Vale District
Permanent URI for this collection
Browse
Browsing Vale District by Subject "Right of way -- Oregon -- Vale Region"
Now showing 1 - 6 of 6
Results Per Page
Sort Options
Item Open Access Kleinhoff Old Auburn Road right-of-way environmental assessment(2008-08-11) United States. Bureau of Land Management. Vale DistrictThe proposed action is to grant the applicant a right-of-way authorizing him the right to construct, operate, maintain, and terminate a road across public land. The requested right-of-way width is 40 feet and the length is approximately 710 feet, encumbering 0.65 acres, more or less. Approximately 552 feet of the existing road would continued to be used, however approximately 165 feet would be abandoned and about 158 feet of new road would be constructed.Item Open Access Lime wind energy project environmental assessment and finding of no significant impact(2008-10-20) United States. Bureau of Land Management. Vale DistrictProposes to issue the applicant, Joseph Millworks Inc. of Baker City Oregon, a right-of-way (ROW) grant authorizing the right to install, operate, and maintain a wind development project on public lands. This ROW will include twelve wind turbines, six transformers, two electrical collectors, access roads, buried utility corridor and electrical line extension.Item Open Access Ontario to Quartz transmission line project environmental assessment(2007-08) United States. Bureau of Land Management. Vale DistrictThe Proposed Action would be to amend the current ROW OR-01469 to recognize and authorize the Ontario-Huntington portion of the transmission line under Title V of the Federal Land Policy and Management Act of 1976 as amended (43 USC 1761) and the regulations found in 43 CFR 2800. This portion of the line is approximately 6.2 miles in length, 100 feet wide, encumbering approximately 75.14 acres of public land. With the amendment the entire length of the Ontario to Quartz line would be 13.13 miles in length, 100 feet wide, encumbering 159.17 acres, more or less. Further, the Proposed Action would amend ROW OR-01469 to allow IPC to grade a portion of an existing road and establish three new short service roads to access the existing 138 kV transmission line from Ontario to the Quartz Junction Substation (line 423). This work would improve access to five structures. The ROW grant would also authorize future O&M activities on the new service roads that would be created outside the current 100-ft ROW.Item Open Access South Fork Walla Walla landowner access decision record(2007) United States. Bureau of Land Management. Vale DistrictAnnounces decision to select the No Action alternative plus that portion of Alternative 1A, which implements NOAA Fisheries Conservation Recommendation #2 by building two small bridges over two pools located in the roadway.Item Open Access South Fork Walla Walla landowner access environmental assessment(2006-08-04) United States. Bureau of Land Management. Vale DistrictProposed preferred alternative would allow the landowners to access their private land via a full-size vehicle using stream crossings for a five-month period from July 1 to August 15 and September 15 to January 1 each year. It would follow the same annual process of the BLM providing written permission after the steelhead, Chinook salmon and bull trout redds are monitored for emergence and dispersal of the fry. According to one of the landowners, use is estimated to be a combined total of approximately 90 landowner trips per year, (an average of 15 round trips a month for the six months, or of three round-trips a month per each of the five cabin families), (personal communication, John Ehart, June 28, 2006). This is an increase over the current estimate of 30 round-trips per year via full-size vehicle.Item Open Access South Fork Walla Walla landowner access finding of no significant impact(2007-04-27) United States. Bureau of Land Management. Vale DistrictFinds no further environmental study is needed for project allowing landowners to access their private land via a full-size vehicle using stream crossings for a five-month period from July 1 to August 15 and September 15 to January 1 each year. It would follow the same annual process of the BLM providing written permission after the steelhead, Chinook salmon and bull trout redds are monitored for emergence and dispersal of the fry. According to one of the landowners, use is estimated to be a combined total of approximately 90 landowner trips per year, (an average of 15 round trips a month for the six months, or of three round-trips a month per each of the five cabin families), (personal communication, John Ehart, June 28, 2006). This is an increase over the current estimate of 30 round-trips per year via full-size vehicle.