[Federal Register Volume 65, Number 223 (Friday, November 17, 2000)]
[Notices]
[Pages 69570-69572]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 00-29316]
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DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
Bureau of Reclamation
[FES 00-48]
Notice of Availability of Final Environmental Impact Statement/
Environmental Impact Report
AGENCIES: Fish and Wildlife Service, Bureau of Reclamation, Interior.
ACTION: Notice of availability of Final Environmental Impact Statement
for the proposed Trinity River Mainstem Fishery Restoration.
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SUMMARY: This notice announces the availability of a joint final
Environmental Impact Statement/Environmental Impact Report (FEIS/EIR)
for the Trinity River Mainstem Fishery Restoration. This notice is the
second notice of availability and follows the first notice of
availability and the rescission of that notice which appeared in the
Federal Register on October 20, 2000, and October 25, 2000,
respectively. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, U.S. Bureau of
Reclamation, Hoopa Valley Tribe, and Trinity County prepared a FEIS/EIR
to assist the Secretary of the Interior in developing recommendations
for permanent instream fishery flow requirements, habitat restoration
projects, and operating criteria and procedures for the Trinity River
Division of the Central Valley Project, California, necessary for the
restoration and maintenance of natural production of anadromous fish in
the Trinity River. Such recommendations are required by: the January
14, 1981, Secretarial Decision that initiated the Trinity River Flow
Evaluation; the Trinity River Basin Fish and Wildlife Management Act
(Public Law 98-541); and the Central Valley Project Improvement Act
(Public Law 102-575).
DATES: A Record of Decision and permit decision will occur no sooner
than thirty (30) days after the publication of the Environmental
Protection Agency's notice of availability.
ADDRESSES: Copies of the FEIS/EIR will be available on compact disc
which, along with a summary, can be obtained by contacting the Fish and
Wildlife Service, 1655 Heindon Road, Arcata, California 95521, (707)
822-7201. The documents are also available for review at the following
government offices and libraries:
Government Offices
Fish and Wildlife Service, Arcata Fish and Wildlife Office, 1655
Heindon Road, Arcata, California 95521, (707) 822-7201;
Fish and Wildlife Service, Sacramento Fish and Wildlife Office, 2800
Cottage Way, Sacramento, California 95825, 916-414-6464;
Trinity County Planning Department, 303 Trinity Lakes Blvd,
Weaverville, CA 96093 (530) 623-1351;
Trinity County Natural Resources Division, 98A Clinic Ave., Hayfork, CA
96041, (530) 628-5949.
[[Page 69571]]
Libraries
Alameda Free Library, 2264 Santa Clara Avenue, Alameda, California
94501-4506, (510) 748-4669; Beale Memorial Library, 701 Truxtun Ave,
Bakersfield, California, 93301, (661) 868-0700; Cesar Chaves Central
Library, 605 N. El Dorado St, Stockton, California, (209) 937-8415;
California State Library, Information and Reference Center, 914 Capitol
Mall, Room 301, Sacramento, California 95814, (916) 654-0261; Colusa
County Free Library, 738 Market Street, Colusa, California 95932-2398,
(530) 458-7671; Contra Costa County Library, 1750 Oak Park Boulevard,
Pleasant Hill, California 94523-4497, (510) 646-6423; Coos Bay Public
Library, 525 W. Anderson Ave., Coos Bay, Oregon, 97420, (541) 269-1101;
Del Norte County Library District, 190 Price Mall, Crescent City,
California 95531-4395, (707) 464-9793; Fresno County Library, Central
Branch, 2420 Mariposa St., Fresno, California, (559) 488-3195; Humboldt
County Library, 1313 Third Street, Eureka, California 95501-1088, (707)
269-1900; Humboldt State University Library, Humboldt State University,
Arcata, California 95521, (707) 826-4939; Lake County Library, 1425 N.
