Draft Environmental Assessment for the Management Plan for Endangered Fishes in the Yampa River Basin
Note: EPA no longer updates this information, but it may be useful as a reference or resource.
[Federal Register: July 30, 2003 (Volume 68, Number 146)]
[Notices]
[Page 44808-44809]
From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
[DOCID:fr30jy03-77]
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DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
Draft Environmental Assessment for the Management Plan for
Endangered Fishes in the Yampa River Basin
AGENCY: Fish and Wildlife Service, Interior.
ACTION: Notice of document availability.
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SUMMARY: The public is invited to comment on a draft Environmental
Assessment for the Management Plan for Endangered Fishes in the Yampa
River Basin. The Fish and Wildlife Service (Service) has prepared a
draft Environmental Assessment under regulations implementing the
National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (NEPA). Council on
Environmental Quality adopted regulations in 40 CFR 1501.3(b) state
that an agency ``may prepare an environmental assessment on any action
at any time in order to assist agency planning and decision making.''
The proposed action of the Service is to enter into a cooperative
agreement with the States of Colorado and Wyoming to implement
provisions of the Management Plan for Endangered Fishes in the Yampa
River Basin. Future actions that may be undertaken pursuant to this
management plan may be subject to additional NEPA documentation
requirements on a case-by-case basis.
DATES: Written comments on this draft Environmental Assessment and
Management Plan must be received by August 31, 2003. In lieu of or in
addition to written comments, comments may be submitted at any of
[[Page 44809]]
the three public meetings to be held in August 2003. Public meetings
are scheduled Monday, August 11, 2003, in Baggs, Wyoming; Tuesday,
August 12, 2003, in Steamboat Springs, Colorado; and Wednesday, August
13, 2003, in Craig, Colorado. All meetings are scheduled from 7 p.m. to
9 p.m.
ADDRESSES: Public meetings will be held at the Little Snake River
Valley Library, 105 2nd Street, Baggs, Wyoming; Centennial Hall, 124
10th Street, Steamboat Springs, Colorado; and Shadow Mountain
Clubhouse, 1055 County Road 7, Craig, Colorado.
Copies of the draft Environmental Assessment and Management Plan
are available online at http://www.r6.fws.gov/crrip/yampa.htm
or at the following Yampa Valley locations--Bud Werner Memorial Library,
1289 Lincoln Avenue, Steamboat Springs, Colorado; Hayden Town Hall, 178 W.
Jefferson Avenue, Hayden, Colorado; Moffat County Public Library, 570
Green Street, Craig, Colorado; Little Snake River Valley Library, 105
2nd Street, Baggs, Wyoming.
Copies of the draft Environmental Assessment and Management Plan,
either printed and bound or on CD-ROM, also are available by request.
Requests for copies and written comments may be sent to Dr. Robert
Muth, Director, by postal mail at Upper Colorado River Endangered Fish
Recovery Program, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, P.O. Box 25486, DFC,
Denver, Colorado, 80225-0486; by fax at (303) 969-7327; or by e-mail at
ColoradoRiverRecovery@fws.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Dr. Robert Muth, Director, at
telephone (303) 969-7322 (extension 268); Mr. Gerry Roehm, Instream
Flow Coordinator (extension 272); Ms. Debra Felker, Information and
Education Coordinator (extension 227); or at the postal and e-mail
addresses above.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Upper Colorado River Endangered Fish
Recovery Program (Program) was established in 1988 by a cooperative
agreement among the governors of Wyoming, Colorado, and Utah, Secretary
of the Department of the Interior, and Administrator of the Western
Area Power Administration for the purpose of recovering four endangered
fish species endemic to the Colorado River Basin--the humpback chub
(Gila cypha), bonytail (Gila elegans), Colorado pikeminnow
(Ptychocheilus lucius), and razorback sucker (Xyrauchen texanus). In
August 2002, the Service completed recovery goals for these species,
which identify five threat factors that led to their decline. These
factors, which include--(1) Destruction, modification, or curtailment
of the species' habitat or range; (2) overutilization; (3) disease and
predation; (4) inadequacy of existing regulatory mechanisms; and (5)
other natural or manmade factors, must be removed or abated to ensure
the species' recovery. The recovery goals specify that certain recovery
actions be taken to achieve the demographic criteria necessary for the
species' downlisting and eventual delisting. Flow modification,
obstructions to fish passage, and the presence of competitive and
predatory nonnative fishes are considered to present the most
significant threats to recovery. Consistent with the recovery goals,
Program participants developed a Management Plan for Endangered Fishes
in the Yampa River Basin to facilitate recovery of listed fishes as
water continues to be depleted from the river to serve the needs of the
people of the Yampa Basin now and into the foreseeable future. This
management plan identifies a package of recovery actions to be
implemented in the Yampa River Basin, including instream flow
augmentation, fish passage, and management of nonnative fish
populations. The Service proposes to enter into a cooperative agreement
to implement the plan. This Federal action requires that the Service
fulfill the requirements of the NEPA, for which an Environmental
Assessment has been prepared.
Dated: March 27, 2003.
Elliott N. Sutta,
Acting Regional Director, Denver, Colorado.
[FR Doc. 03-17696 Filed 7-29-03; 8:45 am]
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