
In 1996, local interests proposed the
LeFleur Lakes Flood Control Plan,
consisting of upper and lower lakes
along the Pearl River south of the Ross
Barnett Reservoir as an alternative to the
comprehensive levee plan consisting of
new levees, levee enlargements, water
control structures, and culverts. USACE
later prepared a preliminary feasibility
study and draft environmental impact
statement (FS/DEIS) evaluating the local
interest plan and the comprehensive
levee plan, dated February 2007, which
was not noticed in the Federal Register,
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:05 May 17, 2023
Jkt 259001
but is referenced in the current DEIS.
The levee plan was determined to be
non-implementable.
In March of 2012, the NFI prepared a
Preliminary Hydraulic and Hydrologic
Report for a channel improvement
concept along with some initial
inquiries of a locally preferred plan with
a smaller footprint. The flood risk
management effort was continued in
2013 when the NFI team began
rescoping the project with input from
USACE, input from additional agencies
and the public, and a review of previous
alternatives. To efficiently and
effectively consider as many measures
as possible, the previous reports were
utilized where possible, reevaluating the
flood risk management measures
studied and considering over 60 plans
previously studied. During the review of
plans examined in prior reports, plans
were updated in some cases with
current cost estimates; in other cases,
plans were updated with continued
modeling for updated and thorough
analysis. Using this information, the
USACE is conducting a reanalysis of
engineering, economic, and
environmental factors relative to
prospective flood alleviation measures
in the Pearl River Watershed study area
(Metropolitan Jackson area) for
Alternatives A, A1, C, and a
Combination/Hybrid Plan by employing
Department of the Army criteria and
guidelines. The DEIS will examine the
reasonably foreseeable environmental
impacts of all reasonable alternatives
that may be proposed.
Proposed Action: The purpose of the
proposed action is to reduce flood risk
in the Jackson metropolitan area; reduce
the flood risk of critical infrastructure,
including the Savanna Street
Wastewater Treatment Facility; and to
improve access to transportation routes,
evacuation routes, and critical care
facilities during flood events. For the
past 100 years, headwater flooding of
the Pearl River (greater than 10 feet deep
in some areas) has caused disruption to
businesses and industry throughout the
Jackson, MS, metropolitan area. This
area of increased flood risk includes
5,000 commercial and residential
structures and effects a population of
over 500,000. There have been
numerous flood events that have
affected the Study Area, most notably
the Easter Flood of 1979 and the May
Flood of 1983. Most recently, the Pearl
River crested at 36.67 feet in Jackson on
February 17, 2020, the third highest
crest ever recorded.
Alternatives: Alternatives being
considered include the following.
Alternative A consists of relocating
structures (buy out) and buying the land
PO 00000
Frm 00071
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
31739
upon which the structures were located.
The total number of structures to be
relocated in this alternative is more than
3,000, including residential structures,
commercial structures, government and
public buildings, schools, and hospitals.
Alternative A1 will be for both
residential and nonresidential structures
receiving residual damages in the base
year with the project in place.
Nonstructural measures of acquisition,
elevation, and floodproofing may be
applied to several with-project
floodplains and will be optimized by
reach to the annual exceedance
probability (AEP) event floodplain
providing the highest net benefits.
Alternative C consists of the
construction of channel improvements,
demolition of the existing weir near the
J. H. Fewell Water Treatment Plant
(WTP) site and construction of a new
weir with a low-flow gate structure
further downstream to enlarge the
existing river channel, Federal levee
improvements (excavated material
plan), and upgrading an existing nonFederal levee into a federalized ring
levee around the Savannah Street
WWTP. The NFI’s preferred alternative
is a Channel Improvements Plan,
Alternative C. Consideration of an
alternative that is a combination, or
hybrid, of these plans is authorized. The
Combination/Hybrid Plan may consist
of features that demonstrate
effectiveness and efficiency in
Alternatives A, A1, and C. Through this
Notice, the public is invited to identify
potential alternatives, information, and
analyses relevant to the proposed
action.
Summary of Expected Effects: It is
anticipated that Alternatives A and A1
would have minimal impacts on natural
resources but could have significant
effects to the human environment.
These alternatives propose the buyout of
up to approximately 3,100 structures,
including homes and businesses.
Implementation of Alternative A or A1
would impact population and housing,
employment and business activity, tax
revenues, community cohesiveness and
growth.
