Subsistence Management Regulations for Public Lands in Alaska, Subpart C and Subpart D-2005-06 Subsistence Taking of Fish and Shellfish Regulations, 13377-13396 [05-5469]
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 53 / Monday, March 21, 2005 / Rules and Regulations
§ 664.31 What selection criteria does the
Secretary use?
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
The Secretary uses the criteria in this
section to evaluate applications for the
purpose of recommending to the J.
William Fulbright Foreign Scholarship
Board Group Projects Abroad for
funding under this part.
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Forest Service
PART 669—LANGUAGE RESOURCE
CENTERS PROGRAM
47. The authority citation for part 669
continues to read as follows:
I
Authority: 20 U.S.C. 1123, unless
otherwise noted.
48. Section 669.20 is revised to read as
follows:
I
§ 669.20 How does the Secretary evaluate
an application?
The Secretary evaluates an
application for an award on the basis of
the criteria contained in §§ 669.21 and
669.22. The Secretary informs
applicants of the maximum possible
score for each criterion in the
application package or in a notice
published in the Federal Register.
(Authority: 20 U.S.C. 1123)
49. Section 669.21 is amended by—
A. Removing all of the parentheticals
that end in ‘‘points)’’;
I B. In paragraph (c), removing the
symbol ‘‘§’’; and
I C. Revising the introductory text to
read as follows:
I
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§ 669.21 What selection criteria does the
Secretary use?
The Secretary evaluates an
application on the basis of the criteria
in this section.
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[FR Doc. 05–5547 Filed 3–18–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4000–01–P
36 CFR Part 242
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
50 CFR Part 100
RIN 1018–AT46
Subsistence Management Regulations
for Public Lands in Alaska, Subpart C
and Subpart D—2005–06 Subsistence
Taking of Fish and Shellfish
Regulations
AGENCIES: Forest Service, Agriculture;
Fish and Wildlife Service, Interior.
ACTION: Final rule.
SUMMARY: This final rule establishes
regulations for seasons, harvest limits,
methods, and means related to taking of
fish and shellfish for subsistence uses
during the 2005–06 regulatory year. The
rulemaking is necessary because
Subpart D is subject to an annual public
review cycle. This rulemaking replaces
the fish and shellfish taking regulations
included in the ‘‘Subsistence
Management Regulations for Public
Lands in Alaska, Subpart C and Subpart
D—2004 Subsistence Taking of Fish and
Wildlife Regulations,’’ which expire on
March 31, 2005. This rule also amends
the Customary and Traditional Use
Determinations of the Federal
Subsistence Board (Section ll.24 of
Subpart C).
DATES: Sections ll.24(a)(2) and (3) are
effective April 1, 2005. Sections ll.27
and ll.28 are effective April 1, 2005,
through March 31, 2006.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Chair, Federal Subsistence Board, c/o
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service,
Attention: Thomas H. Boyd, Office of
Subsistence Management; (907) 786–
3888. For questions specific to National
Forest System lands, contact Steve
Kessler, Regional Subsistence Program
Manager, USDA, Forest Service, Alaska
Region, (907) 786–3592.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
Title VIII of the Alaska National
Interest Lands Conservation Act
(ANILCA) (16 U.S.C. 3111–3126)
requires that the Secretary of the Interior
and the Secretary of Agriculture
(Secretaries) implement a joint program
to grant a preference for subsistence
uses of fish and wildlife resources on
public lands, unless the State of Alaska
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enacts and implements laws of general
applicability that are consistent with
ANILCA and that provide for the
subsistence definition, preference, and
participation specified in Sections 803,
804, and 805 of ANILCA. In 1978, the
State implemented a program that the
Department of the Interior previously
found to be consistent with ANILCA.
However, in December 1989, the Alaska
Supreme Court ruled in McDowell v.
State of Alaska that the rural preference
in the State subsistence statute violated
the Alaska Constitution. The Court’s
ruling in McDowell required the State to
delete the rural preference from the
subsistence statute and, therefore,
negated State compliance with ANILCA.
