Intent To Prepare a Draft Environmental Impact Statement for the Proposed Renourishment of the Brunswick County Beaches--Caswell Beach, Oak Island, and Holden Beach Portion, Brunswick County, NC
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[Federal Register: August 26, 2003 (Volume 68, Number 165)]
[Notices]
[Page 51257]
From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
[DOCID:fr26au03-63]
[[Page 51257]]
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DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE
Department of the Army; Corps of Engineers
Intent To Prepare a Draft Environmental Impact Statement for the
Proposed Renourishment of the Brunswick County Beaches--Caswell Beach,
Oak Island, and Holden Beach Portion, Brunswick County, NC
AGENCY: Department of the Army, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, DoD.
ACTION: Notice of intent.
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SUMMARY: Recent storms, in addition to natural coastal processes, have
seriously eroded the oceanbront beaches of the Caswell Beach, Oak
Island, and Holden Beach communities, located adjacent to the Atlantic
Ocean, in Brunswick County, North Carolina. The proposed project will
renourish the beach and dunes for approximately 11.8 miles of Caswell
Beach and Oak Island, and 7.1 miles of Holden Beach, using beach
compatible sand from one or more offshore borrow sources. Benefits that
will accrue from the proposed beach renourishment include the
protection of developed property from future storm and erosion damages,
and the maintenance and enhancement of the Brunswick County Beaches
tourism industry.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Questions about the proposed action
and Draft Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS) can be answered by: Mr.
Jeff Richter; Environmental Resources Branch; U.S. Army Engineer
District, Wilmington; Post Office Box 1890; Wilmington, NC 28402-1890;
telephone (910) 251-4636.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Project alternatives being considered
include other methods of storm damage reduction and property
protection, different project designs, various sand borrow sites, and
no action. Hydraulic pipeline dredges are to be used to dredge and pump
sand from the selected offshore borrow site(s) to the beach. As the
discharge site moves along the beach away from the dredge, bulldozers
move the sand and shape the new beach.
All private parties and Federal, State, and local agencies having
an interest in the study are hereby notified of the intent to prepare a
DEIS and are invited to comment at this time. Also, a scoping letter
requesting input to the study was sent to all known interested parties
on January 24, 2000. Based on comments received to date, a scoping
meeting will not be needed. All comments received as a result of this
notice of intent and the scoping letter will be considered in the
preparation of the DEIS.
Significant issues to be analyzed in the DEIS include: (1) Dredging
of benthic resources; (2) impact on primary nursery areas, anadromous
fish, threatened and endangered sea turtles and piping plovers, and
marine mammals; and (3) impacts to intertidal invertebrates, nektonic
and benthic species, and other marine species occurring near the
subject beaches.
The lead agency for this project is the U.S. Army Engineer
District, Wilmington. Cooperating agency status has not been assigned
to, nor requested by, any other agency.
The DEIS is being prepared in accordance with the requirements of
the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969, as amended, and will
address the relationship of the proposed action to all other applicable
Federal and State Laws and Executive Orders.
The DEIS is currently scheduled to be available in July 2004.
Dated: August 8, 2003.
Charles R. Alexander, Jr.,
Colonel, U.S. Army, District Engineer.
[FR Doc. 03-21792 Filed 8-25-03; 8:45 am]
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