Stanislaus National Forest; California; Social and Ecological Resilience Across the Landscape 2.0 EIS, 80270-80272 [2023-25427]
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khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with NOTICES
80270
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 221 / Friday, November 17, 2023 / Notices
Agriculture (Forest Service or Agency),
is proposing to revise its directives to
provide guidance on climbing
opportunities on National Forest System
(NFS) lands, including climbing
opportunities in Congressionally
designated wilderness (wilderness).
DATES: Comments must be received in
writing by January 16, 2024.
ADDRESSES: Comments may be
submitted electronically to https://
cara.fs2c.usda.gov/Public/
CommentInput?project=ORMS-3524.
Written comments may be mailed to
Peter Mali, National Wilderness
Program Manager, 1400 Independence
Avenue SW, Washington, DC 20250–
1124. All timely comments, including
names and addresses, will be placed in
the record and will be available for
public inspection and copying. The
public may inspect comments received
at https://cara.fs2c.usda.gov/Public/
ReadingRoom?project=ORMS-3524.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Peter Mali, National Wilderness
Program Manager, SM.FS.ClimbDir@
usda.gov, (202) 823–0773. Individuals
who use telecommunications devices
for the hearing impaired may call the
Federal Relay Service at 800–877–8339,
24 hours a day, every day of the year,
including holidays.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Climbing
is a growing sport in the United States.
According to the Outdoor Industry
Association’s 2022 Report on Outdoor
Participation Trends, there were nearly
10.3 million climbers in the United
States in 2021. Approximately 30
percent of outdoor climbing in the
United States occurs on NFS lands. In
recent years, line officers have
expressed concerns about climbingrelated impacts on resources and
conflicts among uses.
Current Forest Service directives do
not provide guidance for climbing
opportunities on NFS lands. The Joint
Explanatory Statement accompanying
the 2021 Consolidated Appropriations
Act directs the Forest Service to issue
general guidance on climbing
opportunities on NFS lands, including
the application of the Wilderness Act
(16 U.S.C. 1131–1136) to climbing
opportunities and appropriate use of
fixed anchors and fixed equipment in
wilderness. To address impacts
associated with increased climbing on
NFS lands and consistent with the Joint
Explanatory Statement, the Forest
Service is proposing revisions to its
directives to provide guidance on
climbing opportunities on NFS lands.
The proposed directive would
provide guidance on climbing
opportunities inside and outside
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:45 Nov 16, 2023
Jkt 262001
wilderness on NFS lands and would
provide for climbing opportunities that
serve visitor needs; meet land
management and recreation policy
objectives; emphasize the natural setting
of NFS lands; align with natural and
cultural resource protection and the
Agency’s responsibility to Indian Tribes;
and are consistent with applicable law,
directives, and the applicable land
management plan.
The proposed directive would add a
new section, 2355, to Forest Service
Manual (FSM) 2300—Recreation,
Wilderness, and Related Resource
Management, chapter 2350—Trail,
River, and Similar Recreation
Opportunities, which would provide
that climbing is an appropriate use of
NFS lands (proposed FSM 2355.03,
para. 1)—including in wilderness—
when conducted in accordance with
applicable law and Forest Service
directives and consistent with the
applicable land management plan
(proposed FSM 2355.03, para. 4); that a
climbing management plan be
developed, as funding and resources
allow, for climbing opportunities in
wilderness, and for climbing
opportunities outside wilderness where
the District Ranger determines that
climbing is causing adverse resource
impacts or use conflicts (proposed FSM
2355.21); that fixed anchors and fixed
equipment are installations for purposes
of section 4(c) of the Wilderness Act (16
U.S.C. 1133(c)) (proposed FSM 2355.32,
para. 1); that a Forest Supervisor may
authorize the placement or replacement
of fixed anchors and fixed equipment in
wilderness based on a case-specific
determination that they are the
minimum necessary for administration
of the area for Wilderness Act purposes,
including primitive or unconfined
recreation and preservation of
wilderness character (proposed FSM
2355.32, para. 1); that existing fixed
anchors and fixed equipment in
wilderness may be retained pending
completion of a Minimum Requirements
Analysis, as funding and resources
allow, that determines they are the
minimum necessary to facilitate
primitive or unconfined recreation or
otherwise preserve wilderness character
(FSM 2355.32, para. 5);); and that the
issuance and administration of special
use permits are encouraged to enhance
visitor access to climbing opportunities
and visitor education concerning low
impact climbing practices (proposed
FSM 2355.03, para. 9).
