Cisa Review Questions Answers
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History: The DEQ and FDA are collaborating with other environmental programs to further develop all programs to allow following workflow path: Preliminary review by the National Park Service (NPS) and the Forest Service for inclusion of additional NEPA documentation for record, Request for Initial Review (RIR) from the DEQ, Review and Approval of the proposal by the NPS, FDA, and the DEQ, and Federal Register publication of the final RIR. A two-year programmatic agreement was also executed between the DEQ and NPS that will allow the NPS to retain ownership of the historical properties on which the EIS will be produced. The specific proposal at issue is an amendment to the existing Pathways 161 permit (See Exhibit A for a map of the area). The proposed project includes construction of two piers on Lake Barkley near the Lake Barkley State Park boundary. The project is intended to provide construction and operating equipment for a US Navy and US Army Corps of Engineers project that is currently underway to modify the dam on Lake Barkley to allow the temporary storage and transfer of larger amounts of water, and will result in the flooding of approximately 1000 acres of uplands along the Lower Cumberland River, a tributary to the Ohio River, to provide for the construction and maintenance of the piers.
Ms. Chancellor is an assistant area wildlife biologist for the DEQ DoD, where she works with United States Forest Service to manage the mule deer herd on public land in order to protect the mule deer population and its habitat. She has a background of acorn research and deer habitat management and is currently involved with the mule deer herd management project in Barkley National Park.
The history of black bears in Kentucky is spotty. There are confirmatory records for most of the historic range of the black bear in Kentucky (see Appendix A for a summary). In general, the species was absent from Kentucky until the mid to late 1800s. The earliest record of a bear taken in Kentucky was in Clark County in 1832 (Kentucky State Museum); the bear was taken with a trap in a tree hole, near present-day Lexington. There is also some evidence from the early 1900s that bears were seen in northern McCreary, Menifee and Leslie counties in the 1930s. d2c66b5586