98-18336. Notice of Availability  

  • [Federal Register Volume 63, Number 132 (Friday, July 10, 1998)]
    [Notices]
    [Pages 37407-37409]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 98-18336]
    
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
    
    Bureau of Land Management
    [WY-040-06-1610-00]
    
    
    Notice of Availability
    
    AGENCY: Bureau of Land Management, Interior.
    
    ACTION: The Bureau of Land Management (BLM), Green River Resource Area, 
    Rock Springs District, Wyoming, announces: (1) the availability of the 
    Record of Decision (ROD) for the Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) 
    for the Green River Resource Management Plan (RMP), (2) the approved 
    Green River RMP, and (3) notice of off-road vehicle designations for 
    the Green River Resource Area.
    
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    SUMMARY: The ROD identifies the selection and approval of the Green 
    River RMP. The Green River RMP presents multiple use management 
    prescriptions for about 3.6 million acres of public land surface and 
    3.7 million acres of Federal mineral estate, administered by the BLM, 
    in portions of Sweetwater, Fremont, Lincoln, Uinta, and Sublette 
    counties in southwest Wyoming.
        The draft EIS for the Green River RMP was made available for public 
    review and comment in November of 1992. Comments received on the draft 
    EIS were considered in preparing the proposed Green River RMP and final 
    EIS which was made available for public review and protest in May of 
    1996.
        Management prescriptions are presented in the Green River RMP for 
    all BLM-administered public land and resource uses and values found 
    within the planning area, including the following: air quality, 
    cultural resources, fire management, forests and woodlands, hazardous 
    materials, lands and realty management, livestock grazing, minerals, 
    off-road vehicles, outdoor recreation, special status species, 
    vegetation, visual resources, watershed, wild horses, wildlife, and 
    special management areas. Since wilderness values are addressed in 
    other documents, the Green River RMP does not address them.
        The Green River RMP is a comprehensive multiple-use land use plan. 
    It is a refinement of the preferred alternative presented in the draft 
    EIS and the proposed RMP presented in the final EIS. While the intent 
    and content of the Green River RMP are not different from the proposed 
    RMP, comments from the public, review by BLM staff, and new information 
    obtained since the distribution of the final EIS have prompted some 
    wording clarifications in the RMP.
        This Federal Register Notice serves as the notice for the off-road 
    vehicle (ORV) designations for the Green River Resource Area as 
    identified in the Green River RMP. The ORV designations are described 
    underSUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION in this notice.
        This notice also serves to meet the criteria for public 
    notification of linear or site rights-of-way within floodplains as 
    required by BLM Manual 7221 except for those associated with perennial 
    streams. The BLM will solicit public comment on site facilities or 
    major
    
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    linear rights-of-way along perennial streams unless another agency 
    (Federal, State, or local) already has solicited such comments.
    
    ADDRESSES: Information on the Green River RMP may be obtained from the 
    Green River Resource Area Office, 280 Highway 191 North, Rock Springs, 
    Wyoming 82901, (307) 352-0256.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Stan McKee, Green River Resource Area 
    Manager, or Renee Dana, Green River RMP Team Leader, at the Rock 
    Springs BLM District Office, 280 Highway 191 North, Rock Springs, 
    Wyoming 82901, (307) 352-0256. Copies of the ROD and Green River RMP 
    are available from the Green River Resource Area Office.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Eight protests were submitted during the 30-
    day protest period for the proposed Green River RMP. All of the 
    protests were responded to and resolved by the Director of the Bureau 
    of Land Management (BLM). Resolution of the protests required some 
    minor corrections and wording clarification but did not result in 
    changing any of the proposed Green River RMP decisions.
        The Green River RMP provides the interim management direction for 
    those BLM-administered public lands along waterways that were 
    determined to meet the suitability factors for further consideration 
    for inclusion in the Wild and Scenic Rivers System (WSRS). Seven 
    parcels of BLM-administered lands, along a total of about 9.7 miles of 
    the Sweetwater River, have been found to meet the suitability factors 
    to be given further consideration for inclusion in the WSRS. Tentative 
    classifications of the various parcels include wild (about 5.8 miles), 
    scenic (about 0.5 miles), and recreational (about 3.4 miles). The 
    interim management of these parcels will continue until Congress 
    decides to consider them further for possible inclusion in the WSRS.
        The Green River RMP includes identification of the Federal coal 
    lands in the Green River Resource Area that are acceptable for further 
    leasing consideration.
        The Green River RMP includes designations of Areas of Critical 
    Environmental Concern (ACEC). Seven prior ACEC designations are 
    retained (or modified):
    