High Street, Lakeport, California 95453-3800, (707) 263-8816; Los
Angeles Public Library, 630 W. Fifth Street, Los Angeles, California,
9007-12097, (213) 228-7515; Marin County Free Library, 3501 Civic
Center Drive, San Rafael, California 94903-4188, (415) 499-6051;
Mendocino County Library-Ft. Bragg, 499 E Laurel St., Fort Bragg,
California, 95437, (707) 964-2020; Mendocino County Library-Ukiah, 105
N. Main Street, Ukiah, California 95482-4482, (707) 463-4491; Menlo
Park Public Library, 800 Alma Street, Menlo Park, California 94025-
3460, (650) 858-3460; Merced County Library, 2222 M St., Merced,
California, 95340, (209) 385-7434; Modesto Jr. College Library, 425
College Ave, Modesto, California, 95350, (209) 575-6498; Monterey
Public Library, 625 Pacific Street, Monterey, California, 93940, (831)
646-3932; Sacramento Public Library, 828 I Street, Sacramento,
California 95814-2589, (916) 264-2770; San Francisco Public Library,
100 Larkin Street, San Francisco, California 94102-4796, (415) 557-
4400; San Jose Public Library, 180 W. San Carlos Street, San Jose,
California 95113-2096, (408) 277-4822; Santa Cruz Public Library, 224
Church Street, Santa Cruz, California 95060-3873, (408) 429-3532;
Shasta County Library, 1855 Shasta Street, Redding, California 96001-
0460, (530) 225-5769; Siskiyou County Free Library, 719 Fourth Street,
Yreka, California 96097-3381, (530) 842-8175; Sonoma County Library,
Third and E Streets, Santa Rosa, California 95404-4400, (707) 545-0831;
Tehama County Library, 645 Madison Street, Red Bluff, California 96080-
3383, (530) 527-0607; Trinity County Free Library, 211 N. Main Street,
Weaverville, California 96093-1226, (530) 623-1373; Willows Public
Library, 201 N. Lassen St., Willows, California, 95988, 530-934-5156;
Central Library, 801 SW. 10th Avenue, Portland, Oregon 97205, (503)
248-5123; and National Clearinghouse Library, 624 Ninth Street, NW,
600, Washington, DC 20425, (202) 376-8110.
The FEIS/EIR will be available at the Fish and Wildlife Service
website at http://www.ccfwo.r1.fws.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Dr. MaryEllen Mueller, U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service, 2800 Cottage Way, Suite W-2606, Sacramento, CA 95825
(916) 414-6464 or Jay Glase, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, 1655
Heindon Road, Arcata, CA 95521 (707) 822-7201.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Construction of the Trinity River Division
(TRD) of the Central Valley Project (CVP) was completed in 1963. The
primary function of the TRD is to store Trinity River water for
regulated diversion to the Central Valley of California for
agricultural, municipal, and industrial uses. Construction and
operation of the TRD resulted in the diversion of up to 90 percent of
the average annual discharge in the Trinity River at Lewiston, and
blocked access to 109 miles of salmon and steelhead spawning and
rearing habitat. Reduced river flows, combined with excessive watershed
erosion and encroachment of the river channel by riparian vegetation,
caused major changes in the channel morphology resulting in the
simplification and degradation of the remaining salmon and steelhead
habitat of the Trinity River below the Lewiston Dam. This, in turn,
resulted in rapid declines of salmon and steelhead populations
following completion of the TRD.
In response to declining fisheries and degraded habitat conditions,
the Secretary of the Interior (Secretary) decided in 1981 to increase
flows in the Trinity River ranging from 140,000 acre-feet to 340,000
acre-feet annually, with reductions in dry and critically dry years. In
addition, the Fish and Wildlife Service was directed to undertake a
Flow Evaluation Study to assess fish habitat at various flows,
summarize the effectiveness of other instream and watershed restoration
activities, and recommend appropriate flows and other measures
necessary to better maintain favorable habitat conditions. The Flow
Evaluation Study began in October 1984 and was completed in June 1999.
