[Federal Register Volume 74, Number 156 (Friday, August 14, 2009)]
[Notices]
[Pages 41158-41160]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E9-19520]
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DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Land Management
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
U.S. Forest Service
[LLMTC0400000 L51010000.ER0000 LVRWE0420000]
Notice of Availability of a Draft Environmental Impact Statement
for the Dewey Conveyor Project, Custer County, SD
AGENCIES: Bureau of Land Management, Interior (BLM); and United States
Forest Service, Agriculture (USFS).
ACTION: Notice of availability.
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SUMMARY: In accordance with section 102 of the National Environmental
Policy Act of 1969, the BLM and the USFS have jointly prepared a Draft
Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS) to analyze the Dewey Conveyor
Project, Custer County, South Dakota, and by this Notice are announcing
the opening of the comment period.
DATES: To ensure that your written comments on the Dewey Conveyor
Project DEIS will be considered, the BLM or USFS must receive them by
September 14, 2009, which is 45 days after July 31, 2009, the date the
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) published its Notice of
Availability in the Federal Register [74 FR 38187]. The BLM and the
USFS will announce future meetings or hearings and any other public
involvement activities at least 15 days in advance through public
notices, media news releases, and/or mailings.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments by any of the following methods:
Web site: http://www.blm.gov/mt/st/en/fo/south_dakota_field.html.
E-mail: [email protected]. Include Docket number SDM-
96415 in the subject line of the message.
Fax: (605) 892-7015.
Mail or hand delivery: Marian Atkins, South Dakota Field
Manager, Bureau of Land Management, 310 Roundup Street, Belle Fourche,
South Dakota 57717.
[[Page 41159]]
Copies of the Dewey Conveyor Project DEIS are available at the BLM
State Office located at 5001 Southgate Drive, Billings, Montana, and at
the South Dakota Field Office located at 310 Roundup Street, Belle
Fourche, South Dakota. Electronic copies in pdf format are available on
CD-ROM and may be obtained by contacting Marian Atkins of BLM in Belle
Fourche, South Dakota, at the address above. A copy of the Draft EIS is
also available for review via the Agency Web site: http://www.blm.gov/mt/st/en/fo/south_dakota_field.html.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Marian Atkins, South Dakota Field
Manager, Bureau of Land Management, 310 Roundup Street, Belle Fourche,
South Dakota 57717; (605) 892-7000; [email protected]; or Laura
Burns, FS Lands Program Manager, Hell Canyon District, Black Hills
National Forest, 330 Mount Rushmore Road, Custer, South Dakota 57730;
(605) 673-4853; [email protected].
Or visit the BLM's Web site and access the Dewey Conveyor Project
information at the following link http://www.blm.gov/mt/st/en/fo/south_dakota_field.html.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
GCC Dacotah, Inc., has located a limestone deposit several miles
north of the town of Dewey, South Dakota, in a geologically favorable
area where the limestone lies at, or close to, the surface, making
mining economically feasible. The nearby town of Dewey is located along
an existing rail transportation corridor.
The surface of the land currently proposed for mining is mostly
private property, largely owned by GCC Dacotah, Inc. Within the area
proposed for mining, all of the mineral rights are controlled by GCC
Dacotah, Inc., either by direct ownership, leasing of privately-owned
lands, or through the staking of mining claims on lands underlain by
federally-owned minerals. GCC Dacotah, Inc., has a license to mine
limestone in the State of South Dakota issued by the South Dakota
Department of Environment and Natural Resources.
The Dewey Conveyor Project was proposed by GCC Dacotah, Inc., as a
means to transport limestone from the future quarry location to a rail
load-out facility near Dewey. GCC Dacotah, Inc., has submitted an
Application for Transportation and Utility Systems and Facilities on
Federal Lands. If the application is approved, a special use permit
would be required from the USFS and a right-of-way (ROW) grant would be
required from the BLM for the conveyor to cross Federal lands. The BLM
and the USFS have prepared this DEIS to consider the effects of the
proposed action to permit a transportation facility on Federal lands.
