09-05-21-05 Bell Mountain Wilderness Closure Area

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

09-05-21-05 Bell Mountain Wilderness Closure Area CLOSURE ORDER NO. 09-05-21-05 USDA Forest Service Mark Twain National Forest Bell Mountain Wilderness Aerial Gunning Pursuant to 16 USC 551 and 36 CFR 261.50 (a) and (b), the following acts and omissions are prohibited on the trails and areas as described in this Order, and as depicted on the attached maps hereby incorporated into this Order as Exhibit A (the “restricted area”), all within Potosi District, Mark Twain National Forest, Iron County, Missouri: 1. Being on a trail: 36 CFR 261.55(a) 2. Going into or being upon the restricted area: 36 CFR 261.53(e) ALL OF THE BELL MOUNTAIN WILDERNESS ON THE POTOSI RANGER DISTRICT OF THE MARK TWAIN NATIONAL FOREST IS CLOSED TO THE PUBLIC STARTING at 6:00 AM TUESDAY, JANUARY 26TH, 2021, through THURSDAY, JANUARY 28TH, 2020, at 6:00 PM AS DESCRIBED BELOW. All National Forest System lands within the description below are temporarily closed to the public. 36 CFR 261.53(e), 36 CFR 261.55(a): All trails and lands within the congressional boundary of the Bell Mountain Wilderness (Exhibit A). Pursuant to 36 CFR 261.50 (e), the following persons are exempt from this Order: 1. Persons with a Forest Service permit specifically authorizing the otherwise prohibited act or omission. 2. Any Federal, State, or local officer, or member of any organized rescue or fire fighting force in the performance of an official duty. This prohibition is in addition to the general prohibitions in 36 CFR Part 261, Subpart A. A violation of this prohibition is punishable by a fine of not more than $5,000 for an individual or $10,000 for an organization, or imprisonment for not more than six months, or both (16 U.S.C. 551 and 18 U.S.C. 3559, 3571, and 3581). Executed in Rolla Missouri, this 21st day of January 2021. SHERRI K. SCHWENKE Forest Supervisor .
Recommended publications
  • TAUM SAUK AREA THREATENED by HYDRO PLANT by Susan Flader
    (This article was first published in Heritage, the Newsletter of the Missouri Parks Association, August 2001) TAUM SAUK AREA THREATENED BY HYDRO PLANT by Susan Flader When state park officials selected a cover photo to illustrate their first-ever assessment of "threats to the parks" nearly a decade ago, they chose not a scene of despoliation but a symbolic representation of the best of what they were seeking to protect. It was a vista at the core of the Ozarks, looking from the state's grandest waterfall near its tallest peak across its deepest valley into the heart of Taum Sauk Mountain State Park, Missouri's then-newest public park but also its geologically oldest, wildest, most intact, and most ecologically diverse landscape. Scarcely could one imagine that the very symbol of what they were seeking to protect through their threats study, titled "Challenge of the '90s," would itself become the most seriously threatened landscape in Missouri at the dawn of the new millennium. The photo showed two forest-blanketed, time-gentled igneous knobs in the heart of the St. Francois Mountains, on the left Smoke Hill, recently acquired by the state, and on the right Church Mountain, leased to the Department of Natural Resources for park trail development by Union Electric Company of St. Louis (now AmerenUE). But on June 8, the Ameren Development Company, a subsidiary of Ameren Corporation, filed an application for a preliminary permit with the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) for the Church Mountain Pumped Storage Project. It would consist of a 130-acre reservoir ringed by a 12,350-foot-long, 90-foot-high dam on the top of Church Mountain, a lower reservoir of 400 acres formed by a 1,900-foot-long, 100-foot high dam flooding several miles of Taum Sauk Creek, which has been designated a State Outstanding Resource Water, and associated tunnels, powerhouse, transmission lines, roads, and related facilities.