The Court stayed the effect of the
decision until July 1, 1990.
As a result of the McDowell decision,
the Department of the Interior and the
Department of Agriculture
(Departments) assumed, on July 1, 1990,
responsibility for implementation of
Title VIII of ANILCA on public lands.
On June 29, 1990, the Temporary
Subsistence Management Regulations
for Public Lands in Alaska were
published in the Federal Register (55
FR 27114). On January 8, 1999 (64 FR
1276), the Departments extended
jurisdiction to include waters in which
there exists a Federal reserved water
right. This amended rule conformed the
Federal Subsistence Management
Program to the Ninth Circuit’s ruling in
Alaska v. Babbitt. Consistent with
Subparts A, B, and C of these
regulations as revised May 7, 2002 (67
FR 30559), the Departments established
a Federal Subsistence Board to
administer the Federal Subsistence
Management Program. The Board’s
composition includes a Chair appointed
by the Secretary of the Interior with
concurrence of the Secretary of
Agriculture; the Alaska Regional
Director, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service;
the Alaska Regional Director, U.S.
National Park Service; the Alaska State
Director, U.S. Bureau of Land
Management; the Alaska Regional
Director, U.S. Bureau of Indian Affairs;
and the Alaska Regional Forester, USDA
Forest Service. Through the Board, these
agencies participated in the
development of regulations for Subparts
A, B, and C, and the annual Subpart D
regulations.
All Board members have reviewed
this rule and agree with its substance.
Because this rule relates to public lands
managed by agencies in both the
Departments of Agriculture and the
Interior, identical text will be
incorporated into 36 CFR part 242 and
50 CFR part 100.
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Applicability of Subparts A, B, and C
Subparts A, B, and C (unless
otherwise amended) of the Subsistence
Management Regulations for Public
Lands in Alaska, 50 CFR 100.1 to 100.23
and 36 CFR 242.1 to 242.23, remain
effective and apply to this rule.
Therefore, all definitions located at 50
CFR 100.4 and 36 CFR 242.4 apply to
regulations found in this subpart.
Federal Subsistence Regional Advisory
Councils
Pursuant to the Record of Decision,
Subsistence Management Regulations
for Federal Public Lands in Alaska,
April 6, 1992, and the Subsistence
Management Regulations for Federal
Public Lands in Alaska, 36 CFR 242.11
and 242.22 (2002) and 50 CFR 100.11
and 100.22 (2002), and for the purposes
identified therein, we divide Alaska into
10 subsistence resource regions, each of
which is represented by a Federal
Subsistence Regional Advisory Council
(Regional Council). The Regional
Councils provide a forum for rural
residents with personal knowledge of
local conditions and resource
requirements to exercise a meaningful
role in the subsistence management of
fish and wildlife on Alaska public
lands. The Regional Council members
represent varied geographical, cultural,
and user diversity within each region.
The Regional Councils had a
substantial role in reviewing the
proposed rule (69 FR 5105, February 3,
2004) and making recommendations for
this final rule. Moreover, the Council
Chairs, or their designated
representatives, presented their
Council’s recommendations at the Board
meeting of January 11–13, 2005.
Summary of Changes
Section ll.24 (Customary and
traditional use determinations) was
originally published in the Federal
Register (57 FR 22940) on May 29, 1992.
Since that time, the Board has made a
number of Customary and Traditional
Use Determinations at the request of
impacted subsistence users. Those
modifications, along with some
administrative corrections, were last
published in the Federal Register on
February 3, 2004 (69 FR 5105). During
its January 11–13, 2005, meeting, the
Board made new determinations in
addition to various annual season and
harvest limit changes. The public has
had extensive opportunity to review and
comment on all changes. Additional
details on the recent Board
modifications are contained below in
Analysis of Proposals Adopted by the
Board.
