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Docket No. FWS–HQ–NWRS–2019–0040; FXRS12610900000-190-FF09R20000]
This document is scheduled to be published in the Federal Register on 09/10/2019 and available online at https://federalregister.gov/d/2019-18054, and on govinfo.gov Billing Code 4333-15 DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR Fish and Wildlife Service 50 CFR Parts 26, 32, 36, and 71 [Docket No. FWS–HQ–NWRS–2019–0040; FXRS12610900000-190-FF09R20000] RIN 1018-BD79 2019–2020 Station-Specific Hunting and Sport Fishing Regulations AGENCY: Fish and Wildlife Service, Interior. ACTION: Final rule. SUMMARY: We, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Service), open seven National Wildlife Refuges (NWRs) that are currently closed to hunting and sport fishing. In addition, we expand hunting and sport fishing at 70 other NWRs, and add pertinent station-specific regulations for other NWRs that pertain to migratory game bird hunting, upland game hunting, big game hunting, and sport fishing for the 2019–2020 season. We also formally open 15 units of the National Fish Hatchery System to hunting and sport fishing. We also add pertinent station- specific regulations that pertain to migratory game bird hunting, upland game hunting, big game hunting, and sport fishing at these 15 National Fish Hatcheries (NFHs) for the 2019–2020 season. This rule includes global administrative updates to every NWR entry in our refuge- specific regulations and the reorganization of general public use regulations. We remove approximately 2,100 regulations that will have no impact on the administration of hunting and sport fishing within the National Wildlife Refuge System. We also simplify over 2,900 refuge- specific regulations to comply with a Presidential mandate to adhere to plain language standards 1 and to reduce the regulatory burden on the public. -
National Register Nomination
NPS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service National Register Listed National Register of Historic Places June 23, 2016 Registration Form This form is for use in nominating or requesting determinations for individual properties and districts. See instructions in National Register Bulletin, How to Complete the National Register of Historic Places Registration Form. If any item does not apply to the property being documented, enter "N/A" for "not applicable." For functions, architectural classification, materials, and areas of significance, enter only categories and subcategories from the instructions. Place additional certification comments, entries, and narrative items on continuation sheets if needed (NPS Form 10-900a). 1. Name of Property Historic name Steele, Herbert & Eliza, House Other names/site number KHRI # 171-0000-00001 Name of related Multiple Property Listing N/A 2. Location Street & number West Scott Lake Drive (NE/4,SE/4,SW/4 S12-T16S-R33W) not for publication City or town Scott City X vicinity State Kansas Code KS County Scott Code 171 Zip code 67871 3. State/Federal Agency Certification As the designated authority under the National Historic Preservation Act, as amended, I hereby certify that this x nomination _ request for determination of eligibility meets the documentation standards for registering properties in the National Register of Historic Places and meets the procedural and professional requirements set forth in 36 CFR Part 60. In my opinion, the property x _ meets _ does not meet the National Register Criteria. I recommend that this property be considered significant at the following level(s) of significance: national statewide x local Applicable National Register Criteria: A x B x C ___D See file. -
2008 State Park Annual Report
Parks Division Kansas Department of Wildlife and Parks Annual Report for Calendar Year 2008 and A Plan for 2008 and Beyond Director, Jerry Hover Assistant Director, Linda Lanterman PSA II, Kathy Pritchett May 7, 2009 i Table of Contents INTRODUCTION & MISSION STATEMENT .................................................. 1 OVERVIEW OF DIVISION .............................................................................. 3 HIGHLIGHTS OF 2008 ACHIEVEMENTS ...................................................... 5 Significant Challenges ..................................................................................... 6 Revenue............................................................................................................ 7 Visitation ........................................................................................................ 10 NON-PERMANENT STAFFING ...................................................................... 12 Inmates ........................................................................................................... 12 Camphosts & Gate Vendors .......................................................................... 13 Volunteers ...................................................................................................... 14 AMERICORPS ................................................................................................... 16 FRIENDS GROUPS ........................................................................................... 17 CAPITAL IMPROVEMENTS .......................................................................... -
