General Management Plan, Draft Environmental Impact Statement, Navajo National Monument, Arizona
Note: EPA no longer updates this information, but it may be useful as a reference or resource.
[Federal Register: July 16, 2002 (Volume 67, Number 136)]
[Notices]
[Page 46689-46690]
From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
[DOCID:fr16jy02-121]
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DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
National Park Service
General Management Plan, Draft Environmental Impact Statement,
Navajo National Monument, Arizona
AGENCY: National Park Service, Department of the Interior.
ACTION: Availability of draft environmental impact statement and
general management plan for Navajo National Monument.
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SUMMARY: Pursuant to section 102(2)(C) of the National Environmental
Policy Act of 1969, the National Park Service announces the
availability of a draft Environmental Impact Statement and General
Management Plan for Navajo National Monument, Arizona.
DATES: The draft Environmental Impact Statement and General Management
Plan will remain available for public review for 60 days after
publication of this notice. No public meetings are scheduled at this
time.
Comments: If you wish to comment, you may submit your comments by
any one of several methods. You may mail comments to Superintendent,
Navajo National Monument, HC 71, Box 3, Tonalea, Arizona 86044-9704.
You may also comment via the Internet to Suzy_Stutzman@nps.gov. Please
submit Internet comments either as an ASCII file avoiding the use of
special characters and any form of encryption, as a Microsoft Word
file, or as a Word Perfect file. Please also include your name and
return address in your Internet message. If you do not receive a
confirmation from the system that we have received your Internet
message, contact us directly by calling Suzy Stutzman at 303-987-6671.
Finally, you may hand-deliver comments to the Navajo National Monument
visitor center or the Intermountain Support Office--Denver, 12795 W.
Alameda Parkway, Lakewood, CO (room 186).
Our practice is to make comments, including names and home
addresses of respondents, available for public review during regular
business hours. Individual respondents may request that we withhold
their home address from the record, which we will honor to the extent
allowable by law. There also may be circumstances in which we would
withhold from the record a respondent's identity, as allowable by law.
If you wish us to withhold your name and/or address, you must state
this prominently at the beginning of your comment. We will make all
submissions from organizations or businesses, and from individuals
identifying themselves as representatives or officials of organizations
or businesses, available for public inspection in their entirety.
ADDRESSES: Copies of the draft Environmental Impact Statement and
General Management Plan are available from the Superintendent, Navajo
National Monument, HC 71, Box 3, Tonalea, Arizona 86044-9704. The plan
is also available on the internet at: http://www.nps.gov/planning/nava.
Public reading copies of the document will be available for review
at the following locations: Office of the Superintendent, Navajo
National Monument, Tonalea, Arizona 86044, Telephone: 928-672-2700.
Planning and Environmental Quality, Intermountain Support Office--
Denver, National Park Service, 12795 W. Alameda Parkway, Lakewood, CO
80228, Telephone: (303) 987-6671. Office of Public Affairs, National
Park Service, Department of Interior, 18th and C Streets NW.,
Washington, DC 20240, Telephone: (202) 208-6843.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Contact Superintendent, Navajo
National Monument at the above address and telephone number.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This general management plan will guide the
management of Navajo National Monument for the next 15 to 20 years. The
general management plan considers three alternatives--a no-action and
two action alternatives, including the National Park Service preferred
alternative. The preferred alternative would carefully manage the
monument's existing land base and emphasize partnerships and
cooperation with American Indian tribes and others to protect Navajo
National Monument's resources and promote visitor understanding of the
entire region. Opportunities for more innovative and diverse programs,
education and outreach, cross-training, and broader resource management
would be greatly enhanced by a collaborative regional effort.
The draft environmental impact statement assess impacts to cultural
resources (archeological resources, historic structures, cultural
landscapes, ethnographic resources, and museum collections); natural
resources (water resources, wetlands and floodplains, soils,
vegetation, wildlife, and threatened, endangered, candidate, and
[[Page 46690]]
species of special concern); visitor understanding and experience;
remoteness; the monument's socio-economic environment; and monument
operations.
Dated: April 10, 2002.
Michael D. Sunder,
Deputy Regional Director, Intermountain Region, National Park Service.
[FR Doc. 02-17802 Filed 7-15-02; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310-70-P
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