Availability of the Draft Supplement to the Final Environmental Statement for the Reallocation of Water Supply Storage Project, John Redmond Lake, KS
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[Federal Register: June 28, 2002 (Volume 67, Number 125)]
[Notices]
[Page 43588]
From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
[DOCID:fr28jn02-41]
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DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE
Department of the Army; Corps of Engineers
Availability of the Draft Supplement to the Final Environmental
Statement for the Reallocation of Water Supply Storage Project, John
Redmond Lake, KS
AGENCY: Department of the Army, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, DoD.
ACTION: Notice of Availability.
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SUMMARY: The Tulsa District of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE)
has prepared a Draft Supplement to the Final Environmental Statement
(DSFES) for the Reallocation of Water Supply Storage Project, John
Redmond Lake, KS. The purpose of the project is to assess potential
significant environmental impacts associated with water storage
reallocation and a higher conservation pool elevation at John Redmond
Lake.
DATES: The DSFEIS will be available for public review when this
announcement is published. The review period of the document will be
until September 11, 2002. To request a copy of the supplement, please
call (918) 669-4396.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For further information regarding the
DSFEIS, please contact Stephen L. Nolen, Chief, Environmental Analysis
and Compliance Branch, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, ATTN: CESWT-PE-E,
1645 South 101st East Avenue, Tulsa OK, 74128-4629.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: John Redmond Dam was initially authorized as
the Strawn Dam and Reservoir under the Flood Control Act of May 17,
1950, for flood control, water conservation, recreation, and water
supply for communities along the Neosho River in southeastern Kansas.
Congress subsequently changed the name in 1958 to John Redmond Dam and
Reservoir.
To perform its authorized purposes, the lake contains three types
of water storage pools. The upper pool provides 574,918 acre-feet of
flood control storage and is reserved for flood control operations. The
conservation pool provides 50,501 acre-feet of storage for water
supply, water quality, and sediment. The inactive pool has filled with
sediment. Water supply storage was projected to occur within the
conservation pool when maintained at the surface elevation of 1039.0
feet National Geodetic Vertical Datum(NGVD). Studies have determined
that sediment is accumulating in the conservation pool and is reducing
the amount of water stored there. The amount of water storage reduction
predicted by calendar year (CY) 2014 is approximately 25% or 8,725
acre-feet of water supply.
The USACE has been directed by Congress to conduct a study to
reallocate water supply storage, an action that would fulfill the water
supply agreement with the State of Kansas. This supplement addresses
the proposed water supply storage reallocation project.
A Final Environmental Statement for operation and maintenance of
John Redmond, Marion, and Council Grove Lakes, KS, was filed on
December 17, 1976. This supplement addresses the environmental impacts
of making an equitable redistribution of the storage remaining between
the flood control pool and the conservation pool due to uneven sediment
distribution.
Sediment in John Redmond Lake has been collecting mainly in the
conservation pool, thereby reducing the conservation pool storage
faster than was designed, while the flood control pool has not received
as much sediment and has retained more storage than it was designed to
retain. The reallocation does not guarantee the water storage volume
contracted to the State of Kansas per an agreement in 1975, but makes
an equitable redistribution of the remaining storage.
A total of four alternatives were identified and addressed in the
DSFES. These include: no action, raise the conservation pool elevation
by two feet, raise the conservation pool by two feet incrementally, and
dredge the sediment from the conservation pool. The preferred
alternative is to reallocate water storage in the conservation pool by
two feet in a single pool raise. This would achieve the water storage
obligation.
Environmental consequences of the proposed action identified in the
DSFES include: (1) The loss of approximately 270 acres of wetland
habitat, 40 acres of grassland, 51 acres of cropland, and 195 acres of
woodland, and (2) impacts to 31 potentially significant prehistoric and
historic archeology sites.
Mitigation for impacts to biological resources is proposed and is
based upon recommendations of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. A
Memorandum of Agreement between the USACE, the Advisory Council on
Historic Preservation, and the Kansas and Nebraska State Historic
Preservation Offices is being drafted to determine appropriate actions
and mitigation measures for cultural resources that may be discovered
and/or affected during the course of the project. Appropriate
mitigation measures may include preservation in place for future study,
recovery or partial recovery of site data through excavation, a public
interpretive display, or a combination of these measures.
The DSFES has been coordinated and approved by offices and
directorates affected by or interested in the subject matter, including
the Office of Counsel and Executive Offices.
Stephen R. Zeltner,
Lieutenant Colonel, U.S. Army Acting District Engineer.
[FR Doc. 02-16378 Filed 6-27-02; 8:45 am]
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