In October 1984, the Trinity River Basin Fish and Wildlife Management
Act (Management Act) (Public Law 98-541) was enacted by Congress with
the goal of restoring fish and wildlife populations to pre-TRD levels.
The Act provided funding for construction, operation, and maintenance
of the 11-item action plan developed by the Trinity River Task Force in
1982. In 1992, the Central Valley Project Improvement Act (CVPIA)
(Public Law 102-575) was passed. Section 3406(b)(23) of the CVPIA
provides, through the TRD, an instream release of not less than 340,000
acre-feet of water into the Trinity River to meet Federal trust
responsibilities to protect fishery resources of the Hoopa Valley Tribe
and to meet the fishery restoration goals of the Management Act. The
recommendations for mainstem Trinity River fishery restoration will be
developed after appropriate consultations with Federal, State, Tribal,
local agencies, and affected interests, and after completion the Flow
Evaluation Study. To restore the natural production of anadromous fish
in the Trinity River in accordance with the 1981 Secretarial Decision,
the Management Act, and the CVPIA, the FEIS/EIR analyzes the impacts
of:
(1) Increased instream releases into the Trinity River to provide
anadromous fish habitat and restore fluvial processes,
(2) Implementation of a channel rehabilitation program,
(3) Implementation of a spawning gravel supplementation program,
(4) Implementation of a watershed rehabilitation program, and
(5) Implementation of an Adaptive Environmental Assessment and
Management Program.
On October 19, 1999, the Service published a notice in the Federal
Register announcing the availability of the draft EIS/EIR and the
commencement of the public comment period in the Federal Register (64
FR 56364). The comment period was originally scheduled to end on
December 8, 1999. However, on December 2, 1999 the Service extended the
period until December 20, 1999 (64 FR 67584). On December 27, 1999 the
Service published a notice in the Federal Register, which reopened the
public comment period until January 20, 2000 (64 FR 72357). In total,
the lead agencies received written comments from 6445 people and
organizations (1009 letters and 5436 preprinted postcards). The primary
concerns
[[Page 69572]]
expressed in many of the comments related to fishery resource analyses,
power generation impacts analyses, mechanical modifications to riverine
habitat and the amount of river flow proposed for restoration efforts.
A list of the commenters and the response of the agencies to the
comments is presented in the FEIS/EIR.
The FEIS/EIR is intended to accomplish the following:
(1) Inform the public of the proposed action and alternatives;
(2) Address public comments received during the scoping and comment
periods;
(3) Disclose the direct, indirect, and cumulative environmental
effects of the proposed action and each of the alternatives; and
(4) Indicate any irreversible commitment of resources that would
result from implementation of the proposed action.
This notice is provided pursuant to Section 102(2)(c) of the
National Environmental Policy Act of 1969, as implemented by the
Council on Environmental Quality regulations (40 CFR parts 1500, 1508),
and the California Environmental Quality Act of 1970, as amended.
The Technical Appendixes (TA) for this FEIS/EIR will be made
available upon request from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Arcata
Office, 1655 Heindon Road, Arcata, CA 95521; (707) 822-7201. Documents
cited in the FEIS/EIR and its supporting TAs will be available for
viewing in Sacramento (U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, 2800 Cottage
Way, 946-414-6464), Arcata (U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service 1655 Heindon
Road; 707-822-7201), and Weaverville (Trinity County Library, 211 N.
Main Street, Weaverville, California 96093, 530-623-1373).
(Authority: NEPA, the National Environmental Quality Improvement Act
of 1970, as amended (42 U.S.C. 4371 et seq.); E.O. 11514, March 5,
1970, as amended by E.O. 11991, May 24, 1977; and CEQ Regulations 40
CFR 1503.1)
Willie R. Taylor,
Director, Office of Environmental Policy and Compliance.
[FR Doc. 00-29316 Filed 11-16-00; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310-55-P