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Code · REGISTER · 2002-01-09 · PROPOSED RULES · Unknown

Unknown. Interim rule and request for comments

4,608 words·~21 min read·/register/2002/01/09/02-455·

A research copy — for the controlling text, always check the official state or federal source. Not legal advice.

--- schema: federal-register doc_type: fedreg source_file: FR-2002-01-09.xml --- 67 6 Wednesday, January 9, 2002 Contents Agriculture Agriculture Department See Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service NOTICES Committees; establishment, renewal, termination, etc.: National Agricultural Research, Extension, Education, and Economics Advisory Board, 1188 02-452 Animal Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service RULES Exportation and importation of animals and animal products: Foot-and-mouth disease; disease status change— Netherlands and Northern Ireland, 1072-1074 02-454 Overtime services relating to imports and exports:
Commuted traveltime allowances, 1070-1072 02-453 Plant-related quarantine, domestic: Fire ant, imported, 1067-1070 02-455 Census Census Bureau NOTICES Surveys, determinations, etc.: Retail trade; annual, 1188-1189 02-507 Trade; annual, 1189 02-506 Coast Guard Coast Guard RULES Drawbridge operations: Iowa and Illinois, 02-503 1095-1097 02-504 Ports and waterways safety: Fore River bridge repairs, Weymouth, MA; safety zone, 1099-1101 02-505 Port Hueneme Harbor, CA; security zone, 1097-1099 02-502 Ports of Palm Beach, Everglades, Miami, and Key West, FL; security zones, 1101-1102 02-546 PROPOSED RULES Regattas and marine parades:
Western Branch, Elizabeth River, VA; marine events, 1177-1179 02-545 NOTICES Agency information collection activities: Proposed collection; comment request, 1260-1261 02-547 Environmental statements; availability, etc.: Coast Guard Museum relocation; gift of land in New London, CT; acceptance; comment request, 1261 02-548 Meetings: Towing Safety Advisory Committee, 1261-1262 02-544 Commerce Commerce Department See Census Bureau See Export Administration Bureau See National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Commission of Fine Commission of Fine Arts NOTICES Meetings, 1202 02-493 CITA Committee for the Implementation of Textile Agreements NOTICES Special access and special regime programs:
Participation denial— Olympic Mills Corp., 1202 02-509 Defense Defense Department See Navy Department Education Education Department NOTICES Agency information collection activities: Proposed collection; comment request, 1202-1203 02-459 Submission for OMB review; comment request, 1203-1204 02-460 02-461 Employment Employment and Training Administration NOTICES Grants and cooperative agreements; availability, etc.: Quality Child Care Initiative, 1228-1234 02-495 Workforce Investment Act— Migrant and Seasonal Farmworker Youth Program, 1235-1242 02-494 Energy Energy Department See Federal Energy Regulatory Commission NOTICES Grants and cooperative agreements; availability, etc.:
Atmospheric Radiation Measurement Program, 1204-1206 02-500 Natural and Accelerated Bioremediation Research Program, 1206-1211 02-501 EPA Environmental Protection Agency RULES Pesticides; tolerances in food, animal feeds, and raw agricultural commodities: Indian meal moth granulosis virus, 1102-1107 02-223 PROPOSED RULES Toxic substances: Significant new uses— Burkholeria cepacia complex, 1179-1186 02-513 NOTICES Integrated risk information system: Health effects of chronic exposure to chemical substances; information request, 1212-1215 02-511 Meetings:
Clean Air Act Advisory Committee, 1215 02-510 Pesticide registration, cancellation, etc.: Value Gardens Supply, LLC, et al., 1215-1217 02-412 MISSING FOR: Export Administration Bureau Export Administration Bureau NOTICES Meetings: Materials Technical Advisory Committee, 1189-1190 02-519 Farm Farm Credit Administration NOTICES Meetings; Sunshine Act, 1217 02-638 FAA Federal Aviation Administration PROPOSED RULES Airworthiness directives: Boeing, 1167-1169 02-457 McDonnell Douglas, 1165-1171 02-456 02-458 NOTICES Airport noise compatibility program:
Noise exposure maps— Boca Raton Airport, FL, 1262-1263 02-491 Meetings: RTCA, Inc., 02-486 1263-1265 02-487 02-488 02-489 Federal Energy Federal Energy Regulatory Commission NOTICES *Applications, hearings, determinations, etc.:* Columbia Gas Transmission Corp., 1211 02-465 Columbia Gulf Transmission Co., 1211-1212 02-466 Copiah County Storage Co., 1212 02-463 UtiliGroup, Inc., 1212 02-464 Federal Highway Federal Highway Administration NOTICES Environmental statements; notice of intent:
