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Proposed Dillon resource management plan and final environmental impact statement PDF

2005·211.3 MB·English
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BLW LIBRARY Jnited States Department of the Interior 3ureau of Land Management Dillon Field Office April 2005 PROPOSED DILLON RESOURCE MANAGEMENT PLAN AND FINAL ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT Volume I 0 v < / TheBureauofLandManagementisresponsibleforthestewardshipofourpubliclands. Itiscommittedtomanage, protect,andimprovetheselandsinamannertoservetheneedsoftheAmericanpeopleforalltimes. Management is based on the principles of multiple use and sustained yield of our nation's resources within a framework of environmental responsibility and scientific technology. These resources include recreation; rangelands; timber; minerals; watershed; fish and wildlife; wilderness; air; and scenic, scientific, and cultural values. I BLM/MT/PL-05/008+161 r/f . United States Department of the Interior BUREAU OF LAND MANAGEMENT Dillon Field Office 1005 Selway Drive Dillon, Montana 59725 http://www.mt.blm.gov/dfo April 2005 Dear Reader: Enclosed for your review is the Proposed Resource Management Plan and Final Environmental Impact Statement (Pro- posed RMP/Final EIS) for lands administered by the BLM in the Dillon Field Office. The Proposed RMP/Final EIS is a refinement ofthe Preferred Alternative (Alternative B) presented in the Draft RMP/EIS released in April 2004. The Draft RMP/EIS was available fora90-day reviewperiodending on July 12, 2004.The ProposedRMP/Final EIS is designedtobe used in conjunction with the Draft RMP/EIS forreference to maps and in regard to page numbers cited in the comment and response section. Both the Proposed RMP/Final EIS and the Draft RMP/EIS are available on the Dillon RMP website at www.mt.blm.gov/dfo/rmp . Chapter 5 of the Proposed RMP/Final EIS contains an analysis of and BLM responses to the comments received on the Draft RMP/EIS. As aresult ofpublic comment and internal review,Alternative B has been modified and is now considered the ProposedAction for management ofBLM lands in the Dillon Field Office. The Proposed RMP/Final EIS is subject to a 30-day protest period. The Proposed RMP/Final EIS contains only land use planning decisions subject to protest with the exception ofdecisions on route designations discussedin the TravelManagementand OHVUse section oftheplan. Decisions on route desig- nations may be appealedto the InteriorBoard ofLandAppeals (IBLA) following the publicationofthe Record ofDecision (ROD) and Approved Plan. The ROD will include information on the appeal process. Any person whoparticipatedin the Dillon RMPplanning process and has an interest which is ormay be adversely affected may protest approval of this Proposed RMP and the land use plan decisions contained within it (see 43 CFR 1610.5-2) during the 30-day review and protest period. The protest period begins when the Environmental Protection Agency pub- lishes its Notice ofAvailability ofthe final environmental impact statement in the FederalRegister. Only those persons or organizations who participated in the planning process leading to this Proposed RMP may protest. Aprotesting party may raise onlythose issues submittedfortherecordduringtheplanningprocess leading uptopublicationofthis ProposedRMP. New issues may not be brought into the record at the protest stage. To be considered “timely”, your protest, along with all attachments, must be postmarked no later than the last day ofthe protest period. There is no provision for an extension oftime. Although not a requirement, we suggest that you send your protest by certified mail, return receipt requested. The protest period ends 30 days after EPA’s Notice ofAvailability is published in the Federal Register. Press releases on the actual date ending the protest period will be sent to local and RMP regional media contacts and information will be placed on the Dillon website and sent to all contacts on the Dillon RMP mailing list A letter ofprotest must be filed in accordance with the planning regulations at 43 CFR 1610.5-2(a)(l). Protests must be in writing. Electronic mail and faxed protests will not be accepted as valid protests unless the protesting party also provides the original letterby eitherregularorovernightmail postmarkedby the closeofthe protest period. Underthese conditions, BLM will considerthe email orfaxed protest an advance copy and it will receive full consideration. Ifyou wish toprovide BLM with such advance notification, please direct faxed protests to the attention ofthe BLM protest coordinator at 202- 452-5112, and emails to Brenda [email protected] . Ifsent by regular mail, send to: Director (210) Attention: Brenda Williams P.O. Box 66538 Washington, D.C. 20035 For overnight mail (i.e., Federal Express), send to: Director (210) Attention: Brenda Williams 1620 L Street, N.W., Suite 1075 Washington, D.C. 20036 In order to be considered complete, your protest must contain, at a minimum, the following information: The name, mailing address, telephone number, and interest ofthe person filing the protest. 