Regional Goal Action Plans Section
CIMARRON REGIONAL ADVISORY COMMITTEE ACTION PLANS CIMARRON PRIORITY GOAL #1 REDUCE THE RATE OF DECLINE OF THE OGALLALA AQUIFER IN THE REGION THROUGH VOLUNTARY, INCENTIVE-BASED CONSERVATION AS ASSESSED EVERY FIVE YEARS CIMARRON PRIORITY GOAL #2 EXTEND THE USABLE LIFETIME OF THE OGALLALA AQUIFER IN THE REGION THROUGH TECHNOLOGY ADOPTION (IRRIGATION, INDUSTRIAL, MUNICIPAL, ETC.), NEW CROP VARIETIES AND CONSERVATION FOR ALL USES AND FOR MANY GENERATIONS Goals 1 and 2 seek to reduce water use in the region therefore the following actions apply to both ACTION STEPS • Define and quantify the regional aquifer decline, establishing a baseline for comparison • Work with partners, including KDA and NRCS, to develop baseline of water saving technologies in use and voluntary incentive based conservation occurring and a method to track participation. Consider using the annual water reporting system, producer surveys and other means to identify water saving efforts if needed. • Secure funding, including statutory SGF transfer to SWPF, to support water conservation programs and evaluation of technologies, crop varieties and water management to save water. • Provide water users with information on available tools and programs, including but not limited to; LEMAS, WCAs, Multi-Year Flex Accounts, Water Banks, Irrigation Scheduling, RCPP-Soil Probe program through GMDs, K-State Extension tools, K-State Research/farms and additional tools and programs as made available. • Change producer perception from a “use it or lose it” mentality. • Use demonstration projects to educate producers to economically reduce water used. (Water technology farms, LEMAS, WCAs, K-State Research and Extension farm projects and other water management and water efficiency projects can provide valuable examples and information to producers to encourage their participation in water saving efforts.) • GMD3 and DWR work with producers to establish LEMAs and WCAs. -
Kirwin National Wildlife Refuge Fishing Expansion
U. S. FISH AND WILDLIFE SERVICE ENVIRONMENTAL ACTION STATEMENT FOR CATEGORICAL EXCLUSION The Service proposes to expand fishing opportunities (boating regulations changes) on 1,360 acres of the Kirwin National Wildlife Refuge, Kansas in accordance with existing State, local, and Refuge-specific regulations (50 CFR 32.35). Within the spirit and intent of the Council on Environmental Quality's regulations for implementing the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), and other statutes, orders, and policies that protect fish and wildlife resources, I have established the following administrative record and determined that the following proposed action is categorically excluded from NEPA documentation requirements consistent with 40 CFR 1508.4, 43 CFR 46.205, and 516 DM 8.5. The Service has fully satisfied the other requirements for expanding these opportunities on the refuge, including: □X determining that the opportunities are compatible with the purposes for which the refuge was established and the mission of the National Wildlife Refuge System (see attached Compatibility Determination); □X ensuring the opportunities are consistent with existing State, local, and refuge- specific regulations (50 CFR 32.35); *Use of signs and brochures may supplement the refuge-specific regulations □X complying with the National Environmental Policy Act (see attached); □X complying with the Endangered Species Act section 7 evaluation (see attached) OR □ N/A because there are no candidate, threatened or endangered species present; □X complying with the National Historic Preservation Act section 106 consultation; OR □ N/A because there are no cultural or historic resources present; The Service is, therefore, waiving the requirement to prepare an opening package in compliance with Service policy (605 FW 2.9A). -
The Explorer
Issue #97 February 2013 THE EXPLORER The Kansas Explorers Club is created to inspire, educate, and encourage the exploration and appreciation of Kansas...and to have fun doing it! Explorers are urged to look for the rural culture elements in each town — architecture, art, commerce, cuisine, customs, geography, history, and people. Kansas Sampler Foundation, 978 Arapaho Rd., Inman, KS 67546 620.585.2374 kansassampler.org [email protected] / [email protected] KANSAS IS 152! KANSAS DAY WAS JANUARY 29 105 DESTINATION PLACES It was a contentious time. The whole country was watching. Would Kansas come into the union as a IN 105 COUNTIES slave state or free state? The debates between pro-slavery and antislavery forces at Constitution In honor of Kansas Day, this will be an all-across-Kansas Hall in Lecompton were animated and ferocious. newsletter! If your quest is to go to every Kansas county, On January 29, 1861 President James Buchanan here is a starter kit of places that will help you see the signed into law that Kansas would become the 34th broad story of who we are and what we look like. state. We entered as a free state. Allen County: Humboldt’s interpretive signage helps us Learn more at Constitution Hall, 319 Elmore, in realize Kansas’s connection to the Civil War. Start with Lecompton. Open Wednesday-Saturday 9 a.m.- the Civil War monument in the town square. 5 p.m.; Sunday 1-5 p.m. kshs.org/constitution_hall A TIP ON DIGGING IN AS A KANSAS EXPLORER Find iQuest Shirts and a Quest Consider these Kit online at kansassampler.org. -
