United States Section; Notice of Availability of Draft Environmental Impact Statement for Alternative Vegetation Maintenance Practices for the Lower Rio Grande Flood Control Project in Cameron, Hidalgo, and Willacy Counties, TX
Note: EPA no longer updates this information, but it may be useful as a reference or resource.
[Federal Register: July 11, 2003 (Volume 68, Number 133)]
[Notices]
[Page 41403-41404]
From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
[DOCID:fr11jy03-90]
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INTERNATIONAL BOUNDARY AND WATER COMMISSION, UNITED STATES AND MEXICO
United States Section; Notice of Availability of Draft
Environmental Impact Statement for Alternative Vegetation Maintenance
Practices for the Lower Rio Grande Flood Control Project in Cameron,
Hidalgo, and Willacy Counties, TX
AGENCY: United States Section, International Boundary and Water
Commission, United States and Mexico.
ACTION: Notice of availability of draft environmental impact statement.
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SUMMARY: Pursuant to section 102(2)(c) of the National Environmental
Policy Act (NEPA) of 1969, as amended, the United States Section,
International Boundary and Water Commission (USIBWC), in cooperation
with the United States Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) and the Texas
Parks and Wildlife Department, has prepared a Draft Environmental
Impact Statement (DEIS) on Alternative Vegetation Maintenance Practices
for the Lower Rio Grande Flood Control Project in Cameron, Hidalgo, and
Willacy Counties, Texas. The DEIS analyzes the Continued Maintenance
Alternative (No-Action), comprising the current USIBWC vegetation
maintenance program, and the impacts of three vegetation maintenance
alternatives which vary from the current USIBWC vegetation maintenance
practices along the Lower Rio Grande Valley.
DATES: Written comments are requested by August 29, 2003. A public
meeting will be conducted from 5 to 7 p.m. CDT on Wednesday, July 30,
2003, in Weslaco, Texas. See Addresses below for location and time.
ADDRESSES: Comments should be addressed to: Carolyn Murphy, Chief,
Environmental Section, CESWG-PE-PR, Department of the Army, Galveston
District, Corps of Engineers, P.O. Box 1229, Galveston, Texas 77553-
1229 (courier deliveries: 2000 Fort Point Rd. Galveston, Texas 77550).
A public meeting will be conducted from 5 to 7 p.m. CDT on Wednesday,
July 30, 2003, at the Texas A&M Agricultural Research and Extension
Center, Hoblitzelle Auditorium, 2415 East Highway 83, Weslaco, Texas,
to present your verbal or written comments.
Copies of the DEIS are available for inspection and review at the
following locations: Brownsville Public Library, 2600 Central
Boulevard, Brownsville, Texas; Harlingen Public Library, 410 '76 Drive,
Harlingen, Texas; McAllen Public Library, 601 North Main Street,
McAllen, Texas; USIBWC Mercedes Field Office, 325 Golf Course Rd,
Mercedes, Texas; Santa Ana National Wildlife Refuge, FM 307, 7 miles
south of Alamo, TX and 1/4-mile east of U.S. 281; and USIBWC HQ, 4171
N. Mesa Street, Ste C-315, El Paso, Texas. The DEIS is also available
on the USIBWC Home Page at http://www.ibwc.state.gov
under
``What's New,'' and at the United States Army Corps of Engineers,
Galveston District, Home Page at: http://www.swg.usace.army.mil/.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr. Douglas Echlin, Environmental
Protection Specialist, Environmental Management Division, USIBWC, 4171
North Mesa Street, C-100, El Paso, Texas 79902 or call (915) 832-4741,
e-mail: dougechlin@ibwc.state.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The USIBWC vegetation maintenance program is
performed along the United States portion of the Lower Rio Grande Flood
Control Project (LRGFCP). The vegetation maintenance program was
established to fulfill the United States Government's obligations under
International Boundary and Water Commission (IBWC) Minute No. 212 and
No. 238 and to protect life and properties in the United States and
Mexico from Rio Grande flooding events.
Under Minute No. 212, the United States and Mexico agreed to annual
concurrent channel bank mowing to reduce heavy brush growth in the
river reach and to ensure a river channel capacity of 20,000 cfs at the
Brownsville-Matamoros area. This maintenance mowing was considered
necessary to prevent flooding in Brownsville and Matamoros for the
design flood and to ensure that brush did not deflect river flood flows
toward either country, thus altering the international boundary
alignment by erosion. Minute No. 238 called for equally dividing flood
flows into interior floodways in each country, thereby ensuring the
20,000 cfs maximum flow at Brownsville and Matamoros.
On November 1, 1989, the Sierra Club, Frontera Audubon Society, and
National Audubon Society filed a civil action suit against the USIBWC
alleging vegetation maintenance program violations of the Endangered
Species Act (ESA) and the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA). The
plaintiffs alleged that the USIBWC had not prepared an Environmental
Assessment or Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) relative to the
operation and maintenance activities for the
[[Page 41404]]
United States portion of the LRGFCP as required by NEPA. The plaintiffs
also alleged that the USIBWC had not entered into formal consultation
with the USFWS pursuant to section 7 of the ESA with respect to the
impacts of the United States portion of the LRGFCP on federally-listed
threatened or endangered species.
In a 1990 Consent Decree administered by the United States District
Court of the District of Columbia, the USIBWC agreed to enter into
formal consultation with the USFWS regarding the impacts of all
vegetation clearing activities of the LRGFCP on federally listed
species. The consultation process resulted in an issuance by the USFWS
of a Biological Opinion (BO) on May 6, 1993. The USFWS has recently
reissued a new BO. In addition to formal consultation with USFWS,
USIBWC agreed to the preparation of this EIS, which specifically
addresses alternative vegetation maintenance practices.
This DEIS presents and analyzes the impacts of current and
alternative USIBWC vegetation maintenance practices to fulfill
commitments under the IBWC Minutes, the Consent Decree, and the new BO.
The pertinent elements of the LRGFCP vegetation maintenance program are
based on the need to:
? Maintain channel banks to provide adequate flood
conveyance.
? Equitably divert flood flows into interior floodways.
? Remove brush and other obstructions within floodways.
? Maintain a wildlife corridor per the USFWS BO and the 1994
LRGFCP Off-River Wildlife Travel Corridor Plan.
Four potential vegetation maintenance alternatives, including the
current USIBWC maintenance program, are considered and analyzed in the
DEIS. The Preferred Alternative is the Continued Maintenance
Alternative (No-Action), representing the continuation of the current
USIBWC vegetation maintenance program.
A copy of the DEIS has been filed with the Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) in accordance with 40 CFR parts 1500-1508 and USIBWC
procedures. Written comments concerning the DEIS will be accepted at
the address provided above until August 29, 2003.
Dated: July 2, 2003.
Mario Lewis,
General Counsel.
[FR Doc. 03-17564 Filed 7-10-03; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4710-03-P
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