To allow for enforcement of
restrictions and prohibitions in climbing
management plans as needed, the Forest
Service will be proposing revisions via
a separate Federal Register notice to its
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Frm 00002
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
regulations at 36 CFR part 261, subpart
A, General Prohibitions.
The minimum 120-day Tribal
consultation for the proposed directive
was initiated November 8, 2021, and
will conclude at the end of the 60-day
comment period for the proposed
directive.
After the comment period closes, the
Forest Service will consider timely
comments that are within the scope of
the proposed directive in the
development of the final directive. A
notice of the final directive, including a
response to comments, will be posted
on the Forest Service’s web page at
https://www.fs.usda.gov/about-agency/
regulations-policies.
Dated: November 6, 2023.
Gregory Smith,
Associate Deputy Chief, National Forest
System.
[FR Doc. 2023–25426 Filed 11–16–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3411–15–P
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Forest Service
Stanislaus National Forest; California;
Social and Ecological Resilience
Across the Landscape 2.0 EIS
Forest Service, Agriculture
(USDA).
ACTION: Notice of intent to prepare an
environmental impact statement.
AGENCY:
The Forest Service (‘‘Forest
Service’’), United States Department of
Agriculture, is preparing an
Environmental Impact Statement (EIS)
for the Social and Ecological Resilience
Across the Landscape 2.0 (SERAL 2.0)
project. The project area is
approximately 160,000 acres in size,
including approximately 119,000 acres
of Forest Service lands. The project area
includes the remainder of the Stanislaus
Landscape—a Wildfire Crisis Strategy
Priority Landscape identified in 2022.
The project area also spans multiple
High Risk Western Firesheds identified
by the Secretary of Agriculture in
January 2023.
DATES: Comments concerning the scope
of the analysis must be received by
December 18, 2023. The draft
environmental impact statement is
expected in early February 2024, and
the final environmental impact
statement is expected in April 2024.
ADDRESSES: Scoping comments may be
submitted electronically through
https://cara.ecosystemmanagement.org/Public/
commentInput?Project=63557. Written
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\17NON1.SGM
17NON1
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 221 / Friday, November 17, 2023 / Notices
comments may be submitted via mail or
by hand delivery to Stanislaus National
Forest, Attn: SERAL 2.0, 19777 Greenley
Road, Sonora, CA 95370.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Benjamin Cossel (Stanislaus National
Forest Public Affairs Officer) by email at
benjamin.cossel@usda.gov. Individuals
who use telecommunication devices for
the deaf and hard of hearing (TDD) may
call the Federal Relay Service at 800–
877–8339, 24 hours a day, every day of
the year, including holidays.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Purpose and Need for Action
The purpose of SERAL 2.0 is to
prepare the landscape for the safe
reintroduction of fire as a key ecological
process; increase the landscape’s
resilience and adaptive capacity to
natural disturbances such as fire,
drought, insects and disease; reduce the
risk of fire spreading into communities
or damaging critical infrastructure; and
to manage the forest in a cost-effective
manner, including making wood
products available to local industries
and businesses. The actions proposed in
the SERAL 2.0 project are needed to
minimize the potential for large-, highseverity fire and habitat loss; shift the
landscape vegetation structure and
composition towards conditions that are
more in alignment with future desired
conditions, control occurrences of
invasive, non-native plants; and support
prescribed fire and wildfire
management operations.
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with NOTICES
Proposed Action
The Stanislaus National Forest is
proposing multiple actions to meet the
purpose and need of the project. A
combination of mechanical thinning
and prescribed fire is proposed.
