Notice of Availability of the Final Environmental Impact Statement for the Proposed Lava Ridge Wind Project in Jerome, Lincoln, and Minidoka Counties, ID, 48681-48682 [2024-12460]
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 111 / Friday, June 7, 2024 / Notices
Director, Alaska State Office, Bureau of
Land Management, 222 W 7th Avenue,
Anchorage, AK 99513 or by delivering
it in person to BLM Alaska Public
Information Center, Fitzgerald Federal
Building, 222 W 7th Avenue,
Anchorage, Alaska. The notice of protest
must identify the plat(s) of survey that
the person or party wishes to protest.
You must file the notice of protest
before the scheduled date of official
filing for the plat(s) of survey being
protested. The BLM will not consider
any notice of protest filed after the
scheduled date of official filing. A
notice of protest is considered filed on
the date it is received by the State
Director for the BLM in Alaska during
regular business hours; if received after
regular business hours, a notice of
protest will be considered filed the next
business day. A written statement of
reasons in support of a protest, if not
filed with the notice of protest, must be
filed with the State Director for the BLM
in Alaska within 30 calendar days after
the notice of protest is filed.
If a notice of protest against a plat of
survey is received prior to the
scheduled date of official filing, the
official filing of the plat of survey
identified in the notice of protest will be
stayed pending consideration of the
protest. A plat of survey will not be
officially filed until the dismissal or
resolution of all protests of the plat.
Before including your address, phone
number, email address, or other
personally identifiable information in a
notice of protest or statement of reasons,
you should be aware that the documents
you submit, including your personally
identifiable information, may be made
publicly available in their entirety at
any time. While you can ask the BLM
to withhold your personally identifiable
information from public review, we
cannot guarantee that we will be able to
do so.
Authority: 43 U.S.C. chap. 3.
Thomas O’Toole,
Chief Cadastral Surveyor, Alaska.
[FR Doc. 2024–12569 Filed 6–6–24; 8:45 am]
Bureau of Land Management
[BLM_ID_FRN_MO4500177431]
Notice of Availability of the Final
Environmental Impact Statement for
the Proposed Lava Ridge Wind Project
in Jerome, Lincoln, and Minidoka
Counties, ID
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)
announces the availability of the final
environmental impact statement (EIS)
for the Lava Ridge Wind Project.
DATES: The BLM will not issue a
decision on the proposal for a minimum
of 30 days after the date that the
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
publishes its Notice of Availability in
the Federal Register.
ADDRESSES: The final EIS and
documents pertinent to this proposal are
available for review on the BLM
ePlanning project website at https://
eplanning.blm.gov/eplanning-ui/
project/2013782/510 and in hardcopy at
the BLM Shoshone Field Office, 400
West F Street, Shoshone, ID 83352.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Kasey Prestwich, Project Manager,
telephone 208–732–7204; address BLM
Shoshone Field Office, 400 West F
Street, Shoshone, ID 83352; email
kprestwich@blm.gov. 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. Prestwich. 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.
SUMMARY:
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Purpose and Need for the Proposed
Action
BILLING CODE 4331–10–P
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DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Magic Valley Energy, LLC (MVE) has
applied for a right-of-way (ROW) to
construct, operate, maintain, and
decommission the Lava Ridge Wind
Project (the project), a wind energy
facility and ancillary facilities primarily
on BLM-administered public lands in
Jerome, Lincoln, and Minidoka
Counties, Idaho. The BLM’s purpose is
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:23 Jun 06, 2024
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PO 00000
Frm 00132
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
48681
to respond to the ROW application
submitted by MVE in compliance with
FLPMA, BLM regulations, and other
applicable Federal laws and policies.
The need for the BLM’s Proposed
Action arises from FLPMA, which
establishes a multiple use mandate for
management of Federal lands, including
‘‘systems for generation, transmission,
and distribution of electric energy’’
(FLPMA title V). The BLM will decide
whether to grant, grant with
modifications, or deny MVE’s ROW
application.