Montgomery and Harris Counties, TX; North-Hardy Corridor, 1268-1270 02-556 FMC Federal Maritime Commission NOTICES Agreements; additional information requests: Hanjin/SinoTrans Cross Space Charter and Sailing Agreement, 1217 02-560 Agreements filed, etc., 1217 02-564 Ocean transportation intermediary licenses: Archer International, Inc., et al., 1217-1218 02-563 Capital Freight Management et al., 1218 02-562 Grace Lines, Inc., et al., 1218-1219 02-561 Federal Railroad Federal Railroad Administration RULES Alcohol and drug testing; minimum random testing rates determination Correction, 1116 02-559 Federal Transit Federal Transit Administration NOTICES Environmental statements; notice of intent:
Harris County, TX; Southeast-Universities-Hobby Corridor, 1265-1266 02-558 Harris County, TX; Uptown-West Loop Corridor, 1266-1268 02-557 Montgomery and Harris Counties, TX; North-Hardy Corridor, 1268-1270 02-556 Fine Arts Fine Arts Commission See Commission of Fine Arts Fish Fish and Wildlife Service NOTICES Environmental statements; availability, etc.: Double-crested cormorant management, 1226-1227 02-531 Food Food and Drug Administration NOTICES Biological product licenses:
Beauregard Plasma, Inc., et al.; hearing on proposal to revoke, 1223 02-483 Reports and guidance documents; availability, etc.: Food security, 1224-1225 02-542 Structure/function claims; small entity compliance guide, 1225 02-451 Health Health and Human Services Department See Food and Drug Administration See National Institutes of Health NOTICES Grants and cooperative agreements; availability, etc.: Adolescent Family Life Demonstration Projects Program, 1219-1222 02-517 Meetings:
National Human Research Protections Advisory Committee, 1222 02-516 Immigration Immigration and Naturalization Service NOTICES Meetings: Airport and Seaport Inspections User Fee Federal Advisory Committee, 1227-1228 02-508 Interior Interior Department See Fish and Wildlife Service See Minerals Management Service See National Indian Gaming Commission See Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement Office IRS Internal Revenue Service RULES Income taxes: Dollar-value last-in, first-out
(LIFO)regulations; inventory price index computation method, 1075-1095 02-184 Judicial Judicial Conference of the United States NOTICES Meetings: Judicial Conference Advisory Committee on— Civil Procedure Rules, 1227 02-479 Evidence Rules, 1227 02-478 Justice Justice Department See Immigration and Naturalization Service Labor Labor Department See Employment and Training Administration See Pension and Welfare Benefits Administration Legal Legal Services Corporation NOTICES Grants and cooperative agreements; availability, etc.: State Justice Community Evaluation Instrument design, 1247 02-520 Minerals Minerals Management Service PROPOSED RULES Outer Continental Shelf; oil, gas, and sulphur operations: Exploration under salt sheets; operations suspension, 1171-1173 02-521 National Highway National Highway Traffic Safety Administration NOTICES Motor vehicle safety standards; exemption petitions, etc.: Toyota Motor Corp., 1270-1271 02-555 National Indian National Indian Gaming Commission RULES Federal claims collection, 1273-1274 02-676 NIH National Institutes of Health NOTICES Meetings: National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, 1225-1226 02-476 02-477 NOAA National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration RULES Endangered and threatened species: West Coast salmonids; four evolutionarily significant units; take, 1116-1133 02-440 Fishery conservation and management: Alaska; fisheries of Exclusive Economic Zone— Pacific halibut and red king crab, 1160-1163 02-552 Salmon; overfishing definitions, 1163-1164 02-554 Marine mammals: Incidental taking— Atlantic Large Whale Take Reduction Plan, 1133-1160 02-272 02-274 PROPOSED RULES Fishery conservation and management: West Coast States and Western Pacific fisheries— Pacific Fishery Management Council; meetings and hearings, 1186-1187 02-551 NOTICES Grants and cooperative agreements; availability, etc.: National Sea Grant College Program, 1190-1201 02-514 02-515 Meetings: New England Fishery Management Council, 1201 02-550 Pacific Fishery Management Council, 1201-1202 02-553 Navy Navy Department NOTICES Patent licenses; non-exclusive, exclusive, or partially exclusive: Dodenhoff, Tracey A., 1202 02-518 Nuclear Nuclear Regulatory Commission NOTICES Environmental statements; availability, etc.: Virginia Electric & Power Co., 1248-1249 02-498 *Applications, hearings, determinations, etc.:* International Uranium
