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[Federal Register: December 12, 2002 (Volume 67, Number 239)]
[Notices]
[Page 76414-76417]
From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
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DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Bureau of Land Management
[AZ-050-02-1232-EB-AZ11; 8371]
Notice of Proposed Supplementary Rules on Public Lands Within all
Arizona and California Long-Term Visitor Areas
AGENCY: Bureau of Land Management, Interior.
ACTION: Publication of supplementary rules for Long-Term Visitor Areas
managed by the California Desert District office, California, and the
Yuma Field Office, Arizona.
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SUMMARY: The Bureau of Land Management (BLM) Yuma Field Office, Palm
Springs Field Office, and El Centro Field Office are proposing revised
supplementary rules applying to the Long-Term Visitor Area (LTVA)
Program. The program, which was instituted in 1983, established
designated LTVAs and identified an annual long-term use season from
September 15 to April 15. During the long-term season, visitors who
wish to camp on public lands in one location for extended periods must
stay in the designated LTVAs and purchase an LTVA permit. The revised
supplementary rules are necessary to allow safe accommodation by BLM of
increasing demand for long-term winter visitation and provide for
protection of natural resources through improved management.
DATES: Comments on the supplementary rules must be received or
postmarked by January 13, 2003 to be assured consideration. In
developing final supplementary rules, BLM may not consider comments
postmarked or received in person or by electronic mail after this date.
ADDRESSES: Internet e-mail: Mark_Lowans@blm.gov. Mail, personal, or
messenger delivery: Yuma Field Office, 2555 East Gila Ridge Road, Yuma,
Arizona 85365 (Attention: Mark Lowans); Palm Springs Field Office, 690
West Garnet Avenue, North Palm Springs, California 92258 (Attention:
Anna Atkinson); or El Centro Field Office, 1661 South Fourth Street, El
Centro, California 92243 (Attention: Bob Haggerty).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mark Lowans, Outdoor Recreation
Planner, telephone (928) 317-3210; or Anna Atkinson, Outdoor Recreation
Planner, telephone (760) 251-4800; or Bob Haggerty, Outdoor Recreation
Planner, telephone (760) 337-4400; or by e-mail: Mark_Lowans@blm.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Public Comment Procedures
Please submit your comments on issues related to the proposed
supplementary rules, in writing, according to the ADDRESSES section
above. Comments on the supplementary rules should be specific, should
be confined to issues pertinent to the supplementary rules, and should
explain the reason for any recommended change. When possible, your
comments should reference the specific section or paragraph of the
proposal that you are addressing.
BLM may not necessarily consider or include in the Administrative
Record for the final supplementary rules, comments that BLM receives
after the close of the comment period or comments delivered to an
address other than those listed above.
BLM will make your comments, including your name and address,
available for public review at the Yuma Field Office, BLM located at
2555 Gila Ridge Road, Yuma, Arizona, 85365 during regular business
hours (7:45 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday, except Federal
holidays). Under certain conditions, BLM can keep your personal
information confidential. You must prominently state your request for
confidentiality at the beginning of your comment. You may include
reasons for your request. BLM will consider withholding your name,
street address, and other identifying information on a case-by-case
basis to the extent allowed by law. BLM will make available to the
public all submissions from organizations and businesses and from
individuals identifying themselves as representatives or officials of
organizations or businesses.
II. Discussion of the Supplementary Rules
These supplementary rules will apply to all lands within designated
Long-Term Visitor Areas in Arizona and California. The BLM has
determined these supplementary rules are necessary to protect the
natural resources and to provide for safe public recreation and public
health, to reduce the potential for damage to the environment, and to
enhance the safety of visitors. The purpose of the LTVA program is to
provide areas for long-term winter camping use. The sites designated as
LTVAs are, in most cases, the traditional use areas of long-term
visitors. Designated sites were selected using criteria developed
during the land management planning process, and BLM wrote
environmental assessments for each site location.