Treatment objectives to create both lateopen and mid-open forest structure will
be achieved through mechanical
thinning with strategically placed
openings (gaps) and retained groups of
trees (clumps) scattered throughout the
treated landscape. Gaps and clumps will
generally range in size between 0.1 and
0.5 acres, each averaging approximately
0.25 acres in size and a gap frequency
of approximately one every two acres.
Thinning would primarily consist of
timber harvesting but also includes noncommercial methods such as
mastication and biomass removal.
Multiple logging systems, road
maintenance, temporary road
construction, and landing development
would be required for commercial
timber harvest. A proportion of the
proposed restoration treatments will
occur within California spotted owl
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:57 Nov 16, 2023
Jkt 262001
protected activity centers and territories
designed to incorporate the management
approaches and conservation measures
specifications presented in the
Conservation Strategy for the California
Spotted Owl in the Sierra Nevada
(USDA Forest Service 2019).
The construction and maintenance of
a shaded fuelbreak network is also
proposed. The purpose of this proposed
network is to break up large expanses of
continuous fuels, support firefighter
access and safety, increase suppression
opportunities, and provide control
points for the implementation of
prescribed fire. To construct these
fuelbreaks, trees may be thinned to
shaded fuelbreak standards and
continuous vegetation under 8″ DBH
(the diameter of each tree is measured
at ‘‘breast height’’) or 12 feet tall will be
broken up into naturally appearing
clumps or islands of varied size and
shape. Salvage of insect-, disease-,
drought-, and fire-killed trees is
included as part of the proposed action.
The area of potential salvage varies: for
insect-, disease-, and drought-killed
trees, the area of potential salvage is
limited to within 0.25 miles of
maintenance level 2, 3, 4, and 5
National Forest System (NFS) roads; not
requiring a new temporary road greater
than 500 feet within forested areas;
outside of protected activity centers
(PACs), and outside of wild and scenic
river corridors. For fire-killed trees, the
area of potential salvage is further
limited to only 500 acres per Hydrologic
Unit Code (HUC) 6 watershed.
Non-native invasive weed control and
eradication treatments are proposed for
mapped known invasive weed
locations, additional acres to account for
a 20 percent rate of spread from those
known locations, and a limited number
of acres where future infestations are
discovered after analysis.
Forest Plan Amendments
The proposed project-specific forest
plan amendments are designed to
implement the management approaches
and conservation measures presented in
the Conservation Strategy for the
California Spotted Owl in the Sierra
Nevada (‘‘The CSO Strategy’’; USDA
Forest Service 2019). The amendments
are specific to the approximate 160,000acre project area and proposed actions.
The proposed amendments incorporate
CSO Strategy conservation measures
that provide some immediate stability
for individual owls while implementing
actions to better increase landscape
resilience. The CSO Strategy concludes
that short term impacts are a trade-off
that is warranted to best develop
resilient habitat conditions that will
PO 00000
Frm 00003
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
80271
provide long term stability and future
CSO habitat.
Expected Impacts
This project is expected to
significantly increase landscape
resilience to natural disturbances which
is the primary objective of SERAL 2.0.
The treatments proposed to meet the
desired landscape conditions may cause
short term impacts to sensitive
resources, including California spotted
owl PACs. SERAL 2.0 is the second
project on the Stanislaus National Forest
to fully adopt and implement the CSO
Strategy’s management approaches and
conservation measures (SERAL 1.0 in
2022 was the first). Although the longterm benefits are expected to far
outweigh the risks to resources from
applying these new approaches, a
measure of uncertainty is also present.
The proposed actions have been
designed based on best available science
and are well supported. However, at
present, there are not any documented
post-treatment case-studies of the
outcomes of the treatments to directly
inform the analysis, and thus the
uncertainty.
Responsible Official
The Responsible Official will be Jason
Kuiken, Forest Supervisor, Stanislaus
National Forest.
Scoping Comments
This notice of intent initiates the
scoping process which guides the
development of the EIS. In this process,
the Forest Service is requesting
comments on potential impacts, and
identification of any relevant
information, studies, or analyses of any
kind concerning impacts affecting the
quality of the human environment.