1. A 2. statement ofthe issue or issues being protested. 3. A statement ofthe part or parts ofthe Proposed RMP being protested. To the extent possible, this should be done by reference to specific pages, paragraphs, sections, tables, maps, etc., included in the document. 4. Acopy ofalldocuments addressing theissue orissuesthatyou submittedduringthe planningprocess, orareferenceto the date the issue or issues were discussed by you for the record. 5. A concise statement explaining why the Montana/Dakotas BLM State Director’s proposed decision is believed to be incorrect. Thisisacriticalpartofyourprotest. Take caretodocument allrelevantfacts.As much as possible, reference or cite documents. A protest that merely expresses disagreement with the Montana/Dakotas BLM State Director’s proposed decision, without any data, will not provide us with the benefit ofyour information and insight. In this case, the Director’s review will be based on the existing analysis and supporting data. At the end of the 30-day protest period and after the Governor’s consistency review, the Record of Decision and the Approved Resource Management Plan (RMP/ROD) will be prepared. Approval will be withheld on any portion of the Proposed RMPunderprotest until final action has been completed on such protest. The RMP/ROD will include the appeal process fordecisions thatcan be appealed toIBLA. Lorthe Dillon RMP, this only includes decisions on route designations for motorized ornon-motorized use. Any significant change made as a result ofa protest will be made available for public review and comment before it is approved. Freedom ofInformation Act Considerations/Confidentiality Public comments submitted forthisplanning review, includingnames and streetaddresses ofrespondents, will be available for public review at the Dillon Lield Office in Dillon, Montana, during regular business hours (7:45 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.), MondaythroughLriday, exceptholidays. Comments, including namesandaddressesofrespondents, will beretainedonfile in the same office as partofthe publicrecord forthis planningeffort. Individualrespondents may requestconfidentiality. If you wish to withhold your name or address from public inspection or from disclosure under the “Lreedom ofInformation Act”, you muststate thisprominentlyatthebeginning ofyourwrittencomment. Suchrequests willbe honoredtotheextent allowedby law.All submissionsfromorganizationsorbusinesses, andfrom individuals identifyingthemselvesasrepresen- tatives or officials oforganizations or businesses, will be made available forpublic inspection in their entirety. Ithanktheindividuals andorganizations whoparticipated in thisplanningprocess. Yourinterest is appreciated. Ihope your involvement will continue as we move forward to implement and monitor the plan and manage the public lands and re- sources administered by the Dillon Lield Office. Sincerely, / M'VX Tim Bozorth Dillon Lield Manager DSSSC S s^cc CfN PROPOSED DILLON RESOURCE MANAGEMENT PLAN AND FINAL ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT Dillon Field Office Montana Dillon, APRIL 2005 PROPOSED DILLON RESOURCE MANAGEMENT PLAN AND FINAL ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT ResponsibleAgencies: United States Department ofthe Interior, Bureau ofLand Management (LeadAgency) Beaverhead County (Cooperating Agency) Madison County (CooperatingAgency) X Draft Final ( ) ( ) Type ofAction: Administrative (X) Legislative ( ) Abstract: This Proposed Resource Management Plan and Final Environmental Impact Statement describes and analyzes four alternatives for managing the public lands and resources administered by the Bureau of Land Management’s Dillon Field Office and located in southwestern Montana in Beaverhead and Madison counties. These alternatives are: AlternativeA (continuation ofcurrent management, or the “no action” alternative); Alter- native B (the ProposedAction) andAlternatives C and D. MajorRMPissues include upland andriparian manage- ment, forest andwoodlands management, noxious weeds, sage grouse and westslope cutthroattroutconservation, commercial uses, proposed ACEC designations. Wild and Scenic River suitability findings, and travel manage- ment designations. ProtestsontheProposedResourceManagementPlanandFinal Environmental ImpactStatementmustbereceived within 30 days from publication ofthe Notice ofAvailability by the Environmental ProtectionAgency. The close oftheprotestperiodwill be announced