Alternative C’s environmental effects
will be further determined during the
upcoming analyses. Based on the
information available now
approximately 2,069 acres of terrestrial
habitat would be converted to aquatic
habitat. Approximately 1,861 acres of
wetlands and ‘‘other waters of the U.S.’’
and approximately 487 acres of existing
surface water bodies, including the
Pearl River channel and its tributaries,
would be impacted. Additionally,
impacts on threatened and endangered
species by converting the portion of the
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 96 / Thursday, May 18, 2023 / Notices
Pearl River within the project area from
a riverine system to a lake system will
be further reviewed. Water quality and
quantity impacts downstream of the
project area will also be reviewed
pursuant to Section 1176.
Environmental Reviews and
Consultation Requirements: The
alternatives are being coordinated with
federal, state, regional, and local
agencies. In accordance with relevant
environmental laws and regulations,
USACE will engage at least the
following agencies, some of which may
also serve as cooperating or
participating agencies in the EIS
preparation: U. S. Fish and Wildlife
Service (USFWS) under the Fish and
Wildlife Coordination Act; USFWS
under the Endangered Species Act; U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency and
the Mississippi Department of
Environment Quality under the Clean
Air Act and the Clean Water Act;
Mississippi Department of Wildlife
Fisheries and Parks, Mississippi
Department of Marine Resources,
Mississippi Department of Archives and
History, Louisiana Department of
Environmental Quality, Louisiana
Department of Natural Resources,
Louisiana Department of Wildlife and
Fisheries, Louisiana Coastal Protection
and Restoration Authority, and the
Advisory Council on Historic
Preservation and Federally-recognized
Indian Tribes under the National
Historic Preservation Act.
NEPA Schedule: The draft EIS is
presently scheduled to be available for
public review and comment in
September 2023. A 45-day public
review period will be provided for
interested parties and agencies to review
and comment on this draft document.
All interested parties are encouraged to
respond to this notice and provide a
current address if they wish to be
notified of the Draft EIS circulation. A
Record of Decision would be approved
and signed no earlier than 30 days after
the final EIS is published.
Public Involvement and Scoping:
USACE invites all affected federal, state,
and local agencies, affected Federallyrecognized Indian Tribes, other
interested parties, and the general
public to participate in the National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA)
process during development of the
DEIS. Besides providing information,
this notice requests input on
alternatives and issues of concern.
To ensure that public comments are
considered in the DEIS preparation
process, members of the public,
interested persons and entities must
submit their comments to USACE by
mail, email, or at the Scoping
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:05 May 17, 2023
Jkt 259001
Meeting(s). All comments and
suggestions must be submitted by June
20, 2023. All personally identifiable
information (for example, name,
address, etc.) voluntarily submitted by a
commenter may be publicly accessible.
Do not submit confidential business
information or otherwise sensitive or
protected information.
Scoping meeting(s) will be held at
various locations (Slidell, Louisiana,
and Jackson, Mississippi) during the
scoping period which extends to June
20, 2023, to present information and
receive comments from the public.
Notification of the meeting(s) will be
publicly announced in advance by
USACE through press releases, special
public notices, USACE social media
platforms, and the project website
https://www.mvk.usace.army.mil/
Missions/Programs-and-ProjectManagement/Project-Management/
Pearl-River/.
James A. Bodron,
Programs Director, Mississippi Valley
Division.
[FR Doc. 2023–10599 Filed 5–17–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3720–58–P
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE
Department of the Navy
Certificate of Alternate Compliance for
USS George Washington (CVN 73)
Department of the Navy (DoN),
Department of Defense (DoD).
ACTION: Notice of issuance of certificate
of alternate compliance.
AGENCY:
The U.S. Navy hereby
announces that a Certificate of Alternate
Compliance has been issued for USS
GEORGE WASHINGTON (CVN 73). Due
to the special construction and purpose
of this vessel, the Admiralty Counsel of
the Navy has determined it is a vessel
of the Navy which, due to its special
construction and purpose, cannot
comply fully with the navigation lights
provisions of the International
Regulations for Preventing Collisions at
Sea, 1972 (72 COLREGS) without
interfering with its special function as a
naval ship. The intended effect of this
notice is to warn mariners in waters
where 72 COLREGS apply.
DATES: This Certificate of Alternate
Compliance is effective May 18, 2023
and is applicable beginning May 4,
2023.
