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A Grand Canyon National Park News Release
October
1 , 2004
For Immediate Release
GRAND
CANYON NATIONAL PARK PUBLISHES DRAFT ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT
STATEMENT TO REVISE COLORADO RIVER MANAGEMENT PLAN
Preferred Alternatives Outline Model System for River
Management
Grand Canyon
National Park Superintendent, Joseph F. Alston, today
announced the availability of the draft environmental
impact statement (EIS) to revise the Colorado River
Management Plan (CRMP) for Grand Canyon National Park.
The National Park Service prepared the draft EIS for
the CRMP under the provisions of the National Environmental
Policy Act of 1969. Alston also announced that NPS would
hold seven public meetings around the country to provide
a comprehensive public review of the report.
Publication of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s
Notice of Availability (NOA) in the Federal Register
on October 8, 2004 initiates a 90-day public review
and comment period. Comments on the draft EIS can be
submitted following publication of the NOA and will
be accepted through January 7, 2005.
A complete copy of the draft EIS can be downloaded at
www.nps.gov/grca/crmp. A CD with the complete document
can be ordered online at the same website.
“This portion of the Colorado River is one of
the longest stretches of navigable white water on earth,
and one of the world’s premier river experiences,”
Alston said. “Producing a draft EIS was a complex
undertaking, and I am proud of all the hard work our
park staff put into preparing this report. The document
provides a comprehensive analysis of the river’s
recreational use, and we are recommending some innovative
alternatives to balance all the diverse management objectives.”
The proposed CRMP is a visitor use management plan that
specifies actions to preserve park resources while providing
recreational opportunities in the river corridor. The
plan is designed to cover the next decade, and will
also establish goals and objectives for a longer timeframe.
For the draft EIS, the Colorado River is divided into
two geographic sections with a specific set of alternatives,
including preferred alternatives, for each section:
1. One section covers Lees Ferry (River Mile 0) to Diamond
Creek (River Mile 226), where the majority of commercial
and private river trips start and end. A no-action alternative
was analyzed as well as seven alternatives.
2. One section covers the Lower Gorge from Diamond Creek
(River Mile 226) to Lake Mead (River Mile 277). This
is a transitional area, starting in a primitive setting
and ending in the more urban recreational setting of
Lake Mead. It is handled cooperatively with the Hualapai
Tribe and Lake Mead National Recreation Area. This is
the first management plan for the Lower Gorge, where
the situation has been complicated by drought conditions
impacting downstream boat and passenger take-out options.
A no-action alternative was studied as well as four
alternatives.
Alternative H is the preferred alternative for the Lees
Ferry to Diamond Creek section, providing six months
of mixed motorized use and a six-month no-motor period
(September through February). Of all the alternatives,
it achieves the best balance between group size, trip
length, launches per day, the total number of trips
and people on the river at one time, and impacts on
park resources. It has the highest total user-days and
passengers in the summer, but one of the lowest total
user-days and passengers the rest of the year. Commercial
operators would have the same total user days as they
currently do during the high use period of March through
October. Non-commercial users would have more user-days
and passengers than in any other alternative. Alternative
H is one of the best alternatives for protecting park
resources.
Alternative 4 is the preferred alternative for the Lower
Gorge section (Diamond Creek to Lake Mead). This option
increases the overall operations while reducing group
size for all Hualapai River Runner trips. It also reduces
pontoon boat operations from current levels. It spreads
the trips out over a longer period of time to eliminate
a peak use pattern, and includes the development of
three new campsites for Hualapai use.
NPS will host a series of public meetings to receive
comments about the draft EIS in each of the following
seven cities, Las Vegas, Nevada; Denver, Colorado; Salt
Lake City, Utah; Phoenix, Arizona; San Francisco, California;
Washington, D.C; and Flagstaff, Arizona. The NPS anticipates
announcing the public meeting schedule in early October.
Comments on the draft EIS can be submitted any one of
the following ways:
* Mail to CRMP Project, Grand Canyon National Park,
P.O. Box 129, Grand Canyon, Arizona 86023;
* Through the Park’s website at www.nps.gov/grca/crmp;
* Fax to CRMP project at 928-638-7797;
* Hand-deliver to Grand Canyon National Park; or
* Provide comments at one of the seven public meetings.
A summary of the scoping process and planning materials
are available on the Internet at www.nps.gov/grca/crmp.
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