The program was established for safe and proper accommodation of
the increasing demand for long-term winter visitation and for natural
resource protection through improved management of this use. The
designation of LTVAs ensures that specific locations are available for
long-term use year after year, and that inappropriate areas are not
used for extended periods.
Visitors may camp without an LTVA permit outside LTVAs, for up to
14 days in any 28-day period, on public lands not otherwise posted or
closed to camping.
The authority for the designation of LTVAs is contained in 43 CFR
8372.0-3 and 8372.0-5(g). The authority for the establishment of an
LTVA program is contained in 43 CFR 8372.1. The authority for the
payment of fees is contained in 36 CFR subpart 71. The authority for
establishing supplementary rules is contained in 43 CFR 8365.1-6. The
LTVA supplementary rules have been developed to meet the goals of
individual resource management plans. These rules will be available in
each local office having jurisdiction over the lands, sites, or
facilities affected, and will be posted near and/or within the lands,
sites, or facilities affected. Violations of supplementary rules are
punishable by a fine not to exceed $100,000 and/or imprisonment not to
exceed 12 months.
III. Procedural Information
Executive Order 12866, Regulatory Planning and Review
These supplementary rules are not a significant regulatory action
and are not subject to review by the Office of Management and Budget
under Executive Order 12866. These supplementary rules will not have an
effect of $100 million or more on the economy. They are directed at the
effective management of developed Long-Term Visitor Areas. They will
not adversely affect, in a material way, the economy, productivity,
competition, jobs, the environment, public health or safety, or State,
local, or tribal governments or communities. These supplementary rules
will not create a serious inconsistency or otherwise interfere with an
action taken or planned by another agency. The supplementary rules do
not alter the budgetary effects of entitlements, grants, user fees, or
loan programs or the right or obligations of their recipients; nor do
they raise novel legal or policy issues.
[[Page 76415]]
Clarity of the Supplementary Rules
Executive Order 12866 requires each agency to write regulations
that are simple and easy to understand. We invite your comments on how
to make these supplementary rules easier to understand, including
answers to questions such as the following:
(1) Are the requirements in the supplementary rules clearly stated?
(2) Do the supplementary rules contain technical language or jargon
that interferes with their clarity?
(3) Does the format of the supplementary rules (grouping and order
of sections, use of headings, paragraphing, etc.) aid or reduce their
clarity.
(4) Would the supplementary rules be easier to understand if they
were divided into more (but shorter) sections?
(5) Is the description of the supplementary rules in the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section of this preamble helpful in
understanding the supplementary rules? How could this description be
more helpful in making the supplementary rules easier to understand?
Please send any comments you have on the clarity of the
supplementary rules to the addresses specified in the ADDRESSES
section.
National Environmental Policy Act
BLM has prepared environmental assessment documents including the
Yuma Resource Management Plan and Environmental Impact Statement dated
1988; La Posa Interdisciplinary Management Plan and Environmental
Assessment dated July 1997; California Desert Conservation Area Plan as
amended and final Environmental Impact Statement and Proposed Plan
dated 1980 and has found that the supplementary rules would not
constitute a major Federal action significantly affecting the quality
of the human environment under section 102(2)(C) of the National
Environmental Protection Act of 1969 (NEPA), 42 U.S.C. 4332(2)(C). The
supplementary rules will enable effective BLM management of its Long-
Term Visitor Areas for the public. BLM has placed the Environmental
Assessment (EA) and the Finding of No Significant Impact (FONSI) on
file in the BLM Administrative Record at the address specified in the
ADDRESSES section. BLM invites the public to review these documents and
suggests that anyone wishing to submit comments in response to the EA
and FONSI do so to the addresses in the ADDRESSES section above.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
Congress enacted the Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980, as
amended, 5 U.S.C. 601-612, (RFA) to ensure that Government regulations
do not unnecessarily or disproportionately burden small entities. The
RFA requires a regulatory flexibility analysis if a rule would have a
significant economic impact either detrimental or beneficial, on a
substantial number of small entities. The supplementary rules do not
pertain specifically to commercial or governmental entities of any
size, but contain rules to protect the health and safety of
individuals, property, and resources on the public lands. Therefore,
BLM has determined under the RFA that these supplementary rules would
not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small
entities.
Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act (SBREFA)
These supplementary rules do not constitute a ``major rule'' as
defined in SBREFA at 5 U.S.C. 804(2). Again, the supplementary rules
pertain only to individuals who wish to camp on public lands. In this
respect, the regulation of such use is necessary to protect the public
lands, facilities, and those, including small business concessioners,
who use them. The supplementary rules have no effect on business,
commercial, or industrial use of the public lands.
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
These supplementary rules do not impose an unfunded mandate on
state, local, or tribal governments or the private sector of more than
$100 million per year; nor do these supplementary rules have a
significant or unique effect on state, local, or tribal government or
the private sector. The supplementary rules do not require anything of
state, local, or tribal governments. Therefore, the BLM is not required
to prepare a statement containing the information required by the
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (2 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.).
Executive Order 12630, Governmental Actions and Interference With
Constitutionally Protected Property Rights (Takings)
The supplementary rules do not represent a government action
capable of interfering with constitutionally protected property rights.
The supplementary rules do not address property rights in any form and
do not cause the impairment of anyone's property rights. Therefore, the
Department of the Interior has determined that the supplementary rules
would not cause a taking of private property or require further
discussion of takings implications under this Executive Order.
Executive Order 13132, Federalism
The supplementary rules will not have a substantial direct effect
on States, on the relationship between the national government and the
States, or on the distribution of power and responsibilities among the
various levels of government. The supplementary rules apply in Arizona
and California, and do not address jurisdictional issues involving the
State governments. Therefore, in accordance with Executive Order 13132,
BLM has determined that these supplementary rules do not have
sufficient Federalism implications to warrant preparation of a
Federalism Assessment.
Executive Order 13175, Consultation and Coordination With Indian Tribal
Governments
In accordance with E.O. 13175, we have found that this final rule
would not include policies that have tribal implications. The rule
would not affect lands held for the benefit of Indians, Aleuts, and
Eskimos. The rule would apply only to persons engaged in long-term
camping on certain designated public lands in Arizona and California.
Executive Order 13211, Actions Concerning Regulations That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply, Distribution, or Use
This rule is not a significant energy action. It will not have an
adverse effect on energy supplies. It will have no discernible effect
on the production or sale of energy minerals, and any effect on the
consumption of such minerals, either in manufacturing camping and
mobile home or trailer equipment or traveling to LTVA areas, will be
imperceptible, since the provision should not have a measurable effect
on either activity.
Paperwork Reduction Act
The supplementary rules do not contain information collection
requirements that the Office of Management and Budget must approve
under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.
Author
The principal author of these supplementary rules is Mervin G. Boyd
of the Yuma, Arizona, Field Office, assisted by Ted Hudson of the
Regulatory Affairs Group, Washington Office, BLM.
For the reasons stated in the Preamble, and under the authority of
43
[[Page 76416]]
CFR 8365.1-6, the Bureau of Land Management proposes supplementary
rules for public lands in Arizona and California, to read as follows:
Dated: July 19, 2002.
Carl Rountree,
State Director, Arizona.
James Wesley Abbott,
Acting State Director, California.
Supplementary Rules on Use of Long-Term Visitor Areas in Arizona and
California
The following are the supplemental rules for the designated Long
Term Visitor Areas (LTVAs) and are in addition to rules of conduct set
forth in 43 CFR subpart 8365. The supplemental rules apply year-long to
all public land users who enter the LTVAs.
Sec. 1 Permit Requirements and Fees
You must have a permit to camp in a designated LTVA between
September 15 and April 15. The permit authorizes you to camp within any
designated LTVA using those camping or dwelling unit(s) indicated on
the permit between the period from September 15 to April 15. There are
two types of permits: Long-term and Short-visit. The long-term permit
fee is $125.00, U.S. funds only, for the entire season and any part of
the season. The short-term permit is $25.00, U.S. funds only, for 14
consecutive days. The short-visit permit may be renewed an unlimited
number of times for the cost of $25.00 for 14 consecutive days. BLM
will not refund permit fees.