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Subpart D regulations are subject to
an annual cycle and require
development of an entire new rule each
year. Customary and traditional use
determinations are also subject to an
annual review process providing for
modification each year. We published
proposed Subpart D regulations for the
2005–06 seasons, harvest limits, and
methods and means on February 3,
2004, in the Federal Register (69 FR
5105). A 45-day comment period
providing for public review of the
proposed rule and calling for proposals
was advertised by mail, radio, and
newspaper. During that period, the
Regional Councils met and, in addition
to other Regional Council business,
received suggestions for proposals from
the public. The Board received a total of
30 proposals for changes to Customary
and Traditional Use Determinations or
to Subpart D. Subsequent to the review
period, the Board prepared a booklet
describing the proposals and distributed
it to the public. The public had an
additional 30 days in which to comment
on the proposals for changes to the
regulations. The 10 Regional Councils
then met again, received public
comments, and formulated their
recommendations to the Board on
proposals for their respective regions.
One of the proposals was not
considered, being withdrawn before
Board consideration. These final
regulations reflect Board review and
consideration of Regional Council
recommendations and public comments
on the remaining proposals.
Analysis of Proposals Rejected by the
Board
The Board rejected 11 proposals. With
one exception, all of these actions were
based on recommendations from at least
one Regional Council.
The Board rejected one proposal that
requested significant restrictions on the
exercise of customary trade. The Board
rejected this proposal as an unnecessary
restriction on subsistence users.
One proposal requested us to restrict
the size of gillnets in the Yukon River.
This proposal was rejected because it
would have resulted in Federal
regulations that are more restrictive than
State regulations and the Board viewed
it as an unnecessary restriction on
subsistence users.
One proposal to establish a 6-day fall
chum salmon season in Subdistrict 5D
was rejected based on conservation
concerns and the ability of in-season
managers to protect salmon runs for
long-term subsistence opportunities.
The Board rejected two proposals
requesting revisions to the subsistence
fishing schedule for the Yukon and
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Kuskokwim Rivers. The Board rejected
these proposals because the current
fishing schedules are a result of a
coordinated effort by users and
government bodies to rebuild depressed
salmon stocks and are for the long-term
benefit of all users. Additionally, inseason managers already have the
authority to relax schedules when run
strength is adequate to allow additional
harvest.
The Board rejected one proposal that
would have removed the requirement
for a Federal subsistence fishing permit
for steelhead in the Yakutat Fishery
Management Area. This proposal was
rejected because the Board cited a need
to have harvest data on a resource that
is vulnerable to overharvest.
The Board rejected one proposal
contrary to the recommendation of the
Regional Council in order to prevent
detrimental impacts to subsistence users
from harassment when taking resources
for ceremonial purposes and in order to
assure long-term conservation of the
resources being used.
Two proposals rejected by the Board
related to the incidental take of fish in
the Southeastern Alaska Area. The
Board viewed these proposals as serving
no useful purpose, addressing no
conservation concerns, being confusing
to the users, and generally being
unenforceable.
The Board rejected one proposal that
would have removed a closure
restriction in the Kutlaku Lake area.
This proposal was rejected because of a
continuing conservation concern for the
sockeye salmon stocks of this system.
The Board rejected one proposal that
would have placed additional harvest
restrictions on steelhead in southeast
Alaska. This proposal was rejected
because the Board sees no immediate
conservation concern for steelhead and
thus the proposal would have placed
unnecessary restrictions on subsistence
users.
Analysis of Proposals Adopted by the
Board
The Board adopted 17 proposals. A
number of proposals dealing with the
same issue were dealt with as a package.
Some proposals were adopted as
submitted and others were adopted with
modifications suggested by the
respective Regional Council or
developed during the Board’s public
deliberations.
All of the adopted proposals were
recommended for adoption by at least
one of the Regional Councils and were
based on meeting customary and
traditional uses, conforming with
harvest practices, or protecting fish
populations. Detailed information
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relating to justification for the action on
each proposal may be found in the
Board meeting transcripts, available for
review at the Office of Subsistence
Management, 3601 C Street, Suite 1030,
Anchorage, Alaska, or on the Office of
Subsistence Management Web site
(https://alaska.fws.gov/asm/home.html).
