Notice of Availability for the Organ Mountains-Desert Peaks National Monument Draft Environmental Impact Statement and Resource Management Plan, 24030-24032 [2024-07106]
Download as PDF
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with NOTICES
24030
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 67 / Friday, April 5, 2024 / Notices
Comments may be submitted using any
of the methods listed in the ADDRESSES
section.
The proposed ACECs included in the
preferred alternative are:
• Cottonwood Glades—
approximately 115 acres. Designation
proposed to protect native fish,
meadows, complex springs, and fen
soils. Identified special management
considerations may include restricting
cattle from the area and restricting
motorized and non-motorized vehicular
use.
• Mariposa Lily—approximately 239
acres. Designation proposed to protect
rare and exemplary oak savanna with
core populations of native species, such
as the Bureau Sensitive Species Green’s
mariposa lily and Detlings microseris.
Special management considerations
may include restoration of native grass
and forb components, removal of the
invasive yellow star thistle, prescribed
fire, and restrictions on vehicular
activity and heavy equipment during
fire suppression.
The preferred alternative does not
propose to designate the following
potential ACECs or RNAs:
• Buck Prairie ACEC.
• Jenny Creek RNA.
• Lost Lake RNA.
• Mariposa Preserve Wildlife
Crossing ACEC.
• Moon Prairie ACEC.
• Old Baldy RNA.
• Oregon Gulch RNA.
• Priority Wildlife Connectivity Areas
ACEC.
• Scotch Creek RNA.
• Tunnel Creek ACEC.
Executive Order 13175, BLM Manual
Section 1780, and other Departmental
policies. Tribal Nation concerns,
including impacts on Indian trust assets
and potential impacts to cultural
resources, will be given due
consideration.
You may submit comments on the
Draft RMP/EIS in writing to the BLM at
any public meetings or to the BLM using
one of the methods listed in the
ADDRESSES section. To be considered,
comments must be received by the end
of the 90-day comment period. The
ePlanning website (see ADDRESSES)
includes background information on the
CSNM and the planning process.
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 can 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.
Schedule for the Decision-Making
Process
Bureau of Land Management
16:44 Apr 04, 2024
Jkt 262001
Barry R. Bushue,
BLM Oregon/Washington State Director.
Gordon R. Toevs,
Acting BLM California State Director.
[FR Doc. 2024–07290 Filed 4–4–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4331–24–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
[BLM_NM_FRN_MO4500177326]
The BLM will provide additional
opportunities for public participation
consistent with the NEPA and land use
planning processes, including a 30-day
public protest period and a 60-day
Governor’s consistency review on the
Proposed RMP. The Proposed RMP/
Final EIS is anticipated to be available
for public protest in the Fall of 2024
with a Record of Decision and
Approved RMP in January 2025.
The BLM will hold a total of four
public meetings. One meeting will be
held virtually, and three meetings will
be conducted in-person: in Klamath
Falls, Greensprings, and Medford,
Oregon. The dates and locations of these
meetings will be announced at least 15
days in advance through local media,
social media, newspapers, and the
ePlanning website (see ADDRESSES).
The BLM will continue to consult
with Tribal Nations on a government-togovernment basis in accordance with
VerDate Sep<11>2014
(Authority: 40 CFR 1506.6, 40 CFR 1506.10,
43 CFR 1610.2, 43 CFR 1610.7–2)
Notice of Availability for the Organ
Mountains-Desert Peaks National
Monument Draft Environmental Impact
Statement and Resource Management
Plan
Bureau of Land Management,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice of availability.
AGENCY:
In compliance with the
National Environmental Policy Act of
1969, as amended (NEPA), and the
Federal Land Policy and Management
Act of 1976, as amended (FLPMA), the
Bureau of Land Management (BLM)
New Mexico State Director is
announcing the availability of the Organ
Mountains-Desert Peaks National
Monument (Monument) Draft
Environmental Impact Statement (EIS)
and Resource Management Plan (RMP).