    --Cedar Canyon ACEC (approximately 2,550 acres) with management 
    priority and emphasis given to maintaining or enhancing important 
    cultural, scenic, and wildlife habitat values.
    --Greater Red Creek ACEC (approximately 131,890 acres--the original Red 
    Creek ACEC of 55,880 acres was expanded to include the Currant Creek 
    and Sage Creek drainages) with management priority and emphasis given 
    to maintaining or enhancing fragile soils, Colorado River cutthroat 
    trout, and water quality values.
    --Greater Sand Dunes ACEC (approximately 38,650 acres) with management 
    priority and emphasis given to maintaining or enhancing unique and 
    unusual geological features associated with the sand dunes and Boars 
    Tusk, and the diverse biological interrelationships supported by the 
    sand dunes, especially the dependent plants and animals.
    --Natural Corrals ACEC (approximately 1,276 acres) with management 
    priority and emphasis given to maintaining or enhancing the unique and 
    important cultural, historical, recreational, and geological values.
    --Oregon Buttes ACEC (approximately 3,450 acres) with management 
    priority and emphasis given to maintaining or enhancing the historic 
    landmark, significant wildlife values, and the scenic integrity.
    --Pine Springs ACEC (expanded from 90 acres to approximately 6,030 
    acres to include adjacent relevant and important values) with 
    management priority and emphasis given to maintaining or enhancing the 
    important cultural, historic, and prehistoric resource values.
    --White Mountain Petroglyphs ACEC (approximately 20 acres) with 
    management priority and emphasis given to maintaining or enhancing the 
    educational opportunities and important cultural, wildlife, scenic, and 
    Native American values.
    
        Three new areas are designated ACECs:
    
    --South Pass Historic Landscape ACEC (approximately 53,780 acres) with 
    management priority and emphasis given to maintaining or enhancing the 
    visual and historical integrity of historic trails and their 
    surrounding viewscape.
    --Special Status (Candidate) Plants ACEC (four separate locations 
    totalling approximately 900 acres) with management priority and 
    emphasis given to maintaining or enhancing these species and their 
    habitats.
    --Steamboat Mountain ACEC (approximately 43,270 acres) with management 
    priority and emphasis given to maintaining or enhancing the wildlife 
    habitats and vegetation communities.
    
        The management actions for each ACEC include conditional 
    requirements for surface disturbing activities and other land uses such 
    as limitations on oil and gas and coal exploration and development 
    activities, geophysical exploration, right-of-way construction, and 
    vehicular travel. Portions of the ACECs may be closed to future 
    locatable mineral exploration and development subject to valid existing 
    rights. The level of these vary in each ACEC.
        Six areas are designated Special Recreation Management Areas 
    (SRMAs):
    
    --The Greater Sand Dunes (about 38,650 acres).
    --The Oregon, Mormon Pioneer, California, and Pony Express National 
    Historic Trails (about 125 miles).
    --The Continental Divide National Scenic Trail and the Continental 
    Divide Snowmobile Trail (about 24 miles).
    --The Green River (about 4,048 acres).
    --The Wind River Front (about 261,080 acres).
    
    The remainder of the BLM-administered public lands in the Green River 
    Resource Area are designated an Extensive Recreation Management Area 
    (ERMA).
        Five backcountry byways are also designated: the Tri-Territory 
    Loop, the Lander Road, Red Desert, Fort LaClede Loop, and the Firehole-
    Little Mountain Loop.
        Management of wilderness values is not addressed in the Green River 
    RMP. The twelve wilderness study areas (WSAs) within the Green River 
    Resource Area are addressed in the ``Rock Springs District Wilderness 
    Final EIS,'' September 1990, and the ``Adobe Town-Ferris Mountains 
    Wilderness Final EIS,'' December 1987.
        The Green River RMP includes the following Off-Road Vehicle (ORV) 
    designations: areas open to off-road vehicular use, areas with use 
    limitations (i.e., limited to seasonal use, limited to existing roads 
    and trails, and limited to designated roads and trails), and areas 
    closed to vehicular use. (Note: The areas designated as limited 
    seasonally and limited to designated roads and trails, overlap one 
    another as do the areas designated as limited seasonally and limited to 
    existing roads and trails.) Maps of the ORV designations are on file in 
    the Green River Resource Area Office.
        Specific designations are as follows:
        A. Open Designation (approximately 10,500 acres). Vehicle travel is 
    permitted both on and off roads in the eastern portion of the Greater 
    Sand Dunes Area of Critical Environmental Concern (ACEC) (about 10,500 
    acres).
    