On October 2, 2007, the BLM published a Notice of Intent (NOI) to
prepare an environmental impact statement in the Federal Register (72
FR 56083). Publication of the NOI began a 60-day public comment period
on the scope of the EIS. The comment period was further extended to
January 11, 2008, to allow for additional project-related comments. The
BLM provided a Web site with project information that also described
the various methods of providing public comment on the scope of the
proposed action, including an e-mail address for comments to be sent
electronically.
The BLM and USFS scheduled four public meetings in towns near the
project area to facilitate information exchange and to gather public
comments regarding the scope of the proposed Dewey Conveyor Project. A
total of 51 attendees signed in voluntarily at meetings held in
Edgemont, South Dakota, on November 5, 2007; Custer, South Dakota, on
November 6, 2007; Newcastle, Wyoming, on November 7, 2007; and Dewey,
South Dakota, on December 3, 2007.
The public meetings used an ``open house'' format. Information on
the project was provided on poster boards showing the project location
(including maps), a list of preliminary issues identified by the
agencies, and photographic simulations of the proposed conveyor belt.
The public scoping comments mainly addressed the appearance of the
covered elevated conveyor belt and concerns about the increased use of
the county road.
The BLM also contracted with Mr. Donovin Sprague, a member of the
federally-recognized Minnicoujou Lakota Tribe, to conduct interviews
with tribal members on their interest and concerns in the proposed
Dewey Conveyor Project.
The BLM and USFS have jointly prepared a Draft EIS for the Dewey
Conveyor Project. The DEIS considers four alternatives. Alternative A
is the Proposed Action, which includes a 6.6 mile long, above-ground,
enclosed conveyor system beginning at the quarry and terminating at a
new railroad load-out facility. The route would cross 1.5 miles of the
Black Hills National Forest and 1.0 mile of public land administered by
the BLM.
Alternative B is the No Action Alternative. Under the No Action
alternative, the proposed action to grant a ROW or issue a special use
permit authorizing construction of a conveyor system would not be
approved. The analysis for this alternative assumes GCC Dacotah, Inc.,
would not choose to haul limestone in trucks over the existing Dewey
County Road.
Alternative C is an alternative to the proposed action and involves
hauling limestone by truck from the quarry to the proposed load-out
facility using an improved Dewey County road. Public safety concerns
call for the county road to be widened and straightened over
approximately 7.2 miles. Widening and straightening the county road
where it crosses Federal lands would require a special use permit and a
right-of-way (ROW) grant from the USFS and BLM.
Alternative D calls for the construction of another road generally
following the route of the proposed conveyor that would only be used
for hauling limestone by truck and eliminate the potential visual
impact from the proposed conveyor. This would allow for local traffic
to be largely separated from the hauling traffic. Approximately 1.4
miles of the existing county road would need to be straightened and
widened over the pass that crosses the Elk Mountains on the National
Forest. Both a ROW grant and a special use permit would be required for
new road construction across Federal lands. The BLM and the USFS will
decide whether or not to approve the Application for Transportation and
Utility Systems and Facilities on Federal Lands and grant a 100-foot-
wide ROW for a conveyor crossing and a special use permit or some
alternative thereto.
The BLM and the USFS will also decide what stipulations or
mitigation will be attached to any ROW grant or special use permit.
Mining of the limestone resource to be produced and transported to a
proposed rail load-out facility near Dewey, either by the proposed
conveyor belt or one of the trucking action alternatives haul routes,
is considered by the agencies in the DEIS.
Based on public scoping comments and subsequent analysis in the
DEIS, the BLM and the USFS have identified Alternative A, the Proposed
Action, as the agencies' preferred alternative.
Please note that public comments and information submitted
including names, street addresses, and e-mail addresses of respondents
will be available for public review and disclosure at the above
addresses during regular business hours (8 a.m. to 4 p.m.), Monday
through Friday, except holidays.
Before including your address, phone number, e-mail address, or
other personal identifying information in your comment, you should be
aware that
[[Page 41160]]
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.
Marian M. Atkins,
Field Manager, South Dakota Field Manager.
Craig Bobzien,
Forest Supervisor, Black Hills National Forest.
[FR Doc. E9-19520 Filed 8-13-09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310-DN-P