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Thorn Fire Salvage Recovery Project, Malheur National Forest, Grant County, OR

Note: EPA no longer updates this information, but it may be useful as a reference or resource.


 [Federal Register: December 15, 2006 (Volume 71, Number 241)]
[Notices]
[Page 75480-75481]
From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
[DOCID:fr15de06-19]

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DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Forest Service

Thorn Fire Salvage Recovery Project, Malheur National Forest,
Grant County, OR

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

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SUMMARY: The USDA Forest Service will prepare an environmental impact
statement (EIS) to disclose environmental effects on a proposed action
to recover the economic value of dead and dying trees damaged in the
Shake Table Fire Complex, and remove potential hazard trees from open
forest travel routes within the Todd, Duncan, Fields Creek and Dry
Creek subwatersheds. Shake Table Fire Complex, located approximately 20
miles south west of John Day, Oregon, burned approximately 14,527 acres
across mixed ownership in August 2006, of that approximately 13,536
acres were on National Forest System Lands administered by the Blue
Mountain Ranger District, Malheur National Forest. The proposed action
is the Thorn Fire Salvage Recovery Project.

DATES: Comments concerning the scope of the analysis must be received
by January 16, 2007. The Draft EIS is expected to be filed with the
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and be available to the public
for review by April 2007. The Final EIS is scheduled to be completed by
June 2007.

ADDRESSES: Send written comments to the Responsible Official, Gary L.
``Stan'' Benes, Forest Supervisor, Malheur National Forest, 431
Patterson Bridge Road, P.O. Box 909, John Day Oregon 97845. Send
electronic comments to: comments-pacificnorthwest-malheur@fs.fed.us.
for further information contact: Jerry Hensley, Project Manager,
Malheur National Forest, 431 Patterson Bridge Road, P.O. Box 909, John
Day, Oregon, telephone 541-575-3167, e-mail jhensley@fs.fed.us.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

Purpose and Need for Action

    The purpose and need of the Thorn Fire Salvage Recovery Project
includes: (1) Recovery of the economic value of a portion of the dead
and dying trees consistent with protection of other resource values;
and (2) improving public safety within the fire area by removing
potential hazard trees for public safety along open forest travel routes.

Proposed Action

    This action includes salvage of dead and dying trees from
approximately 7,952 acres and removal of potential hazard trees for
public safety along open forest travel routes. Salvage harvest methods
would include ground-based and helicopter logging systems.
Approximately 80 percent of the harvest area would be salvaged by
helicopter. No commercial harvest or road construction is proposed
within Appendix C Inventoried Dry Cabin, Cedar Grove and Shake Table
Roadless Areas. Road activities associated with salvage and restoration
will be limited to reconstruction, opening and re-closing existing
roads, and maintenance. No new roads would be built. Following site
preparation, approximately 7,952 acres would be planted with conifer
seedlings. Forest Plan amendments would be included as needed.

Possible Alternatives

    Alternatives will include the proposed action, no action, and
additional alternatives that respond to issues generated during the
scoping process. The agency will give notice of the full environmental
analysis and decisionmaking process to interested and affected people
may participate and contribute to the final decision.

Responsible Official and Nature of Decision To Be Made

    The Responsible Official is Gary L. ``Stan'' Benes, Forest
Supervisor of the Malheur National Forest, 431 Patterson Bridge Road,
P.O. Box 909, John Day, OR 97845. The Responsible Official will decide
if the proposed project will be implemented and will document the
decision and reasons for the decision in a Record of Decision. That
decision will be subject to Forest Service Appeal Regulations. The
responsibility for preparing the DEIS and FEIS has been delegated to
Brooks Smith, Acting District Ranger, Blue Mountain Ranger District.

Scoping Process

    Public participation will be especially important at several points
during the analysis, beginning with the scoping process (40 CFR
1501.7). Initial scoping began with the project listed in the 2006 Fall
Edition of the Malheur National Forest's Schedule of Proposed Actions.
A Public meeting has been planned for January 2007 to discuss the
project. Other meetings will be scheduled as needed. Also,
correspondence with tribes, government agencies, organizations, and
individuals who have indicated their interest will be conducted.

Preliminary Issues

    Preliminary issues identified include the potential effect of the
proposed action on: Soils, water quality and fish habitat, snags and
down wood, disturbance to cultural resources, potential for noxious
weed expansion, threatened, endangered and sensitive aquatic,
terrestrial and plant species, potential loss of economic value of
trees damaged by wildfire, and the safety and use of the area by public
and land managers.

Comment

    Public comments about this proposal are requested to identify
issues and alternatives to the proposed action and to focus the scope
of the analysis. Comments received in response to this solicitation,
including names and addresses of those who comment, will be considered
part of the public record on this proposed action, and will be
available for public inspection. Comments submitted anonymously will be
accepted and considered; however, those who submit anonymous comments
will not have standing to appeal the subsequent decisions under 36 CFR
parts 215 or 217. Additionally, pursuant to 7 CFR 1.27(d), any person
may request the agency to withhold a submission from the public record
by showing how the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) permits such
confidentiality. Persons requesting such confidentiality should be
aware that under the FOIA, confidentiality may be granted in only very
limited circumstances such as to protect trade secrets. The Forest
Service will inform the requester of the agency's decision regarding
the request for confidentiality, and where the request is denied; the
agency will return the submission and notify the requester that the
comments may be resubmitted with or without name and address within a
specified number of days.

[[Page 75481]]

    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 draft environmental impact statements must structure their
participation in the environmental review of the proposal so that it is
meaningful and alerts an agency to the reviewer's position and
contentions. Vermont Yankee Nuclear Power Corp. v. NRDC, 435 U.S. 519,
553 (1978). Also, environmental objections that could be raised at the
draft environmental impact statement stage but that are not raised
until after completion of the final environmental impact statement may
be waived or dismissed by the courts. City of Angoon v. Hodel, 803 F.2d
1016, 1022 (9th Cir. 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 a time when it can meaningfully consider them and respond to
them in the final environmental impact statement.
    To assist the Forest Service in identifying and considering issues
and concerns on the proposed action, comments on the draft
environmental impact statement should be as specific as possible. It is
also helpful if comments refer to specific pages or chapters of the
draft statement. Comments may also address the adequacy of the draft
environmental impact statement or the merits of the alternatives
formulated and discussed in the statement. Reviewers may wish to refer
to the 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.
    Comments received, including the names and addresses of those who
comment, will be considered part of the public record on this proposal
and will be available for public inspection.

(Authority: 40 CFR 1501.7 and 1508.22; Forest Service Handbook
1909.15, Section 21)

    Dated: December 11, 2006.
Gary L. Benes,
Forest Supervisor.
[FR Doc. 06-9716 Filed 12-14-06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410-11-M 

 
 


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