Public comments regarding this
proposal will assist the Forest Service in
identifying issues and opportunities
associated with the proposal, how to
best manage resources, and to focus the
analysis. The SERAL 2.0 project was
authorized to use the Western Firesheds
Emergency Action Declaration
(Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, Section
40807) on April 14, 2023. Under this
emergency authority, the SERAL 2.0 EIS
will be developed to consider only a
proposed action and no action
alternative in detail, and the EIS and
draft decision will not be subject to predecisional administrative review
(Consolidated Appropriations Act of
2012 (Pub. L. 112–74) as implemented
by Subparts A and B of 36 CFR part 218
or part 219).
It is important that reviewers provide
their comments at such times and in
such manner that they are useful to the
E:\FR\FM\17NON1.SGM
17NON1
80272
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 221 / Friday, November 17, 2023 / Notices
agency’s preparation of the
environmental impact statement.
Therefore, comments should be
provided prior to the close of the
comment period and should clearly
articulate the reviewers’ concerns and
contentions. The Forest Service will use
the scoping comments to help identify
potential significant issues related to the
proposed action while preparing the
draft EIS (DEIS). The DEIS is expected
to be available for a 45-day opportunity
to comment in early February 2024.
Comments received in response to
this solicitation, including names and
addresses of those who comment, will
be part of the public record for this
proposed action. Comments submitted
anonymously will be accepted and
considered.
Nature of Decision To Be Made
Given the purpose and need, the
Responsible Official will determine
whether the proposed actions comply
with all applicable laws governing
Forest Service actions and with the
applicable standards and guidelines
found in the Forest Plan of the
Stanislaus National Forest; whether the
EIS has sufficient environmental
analysis to make an informed decision;
and whether the proposed action meets
the purpose and need for action. With
this information, the Responsible
Official must decide whether to select
the proposed action and what, if any,
additional actions should be required.
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with NOTICES
Substantive Provisions
The substantive provisions of 36 CFR
219.8 through 219.11 that directly apply
to the proposed amendments are 36 CFR
219.9 Diversity of Plant and Animal
Communities, (a) Ecosystem plan
components, (1) Ecosystem integrity (36
CFR 219(a)(1)); 36 CFR 219.9 Diversity
of Plant and Animal Communities, (a)
Ecosystem plan components, (2)
Ecosystem diversity, (i) key
characteristics associated with the
terrestrial and aquatic ecosystem types
(36 CFR 219(a)(2)(i)); 36 CFR 219.9
Diversity of Plant and Animal
Communities, (a) Ecosystem plan
components, (2) Ecosystem diversity,
(ii) rare aquatic and terrestrial plant and
animal communities (36 CFR
219(a)(2)(ii)); and 36 CFR 219.8
Sustainability, (b) Social and Economic
Sustainability, (1) Social, cultural, and
economic conditions relevant to the area
influenced by the plan (36 CFR
219.8(b)(1)).
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:45 Nov 16, 2023
Jkt 262001
Dated: November 1, 2023.
Troy Heithecker,
Associate Deputy Chief, National Forest
System.
[FR Doc. 2023–25427 Filed 11–16–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3411–15–P
COMMISSION ON CIVIL RIGHTS
Notice of Public Meeting of the
Tennessee Advisory Committee
Commission on Civil Rights.
Announcement of meeting.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
Notice is hereby given,
pursuant to the provisions of the rules
and regulations of the U.S. Commission
on Civil Rights (Commission), and the
Federal Advisory Committee Act
(FACA) that a meeting of the Tennessee
Advisory Committee to the Commission
will convene by Zoom on Thursday,
December 14, 2023, at 11:30 a.m. (CST).
The purpose of the meeting is to discuss
their draft report on voting rights in the
state.
DATES: The meeting will take place on
Thursday, December 14, 2023, at 11:30
a.m. (CST).
Registration Link (Audio/Visual):
https://www.zoomgov.com/j/
1609335325?pwd=dGl
wOU9STmhTV28vWmIycW5Wc
lR3QT09.
