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Notice of Availability of the Draft Comprehensive Conservation Plan and Environmental Assessment for Sabine National Wildlife Refuge

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




[Federal Register: June 29, 2007 (Volume 72, Number 125)]
[Notices]
[Page 35717-35718]
From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
[DOCID:fr29jn07-71]

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DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service

Notice of Availability of the Draft Comprehensive Conservation
Plan and Environmental Assessment for Sabine National Wildlife Refuge

AGENCY: Fish and Wildlife Service, Interior.
ACTION: Notice of availability.

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SUMMARY: The Fish and Wildlife Service announces that a Draft
Comprehensive Conservation Plan and Environmental Assessment (Draft
CCP/EA) for Sabine National Wildlife Refuge is available for
distribution. This Draft CCP/EA also covers the East Cove Unit of
Cameron Prairie National Wildlife Refuge. The National Wildlife Refuge
System Administration Act of 1966, as amended by the National Wildlife
Refuge System Improvement Act of 1997, requires the Service to develop
a comprehensive conservation plan for each national wildlife refuge.
This Draft CCP, when final, will describe how the Service intends to
manage Sabine National Wildlife Refuge over the next 15 years.

DATES: Written comments must be received at the postal address listed
below no later than July 30, 2007.

ADDRESSES: To provide written comments or to obtain a copy of the Draft
CCP/EA, please write to: Southwest Louisiana National Wildlife Refuge
Complex, Sabine National Wildlife Refuge, 1428 Highway 27, Bell City,
Louisiana 70630; or telephone: 337-598-2216. The Draft CCP/EA may also
be accessed and downloaded from the Service's Internet Site: 
http://southeast.fws.gov/planning/.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    Public Availability of Comments: Before including your address,
phone number, e-mail address, or other personal identifying information
in your comment, you should be aware that your entire comment,
including your personal identifying information, may be made publicly
available at any time. While you can ask us in your comment to withhold
your personal identifying information from public review, we cannot
guarantee that we will be able to do so.
    Background: Sabine National Wildlife Refuge was established by
Executive Order 7764, dated December 6, 1937, stating the official
purpose of the refuge was, ``* * * as a refuge and breeding ground for
migratory birds and other wildlife.'' A secondary purpose of the refuge
is ``* * * for use as an inviolate sanctuary, or for any other
management purpose, for migratory birds'' [16 U.S.C. 715d (Migratory
Bird Conservation Act)].
    Sabine National Wildlife Refuge is one of four refuges that
comprise the Southwest Louisiana National Wildlife Refuge Complex. It
is located eight miles south of Hackberry on State Highway 27 in
Cameron Parish, Louisiana. The refuge currently occupies the marshes
between Calcasieu and Sabine Lakes and consists of 125,790 acres of
open water and marsh grassland. The East Cove Unit, originally
established as part of Sabine National Wildlife Refuge, was
administratively transferred to Cameron Prairie National Wildlife
Refuge in 1992. The East Cove Unit, also in Cameron Parish, consists of
14,927 acres of brackish to intermediate marsh, bordered on the west by
Calcasieu Lake, and on the north, east, and south by privately owned
marshes. The East Cove Unit is also part of the Cameron Creole
Watershed Project, a cooperative effort among local, State, and Federal
agencies and the private sector to restore 64,000 acres of marsh in
Cameron Parish. The Service manages the Cameron Creole Watershed
Project under cooperative agreement among sponsors. The overall focus
area to be evaluated in this Draft CCP/EA totals 140,717 acres.
    Significant issues addressed in the Draft CCP/EA include: Recovery
from damages incurred by Hurricane Rita; management of migratory birds,
with special emphasis on waterfowl (especially northern pintails and
mottled ducks); management and restoration of unique coastal wetland
habitats; management of oil and gas activities; access management for
public use activities, including recreational freshwater sportfishing
and hunting; and protection of cultural resources.
    Also addressed in the Draft CCP/EA are compatibility determinations
for the following uses: (1) Recreational freshwater sportfishing; (2)
recreational sportfishing tournaments; (3) recreational hunting; (4)
environmental education and interpretation; (5) wildlife observation
and photography; (6) research and monitoring; (7) commercial alligator
harvest; (8) commercial video and photography; (9)