(USA)Corp., 1247-1248 02-496 Portland General Electric Co., 1248 02-497 Ocean Ocean Policy Commission NOTICES Meetings, 1249 02-484 Pension Pension and Welfare Benefits Administration NOTICES Employee benefit plans; prohibited transaction exemptions: Key Trust Co. of Ohio et al., 1242-1247 02-549 Public Public Health Service See Food and Drug Administration See National Institutes of Health Research Research and Special Programs Administration RULES Pipeline safety: Hazardous liquid transportation— Gas transmission pipelines; integrity management in high consequence areas, 1108-1115 02-543 SEC Securities and Exchange Commission NOTICES Agency information collection activities: Proposed collection; comment request, 1249-1250 02-527 Submission for OMB review; comment request, 02-526 1250-1251 02-528 Investment Company Act of 1940: Exemption applications— Longview Management Group LLC, 1251-1252 02-525 Order applications— American Balanced Fund, Inc., et al., 1252-1254 02-524 Self-regulatory organizations; proposed rule changes: Depository Trust Co., 1254-1255 02-522 National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc., 1255-1259 02-523 02-530 Stock Clearing Corp. of Philadelphia, 1259-1260 02-529 State State Department RULES International Traffic in Arms regulations: Tajikistan and Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (Serbia and Montenegro); removal from proscribed destinations list, 1074-1075 02-115 Surface Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement Office PROPOSED RULES Permanent program and abandoned mine land reclamation plan submissions: New Mexico, 1173-1177 02-481 NOTICES Agency information collection activities: Proposed collection; comment request, 1227 02-480 Surface Surface Transportation Board NOTICES Railroad operation, acquisition, construction, etc.: Indiana Harbor Belt Railroad Co., 1272 02-413 Textile Textile Agreements Implementation Committee See Committee for the Implementation of Textile Agreements Transportation Transportation Department See Coast Guard See Federal Aviation Administration See Federal Highway Administration See Federal Railroad Administration See Federal Transit Administration See National Highway Traffic Safety Administration See Research and Special Programs Administration See Surface Transportation Board Treasury Treasury Department See Internal Revenue Service Separate Parts In This Issue Part II National Indian Gaming Commission, 1273-1274 02-676 Reader Aids Consult the Reader Aids section at the end of this issue for phone numbers, online resources, finding aids, reminders, and notice of recently enacted public laws. To subscribe to the Federal Register Table of Contents LISTSERV electronic mailing list, go to http://listserv.access.gpo.gov and select Online mailing list archives, FEDREGTOC-L, Join or leave the list (or change settings); then follow the instructions. 67 6 Wednesday, January 9, 2002 Rules and Regulations DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service 7 CFR Part 301 [Docket No. 01-081-1] Imported Fire Ant; Addition to Quarantined Areas AGENCY: Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, USDA. ACTION: Interim rule and request for comments. SUMMARY: We are amending the imported fire ant regulations by designating as quarantined areas all or portions of five counties in Arkansas, three counties in Georgia, eight counties in North Carolina, and four counties in Tennessee. As a result of this action, the interstate movement of regulated articles from those areas will be restricted. This action is necessary to prevent the artificial spread of the imported fire ant to noninfested areas of the United States. DATES: This interim rule was effective January 2, 2002. We invite you to comment on this docket. We will consider all comments we receive that are postmarked, delivered, or e-mailed by March 11, 2002. ADDRESSES: You may submit comments by postal mail/commercial delivery or by e-mail. If you use postal mail/commercial delivery, please send four copies of your comment (an original and three copies) to: Docket No. 01-081-1, Regulatory Analysis and Development, PPD, APHIS, Station 3C71, 4700 River Road Unit 118, Riverdale, MD 20737-1238. Please state that your comment refers to Docket No. 01-081-1. If you use e-mail, address your comment to regulations@aphis.usda.gov. Your comment must be contained in the body of your message; do not send attached files. Please include your name and address in your message and “Docket No. 01-081-1” on the subject line. You may read any comments that we receive on this docket in our reading room. The reading room is located in room 1141 of the USDA South Building, 14th Street and Independence Avenue SW., Washington, DC. Normal reading room hours are 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday, except holidays. To be sure someone is there to help you, please call