Kansas Byways INTERPRETIVE PLAN Monument Rocks
2014 Kansas Byways INTERPRETIVE PLAN Monument Rocks 1 Kansas Byways Interpretive Plan - Fermata, Inc. Kansas Byways Interpretive Plan - Fermata, Inc 2 Kansas sunflower 3 Kansas Byways Interpretive Plan - Fermata, Inc. Preface Go West, young man, go West and grow up with the country. --Horace Greeley or most of our early history the U.S. had clung to the Atlantic Coast. Yet F the United States exploded from a population of just fewer than 2 million in 1770 to 38.5 million in 1870. The Battle of Fallen Timbers in western Ohio (1794) removed the last vestiges of Indian opposition to westward immigration. The Louisiana Purchase (1803), followed by the early explorers such as Lewis, Clark, Pike, and Long, opened America’s eyes to the possibilities west of the Appalachian range. President Andrew Jackson’s Indian Removal Act of 1830 finally pushed the eastern tribes west of the Mississippi, and open the door to our western potential. We would cling to the Atlantic no longer. Funded in part by Federal Highway Administration Kansas Byways wayside welcome sign Three events precluded an incremental (and logical) expansion of the U.S. across the settlers from considering the area suitable for Great Plains. Although the Indian Removal Act agriculture. Suddenly California became the successfully forced tribes to the west, the lands destination of choice. where they settled, such as the Kansas territory, were declared out of bounds for settlement. Third, the discovery of gold in California in The barrier didn’t evaporate; the barrier simply 1849 accelerated the rush to the west coast. shifted west of the Mississippi. -
General Fishing Atlas Information
ATLAS COVER Pages FISH 2021.qxp_ATLAS COVER Pages FISH 2/17/21 10:42 AM Page 1 Kansas Fishing Atlas 2021 Public Fishing Access Includes Walk-in Fishing Access (WIFA) Get our mobile app HuntFish KS ATLAS COVER Pages FISH 2021.qxp_ATLAS COVER Pages FISH 2/17/21 10:42 AM Page 2 WIFA Area Rules Walk-in Fishing Access (WIFA), formerly F.I.S.H., sites 6. Avoid stretching fences when crossing them, and use are leased from private landowners and are typically open to fence stiles where available. public fishing from March 1 – Oct. 31, though some proper- ties are open year-round. The WIFA program provides 7. Do not attempt to contact cooperating landowners to ask anglers increased opportunities to enjoy fishing on the state’s about fishing other portions of their land. streams and small impoundments, all that is required is a state fishing license. Funding for the program is provided Regulations governing WIFA area use: through fishing license revenues and Sport Fish Restoration Funds. Please observe all rules and regulations, and remem- • Impounded WIFA waters have a creel limit of two channel ber that common sense and ethical behavior will influence catfish, a creel limit of two largemouth bass, and an 18-inch the future of the program. minimum length limit on largemouth bass. Otherwise, all Kansas fishing regulations and statewide creel limits apply. It’s The following guidelines help maintain a good relation- especially important for anglers using the sites to respect and fol- ship between landowners and anglers: low the rules that apply on WIFA properties. -
Kirwin Lake WRAPS 9 Element Watershed Protection Plan
Kirwin Lake WRAPS 9 Element Watershed Protection Plan Water Quality Impairments Directly Addressed: • Kirwin Lake Eutrophication TMDL (Medium Priority) Other Impairments Which Stand to Benefit from Watershed Plan Implementation: • Kirwin Lake Dissolved Oxygen TMDL (Medium Priority) • Bow Creek Near Stockton Total Phosphorous 303(d) listing • North Fork Solomon River Near Glade Total Phosphorous 303(d) listing • Logan City Lake Eutrophication 303(d) listing Determination of Priority Areas Information collected by the Graham, Norton and Phillips county NRCS offices was used by KSU in a SWAT model to identify priority HUC12s. Because of extremely low soil erosion rates, the SLT requested KDHE verify the SWAT model results. KDHE used the Cropland/Slope Analysis method to verify the SWAT model data. The results confirmed the SWAT results identifying nine HUC12s. This method also identified eleven additional HUC12s as significant potential sediment contributors. The SLT agreed to develop two priority area, Tiers 1 and 2, above Kirwin Lake to focus BMP implementation towards addressing nonpoint source impairment issues. Best Management Practice and Load Reduction Goals Phosphorus Load to Watershed Plan Kirwin Lake Current Meet Kirwin Lake Phosphorus Load Phosphorus Load EU TMDL (143,000 lbs/yr) Reduction Goal (48,400 lbs/yr) (94,600 lbs/yr) BMPs to be implemented in association Watershed Plan Duration and Costs with Watershed Plan: • Total plan length = 30 years • Cropland-related BMPs o Load reduction goal of plan met during year 30 o Permanent vegetation • o Grassed waterways Total plan cost = $25,802,172 Cropland BMP Implementation o No-till cropland production o . $15,638,153 o Terraces Livestock BMP Implementation o Nutrient management o . -
Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks & Tourism
Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks & Tourism Alan Stark Supervisor – Arkansas & Neosho Regions Kansas State Parks Wilson State Park KANSAS OUTDOOR RECREATION ECONOMY •71,000 Direct Jobs •$7.3 Billion in Consumer Spending •$1.8 Billion in Wages & Salaries •$481 Million in State and Local Tax Revenue KANSAS STATE PARKS PARK FEE FUND BALANCE • 2018 Visitation – 6,897,836 $6,000,000 $5,000,000 • Facilities – 463 $4,000,000 FY 2013 $3,000,000 FY • Park Offices – 22 2014 FY 2015 $2,000,000 FY 2016 FY • Miles of Road – 400 $1,000,000 2017 $- • Boat Ramp Lanes - 173 Army Corps of Engineers Bureau of Reclamation • Clinton State Park • Cedar Bluff State Park • Cross Timbers State Park • Cheney State Park • Eisenhower State Park • El Dorado State Park • Glen Elder State Park • Elk City State Park • Lovewell State Park • Fall River State Park • Prairie Dog State Park • Hillsdale State Park • Webster State Park • Kanopolis State Park • Milford State Park • Perry State Park • Pomona State Park • Tuttle Creek State Park • Wilson State Park HAB – Blue Green Algae • Cheney State Park • Glen Elder State Park • Lovewell State Park • Meade State Park • Milford State Park • Prairie Dog State Park • Historic Lake Scott State Park • Webster State Park Effects of Blue Green Algae on Meade State Park Two consecutive years of blooms hurt park visitation and revenue • 2010 Visitation down 15,954 with $16,384.00 lost revenue • 2010 Park shut down to all water activities • 2011 Visitation down 31,525 with $37,247.00 lost revenue • 2011 No swimming and boating discouraged -
Bulletin Published Qu.4Ktekly
BULLETIN PUBLISHED QU.4KTEKLY March, 1992 No. 1 THE WINTER BIRD COUNT FOR 1991 Max (:. Thompson The winter bird count of 1991 will eo down in KOS history as the vear with the largest number of counts ever taken in the state. A record 42 counts were made, 43 it' yo; count one that did not conform to the guidelines. There were only 582 participants but a near record 150 species werr seen. Some species were recorded only during the count week and if they had been put into the counts, there would have been a new record. The highest number ever recorded was 152 in 1990. The highest number of species observed was shared by Ernporia and Manhattan with 83 species each. This could very well be called the "vear of the gull". There were eight species seen, including two gulls new to the count. There were two probable California Gulls seen, one on the Udall-Winfield count and one at the Wilson Reservoir count. There was one probable Black-legged Kittiwake seen at Olathe. Gulls are notoriously hard to identify and sightings without specimens are always open to question. A Pomarine Jaeger seen at Junction City was a first winter count record. Another new species seen on the 1991 count were the five Trumpeter Swans at Webster Reservoir. Unfortunately, four of the five were later shot and killed by persons unknown. Another I'rumpeter Swan was reported from Sawyer. While there were no real surprises in the waterfowl counted, there were some surpris- ing numbers. Blue-winged Teal were present with 18 at Garden City and 400 at Parsons. -
Water in Kansas State Parks
Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks & Tourism Linda S. Lanterman Director Kansas State Parks Wilson State Park KANSAS OUTDOOR RECREATION ECONOMY •71,000 Direct Jobs •$7.3 Billion in Consumer Spending •$1.8 Billion in Wages & Salaries •$481 Million in State and Local Tax Revenue https://outdoorindustry.org/state/kansas/ KANSAS STATE PARKS • 2018 Visitation – 6,897,836 • 2019 Visitation 4,663,132 • Facilities – 463 • Park Offices – 22 • Miles of Paved Road – 534 • 81 Miles Flooded • Boat Ramp Lanes – 173 lanes on 80 Ramps • 62 Boat Ramps were Flooded KANSAS STATE PARKS PARK FEE FUND BALANCE $6,000,000 $5,000,000 $4,000,000 FY 2013 $3,000,000 FY 2014 FY 2015 FY 2016 $2,000,000 FY 2017 FY 2018 FY 2019 $1,000,000 $- Army Corps of Engineers Clinton State Park – KS City Vault Toilet Building Cross Timbers State Park - Tulsa Eisenhower State Park – KS City El Dorado State Park - Tulsa Elk City State Park - Tulsa Fall River State Park - Tulsa Hillsdale State Park – KS City Kanopolis State Park – KS City Milford State Park – KS City Perry State Park – KS City Pomona State Park – KS City Tuttle Creek State Park – KS City Wilson State Park – KS City Flood Control/Water Supply Bureau of Reclamation KDWPT • Cedar Bluff State Park - NE • Crawford State Park • Cheney State Park - OK • Flint Hills Trail State Park • Glen Elder State Park - NE • Historic Lake Scott State Park • Lovewell State Park - NE • Kaw River State Park • Prairie Dog State Park - NE • Little Jerusalem Badlands State Park • Webster State Park - NE • Meade State Park • Mushroom Rock