Sec. 2 Displaying the Permit
To make it valid, at the time of purchase, you must affix your
short-visit permit decal or long-term permit decal, using the adhesive
backing, to the bottom right-hand corner of the windshield of all
transportation vehicles and in a clearly visible location on all
camping units. You may use no more than 2 secondary vehicles within the
LTVA.
Sec. 3 Permit Transfers
You may not reassign or transfer your permit.
Sec. 4 Permit Revocation
An authorized BLM officer may revoke, without reimbursement, your
LTVA permit if you violate any BLM rule or regulation, or if your
conduct or that of your family or guest is inconsistent with the goal
of BLM's LTVA Program. Failure to return any LTVA permit to an
authorized BLM officer upon demand is a violation of these
supplementary rules. If BLM revokes your permit, you must remove all of
your property and leave the LTVA system within 12 hours of notice, and
you may not enter any other LTVA in Arizona or California for the
remainder of the LTVA season.
Sec. 5 Unoccupied Camping Units
Do not leave your LTVA camping unit or campsite unoccupied for a
period of greater than 5 days unless an authorized BLM officer approves
in advance.
Sec. 6 Parking
For your safety and privacy, you must maintain a minimum of 15 feet
of space between dwelling units.
Sec. 7 Removal of Wheels and Campers
Campers, trailers, and other dwelling units must remain mobile.
Wheels must remain on all wheeled vehicles. You may set trailers and
pickup campers on jacks manufactured for that purpose.
Sec. 8 Quiet Hours
Quiet hours are from 10 p.m. to 6 a.m. under applicable state time
zone standards, or as otherwise posted.
Sec. 9 Noise
Do not operate audio devices or motorized equipment, including
generators, in a manner that makes unreasonable noise as determined by
the authorized BLM officer. Outdoor amplified music is allowed only
within La Posa and Imperial Dam LTVAs and only in locations designated
by BLM and when approved in advance by an authorized BLM officer.
Sec. 10 Access
Do not block roads or trails commonly in public use with your
parked vehicles, stones, wooden barricades, or by any other means.
Sec. 11 Structures and Landscaping
a. Fixed fences, dog runs, storage units, windbreaks, and other
such structures are prohibited. Temporary structures of these types
must conform to posted policies.
b. Do not alter the natural landscape by painting rocks or defacing
or damaging any natural or archaeological feature.
Sec. 12 Livestock
Do not board or keep livestock (horses, cattle, sheep, goats, etc.)
within LTVA boundaries, unless an authorized BLM officer approves in
advance.
Sec. 13 Pets
Pets must be kept on a leash at all times. Keep an eye on your
pets. Unattended and unwatched pets may fall prey to coyotes or other
desert predators. You are responsible for clean-up and sanitary
disposal of your pet's waste.
Sec. 14 Cultural Resources
Do not disturb any archaeological or historical values, including,
but not limited to, petroglyphs, ruins, historic buildings, and
artifacts that may occur on public lands.
Sec. 15 Trash
You must place all trash in designated receptacles. Public trash
facilities are shown in the LTVA brochure. Do not deposit trash or
holding-tank sewage in vault toilets. An LTVA permit is required for
trash disposal within all LTVA campgrounds. You may not change motor
oil, vehicular fluids, or dispose of or possess these used substances
within an LTVA.
Sec. 16 Dumping
Do not dump sewage, gray water, or garbage on the ground. This
includes motor oil and any other waste products. Federal, state, and
county sanitation laws and county ordinance specifically prohibit these
practices. Sanitary dump station locations are shown in the LTVA
brochure. You must have an LTVA permit for dumping within all LTVA
campgrounds.