Telephone (Audio Only): Dial (833)
568–8864 USA Toll Free; Access Code:
160 933 5325.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Victoria Moreno at vmoreno@usccr.gov
or by phone at 434–515–0204.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This
meeting is available to the public
through the Zoom link above. If joining
only via phone, callers can expect to
incur charges for calls they initiate over
wireless lines, and the Commission will
not refund any incurred charges.
Individuals who are deaf, deafblind and
hard of hearing may also follow the
proceedings by first calling the Federal
Relay Service at 1–800–877–8339 and
providing the Service with the call-in
number found through registering at the
web link provided above for the
meeting.
Members of the public are entitled to
make comments during the open period
at the end of the meeting. Members of
the public may also submit written
comments; the comments must be
received in the Regional Programs Unit
within 30 days following the respective
meeting. Written comments may be
emailed to Victoria Moreno at
vmoreno@usccr.gov. All written
comments received will be available to
the public.
SUMMARY:
PO 00000
Frm 00004
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Persons who desire additional
information may contact the Regional
Programs Unit at (202) 809–9618.
Records and documents discussed
during the meeting will be available for
public viewing as they become available
at the www.facadatabase.gov. Persons
interested in the work of this advisory
committee are advised to go to the
Commission’s website, www.usccr.gov,
or to contact the Regional Programs Unit
at the above phone number or email
address.
Agenda
Thursday, December 14, 2023, at 11:30
a.m. (CST)
1. Welcome & Roll Call
2. Chair’s Comments
3. Discussion on Report
4. Next Steps
5. Public Comment
6. Adjourn
Dated: November 14, 2023.
David Mussatt,
Supervisory Chief, Regional Programs Unit.
[FR Doc. 2023–25448 Filed 11–16–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6335–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
Foreign-Trade Zones Board
[S–214–2023]
Foreign-Trade Zone 26; Application for
Subzone; Helena Industries, LLC;
Cordele, Georgia; Correction
The Federal Register notice published
on November 14, 2023 (88 FR 77952)
regarding the subzone application for
Helena Industries, LLC, located in
Cordele, Georgia, is corrected as follows:
In the first paragraph, first sentence,
the grantee organization should read
‘‘Georgia Foreign-Trade Zone, Inc.,
grantee of FTZ 26’’.
For further information contact
Christopher Kemp at
Christopher.Kemp@trade.gov.
Dated: November 14, 2023.
Elizabeth Whiteman,
Executive Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2023–25467 Filed 11–16–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–DS–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
International Trade Administration
Renewable Energy and Energy
Efficiency Advisory Committee
International Trade
Administration, Department of
Commerce.
AGENCY:
E:\FR\FM\17NON1.SGM
17NON1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 88, Number 221 (Friday, November 17, 2023)]
[Notices]
[Pages 80270-80272]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2023-25427]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Forest Service
Stanislaus National Forest; California; Social and Ecological
Resilience Across the Landscape 2.0 EIS
AGENCY: Forest Service, Agriculture (USDA).
ACTION: Notice of intent to prepare an environmental impact statement.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Forest Service (``Forest Service''), United States
Department of Agriculture, is preparing an Environmental Impact
Statement (EIS) for the Social and Ecological Resilience Across the
Landscape 2.0 (SERAL 2.0) project. The project area is approximately
160,000 acres in size, including approximately 119,000 acres of Forest
Service lands. The project area includes the remainder of the
Stanislaus Landscape--a Wildfire Crisis Strategy Priority Landscape
identified in 2022. The project area also spans multiple High Risk
Western Firesheds identified by the Secretary of Agriculture in January
2023.
DATES: Comments concerning the scope of the analysis must be received
by December 18, 2023. The draft environmental impact statement is
expected in early February 2024, and the final environmental impact
statement is expected in April 2024.
