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Dixie National Forest, UT, Dixie National Forest Motorized Travel Plan

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 [Federal Register: December 15, 2006 (Volume 71, Number 241)]
[Notices]
[Page 75477-75480]
From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
[DOCID:fr15de06-18]

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DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Forest Service

Dixie National Forest, UT, Dixie National Forest Motorized Travel Plan

AGENCY: Forest Service, USDA.
ACTION: Notice of intent to prepare an environmental impact statement.

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SUMMARY: Notice is hereby given that the Dixie National Forest intends
to prepare an environmental impact statement (EIS) for the Forest
Service to establish a system of designated roads, trails and areas for
motorized vehicle use, thereby developing a Motorized Travel Plan. A
new Motorized Travel Plan is needed to improve the management and
enforcement of motor vehicle use on these National Forest System lands
and meet the requirements of national policy for travel management.
This notice describes the components to be included in a new travel
plan, decisions to be made, estimated dates pertaining to the project,
information concerning public participation, and the names, address and
roles of the agency officials involved. The project area is defined by
the boundaries of Dixie National Forest, including the Pine Valley,
Cedar City, Powell and Escalante Ranger Districts, as well as the
Teasdale portion of the Fremont River Ranger District, now administered
by the Fishlake National Forest. For the purpose of this notice, the
Dixie National Forest will include the Fremont River Ranger District.

DATES: Written comments to be considered in the preparation of the
Draft Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS) should be submitted by
January 31, 2007, which is approximately 48 days following the
publication of this notice in the Federal Register. The DEIS is
expected to be available for review by June, 2007. The Record of
Decision and Final Environmental Impact Statement are expected to be
available by September, 2007.

ADDRESSES: Submit written comments to: Noelle Meier, Dixie National
Forest, 1789 N. Wedgewood Ln., Cedar City, Utah 84720; FAX: (435) 865-
3791; E-mail: comments_dixie_motorized_travel_plan@fs.fed.us.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Direct questions about the proposed
action and EIS to Noelle Meier, Motorized Travel Plan Project Team
Leader, by mail at 1789 N. Wedgewood Ln, Cedar City, Utah 84720; or by
phone at (435) 865-3700; FAX: (435) 865-3791; E-mail: 
comments_dixie_motorized_travel_plan@fs.fed.us.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

Purpose and Need for Action

    The purpose of this project is to designate a system of authorized
roads, trails or areas for motor vehicle use in order to better protect
natural resources, provide legal access, improve recreation management
and enforcement related to motor vehicle use. This purpose and need is
in accordance with 36 CFR parts 212, 251, 261, and 295 Travel
Management; Designated Routes and Areas for Motor Vehicle Use; Final
Rule (hereafter referred to as the ``final rule'').
    Overall, increased recreational use and demand on the Dixie
National Forest, including increased off-highway vehicle (OHV) use, has
been linked to the immense population growth of southwestern Utah, Salt
Lake City and Las Vegas, Nevada over the past decade. Concurrent growth
of subdivisions located within and adjacent to the Dixie National
Forest has also occurred, accounting for hundreds of building permits
issued annually for private residential and vacation homes. Increased
OHV use and related impacts have been observed surrounding these
growing forest communities.
    Similar situations have occurred throughout the nation, leading to
a final rule that governs OHVs and other motor vehicle use on national
forests and

[[Page 75478]]

grasslands. While Forest Service Chief Dale Bosworth states that OHV
use is a legitimate form of recreation, he has identified unmanaged
recreation--especially impacts from OHVs--as one of the key threats
facing national forests today. Locally, as well as regionally and
nationally, unmanaged OHV use on federal lands has resulted in
unplanned roads and trails, erosion, watershed and habitat damage,
impacts to cultural sites, and increasing degradation of recreational
experiences, especially a loss in opportunities for solitude, primitive
hunting and other quiet experiences. Perceptions of crowding and user
conflict are occurring in some areas of the Forest, often pertaining to
more intense seasonal activities such as big-game hunting.