    [Show full text]
  • R1090) Cullimore Family
    Information Sheet R Cullimore family. 1090 Collection, 1973-1992. Four folders. This collection is available at The State Historical Society of Missouri. If you would like more information, please contact us at [email protected]. These are papers of the Cullimore family of journalists and outdoor writers. The collection consists of correspondence between Donald B. “Rocky” Cullimore and Dan Saults, and a compi- lation of Saults’s articles in Branson and Springfield, Missouri, newspapers. This collection represents the first installment of what will be a much larger assemblage of Cullimore family papers. It centers on conservationist and author Dan Saults, a close friend of the Cullimore family, and supplements materials in the Saults collection (WHMC-Rolla R403). Saults was a leader in promoting conservation efforts in Missouri. A native of Knob Noster, Mis- souri, he bought the Knob Noster Weekly Gem after graduating from the University of Missouri School of Journalism. He operated the paper until World War Two. Saults served as an officer in the 339th Infantry Regiment in North Africa and Italy during the war, after which he spent a year in Texas. In 1947, Saults joined the Missouri Department of Conservation, heading the depart- ment’s information service and editing the Missouri Conservationist. Later he became the deputy director of the department. In 1964, Saults joined the U. S. Department of the Interior and moved to Washington, D.C., where he worked with the Bureau of Land Management and the Fish and Wildlife Service. He retired in 1973. Saults and his wife, Helen, a former National Park Service employee, moved to a home near Branson, Missouri.
    [Show full text]
  • Mark Twain National Forest Missouri Programmatic Biological Assessment Forest Plan Revision June 14, 2005
    Biological Assessment Mark Twain National Forest June 2005 Revised Forest Plan Mark Twain National Forest Missouri Programmatic Biological Assessment Forest Plan Revision June 14, 2005 USDA Forest Service Eastern Region Milwaukee, Wisconsin Prepared by: Jody Eberly, Wildlife Biologist Mary Lane, Wildlife Biologist Larry Furniss, Fisheries Biologist Dave Moore, Botanist Lori Wilson, Hydrologist Paul Nelson, Ecologist Margaret Olson, GIS Coordinator Monica McKee, GIS Support Mark Twain National Forest Programmatic Consultation Page 1 of 303 Biological Assessment Mark Twain National Forest June 2005 Revised Forest Plan Biological Assessment for Forest Plan Revision Executive Summary Introduction Purpose and Need Proposed Action Description of Affected Area Species Information Request for Formal Consultation Species Plants Asclepias meadii Mead’s milkweed Helenium virginicum Virginia sneezeweed Trifolium stoloniferum Running buffalo clover Insects Somatochlora hineana Hine’s emerald dragonfly Naiades Antrobia culveri Tumbling Creek cavesnail Lampsilis orbiculata Pink mucket pearlymussel Leptodea leptodon Scaleshell mussel Fish Notropis topeka Topeka shiner Birds Haliaeetus leucocephalus Bald eagle Mammals Myotis grisescens Gray bat Myotis sodalis Indiana bat Literature Cited Appendix A – Consultation History Appendix B – Species List Appendix C – Overview of Forest Plan Revision Process and Project Level Decision- making Appendix D – Forest Plan Standards & Guidelines Appendix E –Indiana bat Survey Strategy Appendix F – Photographs Summary of Biological Assessment Programmatic Consultation Mark Twain National Forest, Missouri Forest Plan Revision Page 2 of 303 Biological Assessment Mark Twain National Forest June 2005 Revised Forest Plan Federal agencies are required to comply with provisions of the Endangered Species Act of 1973, as amended. This includes the requirement to consult with the USDI Fish and Wildlife Service on projects which may affect species federally listed as threatened or endangered (ESA section 7(a)(2)).