Additional technical clarifications and
removal of excess or duplicative text
have been made, which result in a more
readable document.
In the Cook Inlet Fishery Management
Area, we corrected the text to prohibit
the use of gillnets in freshwater. This
action is necessary to protect
populations of rainbow trout, steelhead,
and other freshwater species susceptible
to over harvest and was addressed in a
Correcting Amendment published June
28, 2000 (65 FR 39815). Through an
administrative error, we failed to carry
through with this correction in later
rulemaking documents. There is no
impact on subsistence users because no
one uses a gillnet to fish for smelt in
freshwater in this area.
In the final rule, we deleted the
reference to the Holitna River in
§ ll.27(h)(4) because the Holitna River
is not within jurisdiction as identified
in § ll.3(b). Similarly, we also deleted
reference to Tuxedni Bay in
§ ll.24(a)(3). An opinion by the
Department of the Interior Solicitor’s
Office concluded that the boundaries of
the Alaska Maritime National Wildlife
Refuge do not extend below mean high
tide and that those waters are not within
Federal jurisdiction as identified in
§ ll.3. When questions of jurisdiction
are brought to our attention, we
immediately review the issue and make
any appropriate modifications to our
regulations as we have done here. In
addition, we revised the regulations
pertaining to specific management areas
as follows:
Yukon-Northern Fishery Management
Area
The Board adopted one proposal
affecting residents of the YukonNorthern Fishery Management Area,
resulting in the following change to the
regulations found in § ll.27.
• Established a drift gillnet fishery for
king salmon in Districts 4B and 4C of
the Yukon River.
Kuskokwim Fishery Management Area
The Board adopted two proposals
affecting residents of the Kuskokwim
Fishery Management Area, resulting in
the following changes to the regulations
found in § ll.24.
• Revised the customary and
traditional use determination for
rainbow trout.
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The Board adopted one proposal
affecting residents of the Bristol Bay
Fishery Management Area, resulting in
the following change to the regulations
found in § ll.27.
• Removed the permit requirement
when harvesting char and rainbow
trout.
• Provided harvest regulations for
cutthroat trout, rainbow trout, Dolly
Varden, grayling, and brook trout.
Additionally, following consultation
with the Transboundary Panel and the
Pacific Salmon Commission, the Board
has implemented regulations for the
subsistence harvest of chinook and coho
salmon in the Stikine River.
Prince William Sound Fishery
Management Area
Administrative Procedure Act
Compliance
The Board adopted five proposals
affecting residents of the Prince William
Sound Fishery Management Area,
resulting in the following changes to the
regulations found in §§ ll.24 and
lll.27.
• Established customary and
traditional use determinations for
eulachon in portions of the fishery
management area.
• Revised the customary and
traditional use determination for salmon
in the Chitina and Glennallen
Subdistricts of the fishery management
area.
• Established limits on the amount of
salmon that may be sold in customary
trade in the Upper Copper River
District.
Additionally, the Board concurred in
the correction of an administrative error
relative to restrictions on the taking of
salmon in the Prince William Sound
Area.
The Board finds that additional public
notice under the Administrative
Procedure Act (APA) for this final rule
is unnecessary and contrary to the
public interest. The Board has provided
extensive opportunity for public input
and involvement in excess of standard
APA requirements, including
participation in multiple Regional
Council meetings, additional public
review and comment on all proposals
for regulatory change, and opportunity
for additional public comment during
the Board meeting prior to deliberation.
Additionally, an administrative
mechanism exists (and has been used by
the public) to request reconsideration of
the Board’s decision on any particular
proposal for regulatory change. Over the
12 years the Program has been
operating, no benefit to the public has
been demonstrated by delaying the
effective date of regulations. A lapse in
regulatory control could seriously affect
the continued viability of fish and
shellfish populations, adversely impact
future subsistence opportunities for
rural Alaskans, and would generally fail
to serve the overall public interest.
Therefore, the Board finds good cause
pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 553(d) to make this
rule effective less than 30 days after
publication.