This notice begins a 90-day public
comment period to solicit public
SUMMARY:
PO 00000
Frm 00070
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
comments associated with the
Monument RMP land use allocations
and resource management goals and
objectives, and the environmental
analysis developed using best available
science to identify potential impacts to
objects of scientific and historic interest,
as well as natural resources, resource
values, and wildlife habitat located on
the Monument.
DATES: The BLM is encouraging public
involvement and input via comment
submissions on the Monument Draft
EIS/RMP. The BLM will accept
comments through June 4, 2024.
To afford the BLM the opportunity to
consider and respond to public
comment submission for the Monument
Draft EIS/RMP, please ensure your
comments are submitted and received
prior to the close of the 90-day comment
period or 15 days after the last public
meeting, whichever is later.
ADDRESSES: The public may submit
comments on the Draft EIS/RMP to the
BLM by any of the following methods:
website: https://eplanning.blm.gov/
eplanning-ui/project/92170/; email:
blm_nm_lcdo_mail@blm.gov; or mail:
BLM Las Cruces District Office,
Attention: Monument Manager, 1800
Marquess Street, Las Cruces, NM 88005.
Documents and information relevant
to the Monument planning effort may be
examined online at https://eplanning.
blm.gov/eplanning-ui/project/92170/510
or in-person at the BLM Las Cruces
District Office address mentioned above.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr.
Patrick Rich, RMP Team Lead;
telephone: 405–579–7154; email: prich@
blm.gov. Monument Manager,
telephone: 575–525–4358; address: 1800
Marquess Street, Las Cruces, New
Mexico 88005.
Contact Mr. Patrick Rich to add your
name to our mailing list. Individuals in
the United States who are deaf, deafblind, hard of hearing, or have a speech
disability may dial 711 (TTY, TDD, or
TeleBraille) to access
telecommunications relay services for
contacting Mr. Patrick Rich. Individuals
outside the United States should use the
relay services offered within their
country to make international calls to
the point-of-contact in the United
States.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This
document provides notice that the BLM
New Mexico State Director has prepared
a Draft EIS/RMP for the Organ
Mountains-Desert Peaks National
Monument, announces the beginning of
the 90-day public comment period for
the Monument Draft EIS/RMP, and
seeks public input and comment on the
Monument Draft RMP land use
E:\FR\FM\05APN1.SGM
05APN1
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 67 / Friday, April 5, 2024 / Notices
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with NOTICES
allocations and resource management
goals and objectives identified in the
four land use management alternatives,
as well as the environmental analysis
developed in the Draft EIS to identify
potential effects associated with the four
land use management alternatives
developed for the Monument Draft
RMP. The Monument planning area is
in Don˜a Ana County, New Mexico, and
encompasses approximately 496,591
acres of BLM-managed public land. The
Monument’s current management is
directed by the existing 1993 Mimbres
RMP, relevant amendments that apply
to this planning area, and interim
Monument guidance.
Presidential Proclamation 9131
established the Monument through
identification of 496,591-acres of BLMmanaged public lands in Don˜a Ana
County, New Mexico, surrounding the
City of Las Cruces; and directed the
BLM to develop an RMP for the
Monument. The Draft RMP provides
four management alternatives with
associated land use allocations and
resource management goals and
objectives for the protection and
preservation of objects of scientific and
historic interest, as well as the
conservation of natural resources,
resource values, and wildlife habitat
located on the Monument.
Purpose and Need
The BLM’s purpose for developing the
Monument EIS/RMP is to respond to: (1)
Presidential Proclamation 9131 (79 FR
30431), signed by President Barack
Obama on May 21, 2014, establishing
approximately 496,591-acres of Federal
lands and interest in lands owned or
controlled by the government of the
United States as the Monument; and (2)
the John D. Dingell, Jr. Conservation,
Management, and Recreation Act
(Dingell Act; Pub. L. 116–9), enacted on
March 12, 2019, designating
approximately 239,596-acres falling
within the established boundaries of the
Monument as wilderness and
components of the National Wilderness
Preservation System, in accordance with
the Wilderness Act of 1964 (16 U.S.C.