(202)690-2817 before coming. APHIS documents published in the **Federal Register** , and related information, including the names of organizations and individuals who have commented on APHIS dockets, are available on the Internet at *http://www.aphis.usda.gov/ppd/rad/webrepor.html.* FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr. Charles L. Brown, Program Manager, Invasive Species and Pest Management, PPQ, APHIS, 4700 River Road Unit 134, Riverdale, MD 20737-1236;
(301)734-4838. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Background The imported fire ant regulations (contained in 7 CFR 301.81 through 301.81-10 and referred to below as the regulations) quarantine infested States or infested areas within States and restrict the interstate movement of regulated articles to prevent the artificial spread of the imported fire ant. The imported fire ant, *Solenopsis invicta* Buren and *Solenopsis richteri* Forel, is an aggressive, stinging insect that, in large numbers, can seriously injure and even kill livestock, pets, and humans. The imported fire ant, which is not native to the United States, feeds on crops and builds large, hard mounds that damage farm and field machinery. The regulations are intended to prevent the imported fire ant from spreading throughout its ecological range within the country. The regulations in § 301.81-3 provide that the Administrator of the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) will list as a quarantined area each State, or each portion of a State, that is infested with the imported fire ant. The Administrator will designate less than an entire State as a quarantined area only under the following conditions:
(1)The State has adopted and is enforcing restrictions on the intrastate movement of the regulated articles listed in § 301.81-2 that are equivalent to the interstate movement restrictions imposed by the regulations; and
(2)designating less than the entire State will prevent the spread of the imported fire ant. The Administrator may include uninfested acreage within a quarantined area due to its proximity to an infestation or its inseparability from an infested locality for quarantine purposes. In § 301.81-3, paragraph
(e)lists quarantined areas. We are amending § 301.81-3(e) by: • Adding portions of Faulkner and Polk Counties, AR, to the list of quarantined areas and changing the status of Grant, Hempstead, and Nevada Counties, AR, from partially to completely infested; • Adding Rabun, Towns, and Union Counties, GA, to the list of quarantined areas (these three counties were the last remaining uninfested counties in Georgia, thus the entire State is now designated as a quarantined area); • Adding portions of Harnett, Hertford, Johnston and Nash Counties, NC, and all of Lee County, NC, to the list of quarantined areas, changing the status of Moore and Sampson Counties, NC, from partially to completely infested, and revising the quarantine boundaries in Wake County, NC, to incorporate additional infested areas; and • Changing the status of Henderson County, TN, from partially to completely infested and revising the quarantine boundaries in Franklin, Maury, and Moore Counties, TN, to incorporate additional infested areas. We are taking these actions because recent surveys conducted by APHIS and State and county agencies revealed that the imported fire ant has spread to these areas. See the rule portion of this document for specific descriptions of the new and revised quarantined areas. In addition to the changes to the quarantined areas described above, we are correcting the listing for Hot Spring County, AR, in § 301.81-3(e). That county is currently listed incorrectly as Hot Springs County. Emergency Action This rulemaking is necessary on an emergency basis to prevent the spread of imported fire ant into noninfested areas of the United States. Under these circumstances, the Administrator has determined that prior notice and opportunity for public comment are contrary to the public interest and that there is good cause under 5 U.S.C. 553 for making this rule effective less than 30 days after publication in the **Federal Register** . We will consider comments we receive during the comment period for this interim rule (see DATES above). After the comment period closes, we will publish another document in the **Federal Register** . The document will include a discussion of any comments we receive and any amendments we are making to the rule as a result of the comments. Executive Order 12866 and Regulatory Flexibility Act This rule has been reviewed under Executive Order 12866. For this action, the Office of Management and Budget has waived its review process required