innewsreleases, newletters, andonthe RMPwebsite atwww.mt.blm.gov/ dfo/rmp . Forfurther information, contact: Renee Johnson, RMP Project Manager Bureau ofLand Management Dillon Field Office 1005 Selway Drive Dillon, Montana 59725 Telephone commercial: (406) 683-8016 Telephone toll-free: (877) 521-2889 FAX: (406) 683-2970 email: [email protected] READER’S GUIDE Executive Summary The Executive Summary provides an overview of discus- BLM Preparationofthisdocument was guided by planning sions that are detailed in the full document and serves as a regulations issued under the authority of the Federal Land synopsis of the planning process and the alternative pro- Policy and Management Act of 1976 and federal environ- posals and potential environmental consequences resulting mental policy undertheNationalEnvironmental PolicyAct from that process. (NEPA) of 1969. Like the Draft RMP/EIS, the Proposed RMP/Final E1S primarily focuses on eight planning issues Chapter 1 (Introduction) and the decisions needed to resolve them. The issues were BLM identified through public scoping, concerns raised to This chaptercontains background information on the plan- staffin interactionswithpubliclandusers,andresource man- agement concerns of the BLM and cooperating agencies. ning process and sets the stage for the information that is presented in the rest ofthe document. There are nine main The eight issues are: sections in Chapter 1, which include the Introduction, Pur- poseand NeedforthePlan, PlanningAreaandMap,Scoping • Riparian and Upland Vegetation Management and Issues, Planning Criteria and Legislative Constraints, • Forest and Woodland Management Planning Process, RelatedPlans,PolicyandOverall Vision. • Noxious Weeds • Sage Grouse andWestslope CutthroatTroutConserva- Chapter 2 (Alternatives) tion • Commercial Uses ACECs This chapter provides the description of management sce- • • Wild and Scenic Rivers narios proposed forthe next 20years. This chapteruses the • Travel Management five section organization and includes a narrative section followed by two tables. The first table compares the alter- Othermanagement concerns are addressed in the RMP, but native proposals; the second table compares, in a summa- did not drive the formulation of the alternatives. To assist rized fashion, the impacts ofimplementingthe alternatives. agency decision-makers and the general public in choosing appropriate solutions to the planning issues, four alterna- Chapter 3 (Affected Environment) tives orcombinations ofmanagement options are proposed and their impacts evaluated. The alternatives were limited This chapter provides background information on the vari- to those that span a reasonable and implementable way of ous resources, resource uses, and program areas adminis- managing public lands and federal minerals, while offering teredby BLM thatcouldbe impactedby plandecisions and a broad range options. describes their condition and trend. This chapter is orga- nized with the same structure as Chapter 2. Each section DOCUMENT FORMAT begins with a list ofrelevant authorities and policies which guide management of the resource or program area. Brief The format of this RMP/EIS is based on BLM guidance descriptions ofthe cited laws can be found in AppendixA. issued in 2001 that is meant to provide a common look and RMP BLM Chapter 4 (Environmental Consequences) feel to planning documents being prepared by across the west. Five main sections are usedthroughoutthe organization ofthe document: This chapter describes the projected impacts and changes that would result with implementation ofeach ofthe alter- • Resources natives. The chapter is organized by alternative and uses • Resource Uses the same five section format as Chapters 2 and 3. While • Fire Management details ofthe impacts are provide in this chapter, the sum- • Special Designations mary table ofimpacts is found at the end of Chapter 2. • Social and Economic Considerations Chapter 5 (Consultation and Coordination) Each ofthese five sections is then split into subsections of resources,resourceuses,orprogramareasthatarepresented This chapter contains the responses to comments received in alphabetical order. Changes made as a result of public ontheDraftRMP/EIS.Italsoincludesadescriptionofpublic comment and internal review have been shaded in gray in involvementopportunitiesandcollaborativeprocesses, lists Chapters 1-4. Page numbers referenced in the Chapter 5 ofagencies, and organizations receiving the document, and CommentandResponsesectionrefertotheDraftRMP/EIS. identifies the preparers ofthe RMP/EIS. Please referto that document to determine the original lan- guage that generated the comment. OTHER INFORMATION ment ofthe RMP is dynamic. Updatingdataisconsidered a plan maintenance action and will be incorporated overtime RMP as the is