1131 et seq.). The designated wilderness
encompasses 10 BLM-managed public
land areas within New Mexico: Aden
Lava Flow Wilderness, Broad Canyon
Wilderness, Cinder Cone Wilderness,
East Potrillo Mountains Wilderness,
Mount Riley Wilderness, Organ
Mountains Wilderness, Potrillo
Mountains Wilderness, Robledo
Mountains Wilderness, Sierra De Las
Uvas Wilderness, and Whitehorn
Wilderness.
The need to develop the Monument
EIS/RMP is found in FLPMA, which
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:44 Apr 04, 2024
Jkt 262001
states the BLM shall ‘‘develop,
maintain, and, when appropriate, revise
land use plans’’ (43 U.S.C. 1712(a));
NEPA of 1969 (Pub. L. 91–190); and the
BLM’s planning regulations (43 CFR
1610.4–6). The BLM is preparing an EIS
to identify and analyze reasonably
foreseeable direct, indirect, and
cumulative environmental impacts
associated with the Monument RMP
proposed land use allocations and the
resource management goals and
objectives.
Alternatives
The BLM developed and analyzed the
potential effects of four distinct
alternatives, demonstrating a reasonable
range of alternatives. These were
developed and analyzed by the BLM, as
mandated by NEPA. Alternative A is the
No Action alternative, which is required
by Federal law and utilizes existing land
use management allocations and
resource management goals and
objectives. The No Action alternative
serves as a base point of reference from
which the three action alternatives may
be compared and measured for potential
effects, both beneficial and adverse.
Three action alternatives (Alternatives
B, C, and D) were developed and
analyzed for potential effects. Each
alternative demonstrates a unique
means of achieving the purpose and
need through varying land use
allocations and resource management
goals and objectives. The following is a
brief synopsis of the themes used to
develop each alternative:
• Alternative A (No Action):
Maintains the 1993 Mimbres RMP land
use allocations and resource
management goals and objectives.
Incorporates Monument management
direction and guidance from
Presidential Proclamation 9131 and the
2019 Dingell Act.
• Alternative B (Protection-focused):
Protects objects of scientific and historic
interest. Protects, preserves, and
enhances habitat, natural resources, and
resource values while providing limited
recreation and travel opportunities.
Most proactive in promoting land use
management activities focused on
preservation, restoration, and
enhancement.
• Alternative C (Agency Preferred
Alternative): Preserves objects of
scientific and historic interest within
the Monument. Provides an objective
approach to land use management,
employing preservation and
conservation principles for habitat
management, natural resource
management, and resource values.
Alternative C employs targeted
preservation goals and objectives, while
PO 00000
Frm 00071
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
24031
allowing uses that promote sustained
socioeconomic progression.
• Alternative D (Recreation and Usefocused): Preserves objects of scientific
and historic interest within the
Monument. Institutes foundational
conservation management principles for
the management of habitat, natural
resources, and resource values, while
simultaneously providing an enhanced
visitor experience that emphasizes a
more diverse array of recreational
opportunities. Includes targeted
preservation goals and objectives where
appropriate and necessary.
The BLM New Mexico State Director
has identified Alternative C as the
agency preferred alternative. Alternative
C was determined to be effective at
protecting and preserving Monument
objects while balancing resource uses
and meeting the purpose and need. The
preferred alternative includes important
conservation and preservation measures
that will protect Monument objects of
scientific and historic interest, as well
as other resources and resource values,
including:
• Wilderness areas: Emphasizes
preservation of wilderness character,
with allowance for compatible uses;
• Areas of Critical Environmental
Concern (ACEC): Designates two ACECs
comprised of 38,085 acres within the
Don˜a Ana Mountains (1,427 acres) and
the Organ Mountains (36,658 acres);
• Special Recreation Management
Area (SRMA): Designates SRMAs
comprised of 45,871 acres within the
Don˜a Ana Mountains (5,858 acres) and
Organ Mountains (36,658 acres).