by Executive Order 12866. This interim rule is necessary because infestations of imported fire ant have been discovered in additional areas of Arkansas, Georgia, North Carolina, and Tennessee. This action will establish quarantined areas in 10 new counties and revise the boundaries of the quarantined areas in 10 other counties in those States. As a result of this action, the interstate movement of regulated articles from those areas is restricted. This action is necessary to prevent the artificial spread of the imported fire ant into noninfested areas of the United States. The following analysis addresses the economic effects of this rule and the impact on small entities as required by the Regulatory Flexibility Act. According to the 1997 Census of Agriculture, the market value of agricultural products sold in the 20 counties that are subject of this rule was more than $2.171 billion. During 1997, the value of sales from nursery and greenhouse crops in these 20 counties was at least $36.5 million. The five counties in Arkansas had $300.35 million in agricultural product sales, the three counties in Georgia had $30.96 million in agricultural product sales, the eight counties in North Carolina had $1.44 billion in agricultural product sales, and the four counties in Tennessee had $117.45 million in agricultural product sales. In 1997, the eight counties in North Carolina had 51 percent of the value of their agricultural sales attributed to crops (including nursery and greenhouse crops), with the remaining 49 percent attributed to livestock. The four counties in Tennessee had 28 percent of the value of their agricultural sales attributed to crops (including nursery and greenhouse crops), with the remaining 72 percent attributed to livestock. In two of the three Georgia counties, 17 percent of the value of agricultural sales was attributed to crops (including nursery and greenhouse crops), with the remaining 83 percent of that value attributed to livestock. (The relative contributions of crops and livestock to the value of agricultural sales in the third Georgia county could not be determined, as those figures were withheld from the 1997 Census of Agriculture to avoid disclosing data for individual farms.) The five counties in Arkansas had only 5 percent of the value of their agricultural sales attributed to crops, with the remaining 95 percent of the value attributed to livestock. These data indicate that there is a large agricultural economy at risk due to the potential for the imported fire ant to damage crops and injure or kill livestock. Small entities potentially affected by this rule include nurseries, greenhouses, farm equipment dealers, construction companies, and companies that sell, process, or move regulated articles interstate from and through the quarantined areas. According to the Small Business Administration (SBA), Office of Advocacy, regulations create economic disparities when they have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities. The SBA defines a small agricultural producer as one that generates less than $750,000 of annual sales; to be considered small by the SBA definition, an equipment dealer or agricultural service company must generate less than $5 million of annual sales. In the four Tennessee counties, there were at least 94 entities that could be potentially affected by the changes in regulations. In 1997, these four counties received $32.5 million from crop sales, including greenhouse and nursery sales. In the three Georgia counties, there were at least 27 entities that could be potentially affected by the changes in regulations. In 1997, these three counties received at least $2.5 million from crop sales, including greenhouse and nursery sales. In the five Arkansas counties, there were at least 22 entities that could be potentially affected by the changes in regulations. In 1997, these five counties received $8.2 million from crop sales, including greenhouse and nursery sales. In the eight North Carolina counties, there were at least 265 entities that could be potentially affected by the changes in regulations. In 1997, these eight counties received $446.5 million from crop sales, including greenhouse and nursery sales. In summary, there are at least 408 small entities potentially affected by the imported fire ant quarantine in the 20 counties. However, the number of these small entities that will be affected by this rule and the extent to which they are affected depend on the proportion of their sales outside the imported fire ant quarantined areas. The adverse economic effects on these entities can be substantially minimized by the availability of various treatments that will