SUMMARY:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Lieutenant Commander J. Martin Bunt,
JAGC, U.S. Navy, Admiralty Attorney,
Office of the Judge Advocate General,
PO 00000
Frm 00072
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 9990
Admiralty and Claims Division (Code
15), 1322 Patterson Ave. SE, Suite 3000,
Washington Navy Yard, DC 20374–
5066, 202–685–5040, or admiralty@
navy.mil.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background and Purpose. Executive
Order (E.O.) 11964 of January 19, 1977
and 33 U.S.C. 1605 provide that the
requirements of the International
Regulations for Preventing Collisions at
Sea, 1972 (72 COLREGS), as to the
number, position, range, or arc of
visibility of lights or shapes, as well as
to the disposition and characteristics of
sound-signaling appliances, shall not
apply to a vessel or class of vessels of
the Navy where the Secretary of the
Navy shall find and certify that, by
reason of special construction or
purpose, it is not possible for such
vessel(s) to comply fully with the
provisions without interfering with the
special function of the vessel(s). Notice
of issuance of a Certificate of Alternate
Compliance must be made in the
Federal Register.
In accordance with 33 U.S.C. 1605,
the Admiralty Counsel of the Navy,
under authority delegated by the
Secretary of the Navy, hereby finds and
certifies that USS GEORGE
WASHINGTON (CVN 73) is a vessel of
special construction or purpose, and
that, with respect to the position of the
following navigational lights, it is not
possible to comply fully with the
requirements of the provisions
enumerated in the 72 COLREGS without
interfering with the special function of
the vessel:
Rule 21(a), pertaining to the
placement of the masthead lights over
the fore and aft centerline of the ship;
Annex I, paragraph 2(g), pertaining to
the placement of the sidelights above
the hull; Rule 21(b) pertaining to the
visibility of the sidelights; Annex I,
paragraph 3(a), pertaining to the
placement of the forward masthead light
in the forward quarter of the ship; and
Annex I, Paragraph (2)(i)(iii) pertaining
to the placement of the task lights.
The Admiralty Counsel of the Navy
further finds and certifies that these
navigational lights are in closest
possible compliance with the applicable
provision of the 72 COLREGS.
Authority: 33 U.S.C. 1605(c), E.O.
11964.
Dated: May 15, 2023.
A.R. Holt,
Lieutenant Commander, Judge Advocate
General’s Corps, U.S. Navy, Federal Register
Liaison Officer.
[FR Doc. 2023–10630 Filed 5–17–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3810–FF–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 88, Number 96 (Thursday, May 18, 2023)]
[Notices]
[Pages 31738-31740]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2023-10599]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE
Department of the Army, Corps of Engineers
Notice of Intent To Prepare a Draft Environmental Impact
Statement for the Pearl River Flood Risk Management Project, Pearl
River Watershed, Rankin and Hinds Counties, Mississippi
AGENCY: U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Department of the Army, DoD.
ACTION: Notice of intent to prepare a draft environmental impact
statement for the Pearl River Flood Risk Management Project, Pearl
River Watershed, Rankin and Hinds Counties, Mississippi.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) intends to prepare a
draft environmental impact statement (DEIS) for the Pearl River Flood
Risk Management Project in Rankin and Hinds Counties, Mississippi to
analyze flood risk management plans that can be implemented under
section 3104 of the Water Resources Development Act (WRDA) of 2007.
This notice updates the original Notice of Intent declaring the Rankin-
Hinds Pearl River Flood and Drainage Control District, the non-Federal
interest (NFI) and USACE's intent to conduct a Feasibility Study and
EIS process, which was published in the Federal Register on July 25,
2013. USACE is now preparing a DEIS to identify the national economic
development (NED) plan by comparing the level of flood protection
provided by the alternatives presented in the NFI's section 211 Study
(Alternatives A and C) and two new USACE alternatives (Alternative A1
and Combination/Hybrid Plan, as allowed for by section 3104); assess
the environmental acceptability and technical feasibility of the
alternatives; and provide the Secretary the necessary information to
choose a plan to implement. Additionally, consistent with section 1176
of WRDA 2018, the DEIS will assess potential downstream impacts to the
Pearl River Basin.
DATES: All comments and suggestions must be submitted by June 20, 2023.
