BLM seeks public input on proposed expansion of the Navy’s Fallon Range Training Complex

Organization

Bureau of Land Management

BLM Office:

Carson City District Office

Media Contact:

CARSON CITY, Nevada – The Bureau of Land Management is seeking public comment on two proposed withdrawal actions through two notices in the Federal Register related to a proposed expansion by the Department of the Navy of the Fallon Range Training Complex (Fallon Range).  Public comments will help identify issues to be addressed in the BLM’s environmental assessment (EA) and the larger analysis effort being conducted by the Navy in association with their request for Congress to withdraw 769,724.34 acres of public lands in Churchill, Lyon, Mineral, Nye, and Pershing Counties, Nevada in aid of the expansion of the Fallon Range.   

In July 2016, the Navy submitted an application to the BLM requesting that Congress expand the area currently withdrawn and reserved for military purposes at the Fallon Range.  The 2016 application proposed withdrawing 678,670.69 acres of public land near the training complex.  The Navy subsequently amended the original application by proposing an additional 92,482.45 acres of public land for withdrawal, 1,001 acres of non-federally owned lands for withdrawal if they ever entered Federal ownership, and cancellation and removal of 2,429.80 acres from the 2016 withdrawal request, bringing the total area proposed for withdrawal to 769,724.34.  Separately, the Navy has also applied for renewal of the area’s existing 223,557-acre withdrawal and reservation under the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2000.

The Fallon Range Training Complex is the premier range for training in naval aviation strike warfare.  Strike warfare consists of using naval operations to destroy or neutralize enemy targets ashore. The evolution of modern combat systems has increased the need for larger areas to accommodate the tactical ranges that the Navy has determined are necessary to meet combat training requirements. All deploying naval strike aviation units train at Fallon Range before deployment.  According to the Navy, today’s advanced weapons systems already exceed the Navy’s ability to train realistically at the 223,557-acre Fallon Range while also maintaining public safety.

While the decision whether to expand the footprint of the Fallon Range rests with Congress, public comments on issues that should be addressed in the environmental analyses and on the amended withdrawal application will help the BLM and the Navy move forward with the development of this proposal.  Public input will be taken into consideration as the BLM and the Navy evaluate how the withdrawal could potentially affect other public land uses like mining, geothermal energy development, grazing, and recreation.  Public comments will also help inform Congress. 

With today’s publication of the notice of the Navy’s amended application in the Federal Register a total of 92,482.45 acres of public land will be segregated from all forms of appropriation under the public land laws, including those governing mining, mineral leasing, and geothermal leasing.  This segregation will be subject to valid existing rights for two years unless the withdrawal application is denied or canceled, or Congress approves the Navy’s withdrawal application for these lands, and the lands originally applied for in 2016, prior to that date.  The lands that are the subject of the notice of the Secretary of the Interior’s proposed withdrawal, also published today, are already segregated because of the publication of the Navy’s withdrawal application in 2016, and today’s amendment, and will remain segregated unless that withdrawal application is denied or canceled, or Congress approves the Navy’s application, as amended, or the Secretary approves the withdrawal he is proposing for up to four years in order to assist in the evaluation process.  Licenses, permits, cooperative agreements, or discretionary land use authorizations may be allowed during the period of segregation, but only with the approval of the BLM’s authorized officer and, as appropriate, with the concurrence of the Navy. 

Publication of the notices in the Federal Register also initiates a 90-day public comment period.  Comments on the Navy’s amended withdrawal application, and the Secretary of the Interior’s proposed withdrawal, including potential environmental consequences of each, should be received on or before August 2, 2018.  The BLM’s EA and associated documents are located at the project website https://go.usa.gov/xQXTw

Comments may be submitted using any of the following methods:

·                     E-mail:  BLM_NV_FRTC@blm.gov

·                     Fax:  (775) 885-6147

·                     Mail:  BLM Carson City District, Attn: NAS Fallon FRTC, 5665 Morgan Mill Road, Carson City, NV 89701

Before including your address, phone number, email address, or other personally identifiable information in your comment, please be aware that your entire comment including your personally identifiable information may be publicly available at any time.  While you can ask the BLM to withhold your personally identifiable information from public review, we cannot guarantee that we will be able to do so.

A public meeting will be held on June 19, 2018, from 5-7 p.m., at the Fallon Convention Center, 100 Campus Way in Fallon.  The meeting will provide the public with an opportunity to better understand the decision-making processes associated with public land withdrawals, in general, as well as the potential withdrawals discussed in these Notices.

The Federal Register Notices are also available for review on the BLM-Nevada web page at: https://www.blm.gov/media/federal-register  

For further project specific information, please contact Project Manager Colleen Dingman at (775) 885-6168 or cjdingman@blm.gov.

 

 


The BLM manages more than 245 million acres of public land located primarily in 12 western states, including Alaska, on behalf of the American people. The BLM also administers 700 million acres of sub-surface mineral estate throughout the nation. Our mission is to sustain the health, diversity, and productivity of America’s public lands for the use and enjoyment of present and future generations.