Proposed Action

    For the purposes of this project and notice, the term ``route'' is
used to define a motorized road or trail, mapped to a location on the
ground. The term ``authorized route'' is a National Forest System Road
or Trail that is designated for motor vehicle use pursuant to 212.51 in
the final rule. An ``unauthorized route'' is a motorized road or trail
not designated for motor vehicle use pursuant to 212.51 in the final rule.
    This proposal, subsequent alternatives and decision will include
the following components:
    1. Cross-Country Travel:
    (a) Prohibition of motorized cross-country travel (off designated
roads or trails) except in designated areas. Motorized cross-country
travel will be prohibited except as specified for permitted uses, such
as dispersed camping, firewood gathering, emergency fire suppression,
search and rescue, law enforcement, military operations and Forest
Service administrative use and purposes.
    2. Designation of Authorized National Forest System Roads and
Motorized Trails:
    (a) Closure of currently authorized routes that will not be
designated for motorized use, and therefore removed from the National
Forest System of roads and motorized trails. These routes may be
decommissioned from the National Forest System.
    (b) Designation of unauthorized routes that will be added to the
National Forest System of roads and motorized trails.
    3. Designation of Authorized Uses of National Forest System Roads
and Motorized Trails:
    (a) Designation of routes that will be open to all uses.
    (b) Designation of routes needed to accommodate administrative
activities and permitted uses.
    (c) Designation of routes needed to access to private lands,
rights-of-way, easements, and other jurisdictions.
    (d) Designation of routes with seasonal restrictions and/ or that
allow only certain types of vehicles.
    4. Construction or Relocation of Designated National Forest System
Roads and Motorized Trails:
    (a) Construction or relocation of routes to improve the
transportation system or to meet evaluation findings specified through
the environmental analysis.
    The Forest Service would analyze and document direct, indirect, and
cumulative environmental effects in the development of a range of
alternatives. The route evaluations performed in the pre-planning stage
of this project will be updated accordingly, as analysis is conducted
and additional input is provided internally, by the public and other
governments.
    It should be noted that private land and land under the
jurisdiction of other governments are located within this project
boundary, but route segments contained within those lands have been
excluded from this designation process. Proposed designations for
routes on National Forest Lands have been made while considering
adjacent land uses and a variety of legal situations. Ongoing
coordination with these entities will continue throughout this project.
    In 1996, the Dixie National Forest began to inventory every
motorized route on the Forest. This effort resulted in a broad GPS
(Global Positioning System) inventory, completed the summer of 2005.
According to the Infra Database for the Dixie National Forest,
approximately 6,153 total miles of motorized routes have been
inventoried, with 3,856 miles accounting for authorized routes and
2,297 miles being unauthorized routes. The total number of routes on
the inventory is approximately 8,071, with 2,344 being authorized
routes and 5,727 being unauthorized routes.
    It is believed that very few routes were missed in completing the
inventory; therefore, the inventory will provide the base data layer
for this travel planning project. If important routes appear to have
been omitted from the inventory, the Dixie National Forest asks that
knowledge of those routes be brought to the attention of agency
officials as part of public involvement for this project.
    The extensive route inventory has allowed the Dixie National Forest
to conduct a route-by-route assessment for this planning effort. This
assessment involved a detailed agency review of each motorized route
for known or potential effects to the environment, legal access issues
or other social uses, and was augmented by pre-planning public input.
Broad, landscape-scale and site specific considerations were made,
identifying opportunities to improve watershed and wildlife habitat
health, as well as the connectivity of communities, and recreational
access. Opportunities to improve non-motorized and motorized trail
systems and to facilitate desirable recreation activities were also
considered.
    Pursuant to 212.50 of the final rule, a number of previous or
pending administrative decisions that allow, restrict, or prohibit
motor vehicle use on National Forest System roads, trails or areas have
been incorporated as previously designated into this travel planning
project.

