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[Federal Register: June 28, 2002 (Volume 67, Number 125)]
[Notices]
[Page 43588-43589]
From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
[DOCID:fr28jn02-46]
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DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE
Department of the Army; Corps of Engineers
Availability of the Draft Supplement to the Final Environmental
Impact Statement for the Operation and Maintenance Program at Wister
Lake and Poteau River, OK
AGENCY: Department of the Army, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, DoD.
ACTION: Notice of availability.
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SUMMARY: Notice is made of the availability of a Draft Supplement to
the Final Environmental Statement (DSFES) for the Operation and
Maintenance Program at Wister Lake and Poteau River, OK, prepared by
the Tulsa District of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE). The
supplement describes and considers the potential environmental
consequences resulting from operating the Wister Lake project with a
conservation pool at 478.0 feet National Geodetic Vertical Datum (NGVD)
and from raising the conservation pool from 471.6 to 478.0 feet (NGVD).
DATES: The DSFES will be available for public review when this
announcement is published. The review period of the
[[Page 43589]]
document will be until September 11, 2002. To request a copy of the
supplement, please call (918) 669-4396.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For further information regarding the
DSFES, please contact Stephen L. Nolen, Chief, Environmental Analysis
and Compliance Branch, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, ATTN: CESWT-PE-E,
1645 South 101st East Avenue, Tulsa OK 74128-4629.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Wister Lake Project is located in
southeastern Oklahoma in LeFlore County and was authorized by the Flood
Control Act of 1938 and completed in 1949. The project consists of the
lake, dam, and downstream stations on the lower Poteau River to its
confluence with the Arkansas River. It provides substantial flood
control, municipal and industrial water supply, flow augmentation,
water conservation, and sediment reduction. Wister Lake and its
adjacent lands are also used for recreation, hunting, and wildlife
management.
A Final Environmental Statement (FES) for operation and maintenance
of the project was filed on November 19, 1973, and evaluated impacts to
the environment from operating the project with a conservation pool
level at 471.6 feet NGVD. Since 1974, the lake's conservation pool has
been raised four times, either seasonally or permanently, principally
to increase water supply and enhance recreation. The Water Resources
Development Act of 1996 (WRDA 1996) instructed the United States Army
Corps of Engineers (USACE) to permanently raise the conservation pool
to its present elevation, 478.0 feet NGVD. However, impacts to
resources and the environment were never documented or analyzed. To
comply with the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), this
supplement to the 1973 FES focuses on the impacts associated with
maintaining the permanent pool level at 478.0 feet, as directed by
Congress, and continuing current management practices. It also examines
the historical impacts associated with raising the permanent
conservation pool from its original level of 471.6 to 478.0 feet NGVD.
Raising the conservation pool to 478.0 feet NGVD has resulted in
the loss and/or modification of approximately 3,254 acres of wildlife
habitat and approximately 300 acres of a waterfowl marsh and green tree
waterfowl management unit. Raising the conservation pool has inundated
at least 10 archeological sites. Pool fluctuations and wave action
between 471.6 and 478.0 feet NGVD have disturbed at least 18
archeological sites and may have affected as many as 36 sites.
Mitigation measures are proposed for those resources that have been
negatively impacted from raising the conservation pool to 478.0 feet
NGVD. These impacts are limited to biological and cultural resources.
Mitigations for biological resources are based on recommendations of
the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and include reimbursement to the
Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation for the loss of a green
tree waterfowl management unit and the cost of reconstructing a new
waterfowl management unit.
The USACE, Tulsa District is consulting with the Advisory Council
on Historic Preservation, the Oklahoma State Historic Preservation
Officer, the Caddo Tribe of Oklahoma, and the Wichita and Affiliated
Tribes of Oklahoma to develop mitigation measures to minimize adverse
effects of the proposed action on historic properties.
The DSFES has been coordinated and approved by offices and
directorates affected by or interested in the subject matter, including
the Office of Counsel and Executive Offices.
Stephen R. Zeltner,
Lieutenant Colonel, U.S. Army, Acting District Engineer.
[FR Doc. 02-16379 Filed 6-27-02; 8:45 am]
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