95-4543. Availability of an Environmental Assessment and an Application for an Incidental Take Permit to Implement the Red-cockaded Woodpecker ``Safe Harbor'' Program in the Sandhills Region of North Carolina  

  • [Federal Register Volume 60, Number 37 (Friday, February 24, 1995)]
    [Notices]
    [Pages 10400-10401]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 95-4543]
    
    
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
    
    Availability of an Environmental Assessment and an Application 
    for an Incidental Take Permit to Implement the Red-cockaded Woodpecker 
    ``Safe Harbor'' Program in the Sandhills Region of North Carolina
    
    AGENCY: Fish and Wildlife Service, Interior.
    
    ACTION: Notice.
    
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    SUMMARY: The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service's (Service) Red-cockaded 
    Woodpecker Recovery Coordinator (Applicant) is seeking an incidental 
    take permit pursuant to Section 10(a)(1)(B) of the Endangered Species 
    Act of 1973, as amended (Act). The permit would authorize the take of 
    the federally endangered red-cockaded woodpecker Picoides borealis 
    (RCW) at some point in the future, incidental to such lawful activities 
    as timber harvesting, residential development, etc., on private and 
    other public land (excluding Federal land and the Sandhills Game Lands, 
    which are managed by the North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission) 
    in the six-county Sandhills Region of North Carolina. Specifically, the 
    plan area boundary includes land south of N.C. Highway 24/27 in Moore 
    County; east of U.S. Highway 220 and north of U.S. Highway 74 in 
    Richmond County; north of U.S. Highways 74 and 401 in Scotland County; 
    north of U.S. Highway 401 in Hoke County; west of Interstate 95 in 
    Cumberland County; and south of N.C. Highway 27 and west of U.S. 
    Highway 401 in Harnett County. The permit would authorize incidental 
    take only on land that is enrolled in the proposed ``safe harbor'' 
    program, which is described in the Supplementary Information Section 
    below.
        The Service also announces the availability of an environmental 
    assessment (EA) and habitat conservation plan (HCP) for the incidental 
    take application. Copies of the EA or HCP may be obtained by making a 
    request to the Regional Office address below. This notice also advises 
    the public that the Service has made a preliminary determination that 
    issuing the incidental take permit is not a major Federal action 
    significantly affecting the quality of the human environment within the 
    meaning of Section 102(2)(C) of the National Environmental Policy Act 
    of 1969, as amended. The Finding of No Significant Impact is based on 
    information contained in the EA and HCP. The final determination will 
    be made no sooner than 30 days from the date of this notice. This 
    notice is provided pursuant to Section 10(c) of the Act and National 
    Environmental Policy Act Regulations (40 CFR 1506.6).
    
    DATES: Written comments on the permit application, EA, and HCP should 
    be sent to the Regional Permit Coordinator in Atlanta, Georgia, at the 
    address shown below and should be received on or before March 27, 1995.
    
    ADDRESSES: Persons wishing to review the application, HCP, and EA may 
    obtain a copy by writing the Service's Southeast Regional Office, 1875 
    Century Boulevard, Atlanta, Georgia 30345. Documents will also be 
    available for public inspection by appointment during normal business 
    hours at the Regional Office; the Sandhills Field Office in Southern 
    Pines, North Carolina; or the Asheville, North Carolina, Field Office. 
    Written data or comments concerning the application, EA, or HCP should 
    be submitted to the Regional Office. Please reference permit number 
    PRT-798839 in such comments.
    
