As part of the HSSCC’s effort to increase access for America’s sportsmen and women, the HSSCC encouraged DOI to support the development of a BLM Public Lands Access Geodatabase. If developed and implemented, the project would support creating a fully integrated, digitized nationwide mapping platform that can assist the agency with its land management planning efforts. Currently, the quality and type of mapping resources used by BLM planners at the field-level vary greatly, which can negatively impact the ability to identify and address recreational access issues through regular, periodic planning processes.
In its recommendations to the BLM, the HSSCC also noted that development of an Access Geodatabase has the potential to help provide access to isolated or “landlocked” parcels of federal public land. Recent estimates suggest there are 9.5 million acres of such lands across the West with recreational access being limited or nonexistent due to a lack of legal or practical access. Identifying solutions to this problem is a longstanding CSF priority associated with the Making Public Lands Public access initiative.
The HSSCC also submitted a formal request for an update on implementation of Secretarial Order 3356 - specifically the status of a provision directing Interior agencies to develop a categorical exclusion for projects that use standard conservation practices to restore habitat for sage grouse and/or mule deer. Categorical exclusions are defined as categories of actions that have been determined to have “no significant individual or cumulative effect on the quality of the human environment” in the context of federal environmental review requirements.
In its letter, the HSSCC noted that development of a sage brush habitat categorical exclusion “will make it easier for land managers and wildlife organizations to work jointly to support healthy landscapes and recover important habitats for sage-grouse and mule deer populations.”