ADDRESSES: Scoping comments may be submitted electronically through
https://cara.ecosystem-management.org/Public/commentInput?Project=63557. Written
[[Page 80271]]
comments may be submitted via mail or by hand delivery to Stanislaus
National Forest, Attn: SERAL 2.0, 19777 Greenley Road, Sonora, CA
95370.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Benjamin Cossel (Stanislaus National
Forest Public Affairs Officer) by email at [email protected].
Individuals who use telecommunication devices for the deaf and hard of
hearing (TDD) may call the Federal Relay Service at 800-877-8339, 24
hours a day, every day of the year, including holidays.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Purpose and Need for Action
The purpose of SERAL 2.0 is to prepare the landscape for the safe
reintroduction of fire as a key ecological process; increase the
landscape's resilience and adaptive capacity to natural disturbances
such as fire, drought, insects and disease; reduce the risk of fire
spreading into communities or damaging critical infrastructure; and to
manage the forest in a cost-effective manner, including making wood
products available to local industries and businesses. The actions
proposed in the SERAL 2.0 project are needed to minimize the potential
for large-, high-severity fire and habitat loss; shift the landscape
vegetation structure and composition towards conditions that are more
in alignment with future desired conditions, control occurrences of
invasive, non-native plants; and support prescribed fire and wildfire
management operations.
Proposed Action
The Stanislaus National Forest is proposing multiple actions to
meet the purpose and need of the project. A combination of mechanical
thinning and prescribed fire is proposed. Treatment objectives to
create both late-open and mid-open forest structure will be achieved
through mechanical thinning with strategically placed openings (gaps)
and retained groups of trees (clumps) scattered throughout the treated
landscape. Gaps and clumps will generally range in size between 0.1 and
0.5 acres, each averaging approximately 0.25 acres in size and a gap
frequency of approximately one every two acres. Thinning would
primarily consist of timber harvesting but also includes non-commercial
methods such as mastication and biomass removal. Multiple logging
systems, road maintenance, temporary road construction, and landing
development would be required for commercial timber harvest. A
proportion of the proposed restoration treatments will occur within
California spotted owl protected activity centers and territories
designed to incorporate the management approaches and conservation
measures specifications presented in the Conservation Strategy for the
California Spotted Owl in the Sierra Nevada (USDA Forest Service 2019).
The construction and maintenance of a shaded fuelbreak network is
also proposed. The purpose of this proposed network is to break up
large expanses of continuous fuels, support firefighter access and
safety, increase suppression opportunities, and provide control points
for the implementation of prescribed fire. To construct these
fuelbreaks, trees may be thinned to shaded fuelbreak standards and
continuous vegetation under 8'' DBH (the diameter of each tree is
measured at ``breast height'') or 12 feet tall will be broken up into
naturally appearing clumps or islands of varied size and shape. Salvage
of insect-, disease-, drought-, and fire-killed trees is included as
part of the proposed action. The area of potential salvage varies: for
insect-, disease-, and drought-killed trees, the area of potential
salvage is limited to within 0.25 miles of maintenance level 2, 3, 4,
and 5 National Forest System (NFS) roads; not requiring a new temporary
road greater than 500 feet within forested areas; outside of protected
activity centers (PACs), and outside of wild and scenic river
corridors. For fire-killed trees, the area of potential salvage is
further limited to only 500 acres per Hydrologic Unit Code (HUC) 6
watershed.
Non-native invasive weed control and eradication treatments are
proposed for mapped known invasive weed locations, additional acres to
account for a 20 percent rate of spread from those known locations, and
a limited number of acres where future infestations are discovered
after analysis.
Forest Plan Amendments
The proposed project-specific forest plan amendments are designed
to implement the management approaches and conservation measures
presented in the Conservation Strategy for the California Spotted Owl
in the Sierra Nevada (``The CSO Strategy''; USDA Forest Service 2019).
The amendments are specific to the approximate 160,000-acre project
area and proposed actions. The proposed amendments incorporate CSO
Strategy conservation measures that provide some immediate stability
for individual owls while implementing actions to better increase
landscape resilience. The CSO Strategy concludes that short term
impacts are a trade-off that is warranted to best develop resilient
habitat conditions that will provide long term stability and future CSO
habitat.