Possible Alternatives

    All alternatives studied in detail must fall within the scope of
the purpose and need for action and will tier to and comply with the
Dixie forest plan. The added restrictions on motorized cross-country
travel are the only proposed amendments to the forest plan at this
time. Law requires a ``no-action alternative'', which would maintain
current allowances and restrictions for OHV use and motorized travel,
as described in the current Dixie forest plan and travel plan. The
Forest is expecting that public input will identify broad-scale or
route-specific issues that may be addressed by modifying the proposed
action to create a new alternative or alternatives.

Lead and Cooperating Agencies

    Garfield, Iron, Kane, Piute, Washington, and Wayne Counties and the
State of Utah are participating as cooperating agencies in this
project. As lead agency, the Forest Service would analyze and document
direct, indirect, and cumulative environmental effects for a range of
alternatives.

Responsible Officials

    Kevin Schulkoski, Acting Forest Supervisor of the Dixie National
Forest, is currently the responsible official for the Dixie National
Forest. He can be reached by mail at Dixie National Forest, 1789 N.
Wedgewood Ln., Cedar City, UT 84720.
    Mary Erickson, Forest Supervisor of the Fishlake National Forest,
is the responsible official for the decision pertaining to the Fremont
River Ranger District. She can be reached by mail at Fishlake National
Forest, 115 East 900 North, Richfield UT 84701.

[[Page 75479]]

Nature of Decision To Be Made

    On November 2, 2005, the Forest Service announced final travel
management regulations governing OHVs and other motor vehicle use on
national forests and grasslands (36 CFR parts 212, 251, 261, and 295
Travel Management; Designated Routes and Areas for Motor Vehicle Use;
Final Rule). In compliance with this national policy, the Responsible
Officials will decide on motorized areas and routes that will be added
to or deleted from the current authorized system. The Responsible
Officials will also decide on the type and season of motorized use to
be allowed on the authorized system.
    All routes not designated to the motorized travel system will be
considered unauthorized routes, and motorized use of those routes will
be illegal. Motorized cross-country travel will be prohibited except as
specified for the purposes of dispersed camping, firewood gathering,
emergency fire suppression, search and rescue, law enforcement,
military operations and Forest Service administrative use, including
uses authorized by permit. Any user-made motorized route that is
developed after decision will be considered unauthorized and will be
closed or removed by the Forest Service upon discovery. No public
process or analysis will be necessary to remove such a route.
    Methods of closing or removing unauthorized routes may vary and
will be determined on a site-specific basis. Closure or removal methods
for routes that are not designated as a part of this project will be
disclosed prior to decision. Future proposals to change the
designations made in this decision will undergo separate analysis and
decision, conducted under the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA).

Scoping Process

    The first formal opportunity to comment on the Dixie National
Forest Motorized Travel Planning Project is during the scoping process
(40 CFR 1501.7), which begins with the issuance of this Notice of
Intent. All comments, including the names, addresses and when provided,
will be placed in the record and are available for public inspection.
Mail comments to: Noelle Meier, Dixie National Forest, 1789 N.
Wedgewood Ln., Cedar City, Utah, 84720.
    The Forest Service is seeking comments from individuals,
organizations, and local, state, and Federal agencies that may be
interested in or affected by the proposed action. Comments may pertain
to the nature and scope of the environmental, social, and economic
issues, and possible alternatives related to the development of the
travel management plan and EIS. Scoping notices have been sent to
potentially affected persons and those that have expressed a continued
interest in this project. Other interested individuals, organizations,
or agencies may have their names added to the mailing list for this
project at any time by submitting a request to: Noelle Meier, Project
Team Leader, by mail at 1789 N. Wedgewood Ln., Cedar City, Utah 84720;
or by phone at (435) 865-3700; FAX: (435) 865-3791; E-mail: 
comments_dixie_motorized_travel_plan@fs.fed.us. Additional
information about this project can be found at 
http://www.fs.fed.us/r4/dixie/projects/MTP/index.shtml.
    A series of public open houses are scheduled to explain the
proposed travel plan and route designation process and to provide an
opportunity for public input. Six scoping meetings are planned.