ADDRESSES: To ensure the Corps has sufficient time to consider public
input in the preparation of the Draft EIS, scoping comments should be
submitted by email at [email protected], by surface mail to
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, CEMVK-PMP, 4155 Clay Street, Vicksburg,
Mississippi 39183-3435, or at the Scoping Meeting(s).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Questions and comments regarding the
proposed project should reference ``the
[[Page 31739]]
Pearl River Flood Risk Management Project'' and be directed to Eric
Williams at [email protected] or (504) 862-2862.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background: Section 3104 of WRDA 2007 modified the ``Pearl River
Basin Project'' originally authorized by section 401(e)(3) of WRDA 1986
to authorize the Secretary to ``construct the project generally in
accordance with the plan described in the `Pearl River Watershed,
Mississippi, Feasibility Study Main Report, Preliminary Draft', dated
February 2007'' subject to subsection (c). Section 3104(c) provides
that ``[i]f the Secretary determines under subsection (b) that the
locally preferred plan provides a level of flood damage reduction that
is equal to or greater than the level of flood damage reduction
provided by the national economic development plan and that the locally
preferred plan is environmentally acceptable and technically feasible,
the Secretary may construct the project identified as the national
economic development plan, or the locally preferred plan, or some
combination thereof.''
The NFI prepared a draft feasibility study/environmental impact
statement (Study) under section 211 of the Water Resources Development
Act (WRDA) of 1996 and submitted it to the Office of the Assistant
Secretary of the Army for Civil Works (OASA(CW)) in July 2022 for
review. Since then, OASA(CW) and USACE have been working with the NFI
on resolving identified issues with the NFI section 211 Study.
For the past 100 years, headwater flooding of the Pearl River has
caused disruption to citizens and businesses throughout the Jackson,
Mississippi, metropolitan area, putting over 5,000 commercial and
residential structures at risk of flood damage. Five of the highest
river stages on record have occurred in the past 20 years. The greatest
flood risk is borne by minority and low-income communities. Jackson has
struggled with population loss and lost economic opportunity.
In 1996, local interests proposed the LeFleur Lakes Flood Control
Plan, consisting of upper and lower lakes along the Pearl River south
of the Ross Barnett Reservoir as an alternative to the comprehensive
levee plan consisting of new levees, levee enlargements, water control
structures, and culverts. USACE later prepared a preliminary
feasibility study and draft environmental impact statement (FS/DEIS)
evaluating the local interest plan and the comprehensive levee plan,
dated February 2007, which was not noticed in the Federal Register, but
is referenced in the current DEIS. The levee plan was determined to be
non-implementable.
In March of 2012, the NFI prepared a Preliminary Hydraulic and
Hydrologic Report for a channel improvement concept along with some
initial inquiries of a locally preferred plan with a smaller footprint.
The flood risk management effort was continued in 2013 when the NFI
team began rescoping the project with input from USACE, input from
additional agencies and the public, and a review of previous
alternatives. To efficiently and effectively consider as many measures
as possible, the previous reports were utilized where possible,
reevaluating the flood risk management measures studied and considering
over 60 plans previously studied. During the review of plans examined
in prior reports, plans were updated in some cases with current cost
estimates; in other cases, plans were updated with continued modeling
for updated and thorough analysis. Using this information, the USACE is
conducting a reanalysis of engineering, economic, and environmental
factors relative to prospective flood alleviation measures in the Pearl
River Watershed study area (Metropolitan Jackson area) for Alternatives
A, A1, C, and a Combination/Hybrid Plan by employing Department of the
Army criteria and guidelines. The DEIS will examine the reasonably
foreseeable environmental impacts of all reasonable alternatives that
may be proposed.
Proposed Action: The purpose of the proposed action is to reduce
flood risk in the Jackson metropolitan area; reduce the flood risk of
critical infrastructure, including the Savanna Street Wastewater
Treatment Facility; and to improve access to transportation routes,
evacuation routes, and critical care facilities during flood events.
For the past 100 years, headwater flooding of the Pearl River (greater
than 10 feet deep in some areas) has caused disruption to businesses
and industry throughout the Jackson, MS, metropolitan area. This area
of increased flood risk includes 5,000 commercial and residential
structures and effects a population of over 500,000. There have been
numerous flood events that have affected the Study Area, most notably
the Easter Flood of 1979 and the May Flood of 1983. Most recently, the
Pearl River crested at 36.67 feet in Jackson on February 17, 2020, the
third highest crest ever recorded.
Alternatives: Alternatives being considered include the following.