Proposed Action and Alternatives
Under Alternative A, the BLM would
deny MVE’s application for
construction, operation, maintenance,
and decommissioning of the project.
The project facilities would not be built,
and existing land uses and present
activities in the area would continue.
The land would continue to be available
for other uses that are consistent with
the BLM’s Monument Resource
Management Plan (1986) and its
amendments, including the 2015 Idaho
and Southern Montana Greater SageGrouse Approved Resource
Management Plan Amendment. Federal
and regional renewable energy goals
would have to be met using other
alternative energy projects at other
locations.
Under Alternative B (Applicant
Proposed Action), the BLM would
authorize the wind energy facility as
proposed by MVE, subject to certain
terms and conditions. Alternative B
could have up to 400 3-megawatt (MW)
turbines or up to 349 6–MW turbines, or
a combination of 3–MW and 6–MW
turbines not to exceed 400. The
maximum height of the turbines would
be between 390 and 740 feet, depending
on their MW capacity. Siting corridors
would span 84,051 acres, with the
project area footprint within these
corridors totaling 9,114 acres.
Alternative C (Reduced Western
Corridors) would reduce the project’s
footprint by authorizing project
development except within specific
corridors. Siting corridors in Alternative
C would span 65,215 acres. Project
activity would disturb 6,953 acres. The
intent of this alternative is to avoid and
minimize potential impacts to Wilson
Butte Cave and Minidoka National
Historic Site (NHS). Alternative C
would also aim to encourage
development in areas that have already
been impacted by energy infrastructure
and reduce the extent of wildlife habitat
fragmentation.
Like Alternative C, Alternative D
(Centralized Corridors) would reduce
the project’s footprint by authorizing
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ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with NOTICES1
48682
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 111 / Friday, June 7, 2024 / Notices
project development except within
specific siting corridors. Siting corridors
in Alternative D would span 48,597
acres. Project activity would disturb
4,838 acres. Similar to Alternative C,
Alternative D would focus on
minimizing fragmentation of wildlife
habitat and potential impacts to Wilson
Butte Cave and Minidoka NHS.
Alternative D would avoid development
in areas that have higher sagebrush
cover and protect functional Greater
sage-grouse habitat. The reduced
footprint would also avoid or minimize
impacts to other resources and areas of
concern.
Alternative E (Reduced Southern
Corridors) would avoid and minimize
potential impacts to Minidoka NHS.
Alternative E builds from Alternative C
but would further avoid and minimize
potential impacts to Minidoka NHS by
removing additional siting corridors
from development. Siting corridors in
Alternative E would span 50,680 acres.
Project activity would disturb 5,136
acres.
The BLM has identified a Preferred
Alternative based on a combination of
elements of Alternatives B through E.
The Preferred Alternative responds to
resource impact concerns raised by
Tribes, cooperating agencies, and the
public through the public comments
received on the draft EIS. The Preferred
Alternative would reduce visual
impacts to Minidoka NHS, reduce
disturbance to big game migration
routes and winter concentration areas,
reduce impacts to Jerome County
Airport and agricultural aviation uses,
and reduce impacts to adjacent private
landowners. The combination of
Alternatives B–E for development of the
Preferred Alternative included adjusting
the siting corridor and infrastructure to
avoid or minimize impacts while
balancing development of the wind
resource. The BLM considered results of
the analysis of potential impacts
prepared for the draft EIS; feedback
from Tribes, agencies, and various
interested parties; input from the BLM
Idaho Resource Advisory Council’s Lava
Ridge Wind Project Subcommittee; new
wildlife datasets provided by the Idaho
Department of Fish and Game; and
publicly available wind-speed
information for the project area to
develop the Preferred Alternative. Siting
corridors in the Preferred Alternative
would span 44,768 acres. Project
activity would disturb 4,492 acres.
Compliance With NEPA, as Amended
by the Fiscal Responsibility Act
In response to the amendments to
NEPA under the Fiscal Responsibility
Act of 2023 (FRA), Pub. L. 118–5,
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:23 Jun 06, 2024
Jkt 262001
section 321(e)(1)(B), 42 U.S.C. 4336a(e),
the BLM revised the organization of the
final EIS so that it is under the FRA’s
300-page limit for a proposed agency
action of ‘‘extraordinary complexity.’’