Sec. 17 Self-Contained Vehicles
a. In Pilot Knob, Midland, Tamarisk, and Hot Springs LTVAs, you may
camp only in self-contained camping units. The La Posa, Imperial Dam,
and Mule Mountain LTVAs are restricted to self-contained camping units,
except within 500 feet of a vault or rest room.
b. Self-contained camping units must have a permanent, affixed
waste water holding tank of 10-gallon minimum capacity. BLM does not
consider port-a-potty systems, or systems that utilize portable holding
tanks or permanent holding tanks of less than 10-gallon capacity, to be
self-contained.
Sec. 18 Campfires
You may have campfires in LTVAs, subject to all local, state, and
Federal regulations. You must comply with posted rules.
Sec. 19 Wood Collection
Do not collect wood within LTVAs. You may not possess native
firewood (i.e., mesquite, ironwood, palo verde) within LTVAs. Please
contact the nearest BLM office for current regulations concerning wood
collection.
Sec. 20 Speed Limit
The speed limit in LTVAs is 15 miles per hour or as otherwise
posted.
[[Page 76417]]
Sec. 21 Off-Highway Vehicle Use
Motorized vehicles must remain on existing roads, trails, and
washes.
Sec. 22 Vehicle Use
Do not operate any vehicle in violation of state or local laws and
regulations relating to use, standards, registration, operation, and
inspection.
Sec. 23 Firearms
Do not discharge or otherwise use firearms or weapons inside or
within \1/2\ mile of LTVAs.
Sec. 24 Vending Permits
You must have a vending permit to carry on any commercial activity.
Please contact the nearest BLM office for information on vending or
concession permits.
Sec. 25 Aircraft Use
Do not land or take off in aircraft, including ultralights and hot
air balloons, in LTVAs.
Sec. 26 Perimeter Camping
Do not camp within 1 mile outside the boundaries of Hot Springs,
Tamarisk, and Pilot Knob LTVAs and within 2 miles outside the boundary
of Midland LTVA.
Sec. 27 Hot Springs Spa and Day Use Area
Do not consume, possess, or use food, beverages, glass containers,
soap, pets, or motorized vehicles within the fenced-in area at the Hot
Springs Spa. Day use hours are 5 a.m. to midnight.
Sec. 28 Mule Mountain LTVA
You may camp only at designated sites within Wiley's Well and Coon
Hollow campgrounds. You may have only one (1) camping or dwelling unit
per site.
Sec. 29 Imperial Dam and La Posa LTVAs
Do not camp overnight in desert washes in Imperial Dam and La Posa
LTVAs.
Sec. 30 La Posa LTVA
You may enter La Posa LTVA only by legal access roads along U.S.
Highway 95. Do not create or use any other access points. Do not remove
or modify barricades, such as fences, ditches, and berms.
Sec. 31 Posted Rules
You must observe and obey all posted rules. Individual LTVAs may
have additional specific rules in addition to these supplementary
rules. If posted rules differ from these supplementary rules, the
posted rules take precedence.
Sec. 32 Other Laws
If you hold an LTVA permit, you must observe and obey all Federal,
state, and local laws and regulations applicable to the LTVA.
Sec. 33 Campsite Maintenance
You must keep the LTVA and, specifically, your campsite, in a neat,
orderly, and sanitary condition.
Sec. 34 Length of Stay
Between April 16 and September 14, you may stay in an LTVA only 14
days in any 28-day period. After your 14th day of occupation at an
LTVA, you must move outside of a 25-mile radius of that LTVA.
Sec. 35 Penalties
Under the Federal Land Policy and Management Act of 1976 (43 U.S.C.
1733(a)), if you knowingly and willfully violate or fail to comply with
any of the supplementary rules provided in this notice, BLM may revoke
your LTVA permit, and you may be subject to a fine under 18 U.S.C. 3571
or other penalties in accordance with 43 U.S.C. 1733.
[FR Doc. 02-30991 Filed 12-11-02; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310-32-P
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