    [Show full text]
  • Appendix G - Roadless Area/Wilderness Evaluations and Wild and Scenic Rivers
    Appendix G - Roadless Area/Wilderness Evaluations and Wild and Scenic Rivers In accordance with 36 CFR 219.17, a new inventory of roadless areas was completed for this plan revision, and areas of the Ouachita National Forest that met the criteria for inclusion in the roadless area inventory (Chapter 7 of Forest Service Handbook 1909.12) were further evaluated for recommendation as potential wilderness areas. The reinventory of roadless areas included previously recognized roadless areas considered during development of the 1986 Forest Plan and the 1990 Amended Forest Plan. These areas were: Beech Creek, Rich Mountain, Blue Mountain, Brush Heap, Bear Mountain, and Little Blakely. Also, two areas near Broken Bow Lake in Southeastern Oklahoma, Bee Mountain and Ashford Peak, were identified in the January 2002 FEIS for Acquired Lands in Southeastern Oklahoma. Possible additions to existing wilderness areas were also considered. The roadless inventory for the Ouachita National Forest was updated for this iteration of plan revision using Geographic Information System (GIS) technology. Evaluation of the Forest for areas meeting the criterion of one-half mile of improved [National Forest System] road or less per 1,000 acres yielded a significant number of candidate polygons and all polygons over 1,000 acres in size were considered to determine if there were any possibility of expanding the area to a suitable size to warrant consideration as possible wilderness. Polygons meeting the initial criteria were further analyzed using criteria found in FSH 1909.12 (Chapter 7.11) to produce the inventoried roadless areas described in this appendix. The planning team determined that, of the former RARE II areas, the only ones that meet the criteria for inclusion in the roadless area inventory are portions of Blue Mountain and Brush Heap.
    [Show full text]
  • Page 1464 TITLE 16—CONSERVATION § 1132
    § 1132 TITLE 16—CONSERVATION Page 1464 Department and agency having jurisdiction of, and reports submitted to Congress regard- thereover immediately before its inclusion in ing pending additions, eliminations, or modi- the National Wilderness Preservation System fications. Maps, legal descriptions, and regula- unless otherwise provided by Act of Congress. tions pertaining to wilderness areas within No appropriation shall be available for the pay- their respective jurisdictions also shall be ment of expenses or salaries for the administra- available to the public in the offices of re- tion of the National Wilderness Preservation gional foresters, national forest supervisors, System as a separate unit nor shall any appro- priations be available for additional personnel and forest rangers. stated as being required solely for the purpose of managing or administering areas solely because (b) Review by Secretary of Agriculture of classi- they are included within the National Wilder- fications as primitive areas; Presidential rec- ness Preservation System. ommendations to Congress; approval of Con- (c) ‘‘Wilderness’’ defined gress; size of primitive areas; Gore Range-Ea- A wilderness, in contrast with those areas gles Nest Primitive Area, Colorado where man and his own works dominate the The Secretary of Agriculture shall, within ten landscape, is hereby recognized as an area where years after September 3, 1964, review, as to its the earth and its community of life are un- suitability or nonsuitability for preservation as trammeled by man, where man himself is a visi- wilderness, each area in the national forests tor who does not remain. An area of wilderness classified on September 3, 1964 by the Secretary is further defined to mean in this chapter an area of undeveloped Federal land retaining its of Agriculture or the Chief of the Forest Service primeval character and influence, without per- as ‘‘primitive’’ and report his findings to the manent improvements or human habitation, President.