permit the movement of regulated articles with only a small additional cost. The estimated annual cost of imposing a quarantine on these counties is very small in comparison to the benefit gained through agricultural sales. For example, the value of a “standard” sized tractor-trailer load of nursery plants ranges from $10,000 to $250,000. The treatment cost for this “standard” shipment of plants is only around $200. An average treatment cost, then, is between 2 percent and 0.8 percent per standard plant shipment. In contrast to the potential losses associated with an imported fire ant infestation, these treatment costs are not significant. Under these circumstances, the Administrator of the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service has determined that this action will not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities. Executive Order 12372 This program/activity is listed in the Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance under No. 10.025 and is subject to Executive Order 12372, which requires intergovernmental consultation with State and local officials. (See 7 CFR part 3015, subpart V.) Executive Order 12988 This interim rule has been reviewed under Executive Order 12988, Civil Justice Reform. This rule:
(1)Preempts all State and local laws and regulations that are inconsistent with this rule;
(2)has no retroactive effect; and
(3)does not require administrative proceedings before parties may file suit in court challenging this rule. National Environmental Policy Act An environmental assessment and finding of no significant impact have been prepared for this program. The assessment provides a basis for the conclusion that the methods employed to prevent the spread of the imported fire ant will not have a significant impact on the quality of the human environment. Based on the finding of no significant impact, the Administrator of the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service has determined that an environmental impact statement need not be prepared. The environmental assessment and finding of no significant impact were prepared in accordance with:
(1)The National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (NEPA), as amended (42 U.S.C. 4321 *et seq.* ),
(2)regulations of the Council on Environmental Quality for implementing the procedural provisions of NEPA (40 CFR parts 1500-1508),
(3)USDA regulations implementing NEPA (7 CFR part 1b), and
(4)APHIS' NEPA Implementing Procedures (7 CFR part 372). Copies of the environmental assessment and finding of no significant impact are available for public inspection at USDA, room 1141, South Building, 14th Street and Independence Avenue SW., Washington, DC, between 8 a.m. and 4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday, except holidays. Persons wishing to inspect copies are requested to call ahead on
(202)690-2817 to facilitate entry into the reading room. In addition, copies may be obtained by writing to the individual listed under FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT . Paperwork Reduction Act This final rule contains no information collection or recordkeeping requirements under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501 *et seq.* ). List of Subjects in 7 CFR Part 301 Agricultural commodities, Plant diseases and pests, Quarantine, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Transportation. Accordingly, we are amending 7 CFR part 301 as follows: PART 301—DOMESTIC QUARANTINE NOTICES 1. The authority citation for part 301 continues to read as follows: Authority: 7 U.S.C. 166, 7711, 7712, 7714, 7731, 7735, 7751, 7752, 7753, and 7754; 7 CFR 2.22, 2.80, and 371.3. Section 301.75-15 also issued under Sec. 204, Title II, Pub. L. 106-113, 113 Stat. 1501A-293; sections 301.75-15 and 301.75-16 also issued under Sec. 203, Title II, Pub. L. 106-224, 114 Stat. 400 (7 U.S.C. 1421 note). 2. In § 301.81-3, paragraph
(e)is amended as follows: a. Under the heading Arkansas, by adding, in alphabetical order, new entries for Faulkner and Polk Counties; by revising the entries for Grant, Hempstead, and Nevada Counties; and, in the entry for Hot Springs County, by removing the word “Springs” and adding the word “Spring” in its place. b. Under the heading Georgia, by removing the individual county entries and adding a single entry for the entire State. c. Under the heading North Carolina, by adding, in alphabetical order, new entries for Harnett, Hertford, Johnston, Lee, and Nash Counties and by revising the entries for Moore, Sampson, and Wake Counties. d. Under the heading Tennessee, by revising the entries for Franklin, Henderson, Maury, and Moore Counties. § 301.81-3 Quarantined areas.