    January 9, 2007 (Tuesday): Ramada Inn, 1440 East St. George Blvd.,
St. George, UT, 12 p.m. to 8 p.m.
    January 10, 2007 (Wednesday): Hunter Conference Center, Southern
Utah University, Cedar City, UT, 12 p.m. to 8 p.m.
    January 11, 2007 (Thursday): City Library and Offices, 25 South 200
East, Panguitch, UT, 12 p.m. to 8 p.m.
    January 18, 2007 (Thursday): Salt Lake City Library, Level 4
Meeting Room, 210 East 400 South, Salt Lake City, UT, 12 p.m. to 8 p.m.
    January 24, 2007 (Wednesday): City Office and Community Center,
Escalante, UT 12 p.m. to 8 p.m.
    January 25, 2007 (Thursday): Wonderland Inn, Utah State Highways 12
and 24, Torrey, UT 12 p.m. to 8 p.m.

    Times, dates and locations will also be posted through local public
notice and on the project Web page at: http://www.fs.fed.us/r4/dixie/
projects/MTP/index.shtml. Written comments will be
accepted at these meetings. The Forest Service will also work with
tribal governments to address issues that would significantly or
uniquely affect them.

Preliminary Issues

    Alternatives to the proposed action have not been identified at
this time; however, the following preliminary issues have been identified:
    ? Compliance with policy and law, recognition of legal access.
    ? Protection of natural and cultural resources.
    ? Improvement of recreation opportunities, management,
enforcement and education.
    ? Consideration of local economies.
    ? Increased public involvement.

Permits or Licenses Required

    No permits or licenses are required to implement the proposed
action and the issuing authority is the Forest Service.

Comment Requested

    This notice of intent initiates the scoping process which guides
the development of the environmental impact statement.

Early Notice of Importance of Public Participation in Subsequent
Environmental Review:

    A draft environmental impact statement will be prepared for
comment. The comment period on the draft environmental impact statement
will be 45 days from the date the Environmental Protection Agency
publishes the notice of availability in the Federal Register. The
Forest Service believes, at this early stage, it is important to give
reviewers notice of several court rulings related to public
participation in the environmental review process. First, reviewers of
the DEIS must structure their participation in the environmental review
of the proposal so that it is meaningful and alerts an agency to the
reviewers' position and contentions. Vermont Yankee Nuclear Power Corp.
v. NRDC, 435 U.S. 519, 553 (1978). Also, environmental objections that
could have been raised at the DEIS stage but that are not raised until
after completion of the final EIS may be waived or dismissed by the
courts. City of Angoon v. Hodel, (9th Circuit, 1986) and Wisconsin
Heritages, Inc. v. Harris, 490 F. Supp.1334. 1338 (E.D. Wis. 1980).
Because of these court rulings, it is very important that those
interested in this proposed action participate by the close of the 45-
day comment period so that substantive comments and objections are made
available to the Forest Service at the time it can meaningfully
consider them and respond to them in the draft and final EIS.
    To assist the Forest Service in identifying and considering issues
and concerns about the proposed action, comments should be as specific
as possible. Upon issuance of a draft EIS it would also be helpful if
comments refer to specific pages or chapters of the draft statement.
Comments may also address the adequacy of the statement or the merits
of the alternatives formulated and discussed in the statement.
Reviewers may wish to refer to the

[[Page 75480]]

Council on Environmental Quality Regulations for implementing the
procedural provisions of the National Environmental Policy Act at 40
CFR 1503.3 in addressing these points.

    Dated December 5, 2006.
Kevin R. Schulkoski,
Acting Dixie Forest Supervisor.
[FR Doc. E6-21145 Filed 12-14-06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410-11-P 

 
 


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