Notice of Availability of the Alamosa River Watershed Restoration Master Plan and Environmental Assessment
Note: EPA no longer updates this information, but it may be useful as a reference or resource.
[Federal Register: May 18, 2006 (Volume 71, Number 96)]
[Notices]
[Page 28882-28883]
From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
[DOCID:fr18my06-79]
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DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Land Management
[CO930-06-9260NQ-COQB]
Notice of Availability of the Alamosa River Watershed Restoration
Master Plan and Environmental Assessment
AGENCIES: Bureau of Land Management, Department of the Interior, lead
agency; Fish and Wildlife Service, Department of the Interior,
cooperating agency; Forest Service, Department of Agriculture,
cooperating agency.
ACTION: Notice of availability.
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SUMMARY: This notice advises the public and other agencies of the
availability of the Alamosa River Watershed Restoration Master Plan and
Environmental Assessment (``Plan'') prepared under the direction of
Federal and state natural resource trustees, pursuant to subpart G of
the National Oil and Hazardous Substances Pollution Contingency Plan
(40 CFR 300.600 and 300.610) and Executive Order 12580. The Department
of the Interior (represented by the Bureau of Land Management and the
Fish and Wildlife Service), Department of Agriculture (represented by
the Forest Service), and the State of Colorado (represented by the
Departments of Law, Natural Resources, and Public Health and the
Environment) are Trustees for natural resources considered in this
Plan. The Alamosa River is located in the San Luis Valley of south-
central Colorado. The Plan describes the Alamosa River environment and
the impacts to watershed resources and land uses, and briefly describes
proposed restoration projects.
DATES: On November 10, 2005, the Authorized Official (Colorado State
Director of the Bureau of Land Management) of the Department of the
Interior issued a Decision Record, which approved the preferred
alternative in the Plan and Environmental Assessment. The Decision
Record also referred to an attached Finding of No Significant Impact to
the human environment, which concluded that an Environmental Impact
Statement is not required. The Regional Director of the Fish and
Wildlife Service concurred with release of the Plan. The Regional
Forester of the Forest Service concurred with the Decision Record for
the Plan and the Finding of No Significant Impact for the Environmental
Assessment.
Addresses and Further Information: The Plan is available at the
following Internet address: http://mountain-prairie.fws.gov/nrda/
SummitvilleColo/Summitville.htm.
Copies of the document are
available for on-site review in the Del Norte Public Library, 190 Grand
Avenue, Del Norte, CO 81131 or Department of Agriculture, Conejos County
Natural Resources Conservation Service, 15 Spruce, La Jara, CO 81140.
The Decision Record and further information is available from Robert
Robinson, Bureau of Land Management, 2850 Youngfield Street, Lakewood,
CO 80215, telephone 303-239-3642, or via e-mail at
rob_robinson@blm.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Plan comprehensively addresses all
watershed restoration needs, including those resulting from injuries
pursuant to the federal Natural Resource Damage Assessment and
Restoration (NRDAR) regulations in Title 43 Code of Federal Regulations
part 11, as well as restoration needs arising from other impacts. The
Plan also outlines several sets of projects based on competing needs
and limited funding, and identifies a preferred restoration
alternative, consisting of a project set that best addresses the
various resource impacts. The Decision Record approves the preferred
alternative, which includes projects for greater in-stream flow,
cleaner surface water, river bank stabilization, restored riparian
areas, abandoned mine reclamation, and increased public access to the
river corridor. The Plan envisions funds from the NRDAR settlement,
along with matching funds, grants, and other funding sources, to
support the preferred alternative. The restoration actions ultimately
undertaken will result from proposals for specific actions that respond
to the needs and projects identified in the preferred restoration
alternative. The Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and
Liability Act (CERCLA, more commonly known as the Federal ''Superfund''
law) [42 U.S.C. 9601 et seq.] and the Federal Water Pollution Control
Act, commonly known as the Clean Water Act (CWA) [33 U.S.C. 1251 et
seq.] authorize States, federally recognized Tribes, and certain
Federal agencies, which have the authority to manage or control natural
resources, to act as ''trustees'' on behalf of the public, to restore,
rehabilitate, replace, and/or acquire natural resources equivalent to
those harmed by hazardous substance releases.
[[Page 28883]]
The objective of the NRDAR process in the Alamosa River watershed
is to compensate the public, through restoration actions, for losses to
natural resources and services that have been caused by releases of
toxic metals into the watershed. Restoration activities will be funded
in part by natural resource damages recovered in settlement from the
party responsible for recent contamination emanating from the
Summitville mine in the upper watershed. The damages received must be
used to restore, rehabilitate, replace and/or acquire the equivalent of
those natural resources that have been injured.
The Trustees have a Memorandum of Agreement which establishes a
Trustee Council to develop and implement a restoration plan for
ecological restorations in the Alamosa River watershed. The Trustees
followed the NRDAR regulations found at Title 43 Code of Federal
Regulations part 11 for development of the Plan. The Trustees have
worked together, in a cooperative process with the public, to determine
appropriate restoration activities to address natural resource injuries
caused by Summitville releases of hazardous substances, as well as
other watershed impacts identified during planning. The Plan addresses
the Trustees' overall approach to restore, rehabilitate, replace, or
acquire the equivalent of natural resources injured by the release of
toxic metals into the Alamosa River watershed environment. The public
was invited to review and comment on the draft Plan during a 30-day
period, and to attend a meeting near the site during which important
elements of the draft Plan were presented. Approximately 29 comments
were received, to which responses have been prepared and included,
along with the comments, in the final Plan. Some comments prompted
minor text changes, but no comments required significant changes to the
document, or to the restoration approach that the Trustees and public
have selected.
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 4321-4347.
Dated: April 4, 2006.
Robert H. Robinson,
Summitville Trustee Council Representative, Division of Energy, Lands
and Minerals, Colorado State Office, Bureau of Land Management.
[FR Doc. E6-7529 Filed 5-17-06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310-JB-P
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