94-14716. Notice of Availability of the Draft Environmental Impact Statement for the Exxon Valdez Oil Spill Restoration Plan  

  • [Federal Register Volume 59, Number 116 (Friday, June 17, 1994)]
    [Unknown Section]
    [Page 0]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 94-14716]
    
    
    [[Page Unknown]]
    
    [Federal Register: June 17, 1994]
    
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
    DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
    
    Office of the Secretary
    
     
    
    Notice of Availability of the Draft Environmental Impact 
    Statement for the Exxon Valdez Oil Spill Restoration Plan
    
    AGENCY: Forest Service, Department of Agriculture, and the Office of 
    the Secretary, Department of the Interior. National Marine Fisheries 
    Service, Department of Commerce is a cooperating agency.
    
    ACTION: Notice of availability of the draft environmental impact 
    statement for the Exxon Valdez restoration plan.
    
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    SUMMARY: On behalf of the Exxon Valdez Trustee Council, the Department 
    of Agriculture, Forest Service announces the availability of the Draft 
    Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS) for the Exxon Valdez Oil Spill 
    Restoration Plan. This notice announces the locations and dates of 
    public meetings to solicit comments on the DEIS. The responsible 
    official for the preparation of the DEIS is the Regional Forester, Phil 
    Janik. The Restoration Plan will establish management direction and 
    guide all natural resource restoration activities covered by the civil 
    settlement to the Exxon Valdez oil spill.
    
    DATES: Comments concerning the DEIS should be received within 45 days 
    of the publication of the Notice of Availability by the Environmental 
    Protection Agency in the Federal Register.
    
    ADDRESSES: Send written comments to or for copies of a Summary of the 
    DEIS or for copies of the DEIS itself, contact the Oil Spill Public 
    Information Office, 645 G. Street, Anchorage, Alaska, 99501. Phone 
    number 907 278-8008 or within Alaska 800 478-7745, outside Alaska 800 
    283-7745. Copies also will be sent to public libraries in Anchorage, 
    Juneau, Fairbanks, Valdez, Cordova, Kodiak, Homer, and Seward, Alaska 
    for review.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    A. Introduction
    
        On October 8, 1991, a federal court approved settlement between the 
    State and Federal governments and Exxon under which Exxon will pay $1 
    billion in criminal restitution and civil damages to the governments. 
    The State and Federal Trustees will receive $900 million in civil 
    damages from Exxon over the 10 years. The funds are to be used to 
    restore to their pre-spill condition the natural resources and the 
    services they provide, that were injured by the Exxon Valdez oil spill. 
    This includes the restoration of any natural resource injured, lost or 
    destroyed and the services provided by that resource or which replaces 
    or substitutes for the injured, lost or destroyed resource and affected 
    services. Restoration includes all phases of injury assessment, 
    restoration, replacement, and enhancement of natural resources, and 
    acquisition of equivalent resources and services.
        All decisions about restoration and uses of restoration funds are 
    determined by six natural resources Trustees, three Federal and three 
    State. The three Federal Trustees are: The Administrator for the 
    National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, U.S. Department of 
    Commerce, and the Secretaries of the Department of Agriculture and of 
    the Interior. The three State Trustees are: The Commissioners of Fish 
    and Game and Environmental Conservation, and the Attorney General. A 
    Trustee Council, located in Alaska, which is made up of the three State 
    Trustees and designees of the three Federal Trustees, is responsible 
    for decisions relating to the assessment of injuries, uses of the 
    restoration funds, and all restoration activities including the 
    preparation of a Restoration Plan.
        On April 10, 1992 (57 FR 12473-12475) on behalf of the Exxon Valdez 
    Trustee Council, the Forest Service published a Notice of Intent to 
    prepare an EIS on the Restoration Plan. This was later revised on 
    January 14, 1994 (59 FR 2352-2353). Since then the Trustee Council 
    developed a draft Restoration Plan which has become the proposed action 
    for the analysis conducted in the DEIS.
    