implemented. TablesandFigureshavebeenincludedthroughoutthedocu- menttodisplayand summarizepertinentinformation.Acre- Appendicesareletteredandorganizedbytopicandincluded ages displayed in this document should be considered ap- inaseparate volume foreasyreference. Each appendixmay proximationseven when displayedtothenearestacre. Most contain several pieces of information related to the appen- acreages were calculated from GIS coverages and as a re- dix topic.Atableofcontents is provided atthebeginningof sult may not match acres provided in priorpublished docu- the lengthier appendices. ments that contained calculations from master title plats or other base data. For example, acres calculated for Wilder- Only those maps that have been adjusted as a result of ness Study Areas and reported in the 1991 Montana State- changes to Alternative B (the Proposed Action in the Pro- wide Wilderness Study Area report vary from the GIS cal- posed RMP/Final EIS) or maps that display updated infor- culated acres forthose same areas. In otherinstances, acres mationorcorrectionshavebeenreprintedinthisdocument. have been rounded to the nearest 100 acres as analysis was Pleaserefertothe mapscontainedin VolumeIIIofthe Draft completed. These rounded figures should also be consid- RMP/EIS to compare alternatives or view other informa- ered approximations. The data used throughout this docu- tion thathas notbeen updated. Twonew maps, Map84and ment is for land use planning purposes and not necessarily Map 85, have been added to the Proposed RMP/Final EIS foractual on-the-ground implementation. The precision af- and arereferencedoutofsequence in the textoftherevised forded by GIS calculation does not reflect project level ac- document. Maps related toAppendix material are included curacy. Acreage figures provided in this document for land and referenced withineach appendix and are not numbered use plan analysis purposes will be refined as subsequent RMP with the document maps. site specific analysis is conducted. Data used in develop- ACRONYMS ACEC Area ofCritical Environmental Concern MMBF Million Board Feet AML Abandoned Mine Lands MMCF Million Cubic Feet AMP Allotment Management Plan MOU Memorandum ofUnderstanding ARS Agricultural Research Service MRWA Montana Riparian-Wetland Association BCR Bird Conservation Region MTDEQ Montana Department ofEnvironmental BDNF Beaverhead-Deerlodge National Forest Quality BLM Bureau ofLand Management MTNHP Montana Natural Heritage Program BMP Best Management Practice NE No Effect BOR Bureau of Reclamation NEPA National Environmental Policy Act C&MU Classification and Multiple Use NF Non Functional CDT Continental Divide Trail NLAA Not Likely toAdversely Affect CEQ Council on Environmental Quality NOI Notice ofIntent CFR Code ofFederal Regulations NPS National Park Service CRMW Center for the Rocky Mountain West NRCS Natural Resources and Conservation DEQ Department ofEnvironmental Quality Service (formerly Soil Conservation DFC Desired Future Condition Service) DFO Dillon Field Office NWR National Wildlife Refuge DNRC OHV Department ofNatural Resources Off-highway vehicle Conservation OPA Outfitter Permit Area DOI Department ofthe Interior ORV Outstandingly remarkable value EE/CA Engineering Evaluation/Cost Analysis PFC Proper Functioning Condition EIS Environmental Impact Statement PRP Potentially Responsible Party EO Executive Order PSQ Probable Sale Quantity EPA Environmental Protection Agency R&PP Recreation and Public Purposes ESA Endangered Species Act RAC Resource Advisory Council ESR Emergency Site Rehabilitation RMP Resource Management Plan FAR Functioning-at-Risk ROD Record ofDecision FMZ Fire Management Zone ROW Right-of-way FO Field Office SHPO State Historic Preservation Office FORVIS Forest Vegetation Inventory System SMZ Streamside Management Zone FS Forest Service SO State Office FTE Full Time Equivalent SRMA Special Recreation ManagementArea FWP Fish, Wildlife and Parks sss Special Status Species HMP Habitat Management Plan TMDL Total Maximum Daily Load IDT/ID Team Interdisciplinary Team USDA United States Department ofAgricul- IB Information Bulletin ture IM Instruction Memorandum USDI United States Department ofthe Interioi KGRA Known Geothermal Resource Area USFWS United States Fish and Wildlife Service LAA Likely toAdversely Affect VRM Visual Resource Management LAU Lynx Analysis Unit WCT Westslope Cutthroat Trout MBF WFSA Thousand Board Feet Wildland Fire SituationAnalysis MBMG WMZ Montana Bureau ofMines and Geology Western Montana Zone MCA WO Montana Code Annotated Washington Office MCC WSA Montana Consensus Council Wilderness Study Area MCF Thousand Cubic Feet WUI Wildland Urban Interface MFP Management Framework Plan WQRP Water Quality Restoration Plan MIST Minimum Impact Suppression Tactics

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