Revocation of the Moratorium on the Number of Commercial Outfitting Permits and Designation of Special Areas for the Public Land Administered by the BLM, Burns District
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[Federal Register: August 17, 2001 (Volume 66, Number 160)]
[Notices]
[Page 43268]
From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
[DOCID:fr17au01-110]
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DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Land Management
[OR-020-1220-EA; G 01-0165]
Revocation of the Moratorium on the Number of Commercial
Outfitting Permits and Designation of Special Areas for the Public Land
Administered by the BLM, Burns District
AGENCY: Bureau of Land Management (BLM), Burns District, Interior.
ACTION: Revocation of the moratorium on the number of commercial
outfitting permits and designation of special areas for the public land
administered by the BLM, Burns District.
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SUMMARY: The BLM, Burns District is revoking the existing moratorium on
new commercial outfitting Special Recreation Permits (SRPs). New
commercial outfitting SRP applications will be accepted for the entire
BLM, Burns District which includes the Andrews and Three Rivers
Resource Areas. All commercial, competitive, and organized group permit
applications must be received at least 180 days before the intended use
unless otherwise approved by the Authorized Officer.
The lifting of this moratorium does not guarantee specific SRP
approval and issuance. BLM will consider evidence of user conflicts,
resource impacts, and consistency with recreation management
objectives, and other relevant information in determining whether or
not to issue a specific SRP. Processing of an SRP application that is
accepted will include appropriate environmental analysis and
documentation.
The BLM, Burns District established a moratorium on all new
commercial outfitting permits for public land on June 15, 1999 (Federal
Register, Volume 64, No. 95, on Tuesday, May 18, 1999/Notices). The
moratorium provided that BLM would hold commercial use at the 1999
levels while conducting an environmental review of commercial
outfitting. Shortly after this time, Congress began consideration of
special legislation to govern management of the Steens Mountain Area.
On October 30, 2000, the Steens Mountain Cooperative Management and
Protection Area (CMPA) and the Steens Mountain Wilderness Area were
designated through the Steens Mountain Cooperative Management and
Protection Act (Act) of 2000, Public Law 106-399. Section 111 of the
Act provides a number of criteria for BLM management of the land,
including managing the land in a manner that ``recognizes and allows
current and historic recreational use.'' The legislation also obligates
BLM to develop, within 4 years after the date of the enactment of the
Act, a comprehensive plan for the long-range protection and management
of the Federal land included in the CMPA, including the Wilderness
Area.
BLM will meet this planning requirement through preparation of the
Andrews Resource Area/Steens Mountain CMPA Resource Management Plan
(RMP) and Environmental Impact Statement (EIS), which is scheduled to
begin later this fiscal year and to be completed in 2004. The RMP
currently in affect for the Three Rivers Resource Area is scheduled to
be updated within the next 3 years. Long-term use levels for organized
groups and commercial permittees will now be determined through the RMP
process. SRPs are a means to manage commercial, competitive, and
organized group recreational users of public land. They are issued as a
means to control visitor use, protect recreational and natural
resources, monitor impacts, and provide for the health and safety of
visitors. Relevant regulations are found in 43 CFR 8372.
Given the current recreational interest in the Burns District, the
BLM finds that it is preferable to lift the moratorium rather than
delay issuance of SRPs until the planning efforts are completed. To
delay SRP issuance until after the plans are completed would
potentially deny compatible forms of recreational use in the interim
without just consideration of the public's needs. Any applications
received by BLM will also provide valuable data for preparation of the
comprehensive plan, because BLM will be able to gauge current interest
in commercial and organized group recreational use in the area. The
environmental analysis and documentation to be done for each new permit
will also be used in the development of the RMPs.
The BLM is also designating the CMPA and the Wilderness Study Areas
within the Burns District as special areas as provided for in 43 CFR
8372.1-2. This special area designation will require organized groups
to obtain a SRP or other proper authorization to conduct certain
activities within these areas. The Authorized Officer determines when a
permit is required based on resource concerns, user conflicts, and/or
the need for monitoring.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Additional information may be obtained
from Evelyn Treiman, Outdoor Recreation Planner, Burns District Office,
HC 74-12533 Hwy 20 West, Hines, Oregon 97738, (541) 573-4442.
Dated: August 2, 2001.
Thomas H. Dyer,
District Manager.
[FR Doc. 01-20776 Filed 8-16-01; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310-33-P
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