Notice of Availability; Oil Spill Restoration Plan and Environmental Assessment
Note: EPA no longer updates this information, but it may be useful as a reference or resource.
[Federal Register: February 10, 1999 (Volume 64, Number 27)]
[Notices]
[Page 6675-6676]
From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
[DOCID:fr10fe99-115]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
Notice of Availability; Oil Spill Restoration Plan and
Environmental Assessment
AGENCY: Fish and Wildlife Service, Interior
ACTION: Notice of availability
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Fish and Wildlife Service, on behalf of the Department of
the Interior, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
(Administration), the State of Washington, and the Makah Tribe,
announces the release for public review of the Draft Restoration Plan
and Environmental Assessment for the Tenyo Maru Oil Spill (Plan/
Assessment). The Plan/Assessment covers the Natural Resource Trustees'
(Trustees) proposal to restore natural resources injured as a result of
the 1991 Tenyo Maru fishing vessel oil spill.
DATES: Written comments must be submitted on or before April 12, 1999.
ADDRESSES: Requests for copies of the Plan/Assessment may be made to:
Fish and Wildlife Service, 510 Desmond Drive SE, Suite 102, Lacey,
Washington 98503, Attn: Cindy M. Chaffee. The Plan/Assessment is also
available for download at http://www.r1.fws.gov. and http://
www.darcnw.noaa.gov/tenyo.htm. Written comments regarding the Plan/
Assessment should be sent to the same mailing address as requests for
copies of the Plan/Assessment.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Cindy M.Chaffee, Fish and Wildlife
Service, 510 Desmond Drive SE, Suite 102, Lacey, Washington 98503.
Interested parties may also call (360) 753-4324.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: On July 22, 1991, a Japanese fishing vessel
(Tenyo Maru) and a Chinese freighter (Tuo Hai) collided about 20 miles
northwest of Neah Bay, Washington, spilling at least 100,000 gallons of
oil. Beaches were fouled with oil from Vancouver Island, British
Columbia to northern Oregon. While impacts were scattered along the
entire Washington State shoreline and the northern beaches of Oregon,
the heaviest oiling occurred along the Makah Indian Reservation and the
Olympic National Park shoreline. Seabirds, and to a lesser extent, kelp
habitats, were demonstrated to have been injured by the spill. The
trustees documented that common murres (Uria aalge) and federally
threatened marbled murrelets (Brachyramphus marmoratus) were killed, as
well as rhinoceros auklets
[[Page 6676]]
(Cerorhinca moncerata), tufted puffins (Fratercula cirrhata), Cassin's
auklets (Ptychoramphus aleuticus) and pigeon guillemots (Cepphus
columba). Oil was observed in many of the giant kelp (Macrocystis) and
bull kelp (Nereocystis) dominated kelp beds from Cape Alava north to
Tatoosh Island and from Tatoosh Island east to Waadah Island.
Claims for natural resource damages were settled by consent decree
under the Oil Pollution Act of 1990 (Act), 33 U.S.C. Sec. 2701 et seq.
Under the consent decree, the defendants agreed to pay approximately
$5.2 million to the natural resource trustees to compensate the public
for the injury, destruction, and loss of natural resources resulting
from the spill. The Plan/Assessment is presented to the public by the
Trustees responsible for restoration implementation under the consent
decree and is consistent with the Natural Resource Damage Assessment
Regulations found at 15 CFR, Part 990. The Plan/Assessment describes
the affected environment and illustrates potential restoration
alternatives to restore, rehabilitate, replace, or acquire the
equivalent of natural resources injured in the Tenyo Maru oil spill and
their environmental consequences.
The preferred restoration alternative selected by the Trustees is
an integrative restoration approach that restores populations of
injured resources, provides quality habitat, and allows natural
recovery. Proposed restoration efforts will include the combination of
protection and enhancement activities that have the greatest potential
to restore the injured natural resources, with particular emphasis on
seabirds. The Plan/Assessment proposes to restore injured resources by:
(1) Restoring common murre colonies within the Copalis National
Wildlife Refuge; (2) contributing to an oiled wildlife rehabilitation
center; (3) educating the general public on human disturbance of
nesting seabird colonies; (4) reducing seabird by-catch in coastal set-
net fisheries; (5) protecting marbled murrelet habitat; and (6)
reducing siltation in rivers.
Interested members of the public are invited to review and comment
on the Plan/Assessment. Copies of the plan are available for review at
the Fish and Wildlife Service's Western Washington Office in Lacey,
Washington (510 Desmond Drive SE, Suite 102); the Olympic Coast
National Marine Sanctuary in Port Angeles, Washington (Federal
Building, 138 West 1st Street, Suite 7) and; the Makah Tribe at Neah
Bay, Washington (Old Air Force Building #15). Additionally the Plan/
Assessment will be available for review at the Fish and Wildlife
Service's web site http://www.rl.fws.gov, at Administration's web site
http://www.darcnw.noaa.gov/tenyo.htm, and at public libraries in
Clallam, Jefferson, Grays Harbor, and Pacific Counties.
Written comments will be considered and addressed in the final
Restoration Plan and Environmental Assessment at the conclusion of the
restoration planning process.
Dated: February 2, 1999.
Thomas J. Dwyer,
Acting Regional Director, Region 1, Portland, Oregon.
[FR Doc. 99-3198 Filed 2-9-99; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310-55-P
![[logo] US EPA](http://www.epa.gov/epafiles/images/logo_epaseal.gif)