    [Show full text]
  • Wilderness Connection and Watershed Protection for the East Fork of the Black River
    Wilderness Connection and Watershed Protection for the East Fork of the Black River Shut-In Creek, Reynolds County Mark Twain National Forest Natural Resource Damage Assessment Restoration Proposal Updated December 2015 1 Wilderness Connection and Watershed Protection for the East Fork of the Black River Shut-in Creek, Jost Property, Reynolds County Forest floor Shut-in Creek bottoms Small tributary Shut-in Creek Upper Shut-in Creek, Iron County, Jost Property 2 Wilderness Connection and Watershed Protection for the East Fork of the Black River Old house site spring- one of many small springs Hillside igneous rock outcropping Glade on Bell Mountain Jost Parcel elevation 1465 feet Typical hillside white oak stand, Jost Large high mountain glade Wilderness view from east corner, Jost property 3 Wilderness Connection and Watershed Protection for the East Fork of the Black River Restoration Project Information Sheet General Information Organization: Mark Twain National Forest Date Submitted: 4/24/2015 Contact name: Janet Fraley Title: Lands and Special Uses Program Manger Street address: 401 Fairgrounds Road, Rolla, Missouri 65483 Phone number: 573-341-7459 Email: [email protected] Organization website: http://www.fs.usda.gov/mtnf Project Information Type of project: This is a proposal for purchase of critical area inholdings in around the wilderness areas that protect and connect Mark Twain National Forest Bell Mountain Wilderness with Missouri Department of Natural Resources Goggins Mountain Wild Area of Johnson’s Shut Ins State Park. These parcels would bridge the landscape to form a total state and federal wilderness in excess of 15,000 acres. This acquisition will replace lands and soils injured by releases of heavy metals from mining activities and create one of the largest wilderness areas in Missouri.
    [Show full text]
  • On the Loose – Trails Section
    Everything you need to know about more than 90 of the best camps in the region Including more than 60 High Adventure opportunities Images courtesy of: http://signal.baldwincity.com/news/2011/oct/20/local-boy-scouts-troop-remained-busy-during-summer/ http://i4.ytimg.com/vi/obn8RVY_szM/mgdefault.jpg http://www/sccovington.com/philmont/trek_info/equipment/tents.htm This is a publication of Tamegonit Lodge, the Order of the Arrow lodge affiliated with the Heart of America Council, BSA. Updated: December 2012 Additional copies of this publication are available through the Program Services Department at the Heart of America Council Scout Service Center 10210 Holmes Road Kansas City, Missouri 64131 Phone: (816) 942-9333 Toll Free: (800) 776-1110 Fax: (816) 942-8086 Online: www.hoac-bsa.org Camps: Revised December 2012; Rivers: Revised November 2008; Caves: Revised July 2007; Trails: Revised March 2010; High Adventure: Revised September 2007 HOAC – Order of the Arrow – ON THE LOOSE TRAILS – Page 1 ON THE LOOSE - TRAILS Table of Contents A H American Gothic Trail ............................................. 4 Henry Rowe Schoolcraft Trail ............................... 13 B Herbert Hoover Trail ............................................. 14 Battle of Westport Historical Trail ......................... 4 Hercules Glades Wilderness Hiking Trails .......... 14 Bell Mountain Wilderness Hiking Trails ............... 5 J Berryman Trail .......................................................... 5 John J Audubon Trail ............................................
    [Show full text]
  • Taum Sauk Mountain and Johnson's Shut-Ins State Parks
    Taum Sauk Mountain and Johnson’s Shut-Ins State Parks: Parcel Acquisitions October 2016 Natural Resource Restoration Project Proposal for the Southeast Missouri Lead Mining District Taum Sauk Mountain and Johnson’s Shut-Ins State Parks: Parcel Acquisitions Iron and Reynolds Counties, Missouri Submitted by the Missouri Department of Natural Resources September 2016 1 Taum Sauk Mountain and Johnson’s Shut-Ins State Parks: Parcel Acquisitions October 2016 Introduction and Background The federal Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act (CERCLA) authorizes claims for “damages for injury to, destruction of, or loss of natural resources” as a result of the release of a hazardous substance. 42 U.S.C § 9607(a)(4)(C). Any compensation received as a result of resolving a claim for natural resource damages must be used for “the restoration, rehabilitation, or replacement or acquisition of the equivalent of” any lost natural resources or their services. 42 U.S.C. § 9611(i). This CERCLA process is referred to as natural resource damage assessment and restoration (NRDAR), the goal of which is to compensate the public for the loss of resources and their services resulting from a release of a hazardous substance. Missouri Trustees and the Trustee Council CERCLA, and its implementing regulations, designated federal and state authorities to act on behalf of the public as trustees for natural resources, including supporting ecosystems, belonging to, managed by, controlled by, or appertaining to such state, or by the United States. 42 U.S.C. § 9607(f); 40 C.F.R. § 600 and § 300.605. Under this authority, the Governor of the State of Missouri has appointed the director of the Missouri Department of Natural Resources (MDNR) as the designated state trustee.