Recreational focus on camping,
equestrian, and pedestrian use;
• Soils: provides for protection and
active management of soils, while
limiting soil disturbing activities;
• Vegetative communities: provides
for the protection, preservation, and
restoration of reference vegetative
communities;
• Wildlife: preserves and restores
native habitat, while enhancing wildlife
corridors and connectivity;
• Visual resources: preserves high
value visual resources through
protective management goals and
objectives;
• Livestock grazing: establishes goals
and objectives developed to ensure
appropriate preservation and
conservation of Monument objects,
natural resources, and resource values,
and defers to a subsequent site-specific
evaluation of compatibility of grazing
with the Presidential Proclamation and
land health evaluations to make further
adjustments to grazing management
guidance and decisions;
E:\FR\FM\05APN1.SGM
05APN1
24032
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 67 / Friday, April 5, 2024 / Notices
• Travel management: establishes
protective goals and objectives by
limiting off-highway vehicles to
designated roads and mechanized
vehicles to designated roads and trails;
and
• Lands and realty: provides resource
preservation and conservation through
establishment of right-of-way exclusion
and avoidance areas across the
Monument.
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with NOTICES
Public Involvement Process
The date(s) and location(s) of public
meeting(s), in-person or virtual, will be
announced at least 15 days in advance
through local media, social media, and
the ePlanning website (https://
eplanning.blm.gov/eplanning-ui/
project/92170/510).
The ePlanning website https://
eplanning.blm.gov/eplanning-ui/
project/92170/510 includes information
about the Monument, a BLM planning
process overview, issues identified for
planning, and interim management
guidance. The BLM encourages broad
public involvement and the submission
of substantive comments on: (1) the
issues identified for analysis; (2) the
land use allocations and resource
management goals and objectives
associated with the four alternatives; (3)
other relevant information; and (4) the
environmental analysis conducted in
the Monument Draft EIS. However, the
public may comment on any aspect of
the Monument Draft EIS/RMP.
A substantive comment is one that is
based on or uses a rational and/or
science-based approach to critique the
information, data, or methodology
employed to develop the Monument
Draft EIS/RMP; the construct of the
alternative(s); or the methodology and
projected effects derived from the
environmental analysis and utilized to
develop the Monument Draft EIS. All
public comments received during the
90-day public comment period will be
accepted, reviewed, and logged into the
administrative record. However,
substantive comments submitted to the
BLM during the 90-day public comment
period will be accepted, reviewed,
responded to by the BLM, and
potentially used for document
amendment through incorporation of
comment substance.
Responsible Official
The New Mexico State Director is the
deciding official for the Monument EIS/
RMP and the Record of Decision.
Decision To Be Made
The BLM New Mexico State Director
will select from the four alternatives
developed and analyzed in the
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:44 Apr 04, 2024
Jkt 262001
Monument Draft EIS/RMP or a
combination of those alternatives, and
the specific land use allocations and
resource management goals and
objectives to be employed for the
protection, preservation, restoration,
enhancement, conservation,
administration, and management of the
objects of scientific and historic interest,
natural resources, resource values, and
wildlife habitat located on Monument
lands.
BLM Interdisciplinary Team
The BLM used an interdisciplinary
approach to develop the Monument
Draft EIS/RMP through careful
consideration of the issues and concerns
identified. Specialists with expertise in
the following disciplines were involved
in the development and analysis of the
Monument Draft EIS/RMP: botany/
vegetation; lands and realty; renewable
energy; fire ecology and management;
wilderness characteristics; wildlife and
special status species; public health and
safety; geology and minerals;
paleontology; air resources; climate
change; water resources; recreation;
transportation; visual resources;
rangeland management; cultural
resources; Tribal resources; soils;
sociology; and economics.
Additional Information: The BLM
interdisciplinary team identified,
analyzed, and considered mitigation to
address reasonably foreseeable impacts
associated with land use allocations and
resource management goals and
objectives employed to develop the
alternatives, in accordance with 40 CFR
1502.14(e). The BLM interdisciplinary
team included appropriate mitigation
measures in the proposed alternatives.