    B. Draft Restoration Plan
    
        The proposed action (Draft Restoration Plan) consists of nine 
    policy statements, a discussion of categories of restoration actions 
    and broad objectives for injured resources. The policies for 
    identifying and conducting restoration actions are:
        1. The restoration program will take an ecosystem approach.
        2. Restoration activities may be considered for any injured 
    resource or service.
        3. Most restoration activities will occur within the spill area. 
    However, restoration activities outside the spill are, but within 
    Alaska, may be considered when the most effective restoration actions 
    for an injured migratory population are in a part of its range outside 
    the spill area or when the information acquired from research and 
    monitoring activities outside the spill area will be important for 
    restoration or understanding injuries within the spill area.
        4. Restoration activities will emphasize resources and services 
    that have not recovered. Resources and services will be enhanced, as 
    appropriate, to promote restoration. Restoration projects should not 
    adversely affect the ecosystem.
        5. Projects designed to restore or enhance an injured service must 
    have a sufficient relationship to an injured resource; must benefit the 
    same user group that was injured; and, should be compatible with the 
    character and public uses of the area.
        6. Competitive proposals for restoration projects will be 
    encouraged.
        7. Restoration projects will be subject to independent scientific 
    review before Trustee Council approval.
        8. Meaningful public participation in restoration decisions will be 
    actively solicited.
        9. Government agencies will be funded only for restoration work 
    that they do not normally conduct.
        Four types of restoration actions are identified and discussed in 
    the Draft Restoration Plan: General restoration, habitat protection and 
    acquisition, monitoring and research, and public information and 
    administration. Alternatives to the proposed action place different 
    emphases on each of these categories of restoration actions.
        General Restoration consists of activities that fall within 
    manipulation of the environment, management of human use for reduction 
    of marine pollution. Decisions about conducting general restoration 
    projects would look at the following factors: Extent of natural 
    recovery, the value of an injured resource to the ecosystem and to the 
    public, the duration of benefits, the technical feasibility of the 
    project, the likelihood of success, the relationship of costs to 
    expected benefits, potential for harmful side effects, benefits to more 
    than one resource, effects on health and human safety, consistency with 
    applicable laws, and policies, and duplication with other actions.
        Habitat Protection and Acquisition is a category that includes 
    purchase of private land or interests in land such as conservation 
    easements, mineral rights, or timber rights. It also includes 
    recommendations for changing public agency management practices. 
    Specific policies that relate to habitat protection and acquisition are 
    proposed. These policies deal with ranking potential lands to determine 
    potential benefits, the need for a willing seller, purchasing at fair 
    market value, post acquisition management of the acquired lands and 
    involving the public in the prioritization process.
        Monitoring and Research consists of recovery monitoring, 
    restoration monitoring and ecological monitoring and research. Specific 
    policies governing the selecting and performance of monitoring 
    activities are discussed in the Draft Restoration Plan.
        Public Information and Administration is the last category of 
    restoration actions. It consists of all necessary administrative 
    actions that are not attributable to a particular project. The Draft 
    Restoration Plan goal for this category is for administrative costs to 
    average no more than 5% of overall restoration expenditures for the 
    remainder of the settlement period.
        General restoration objectives have been developed for resources 
    that are recovering, resources not recovering, resources where the 
    recovery is unknown, resources such as archaeological resources and 
    wilderness, and services. These broad objectives will guide in the 
    development of annual work plans.
        Further information regarding the proposed action and possible 
    restoration alternatives is included in the Draft Exxon Valdez Oil 
    Spill Restoration Plan, Summary of Alternatives for Public Comment, 
    April 1993; the Supplement to Draft Exxon Valdez Oil spill Restoration 
    Plan, Summary of Alternatives for Public Comment, June 1993; the 
    Summary of Public Comment on Alternatives of the Draft Exxon Valdez Oil 
    Spill Restoration Plan, September 1993; and the Draft Exxon Valdez Oil 
    Spill Restoration Plan, November 1993. Copies of these documents may be 
    requested from the Oil Spill Public Information Office, 645 G. Street, 
    Anchorage, Alaska, 99501. Phone number 907 278-8008 or within Alaska 
    800 478-7745, outside Alaska 800 283-7745.
    
    C. Public Meetings
    
        During the comment period for the DEIS public meetings will be held 
    on the following dates at the locations shown:
    
    June 27, 1994--EVOS Trustee Council Restoration Office, 645 G. Street, 
    suite 100, Anchorage, AK
    June 29, 1994--Kenai Fjords National Park Visitor's Center, 1212 4th 
    Avenue, Small Boat Harbor, Seward, AK
    July 1, 1994--City Council Chambers, 491 E Pioneer Avenue, Homer, AK
    July 5, 1994--Alaska Dept. of Fish and Game Conference Room, 211 
    Mission Road, Kodiak, AK
    July 7, 1994--U.S. Forest Service Third Floor Conference Room, 612 
    Second Street, Cordova, AK
    July 19, 1994--City Council Chambers, 212 Chenega Avenue, Valdez, AK
    
    D. Comments
    
        The comment period on the DEIS will be 45 days from the date the 
    Environmental Protection Agency's notice of availability appears in the 
    Federal Register. It is very important that those interested in this 
    proposed action participate at this time. To be most helpful, comments 
    on the DEIS statement should be as specific as possible, and may 
    address the adequacy of the statement or the merits of the alternatives 
    discussed. (See the Council on Environmental Quality Regulations for 
    implementing the procedural provisions of the National Environmental 
    Policy Act at 40 CFR 1503.3).
        In addition, Federal court decisions have established that 
    reviewers of DEIS statements must structure their participation in the 
    environmental review of the proposal so that it is meaningful and 
    alerts an agency to the reviewer's position and concerns. Vermont 
    Yankee Nuclear Power Corp. v. NRDC. 435 U.S. 519, 553 (1978). 
    Environmental objections that could have been raised at the draft stage 
    may be waived if not raised until after completion of the final EIS. 
    Wisconsin Heritage, Inc. v. Harris, 490 F. Supp. 1334, 1338 (E.D. Wis. 
    1980). The reason for this is to ensure that substantive comments and 
    objections are made available to the Forest Service at a time when it 
    can meaningfully consider them and respond to them in the final.
    
        Dated: June 9, 1994.
    Phil Janik,
    Regional Forester, Alaska Region Forest Service, Department of 
    Agriculture.
    
        Dated: June 13, 1994.
    Robert P. Davison,
    Deputy Assistant Secretary for Fish and Wildlife and Parks, Department 
    of the Interior.
    [FR Doc. 94-14716 Filed 6-16-94; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 3410-11-M
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
06/17/1994
Department:
Interior Department
Entry Type:
Uncategorized Document
Action:
Notice of availability of the draft environmental impact statement for the Exxon Valdez restoration plan.
Document Number:
94-14716
Dates:
Comments concerning the DEIS should be received within 45 days of the publication of the Notice of Availability by the Environmental Protection Agency in the Federal Register.
Pages:
0-0 (1 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Federal Register: June 17, 1994