    [Show full text]
  • 2005 Forest Plan
    United States Department of Agriculture 2005 Land and Resource Forest Service Management Plan Mark Twain National Forest 2005 September 2005 Forest Plan Mark Twain National Forest Abstract This 2005 Land and Resource Management Plan (2005 Forest Plan) was prepared according to Department of Agriculture regulations (36 CFR 219 - 1982 regulations), which are based on the Forest and Rangeland Renewable Resources Planning Act (RPA), as amended by the National Forest Management Act of 1976 (NFMA). This plan was also developed in accordance with regulations (40 CFR 1500) for implementing the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (NEPA). A Final Environmental Impact Statement (FEIS) has been prepared as required by NEPA and 36CFR219 (1982 Planning Regulations.) The FEIS the analysis of five alternatives developed for management of the Mark Twain NF, and displays the environmental effects at a programmatic level. Alternative 3 is identified in the FEIS as the selected alternative. If any provision of this plan or its application to any person or circumstances is found to be invalid, the remainder of the plan and its applicability to other persons or circumstances will not be affected. The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) prohibits discrimination in all its programs and activities on the basis of race, color, national origin, gender, religion, age, disability, political beliefs, sexual orientation, or marital or family status. (Not all prohibited bases apply to all programs.) Persons with disabilities who require alternative means for communication of program information (Braille, large print, audiotape, etc.) should contact USDA's TARGET Center at (202) 720-2600 (voice and TDD). To file a complaint of discrimination, write USDA, Director, Office of Civil Rights, Room 326-W, Whitten Building, 1400 Independence Avenue, SW, Washington, DC 20250-9410 or call (202) 720- 5964 (voice and TDD).
    [Show full text]
  • The Wilderness Act of 1964
    The Wilderness Act of 1964 Source: US House of Representatives Office of the Law This is the 1964 act that started it all Revision Counsel website at and created the first designated http://uscode.house.gov/download/ascii.shtml wilderness in the US and Nevada. This version, updated January 2, 2006, includes a list of all wilderness designated before that date. The list does not mention designations made by the December 2006 White Pine County bill. -CITE- 16 USC CHAPTER 23 - NATIONAL WILDERNESS PRESERVATION SYSTEM 01/02/2006 -EXPCITE- TITLE 16 - CONSERVATION CHAPTER 23 - NATIONAL WILDERNESS PRESERVATION SYSTEM -HEAD- CHAPTER 23 - NATIONAL WILDERNESS PRESERVATION SYSTEM -MISC1- Sec. 1131. National Wilderness Preservation System. (a) Establishment; Congressional declaration of policy; wilderness areas; administration for public use and enjoyment, protection, preservation, and gathering and dissemination of information; provisions for designation as wilderness areas. (b) Management of area included in System; appropriations. (c) "Wilderness" defined. 1132. Extent of System. (a) Designation of wilderness areas; filing of maps and descriptions with Congressional committees; correction of errors; public records; availability of records in regional offices. (b) Review by Secretary of Agriculture of classifications as primitive areas; Presidential recommendations to Congress; approval of Congress; size of primitive areas; Gore Range-Eagles Nest Primitive Area, Colorado. (c) Review by Secretary of the Interior of roadless areas of national park system and national wildlife refuges and game ranges and suitability of areas for preservation as wilderness; authority of Secretary of the Interior to maintain roadless areas in national park system unaffected. (d) Conditions precedent to administrative recommendations of suitability of areas for preservation as wilderness; publication in Federal Register; public hearings; views of State, county, and Federal officials; submission of views to Congress.