Mitigation includes avoidance,
minimization, rectification, reduction,
or elimination over time, and
compensation and was considered at
multiple planning scales, including the
landscape level.
The BLM interdisciplinary team
proactively coordinated the NEPA and
land use planning processes early in the
planning effort to ensure compliance
with applicable procedural
requirements under the Endangered
Species Act (16 U.S.C. 1536) and
Section 106 of the National Historic
Preservation Act (54 U.S.C. 306108), as
provided in 36 CFR 800.2(d)(3),
including public involvement
requirements of Section 106.
Information concerning historic and
cultural resources and threatened and
endangered species within the area
potentially affected by the draft plan
assisted the BLM interdisciplinary team
in identifying and evaluating potential
impacts to those resources.
PO 00000
Frm 00072
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
The BLM engaged in consultation
with thirteen federally recognized
Tribes on a government-to-government
basis in accordance with Executive
Order 13175, BLM Manual section 1780,
and other Departmental policies. Tribal
concerns, including potential impacts to
Indian trust assets and cultural
resources, were given due
consideration. Federal, State, and local
agencies, along with Indian Tribal
Nations and other stakeholders that
demonstrated interest in or could have
been impacted by the Monument RMP,
were invited to participate in the
scoping process and, if eligible, were
invited to participate as a cooperating
agency. The BLM intends to continue
government-to-government consultation
meetings and will continue to solicit
input and develop opportunities for
meaningful consultation with
potentially affected Tribal Nations
throughout the land use planning
process.
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 can 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.
(Authority: 40 CFR 1501.9 and 43 CFR
1610.2)
Melanie G. Barnes,
BLM New Mexico State Director.
[FR Doc. 2024–07106 Filed 4–4–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4331–23–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Land Management
[MO4500178485]
Notice of Public Meeting, Southern
New Mexico Resource Advisory
Council, New Mexico
Bureau of Land Management,
Interior.
ACTION: Notice of meeting.
AGENCY:
In accordance with the
Federal Land Policy and Management
Act of 1976, as amended, and the
Federal Advisory Committee Act of
1972, the U.S. Department of the
Interior, Bureau of Land Management’s
(BLM) Southern New Mexico Resource
Advisory Council (RAC) will meet as
indicated below.
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\05APN1.SGM
05APN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 89, Number 67 (Friday, April 5, 2024)]
[Notices]
[Pages 24030-24032]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2024-07106]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Land Management
[BLM_NM_FRN_MO4500177326]
Notice of Availability for the Organ Mountains-Desert Peaks
National Monument Draft Environmental Impact Statement and Resource
Management Plan
AGENCY: Bureau of Land Management, Interior.
ACTION: Notice of availability.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: In compliance with the National Environmental Policy Act of
1969, as amended (NEPA), and the Federal Land Policy and Management Act
of 1976, as amended (FLPMA), the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) New
Mexico State Director is announcing the availability of the Organ
Mountains-Desert Peaks National Monument (Monument) Draft Environmental
Impact Statement (EIS) and Resource Management Plan (RMP). This notice
begins a 90-day public comment period to solicit public comments
associated with the Monument RMP land use allocations and resource
management goals and objectives, and the environmental analysis
developed using best available science to identify potential impacts to
objects of scientific and historic interest, as well as natural
resources, resource values, and wildlife habitat located on the
Monument.
DATES: The BLM is encouraging public involvement and input via comment
submissions on the Monument Draft EIS/RMP. The BLM will accept comments
through June 4, 2024.
To afford the BLM the opportunity to consider and respond to public
comment submission for the Monument Draft EIS/RMP, please ensure your
comments are submitted and received prior to the close of the 90-day
comment period or 15 days after the last public meeting, whichever is
later.
ADDRESSES: The public may submit comments on the Draft EIS/RMP to the
BLM by any of the following methods: website: https://eplanning.blm.gov/eplanning-ui/project/92170/; email:
[email protected]; or mail: BLM Las Cruces District Office,
Attention: Monument Manager, 1800 Marquess Street, Las Cruces, NM
88005.