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    Vehicle use is confined to the active sand dunes within the 10,500 
    acres.
        B. Limited Designations:
        1. Motorized vehicle travel is limited to existing roads and trails 
    except during certain periods of the year when areas may be closed to 
    all vehicles (approximately 1,627,955 acres). Acres may not total 
    because of overlap.
        a. Big game crucial winter ranges (about 1,500,000 acres) are 
    limited through seasonal closures (November 15-April 30 as needed) to 
    reduce stress on wintering animals. Closure to over-the-snow vehicles 
    will be evaluated on a case-by-case basis in conjunction with the 
    Wyoming Game and Fish Department.
        b. Deer parturition areas (about 40,880 acres) are limited through 
    seasonal closures (May 1 to June 30 as needed) to reduce stress on 
    deer.
        c. Elk calving areas (about 85,830 acres) are limited through 
    seasonal closures (to be decided by biologist--May 1 to June 30 as 
    needed) to reduce stress on elk.
        d. Moose calving areas (about 410 acres) are limited through 
    seasonal closures (to be decided by biologist--May 1 to June 30 as 
    needed) to reduce stress on moose.
        e. Raptor nesting areas (about 835 acres) are limited through 
    seasonal closures (February 1 through July 31 as needed) to protect 
    nesting raptors.
        f. Steamboat Mountain (about 15,981 acres) is limited through 
    seasonal closures (to be determined, but usually between May 1 and June 
    30) to protect wildlife values (big game birthing areas are of 
    particular concern).
        2. Motorized vehicle travel is limited to designated roads and 
    trails only on approximately 1,006,336 acres. Vehicle use in these 
    areas will be managed the same as under the existing roads and trails 
    designation until the designation is implemented on the ground (i.e., 
    until the designated roads are identified and signs or notices are put 
    in place). Acres may not total because of overlap.
        a. Adobe Town-Haystacks (about 54,000 acres) to protect fragile and 
    highly erodible soils.
        b. Cedar Canyon ACEC (about 2,550 acres) to protect wildlife and 
    cultural values (includes over-the-snow vehicles).
        c. Dug Springs Stage Station (about 10 acres) to protect historic 
    values.
        d. Greater Red Creek ACEC (about 123,870 acres) (includes the 
    Currant Creek and Sage Creek watersheds, and remainder of Red Creek 
    watershed) to protect watershed values.
        e. An area adjacent to the Green River city limits (about 4,500 
    acres within a 2-mile radius around the city limits) to reduce impacts 
    from ORV freeplay.
        f. LaBarge Bluff Petroglyphs (about 100 acres within \1/2\ mile 
    surrounding the petroglyphs) to protect cultural values.
        g. LaClede Stage Station (about 10 acres) to protect historic 
    values.
        h. Monument Valley (about 69,940 acres) to protect paleontological 
    resource values and watershed values.
        i. Natural Corrals ACEC (about 1,300 acres) to protect cultural, 
    historic, and geologic resource values.
        j. North and South Table Mountains (about 1,280 acres) to protect 
    cultural and wildlife values.
        k. Parting of the Ways (about 40 acres) to protect historical 
    values.
        l. Pine Mountain (about 64,200 acres) to protect watershed values.
        m. Red Desert (about 245,480 acres) to protect scenic resource 
    values.
        n. South Pass (about 33,700 acres) to protect cultural values.
        o. Steamboat Mountain ACEC (about 43,270 acres) to protect wildlife 
    values.
        p. Steep slopes of White Mountain (about 68,640 acres) to protect 
    watershed and visual values.
        q. Sugarloaf Basin (about 85,880 acres) to protect watershed 
    values.
        r. Sugarloaf Petroglyphs (about 350 acres within \1/2\ mile radius) 
    to protect cultural values.
        s. Tolar Petroglyphs (about 310 acres within \1/2\ mile radius) to 
    protect cultural values.
        t. White Mountain Petroglyphs ACEC (about 480 acres within \1/2\ 
    mile surrounding the petroglyphs) to protect cultural values.
        u. Wind River Front Special Recreation Management area (about 
    260,580 acres) to protect the nearby Class I airshed, scenic, 
    watershed, and wildlife values; recreation use; and riparian and 
    vegetation resources.
        3. Motorized vehicle travel is limited to existing roads and trails 
    on approximately 2,436,595 acres. Acres may not total because of 
    overlap.
        a. General Green River Resource Area (about 2,436,595 acres) to 
    reduce resource damage.
        b. Greater Sand Dunes ACEC (Eastern Portion) (about 5,810 acres of 
    stabilized dunes) to protect resource values.
        c. Pine Springs ACEC (about 730 acres outside the WSA and original 
    90-acre site) to protect resource values.
        d. Riparian areas (about 8,730 acres) to protect riparian and 
    watershed values. During muddy conditions, vehicle travel may be 
    limited to protect soil and watershed values.
        C. Closed Designations (approximately 181,570 acres). Acres may not 
    total because of overlap.
        1. The following areas are closed to vehicle use.
        a. Crookston Ranch (about 40 acres) in the Greater Sand Dunes ACEC 
    to protect cultural and historic site.
        b. Dry Sandy Swales (about 20 acres) to protect integrity of 
    setting and soils.
        c. Road around Boars Tusk and the Boars Tusk (about 90 acres) to 
    preserve its value as a geologic feature.
        d. LaBarge Bluffs Petroglyphs (about 20 acres) to protect cultural 
    values.
        e. Natural Corrals National Register of Historic Places site (about 
    20 acres and the trail [about \1/2\ mile] to the spring) to protect 
    wildlife and cultural values.
        f. Oregon Buttes (about 3,450 acres) to protect historic, wildlife, 
    and scenic resource values, and adjacent WSA values.
        g. Pine Springs (about 5,390 acres within the Pine Springs ACEC) to 
    protect cultural, historic, and prehistoric resource values.
        h. Prehistoric Quarry site (about 160 acres) to protect cultural 
    values.
        i. Special Status Plant Species (about 3,610 acres) to protect 
    plant populations.
        j. Sugarloaf Petroglyph site (about 20 acres) to protect cultural 
    values.
        k. Tolar Petroglyph site (about 20 acres) to protect cultural 
    values.
        l. Wilderness Study Areas (to protect naturalness, solitude, and 
    opportunities for unconfined recreation):
    