    Regional Permit Coordinator, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, 1875 
    Century Boulevard, Suite 210, Atlanta, Georgia 30345 (Telephone 404/
    679-7110, Fax 404/679-7280).
    Sandhills RCW Biologist, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, P.O. Box 119, 
    225 N. Bennett Street, Southern Pines, North Carolina 28388 (Telephone/
    Fax 910/695-3323).
    Field Supervisor, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, 330 Ridgefield Court, 
    Asheville, North Carolina 28806 (Telephone 704/665-1195, Fax 704/665-
    2782).
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr. Mark Cantrell at the Sandhills 
    Red-cockaded Woodpecker Field Office in Southern Pines, North Carolina; 
    Ms. Janice Nicholls at the Asheville Field Office, Asheville, North 
    Carolina; or Mr. Rick G. Gooch at the Southeast Regional Office, 
    Atlanta, Georgia.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Sandhills area of North Carolina 
    supports one of the largest remaining populations of federally 
    endangered red-cockaded woodpeckers (RCWs) in the nation and is 
    identified in the RCW recovery plan as 1 of the 15 populations across 
    the species' range that must be viable in order to recover the species. 
    Unlike the other 14 recovery populations, however, a significant 
    portion (approximately 30 percent) of the Sandhills RCW groups known 
    are on private land and could potentially contribute to a Sandhills 
    recovery population. RCWs on private land in the Sandhills have 
    declined significantly over the past decade. Thus, the recovery of the 
    RCW in the Sandhills is likely to be influenced significantly by the 
    land management decisions of private landowners.
        The Service and several other agencies/organizations are working 
    cooperatively to develop an overall conservation strategy for the 
    Sandhills RCW population and the longleaf pine ecosystem. One component 
    of this strategy is a habitat conservation plan that will implement the 
    proposed ``safe harbor'' program. The Service recognizes that 
    landowners presently have no legal or economic incentive to undertake 
    proactive management actions, such as hardwood midstory removal, 
    prescribed burning, or protecting future cavity trees, that will 
    benefit and help recover the RCW. Indeed, landowners actually have a 
    disincentive to undertake these actions because of land use limitations 
    that could result if their management activities attract RCWs. However, 
    some Sandhills landowners may be willing to take or permit actions that 
    would benefit the RCW on their property if the possibility of future 
    land use limitations could be reduced or eliminated.
        Thus, the Service is proposing the ``safe harbor'' program, which 
    is designed to encourage voluntary RCW habitat restoration or 
    enhancement activities by relieving a landowner who enters into a 
    cooperative agreement with the Service from any additional 
    [[Page 10401]] responsibility under the Act beyond that which exists at 
    the time he or she enters into the agreement; i.e., to provide a ``safe 
    harbor.'' The cooperative agreement will identify any existing RCW 
    clusters and will describe the actions that the landowner commits to 
    take (e.g., hardwood midstory removal, cavity provisioning, etc.) or 
    allows to be taken to improve RCW habitat on the property and the time 
    period within which those actions are to be taken and maintained. 
    Participating landowners who enter into cooperative agreements with the 
    Service will be included within the scope of the incidental take permit 
    by Certificates of Inclusion. A participating landowner must maintain 
    the baseline habitat requirements on his/her property (i.e., any 
    existing RCW groups and associated habitat) but will be allowed to 
    incidentally take RCWs at some point in the future on other habitat on 
    the property if they are attracted to the site by the proactive 
    management measures undertaken by the landowner. No incidental taking 
    of any existing RCW group is permitted under this program except under 
    the special circumstances that are described in the HCP. Further 
    details about this program are found in the HCP.
    
        The EA considers the environmental consequences of three 
    alternatives, including the preferred alternative--to implement the 
    ``Safe Harbor'' program. The likely effects of the no-action 
    alternative are the continued decline of the Sandhills RCW population 
    on private land and the continued lack of management of many of the 
    longleaf pine stands that remain in the Sandhills. The third 
    alternative involves offering interested landowners financial, rather 
    than regulatory, incentives to undertake the desired land management 
    activities for RCWs. This alternative is not being pursued because the 
    Service is presently unable at present to fund such a program. The 
    proposed action alternative is the issuance of an incidental take 
    permit and implementation of the ``Safe Harbor'' program.
    
        Dated: February 16, 1995.
    
    Noreen Clough,
    
    Acting Regional Director.
    
    [FR Doc. 95-4543 Filed 2-23-95; 8:45 am]
    
    BILLING CODE 4310-55-P
    
    

Document Information

Published:
02/24/1995
Department:
Interior Department
Entry Type:
Notice
Action:
Notice.
Document Number:
95-4543
Dates:
Written comments on the permit application, EA, and HCP should be sent to the Regional Permit Coordinator in Atlanta, Georgia, at the
Pages:
10400-10401 (2 pages)
PDF File:
95-4543.pdf