Documents and information relevant to the Monument planning effort
may be examined online at https://eplanning.blm.gov/eplanning-ui/project/92170/510 or in-person at the BLM Las Cruces District Office
address mentioned above.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr. Patrick Rich, RMP Team Lead;
telephone: 405-579-7154; email: [email protected]. Monument Manager,
telephone: 575-525-4358; address: 1800 Marquess Street, Las Cruces, New
Mexico 88005.
Contact Mr. Patrick Rich to add your name to our mailing list.
Individuals in the United States who are deaf, deaf-blind, hard of
hearing, or have a speech disability may dial 711 (TTY, TDD, or
TeleBraille) to access telecommunications relay services for contacting
Mr. Patrick Rich. Individuals outside the United States should use the
relay services offered within their country to make international calls
to the point-of-contact in the United States.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This document provides notice that the BLM
New Mexico State Director has prepared a Draft EIS/RMP for the Organ
Mountains-Desert Peaks National Monument, announces the beginning of
the 90-day public comment period for the Monument Draft EIS/RMP, and
seeks public input and comment on the Monument Draft RMP land use
[[Page 24031]]
allocations and resource management goals and objectives identified in
the four land use management alternatives, as well as the environmental
analysis developed in the Draft EIS to identify potential effects
associated with the four land use management alternatives developed for
the Monument Draft RMP. The Monument planning area is in Do[ntilde]a
Ana County, New Mexico, and encompasses approximately 496,591 acres of
BLM-managed public land. The Monument's current management is directed
by the existing 1993 Mimbres RMP, relevant amendments that apply to
this planning area, and interim Monument guidance.
Presidential Proclamation 9131 established the Monument through
identification of 496,591-acres of BLM-managed public lands in
Do[ntilde]a Ana County, New Mexico, surrounding the City of Las Cruces;
and directed the BLM to develop an RMP for the Monument. The Draft RMP
provides four management alternatives with associated land use
allocations and resource management goals and objectives for the
protection and preservation of objects of scientific and historic
interest, as well as the conservation of natural resources, resource
values, and wildlife habitat located on the Monument.
Purpose and Need
The BLM's purpose for developing the Monument EIS/RMP is to respond
to: (1) Presidential Proclamation 9131 (79 FR 30431), signed by
President Barack Obama on May 21, 2014, establishing approximately
496,591-acres of Federal lands and interest in lands owned or
controlled by the government of the United States as the Monument; and
(2) the John D. Dingell, Jr. Conservation, Management, and Recreation
Act (Dingell Act; Pub. L. 116-9), enacted on March 12, 2019,
designating approximately 239,596-acres falling within the established
boundaries of the Monument as wilderness and components of the National
Wilderness Preservation System, in accordance with the Wilderness Act
of 1964 (16 U.S.C. 1131 et seq.). The designated wilderness encompasses
10 BLM-managed public land areas within New Mexico: Aden Lava Flow
Wilderness, Broad Canyon Wilderness, Cinder Cone Wilderness, East
Potrillo Mountains Wilderness, Mount Riley Wilderness, Organ Mountains
Wilderness, Potrillo Mountains Wilderness, Robledo Mountains
Wilderness, Sierra De Las Uvas Wilderness, and Whitehorn Wilderness.
The need to develop the Monument EIS/RMP is found in FLPMA, which
states the BLM shall ``develop, maintain, and, when appropriate, revise
land use plans'' (43 U.S.C. 1712(a)); NEPA of 1969 (Pub. L. 91-190);
and the BLM's planning regulations (43 CFR 1610.4-6). The BLM is
preparing an EIS to identify and analyze reasonably foreseeable direct,
indirect, and cumulative environmental impacts associated with the
Monument RMP proposed land use allocations and the resource management
goals and objectives.