Alternative A consists of relocating structures (buy out) and buying
the land upon which the structures were located. The total number of
structures to be relocated in this alternative is more than 3,000,
including residential structures, commercial structures, government and
public buildings, schools, and hospitals. Alternative A1 will be for
both residential and nonresidential structures receiving residual
damages in the base year with the project in place. Nonstructural
measures of acquisition, elevation, and floodproofing may be applied to
several with-project floodplains and will be optimized by reach to the
annual exceedance probability (AEP) event floodplain providing the
highest net benefits. Alternative C consists of the construction of
channel improvements, demolition of the existing weir near the J. H.
Fewell Water Treatment Plant (WTP) site and construction of a new weir
with a low-flow gate structure further downstream to enlarge the
existing river channel, Federal levee improvements (excavated material
plan), and upgrading an existing non-Federal levee into a federalized
ring levee around the Savannah Street WWTP. The NFI's preferred
alternative is a Channel Improvements Plan, Alternative C.
Consideration of an alternative that is a combination, or hybrid, of
these plans is authorized. The Combination/Hybrid Plan may consist of
features that demonstrate effectiveness and efficiency in Alternatives
A, A1, and C. Through this Notice, the public is invited to identify
potential alternatives, information, and analyses relevant to the
proposed action.
Summary of Expected Effects: It is anticipated that Alternatives A
and A1 would have minimal impacts on natural resources but could have
significant effects to the human environment. These alternatives
propose the buyout of up to approximately 3,100 structures, including
homes and businesses. Implementation of Alternative A or A1 would
impact population and housing, employment and business activity, tax
revenues, community cohesiveness and growth.
Alternative C's environmental effects will be further determined
during the upcoming analyses. Based on the information available now
approximately 2,069 acres of terrestrial habitat would be converted to
aquatic habitat. Approximately 1,861 acres of wetlands and ``other
waters of the U.S.'' and approximately 487 acres of existing surface
water bodies, including the Pearl River channel and its tributaries,
would be impacted. Additionally, impacts on threatened and endangered
species by converting the portion of the
[[Page 31740]]
Pearl River within the project area from a riverine system to a lake
system will be further reviewed. Water quality and quantity impacts
downstream of the project area will also be reviewed pursuant to
Section 1176.
Environmental Reviews and Consultation Requirements: The
alternatives are being coordinated with federal, state, regional, and
local agencies. In accordance with relevant environmental laws and
regulations, USACE will engage at least the following agencies, some of
which may also serve as cooperating or participating agencies in the
EIS preparation: U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) under the Fish
and Wildlife Coordination Act; USFWS under the Endangered Species Act;
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the Mississippi Department of
Environment Quality under the Clean Air Act and the Clean Water Act;
Mississippi Department of Wildlife Fisheries and Parks, Mississippi
Department of Marine Resources, Mississippi Department of Archives and
History, Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality, Louisiana
Department of Natural Resources, Louisiana Department of Wildlife and
Fisheries, Louisiana Coastal Protection and Restoration Authority, and
the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation and Federally-recognized
Indian Tribes under the National Historic Preservation Act.
NEPA Schedule: The draft EIS is presently scheduled to be available
for public review and comment in September 2023. A 45-day public review
period will be provided for interested parties and agencies to review
and comment on this draft document. All interested parties are
encouraged to respond to this notice and provide a current address if
they wish to be notified of the Draft EIS circulation. A Record of
Decision would be approved and signed no earlier than 30 days after the
final EIS is published.
Public Involvement and Scoping: USACE invites all affected federal,
state, and local agencies, affected Federally-recognized Indian Tribes,
other interested parties, and the general public to participate in the
National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) process during development of
the DEIS. Besides providing information, this notice requests input on
alternatives and issues of concern.
To ensure that public comments are considered in the DEIS
preparation process, members of the public, interested persons and
entities must submit their comments to USACE by mail, email, or at the
Scoping Meeting(s). All comments and suggestions must be submitted by
June 20, 2023. All personally identifiable information (for example,
name, address, etc.) voluntarily submitted by a commenter may be
publicly accessible. Do not submit confidential business information or
otherwise sensitive or protected information.
Scoping meeting(s) will be held at various locations (Slidell,
Louisiana, and Jackson, Mississippi) during the scoping period which
extends to June 20, 2023, to present information and receive comments
from the public. Notification of the meeting(s) will be publicly
announced in advance by USACE through press releases, special public
notices, USACE social media platforms, and the project website https://www.mvk.usace.army.mil/Missions/Programs-and-Project-Management/Project-Management/Pearl-River/.
James A. Bodron,
Programs Director, Mississippi Valley Division.
[FR Doc. 2023-10599 Filed 5-17-23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3720-58-P