The BLM moved the evaluation of
certain environmental impacts that it
determined not to be significant to an
appendix.
(Authority: 40 CFR 1506.6, 40 CFR 1506.10)
Public Input
The BLM continues to engage in
government-to-government consultation
with the Shoshone-Bannock Tribes and
the Shoshone-Paiute Tribes on the
project. These Native American Tribes
have expressed concerns focused on
potential impacts to Wilson Butte Cave,
wildlife, and the Shoshone-Bannock
Tribes’ Treaty rights. The BLM
published a Notice of Availability for
the draft EIS for the project in the
Federal Register on January 20, 2023
(88 FR 3759). The notice began a 60-day
public comment period, which was
extended to 90 days ending on April 20,
2023. The BLM held public meetings on
the draft EIS in February and March
2023. Meetings were held virtually and
in person in Shoshone and Twin Falls,
Idaho; Portland, Oregon; and Mercer
Island, Washington. The BLM received
a total of 11,179 submissions via mail,
fax, email, ePlanning online comment
form, and handwritten and verbal
comments given to a transcriptionist at
public meetings. The BLM considered
comments within each submission and
determined if comments were
substantive or non-substantive. The
BLM identified and categorized 3,303
individual substantive comments from
the various submissions. Comments on
the draft EIS received from the public
and internal BLM review were
considered and incorporated, as
appropriate, into the final EIS. The final
EIS includes all substantive comments
with a BLM response.
The BLM conducted additional
meetings in April and May 2024, with
the Idaho Governor’s Office; numerous
Idaho state agencies; Friends of
Minidoka; Minidoka Pilgrimage
Planning Committee; ShoshoneBannock Tribes; county commissioners
from Jerome, Lincoln, and Minidoka
counties; grazing permittees; other
Federal agencies; and others, consistent
with Section 441, Division E, of Public
Law 118–42, the Consolidated
Appropriations Act, 2024.
Public comments informed clarifying
text, developing the Preferred
Alternative, developing new issue
statements, identifying project-specific
interim Visual Resource Management
classes, and refining a mitigation
framework.
Bureau of Land Management
PO 00000
Frm 00133
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Michael Courtney,
BLM Twin Falls District Manager.
[FR Doc. 2024–12460 Filed 6–6–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4331–21–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
[BLM_OR_FRN_MO4500179562]
Notice of Availability of the Draft
Resource Management Plan
Amendment and Environmental Impact
Statement for the Lakeview Field
Office, Lakeview District, Oregon
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) has
prepared a Draft Resource Management
Plan (RMP) Amendment and Draft
Environmental Impact Statement (EIS)
for the Lakeview RMP and by this notice
is providing information announcing
the opening of the comment period on
the Draft RMP Amendment and Draft
EIS.
SUMMARY:
This notice announces the
opening of a 90-day comment period for
the Draft RMP Amendment and Draft
EIS beginning with the date following
the Environmental Protection Agency’s
(EPA) publication of its Notice of
Availability (NOA) in the Federal
Register.
To afford the BLM the opportunity to
consider comments in the forthcoming
Proposed RMP Amendment and Final
EIS, please ensure the BLM receives
your comments prior to the close of the
90-day comment period or 15 days after
the last public meeting, whichever is
later.
DATES:
The Draft RMP Amendment
and Draft EIS is available for review on
the BLM ePlanning project website at
https://eplanning.blm.gov/eplanning-ui/
project/114300/510.
Written comments related to the
Lakeview Draft RMP Amendment and
Draft EIS may be submitted by any of
the following methods:
• website: https://eplanning.blm.gov/
eplanning-ui/project/114300/510.
• Email: blm_or_lv_rmp_team@
blm.gov.
• Mail: Lakeview District, BLM, 1301
South G Street, Lakeview, OR 97630.