    [Show full text]
  • A Bill to Provide for the Wilderness Designation of Certain Lands Within the Ocala National Forest and the Apalachicola National Forest
    96 H.R.5341 Title: A bill to provide for the wilderness designation of certain lands within the Ocala National Forest and the Apalachicola National Forest. Sponsor: Rep Chappell, Bill, Jr. [FL-4] (introduced 9/19/1979) Cosponsors (11) Latest Major Action: 7/2/1980 Referred to Senate committee. Status: Referred jointly to Senate Committees on Agriculture, Nutrition and Forestry; and Energy and Natural Resources. SUMMARY AS OF: 7/1/1980--Passed House amended. (There are 3 other summaries) (Measure passed House, amended, roll call #385 (324-82)) Designates the following lands as wilderness and components of the National Wilderness Preservation System: (1) the Black Creek Wilderness in the Desoto National Forest, Mississippi; (2) the Bell Mountain Wilderness, Rockpile Mountain Wilderness, Piney Creek Wilderness, and the Devils Backbone Wilderness all in the Mark Twain National Forest, Missouri; (3) the Bradwell Bay Wilderness, and the Mud Swamp/New River Wilderness in the Apalachicola National Forest, Florida; (4) the Juniper Prairie Wilderness, Billies Bay Wilderness, Alexander Springs Wilderness, and the Little Lake George Wilderness all in the Ocala National Forest, Florida, (5) the Big Gum Swamp Wilderness in the Osceola National Forest, Florida; (6) the Pocosin Wilderness, Sheep Ridge Wilderness, Catfish Lake South Wilderness, and the Pond Pine Wilderness all in the Croatan National Forest, North Carolina; (7) the Wambaw Swamp Wilderness, Hell Hole Bay Wilderness, and the Wambaw Creek Wilderness all in the Francis Marion National Forest, South Carolina; and (8) the Kisatchie Hills Wilderness in the Kisatchie National Forest, Louisiana. Designates as wilderness and adds to the Florida Keys Wilderness certain lands referred to as North Cudjoe Key, located in Florida.
    [Show full text]
  • Land Areas of the National Forest System
    United States Department of Agriculture Land Areas of the National Forest System As of September 30, 2020 Forest Service WO Lands FS–383 November 2020 Metric Equivalents When you know: Multiply by: To find: Inches (in) 2.54 Centimeters (cm) Feet (ft) 0.305 Meters (m) Miles (mi) 1.609 Kilometers (km) Acres (ac) 0.405 Hectares (ha) Square feet (ft2) 0.0929 Square meters (m2) Yards (yd) 0.914 Meters (m) Square miles (mi2) 2.59 Square kilometers (km2) Pounds (lb) 0.454 Kilograms (kg) United States Department of Agriculture Forest Service Land Areas of the WO, Lands National Forest FS–383 System November 2020 As of September 30, 2020 USDA Forest Service 1400 Independence Ave., SW Washington, DC 20250–0003 Website: https://www.fs.fed.us/land/staff/lar-index.shtml Cover photo: Mount Ogden, Uinta-Wasatch-Cache National Forest, Utah Photo by Eric Greenwood, USDA Forest Service, Region 4, Recreation Lands & Minerals i Statistics are current as of: 10/19/2020 The National Forest System (NFS) is comprised of: 154 National Forests 58 Purchase Units 20 National Grasslands 7 Land Utilization Projects 17 Research and Experimental Areas 28 Other Areas NFS lands are found in 43 States as well as Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands. TOTAL NFS ACRES = 193,041,851 NFS lands are organized into: 9 Forest Service Regions 112 Administrative Forest or Forest-level units 503 Ranger District or District-level units The Forest Service, an agency of the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), administers 134 Wild and Scenic Rivers in 23 States and 449 National Wilderness Areas in 39 States.
    [Show full text]