[[Page 35718]]

commercially guided wildlife viewing, photography, environmental
education, and interpretation; and (10) beneficial use of dredge material.
    Alternatives: The Service developed three alternatives for
management of the refuge (alternatives A, B, and C), with Alternative B
as the proposed alternative. We believe this alternative will be the
most effective one to contribute to the purpose for which the refuge
was established and to the mission of the National Wildlife Refuge System.
    Alternative A, also called the ``No Action'' alternative, is the
baseline or status quo of refuge programs and is usually a continuation
of current planning unit objectives and management strategies, with no
changes or changes that would have occurred without the CCP. Sabine
Refuge, which was severely affected by Hurricane Rita in September
2005, is currently closed to most activities other than essential
operations, and hurricane clean-up and restoration activities.
    Non-essential programs, such as public use, would cease. Research
monitoring activities and the fire program, including both prescribed
fire as well as extinguishing wildfires, would continue. Hazardous
debris removal and Coastal Wetlands Planning, Protection and
Restoration Act projects would continue. Oil and gas operations would
continue. Law enforcement operations would increase to ensure that the
more than 300,000 annual visitors who normally use the refuge comply
with the closure. Sabine Refuge staff would function at an office
located off-site. Cultural resources would continue to be protected. As
hurricane recovery is accomplished, the refuge would essentially be
managed as it was prior to the devastation from the historic storm. The
East Cove Unit would continue to be managed under an inter-agency
management agreement.
    Alternative B, our proposed alternative, would continue to keep the
refuge operational with minimal public use programs functional but at a
reduced cost (near-term). It would increase marsh restoration, enhance
fish and wildlife management, and expand public use (long-term).
    Over the near-term, programs would continue throughout the refuge
commensurate with the levels of hazardous material clean-up and
restoration. Over time, public use areas would be re-opened as repairs
to infrastructure and restoration of habitat occur. Fire and research
programs would remain active. Existing oil and gas operations would
continue at the normal level, but new operations would be closely
assessed under Service regulations and Federal laws. Staff assigned to
the refuge would function out of a hurricane-resistant building to be
located at the original headquarters site.
    Over the long-term, under Alternative B, Sabine Refuge would
increase marsh restoration and enhance wildlife management, stepping up
these efforts from current levels. Like Alternative A, Alternative B
would maintain salinity monitoring throughout the refuge at established
discrete salinity stations. Improving water quality would be a major
thrust for the refuge. The refuge would provide additional opportunities
for friends, volunteers, partners, and interns to assist the refuge.
    Management of the East Cove Unit under Alternative B would be
identical to Alternative A. Gates at the water control structures would
be operated to restore preferred vegetated plant communities associated
with intermediate or possibly slightly brackish environments. Staff
would evaluate the use of terraces to improve vegetation of open-water
areas. During the life of the CCP, an assessment would be conducted to
determine the need for sanctuary in the East Cove Unit, which would
minimize detrimental waterfowl disturbances. The invasion of exotic
plant species, with special emphasis on giant salvinia, would be
monitored. Public fishing access to the East Cove Unit would be improved.
    Alternative C would hold the refuge in custodial form. Major
restoration and recovery efforts from devastation caused by Hurricane
Rita would be curtailed. The fire and research programs would remain
active throughout the refuge. Oil and gas operations would continue at
the current level. No active habitat management would occur. Instead,
refuge and complex staff would serve as good caretakers or custodians
of the refuge, observing and monitoring the natural forces and
ecological succession that would shape its habitats and effectively
determine their suitability for wildlife. The Service would conduct no
prescribed fire and would limit fire management to hazardous fuel
reduction and suppression of wildfires. There would be no need to
replace and upgrade equipment and facilities, such as pumps, tractors,
and water control structures. This alternative would result in very
little effective high-quality waterfowl sanctuary. That is, high ground
would succeed to a mix of Chinese tallow, willow, and hackberry, while
lower ground reverted to dense stands of maidencane. There would be few
open areas.
    With regard to public use, each of the six priority public uses
would be strongly encouraged but facilities would be limited.
Management of cultural resources and the East Cove Unit under
Alternative C would be identical to Alternatives A and B.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Judy McClendon, Natural Resource
Planner, Telephone: 870/347-2074, Extension 43; Fax: 870/347-2908; or
electronically at: Judy_McClendon@fws.gov.

    Authority: This notice is published under the authority of the National
Wildlife Refuge System Improvement Act of 1997, Public Law 105-57.

    Dated: April 30, 2007.
Cynthia K. Dohner,
Acting Regional Director.
[FR Doc. E7-12628 Filed 6-28-07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310-55-P

 
 


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