ADDRESSES:
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 89, Number 111 (Friday, June 7, 2024)]
[Notices]
[Pages 48681-48682]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2024-12460]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Land Management
[BLM_ID_FRN_MO4500177431]
Notice of Availability of the Final Environmental Impact
Statement for the Proposed Lava Ridge Wind Project in Jerome, Lincoln,
and Minidoka Counties, ID
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)
announces the availability of the final environmental impact statement
(EIS) for the Lava Ridge Wind Project.
DATES: The BLM will not issue a decision on the proposal for a minimum
of 30 days after the date that the Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA) publishes its Notice of Availability in the Federal Register.
ADDRESSES: The final EIS and documents pertinent to this proposal are
available for review on the BLM ePlanning project website at https://eplanning.blm.gov/eplanning-ui/project/2013782/510 and in hardcopy at
the BLM Shoshone Field Office, 400 West F Street, Shoshone, ID 83352.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Kasey Prestwich, Project Manager,
telephone 208-732-7204; address BLM Shoshone Field Office, 400 West F
Street, Shoshone, ID 83352; email [email protected]. 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. Prestwich.
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:
Purpose and Need for the Proposed Action
Magic Valley Energy, LLC (MVE) has applied for a right-of-way (ROW)
to construct, operate, maintain, and decommission the Lava Ridge Wind
Project (the project), a wind energy facility and ancillary facilities
primarily on BLM-administered public lands in Jerome, Lincoln, and
Minidoka Counties, Idaho. The BLM's purpose is to respond to the ROW
application submitted by MVE in compliance with FLPMA, BLM regulations,
and other applicable Federal laws and policies. The need for the BLM's
Proposed Action arises from FLPMA, which establishes a multiple use
mandate for management of Federal lands, including ``systems for
generation, transmission, and distribution of electric energy'' (FLPMA
title V). The BLM will decide whether to grant, grant with
modifications, or deny MVE's ROW application.
Proposed Action and Alternatives
Under Alternative A, the BLM would deny MVE's application for
construction, operation, maintenance, and decommissioning of the
project. The project facilities would not be built, and existing land
uses and present activities in the area would continue. The land would
continue to be available for other uses that are consistent with the
BLM's Monument Resource Management Plan (1986) and its amendments,
including the 2015 Idaho and Southern Montana Greater Sage-Grouse
Approved Resource Management Plan Amendment. Federal and regional
renewable energy goals would have to be met using other alternative
energy projects at other locations.
Under Alternative B (Applicant Proposed Action), the BLM would
authorize the wind energy facility as proposed by MVE, subject to
certain terms and conditions. Alternative B could have up to 400 3-
megawatt (MW) turbines or up to 349 6-MW turbines, or a combination of
3-MW and 6-MW turbines not to exceed 400. The maximum height of the
turbines would be between 390 and 740 feet, depending on their MW
capacity. Siting corridors would span 84,051 acres, with the project
area footprint within these corridors totaling 9,114 acres.
Alternative C (Reduced Western Corridors) would reduce the
project's footprint by authorizing project development except within
specific corridors. Siting corridors in Alternative C would span 65,215
acres. Project activity would disturb 6,953 acres. The intent of this
alternative is to avoid and minimize potential impacts to Wilson Butte
Cave and Minidoka National Historic Site (NHS). Alternative C would
also aim to encourage development in areas that have already been
impacted by energy infrastructure and reduce the extent of wildlife
habitat fragmentation.
Like Alternative C, Alternative D (Centralized Corridors) would
reduce the project's footprint by authorizing
[[Page 48682]]
project development except within specific siting corridors. Siting
corridors in Alternative D would span 48,597 acres. Project activity
would disturb 4,838 acres. Similar to Alternative C, Alternative D
would focus on minimizing fragmentation of wildlife habitat and
potential impacts to Wilson Butte Cave and Minidoka NHS. Alternative D
would avoid development in areas that have higher sagebrush cover and
protect functional Greater sage-grouse habitat. The reduced footprint
would also avoid or minimize impacts to other resources and areas of
concern.