    Buffalo Hump: 10,300 acres
    South Pinnacles: 10,800 acres
    Sand Dunes: 27,109 acres
    Alkali Basin-East Sand Dunes: 12,800 acres
    Alkali Draw: 16,990 acres
    Red Lake: 9,515 acres
    Honeycomb Buttes: 41,188 acres
    Oregon Buttes: 5,700 acres
    Whitehorse Creek: 4,002 acres
    Devils Playground-Twin Buttes: 23,841 acres
    Red Creek Badlands: 8,020 acres
    
        Parties who are interested in and who wish to be involved in future 
    activity planning and implementation of management actions that may 
    involve or affect the resource values addressed in the Green River RMP 
    are requested to identify themselves. Please contact the Green River 
    Resource Area Office at the above address and request to be placed on a 
    future contact list for activity planning and implementation activities 
    concerning the Green River RMP.
    
        Dated: July 2, 1998.
    Alan R. Pierson,
    State Director.
    [FR Doc. 98-18336 Filed 7-9-98; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 4310-22-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
07/10/1998
Department:
Land Management Bureau
Entry Type:
Notice
Action:
The Bureau of Land Management (BLM), Green River Resource Area, Rock Springs District, Wyoming, announces: (1) the availability of the Record of Decision (ROD) for the Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) for the Green River Resource Management Plan (RMP), (2) the approved Green River RMP, and (3) notice of off-road vehicle designations for the Green River Resource Area.
Document Number:
98-18336
Pages:
37407-37409 (3 pages)
Docket Numbers:
WY-040-06-1610-00
PDF File:
98-18336.pdf