Expected Impacts
This project is expected to significantly increase landscape
resilience to natural disturbances which is the primary objective of
SERAL 2.0. The treatments proposed to meet the desired landscape
conditions may cause short term impacts to sensitive resources,
including California spotted owl PACs. SERAL 2.0 is the second project
on the Stanislaus National Forest to fully adopt and implement the CSO
Strategy's management approaches and conservation measures (SERAL 1.0
in 2022 was the first). Although the long-term benefits are expected to
far outweigh the risks to resources from applying these new approaches,
a measure of uncertainty is also present. The proposed actions have
been designed based on best available science and are well supported.
However, at present, there are not any documented post-treatment case-
studies of the outcomes of the treatments to directly inform the
analysis, and thus the uncertainty.
Responsible Official
The Responsible Official will be Jason Kuiken, Forest Supervisor,
Stanislaus National Forest.
Scoping Comments
This notice of intent initiates the scoping process which guides
the development of the EIS. In this process, the Forest Service is
requesting comments on potential impacts, and identification of any
relevant information, studies, or analyses of any kind concerning
impacts affecting the quality of the human environment. Public comments
regarding this proposal will assist the Forest Service in identifying
issues and opportunities associated with the proposal, how to best
manage resources, and to focus the analysis. The SERAL 2.0 project was
authorized to use the Western Firesheds Emergency Action Declaration
(Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, Section 40807) on April 14, 2023. Under
this emergency authority, the SERAL 2.0 EIS will be developed to
consider only a proposed action and no action alternative in detail,
and the EIS and draft decision will not be subject to pre-decisional
administrative review (Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2012 (Pub. L.
112-74) as implemented by Subparts A and B of 36 CFR part 218 or part
219).
It is important that reviewers provide their comments at such times
and in such manner that they are useful to the
[[Page 80272]]
agency's preparation of the environmental impact statement. Therefore,
comments should be provided prior to the close of the comment period
and should clearly articulate the reviewers' concerns and contentions.
The Forest Service will use the scoping comments to help identify
potential significant issues related to the proposed action while
preparing the draft EIS (DEIS). The DEIS is expected to be available
for a 45-day opportunity to comment in early February 2024.
Comments received in response to this solicitation, including names
and addresses of those who comment, will be part of the public record
for this proposed action. Comments submitted anonymously will be
accepted and considered.
Nature of Decision To Be Made
Given the purpose and need, the Responsible Official will determine
whether the proposed actions comply with all applicable laws governing
Forest Service actions and with the applicable standards and guidelines
found in the Forest Plan of the Stanislaus National Forest; whether the
EIS has sufficient environmental analysis to make an informed decision;
and whether the proposed action meets the purpose and need for action.
With this information, the Responsible Official must decide whether to
select the proposed action and what, if any, additional actions should
be required.
Substantive Provisions
The substantive provisions of 36 CFR 219.8 through 219.11 that
directly apply to the proposed amendments are 36 CFR 219.9 Diversity of
Plant and Animal Communities, (a) Ecosystem plan components, (1)
Ecosystem integrity (36 CFR 219(a)(1)); 36 CFR 219.9 Diversity of Plant
and Animal Communities, (a) Ecosystem plan components, (2) Ecosystem
diversity, (i) key characteristics associated with the terrestrial and
aquatic ecosystem types (36 CFR 219(a)(2)(i)); 36 CFR 219.9 Diversity
of Plant and Animal Communities, (a) Ecosystem plan components, (2)
Ecosystem diversity, (ii) rare aquatic and terrestrial plant and animal
communities (36 CFR 219(a)(2)(ii)); and 36 CFR 219.8 Sustainability,
(b) Social and Economic Sustainability, (1) Social, cultural, and
economic conditions relevant to the area influenced by the plan (36 CFR
219.8(b)(1)).
Dated: November 1, 2023.
Troy Heithecker,
Associate Deputy Chief, National Forest System.
[FR Doc. 2023-25427 Filed 11-16-23; 8:45 am]
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