Alternatives
The BLM developed and analyzed the potential effects of four
distinct alternatives, demonstrating a reasonable range of
alternatives. These were developed and analyzed by the BLM, as mandated
by NEPA. Alternative A is the No Action alternative, which is required
by Federal law and utilizes existing land use management allocations
and resource management goals and objectives. The No Action alternative
serves as a base point of reference from which the three action
alternatives may be compared and measured for potential effects, both
beneficial and adverse. Three action alternatives (Alternatives B, C,
and D) were developed and analyzed for potential effects. Each
alternative demonstrates a unique means of achieving the purpose and
need through varying land use allocations and resource management goals
and objectives. The following is a brief synopsis of the themes used to
develop each alternative:
Alternative A (No Action): Maintains the 1993 Mimbres RMP
land use allocations and resource management goals and objectives.
Incorporates Monument management direction and guidance from
Presidential Proclamation 9131 and the 2019 Dingell Act.
Alternative B (Protection-focused): Protects objects of
scientific and historic interest. Protects, preserves, and enhances
habitat, natural resources, and resource values while providing limited
recreation and travel opportunities. Most proactive in promoting land
use management activities focused on preservation, restoration, and
enhancement.
Alternative C (Agency Preferred Alternative): Preserves
objects of scientific and historic interest within the Monument.
Provides an objective approach to land use management, employing
preservation and conservation principles for habitat management,
natural resource management, and resource values. Alternative C employs
targeted preservation goals and objectives, while allowing uses that
promote sustained socioeconomic progression.
Alternative D (Recreation and Use-focused): Preserves
objects of scientific and historic interest within the Monument.
Institutes foundational conservation management principles for the
management of habitat, natural resources, and resource values, while
simultaneously providing an enhanced visitor experience that emphasizes
a more diverse array of recreational opportunities. Includes targeted
preservation goals and objectives where appropriate and necessary.
The BLM New Mexico State Director has identified Alternative C as
the agency preferred alternative. Alternative C was determined to be
effective at protecting and preserving Monument objects while balancing
resource uses and meeting the purpose and need. The preferred
alternative includes important conservation and preservation measures
that will protect Monument objects of scientific and historic interest,
as well as other resources and resource values, including:
Wilderness areas: Emphasizes preservation of wilderness
character, with allowance for compatible uses;
Areas of Critical Environmental Concern (ACEC): Designates
two ACECs comprised of 38,085 acres within the Do[ntilde]a Ana
Mountains (1,427 acres) and the Organ Mountains (36,658 acres);
Special Recreation Management Area (SRMA): Designates
SRMAs comprised of 45,871 acres within the Do[ntilde]a Ana Mountains
(5,858 acres) and Organ Mountains (36,658 acres). Recreational focus on
camping, equestrian, and pedestrian use;
Soils: provides for protection and active management of
soils, while limiting soil disturbing activities;
Vegetative communities: provides for the protection,
preservation, and restoration of reference vegetative communities;
Wildlife: preserves and restores native habitat, while
enhancing wildlife corridors and connectivity;
Visual resources: preserves high value visual resources
through protective management goals and objectives;
Livestock grazing: establishes goals and objectives
developed to ensure appropriate preservation and conservation of
Monument objects, natural resources, and resource values, and defers to
a subsequent site-specific evaluation of compatibility of grazing with
the Presidential Proclamation and land health evaluations to make
further adjustments to grazing management guidance and decisions;
[[Page 24032]]
Travel management: establishes protective goals and
objectives by limiting off-highway vehicles to designated roads and
mechanized vehicles to designated roads and trails; and
Lands and realty: provides resource preservation and
conservation through establishment of right-of-way exclusion and
avoidance areas across the Monument.
Public Involvement Process
The date(s) and location(s) of public meeting(s), in-person or
virtual, will be announced at least 15 days in advance through local
media, social media, and the ePlanning website (https://eplanning.blm.gov/eplanning-ui/project/92170/510).