Alternative E (Reduced Southern Corridors) would avoid and minimize
potential impacts to Minidoka NHS. Alternative E builds from
Alternative C but would further avoid and minimize potential impacts to
Minidoka NHS by removing additional siting corridors from development.
Siting corridors in Alternative E would span 50,680 acres. Project
activity would disturb 5,136 acres.
The BLM has identified a Preferred Alternative based on a
combination of elements of Alternatives B through E. The Preferred
Alternative responds to resource impact concerns raised by Tribes,
cooperating agencies, and the public through the public comments
received on the draft EIS. The Preferred Alternative would reduce
visual impacts to Minidoka NHS, reduce disturbance to big game
migration routes and winter concentration areas, reduce impacts to
Jerome County Airport and agricultural aviation uses, and reduce
impacts to adjacent private landowners. The combination of Alternatives
B-E for development of the Preferred Alternative included adjusting the
siting corridor and infrastructure to avoid or minimize impacts while
balancing development of the wind resource. The BLM considered results
of the analysis of potential impacts prepared for the draft EIS;
feedback from Tribes, agencies, and various interested parties; input
from the BLM Idaho Resource Advisory Council's Lava Ridge Wind Project
Subcommittee; new wildlife datasets provided by the Idaho Department of
Fish and Game; and publicly available wind-speed information for the
project area to develop the Preferred Alternative. Siting corridors in
the Preferred Alternative would span 44,768 acres. Project activity
would disturb 4,492 acres.
Compliance With NEPA, as Amended by the Fiscal Responsibility Act
In response to the amendments to NEPA under the Fiscal
Responsibility Act of 2023 (FRA), Pub. L. 118-5, section 321(e)(1)(B),
42 U.S.C. 4336a(e), the BLM revised the organization of the final EIS
so that it is under the FRA's 300-page limit for a proposed agency
action of ``extraordinary complexity.'' The BLM moved the evaluation of
certain environmental impacts that it determined not to be significant
to an appendix.
Public Input
The BLM continues to engage in government-to-government
consultation with the Shoshone-Bannock Tribes and the Shoshone-Paiute
Tribes on the project. These Native American Tribes have expressed
concerns focused on potential impacts to Wilson Butte Cave, wildlife,
and the Shoshone-Bannock Tribes' Treaty rights. The BLM published a
Notice of Availability for the draft EIS for the project in the Federal
Register on January 20, 2023 (88 FR 3759). The notice began a 60-day
public comment period, which was extended to 90 days ending on April
20, 2023. The BLM held public meetings on the draft EIS in February and
March 2023. Meetings were held virtually and in person in Shoshone and
Twin Falls, Idaho; Portland, Oregon; and Mercer Island, Washington. The
BLM received a total of 11,179 submissions via mail, fax, email,
ePlanning online comment form, and handwritten and verbal comments
given to a transcriptionist at public meetings. The BLM considered
comments within each submission and determined if comments were
substantive or non-substantive. The BLM identified and categorized
3,303 individual substantive comments from the various submissions.
Comments on the draft EIS received from the public and internal BLM
review were considered and incorporated, as appropriate, into the final
EIS. The final EIS includes all substantive comments with a BLM
response.
The BLM conducted additional meetings in April and May 2024, with
the Idaho Governor's Office; numerous Idaho state agencies; Friends of
Minidoka; Minidoka Pilgrimage Planning Committee; Shoshone-Bannock
Tribes; county commissioners from Jerome, Lincoln, and Minidoka
counties; grazing permittees; other Federal agencies; and others,
consistent with Section 441, Division E, of Public Law 118-42, the
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2024.
Public comments informed clarifying text, developing the Preferred
Alternative, developing new issue statements, identifying project-
specific interim Visual Resource Management classes, and refining a
mitigation framework.
(Authority: 40 CFR 1506.6, 40 CFR 1506.10)
Michael Courtney,
BLM Twin Falls District Manager.
[FR Doc. 2024-12460 Filed 6-6-24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4331-21-P