(e)* * * Arkansas *Faulkner County.* That portion of the county lying south of a line beginning at the intersection of Interstate 40 and the Faulkner/Conway County line; then southeast on Interstate 40 to U.S. Highway 64; then east on U.S. Highway 64 to the Faulkner/White County line. *Grant County.* The entire county. *Hempstead County.* The entire county. *Nevada County.* The entire county. *Polk County.* That portion of the county lying south of a line beginning at the intersection of State Highway 4 and the Oklahoma/Arkansas border; then east on State Highway 4 to U.S. Highway 71; then south on U.S. Highway 71 to State Highway 246; then east on State Highway 246 to the Polk/Howard County line. Georgia The entire State. North Carolina *Harnett County.* That portion of the county lying south of a line beginning at the intersection of U.S. Highway 421 and the Harnett/Lee County line; then east and southeast on U.S. Highway 421 to Interstate 95; then northeast on Interstate 95 to the Harnett/Johnston County line. *Hertford County.* That portion of the county lying east of a line beginning at the intersection of U.S. Highway 13 and the Hertford/Bertie County line; then north on U.S. Highway 13 to County Route 1419 (Newsome Grove Road); then north on County Route 1419 to County Route 1415 (Catherine Creek Road); then northeast on County Route 1415 to County Route 1409 (Hall Siding Road); then northwest on County Route 1409 to County Route 1403 (Ahoskie-Cofield Road); then northeast on County Route 1403 to County Route 1400 (River Road); then northwest on County Route 1400 to County Route 1402 (Tunis Road); then northeast on County Route 1402 to the Chowan River and the Hertford/Gates County line. *Johnston County.* That portion of the county lying south and east of Interstate 95. *Lee County.* The entire county. *Moore County.* The entire county. *Nash County.* That portion of the county bounded by Interstate 95 on the west, the old Seaboard Railroad tracks on the south, the Nash/Edgecombe County line on the east, and on the north by State Highway 4 to its junction with U.S. Highway 301, then following a straight line east to the Nash/Edgecombe County line. *Sampson County.* The entire county. *Wake County.* That portion of the county lying south of a line beginning at the intersection of U.S. Highway 70 and the Wake/Durham County line; then south and east on U.S. Highway 70 to Interstate Highway 440; then east on Interstate 440 to Wake Forest Road; then north on Wake Forest Road to Spring Forest Road; then east on Spring Forest Road to State Highway 401; then north on State Highway 401 to the Neuse River; and then south along the Neuse River to the Wake/Johnston County line. Tennessee *Franklin County.* That portion of the county lying south a line beginning at the intersection of State Highway 50 and the Moore/Franklin County line; then east on State Highway 50 to U.S. Highway 64; then east on U.S. Highway 64 to U.S. Highway Alt 41; then east on U.S. Highway Alt 41 to the Grundy/Marion County line; also the entire city limits of Winchester, Decherd, and Estill Springs. *Henderson County.* The entire county. *Maury County.* That portion of the county lying south and west of a line beginning at the intersection of U.S. Highway 412 and the Maury/Lewis County line; then east on U.S. Highway 412 to State Highway 166; then southeast on State Highway 166 to Dry Creek Road; then south on Dry Creek Road to the Maury/Lawrence County line. *Moore County.* That portion of the county lying south of a line beginning at the intersection of State Highway 82 and the Moore/Bedford County line; then southeast on State Highway 82 to State Highway 55; then northeast on State Highway 55 to Cobb Hollow Road; then east on Cobb Hollow Road to the Moore/Coffee County line. Done in Washington, DC, this 2nd day of January 2002. W. Ron DeHaven, Acting Administrator, Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service. [FR Doc. 02-455 Filed 1-8-02; 8:45 am]
Connectionstraces to 8
9 references not yet in our index
  • 7 CFR 301
  • 7 CFR 301.81
  • 7 CFR 3015
  • 7 CFR 1
  • 7 CFR 372
  • 7 CFR 2.22
  • Pub. L. 106-113
  • Pub. L. 106-224
  • 114 Stat. 400
Citation graph
cites case law
Unknown
Interim rule and request for comments
Cite7 CFR 301
Cite7 CFR 301.81
Cite7 CFR 3015
Cite7 CFR 1
Cites 17 · showing 12Cited by 0 across 0 sources
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