The ePlanning website https://eplanning.blm.gov/eplanning-ui/project/92170/510 includes information about the Monument, a BLM
planning process overview, issues identified for planning, and interim
management guidance. The BLM encourages broad public involvement and
the submission of substantive comments on: (1) the issues identified
for analysis; (2) the land use allocations and resource management
goals and objectives associated with the four alternatives; (3) other
relevant information; and (4) the environmental analysis conducted in
the Monument Draft EIS. However, the public may comment on any aspect
of the Monument Draft EIS/RMP.
A substantive comment is one that is based on or uses a rational
and/or science-based approach to critique the information, data, or
methodology employed to develop the Monument Draft EIS/RMP; the
construct of the alternative(s); or the methodology and projected
effects derived from the environmental analysis and utilized to develop
the Monument Draft EIS. All public comments received during the 90-day
public comment period will be accepted, reviewed, and logged into the
administrative record. However, substantive comments submitted to the
BLM during the 90-day public comment period will be accepted, reviewed,
responded to by the BLM, and potentially used for document amendment
through incorporation of comment substance.
Responsible Official
The New Mexico State Director is the deciding official for the
Monument EIS/RMP and the Record of Decision.
Decision To Be Made
The BLM New Mexico State Director will select from the four
alternatives developed and analyzed in the Monument Draft EIS/RMP or a
combination of those alternatives, and the specific land use
allocations and resource management goals and objectives to be employed
for the protection, preservation, restoration, enhancement,
conservation, administration, and management of the objects of
scientific and historic interest, natural resources, resource values,
and wildlife habitat located on Monument lands.
BLM Interdisciplinary Team
The BLM used an interdisciplinary approach to develop the Monument
Draft EIS/RMP through careful consideration of the issues and concerns
identified. Specialists with expertise in the following disciplines
were involved in the development and analysis of the Monument Draft
EIS/RMP: botany/vegetation; lands and realty; renewable energy; fire
ecology and management; wilderness characteristics; wildlife and
special status species; public health and safety; geology and minerals;
paleontology; air resources; climate change; water resources;
recreation; transportation; visual resources; rangeland management;
cultural resources; Tribal resources; soils; sociology; and economics.
Additional Information: The BLM interdisciplinary team identified,
analyzed, and considered mitigation to address reasonably foreseeable
impacts associated with land use allocations and resource management
goals and objectives employed to develop the alternatives, in
accordance with 40 CFR 1502.14(e). The BLM interdisciplinary team
included appropriate mitigation measures in the proposed alternatives.
Mitigation includes avoidance, minimization, rectification, reduction,
or elimination over time, and compensation and was considered at
multiple planning scales, including the landscape level.
The BLM interdisciplinary team proactively coordinated the NEPA and
land use planning processes early in the planning effort to ensure
compliance with applicable procedural requirements under the Endangered
Species Act (16 U.S.C. 1536) and Section 106 of the National Historic
Preservation Act (54 U.S.C. 306108), as provided in 36 CFR 800.2(d)(3),
including public involvement requirements of Section 106. Information
concerning historic and cultural resources and threatened and
endangered species within the area potentially affected by the draft
plan assisted the BLM interdisciplinary team in identifying and
evaluating potential impacts to those resources.
The BLM engaged in consultation with thirteen federally recognized
Tribes on a government-to-government basis in accordance with Executive
Order 13175, BLM Manual section 1780, and other Departmental policies.
Tribal concerns, including potential impacts to Indian trust assets and
cultural resources, were given due consideration. Federal, State, and
local agencies, along with Indian Tribal Nations and other stakeholders
that demonstrated interest in or could have been impacted by the
Monument RMP, were invited to participate in the scoping process and,
if eligible, were invited to participate as a cooperating agency. The
BLM intends to continue government-to-government consultation meetings
and will continue to solicit input and develop opportunities for
meaningful consultation with potentially affected Tribal Nations
throughout the land use planning process.
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 can
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.
(Authority: 40 CFR 1501.9 and 43 CFR 1610.2)
Melanie G. Barnes,
BLM New Mexico State Director.
[FR Doc. 2024-07106 Filed 4-4-24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4331-23-P