Bristol Bay Fishery Management Area
Southeastern Alaska Fishery
Management Area
The Board adopted nine proposals
affecting residents of the Southeastern
Alaska Fishery Management Area,
resulting in the following changes to the
regulations found in § ll.27.
• Revised regulations to allow fishing
with rod and reel within 300 feet of a
fish ladder unless posted by the USDA
Forest Service.
• Specified specific gear types
allowable for the taking of salmon and
steelhead.
• Established harvest limits for
sockeye salmon.
• Clarified that there are generally no
harvest limits for pink or chum salmon.
• Established regulations for a
southeast Alaska steelhead fishery.
• Provided for the use of handlines
for snagging for salmon and steelhead.
Established a definition of snagging.
• Allowed the accumulation of
subsistence harvest limits with sport
harvest limits.
• Simplified the coho salmon harvest
regulations, removed the annual harvest
limit, and removed the prohibition on
retaining incidentally-caught trout and
sockeye salmon.
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Conformance With Statutory and
Regulatory Authorities
National Environmental Policy Act
Compliance
A Draft Environmental Impact
Statement (DEIS) for developing a
Federal Subsistence Management
Program was distributed for public
comment on October 7, 1991. That
document described the major issues
associated with Federal subsistence
management as identified through
public meetings, written comments, and
staff analysis and examined the
environmental consequences of four
alternatives. Proposed regulations
(Subparts A, B, and C) that would
implement the preferred alternative
were included in the DEIS as an
appendix. The DEIS and the proposed
administrative regulations presented a
framework for an annual regulatory
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cycle regarding subsistence hunting and
fishing regulations (Subpart D). The
Final Environmental Impact Statement
(FEIS) was published on February 28,
1992.
Based on the public comment
received, the analysis contained in the
FEIS, and the recommendations of the
Federal Subsistence Board and the
Department of the Interior’s Subsistence
Policy Group, the Secretary of the
Interior, with the concurrence of the
Secretary of Agriculture, through the
U.S. Department of Agriculture-Forest
Service, implemented Alternative IV as
identified in the DEIS and FEIS (Record
of Decision on Subsistence Management
for Federal Public Lands in Alaska
(ROD), signed April 6, 1992). The DEIS
and the selected alternative in the FEIS
defined the administrative framework of
an annual regulatory cycle for
subsistence hunting and fishing
regulations. The final rule for
Subsistence Management Regulations
for Public Lands in Alaska, Subparts A,
B, and C (57 FR 22940, published May
29, 1992; amended January 8, 1999, 64
FR 1276; June 12, 2001, 66 FR 31533;
and May 7, 2002, 67 FR 30559)
implemented the Federal Subsistence
Management Program and included a
framework for an annual cycle for
subsistence hunting and fishing
regulations.
An environmental assessment was
prepared in 1997 on the expansion of
Federal jurisdiction over fisheries and is
available by contacting the office listed
under FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT. The Secretary of the Interior,
with the concurrence of the Secretary of
Agriculture, determined that the
expansion of Federal jurisdiction did
not constitute a major Federal action
significantly affecting the human
environment and has therefore signed a
Finding of No Significant Impact.
Compliance With Section 810 of
ANILCA
The intent of all Federal subsistence
regulations is to accord subsistence uses
of fish and wildlife on public lands a
priority over the taking of fish and
wildlife on such lands for other
purposes, unless restriction is necessary
to conserve healthy fish and wildlife
populations. A Section 810 analysis was
completed as part of the FEIS process.
The final Section 810 analysis
determination appeared in the April 6,
1992, ROD, which concluded that the
Federal Subsistence Management
Program may have some local impacts
on subsistence uses, but the program is
not likely to significantly restrict
subsistence uses.
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Paperwork Reduction Act
The information collection
requirements contained in this rule have
been approved by the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) under
the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.) and assigned
OMB control number 1018–0075, which
expires August 31, 2006. We may not
conduct or sponsor, and you are not
required to respond to, a collection of
information request unless it displays a
currently valid OMB control number.
Other Requirements
Regulatory Planning and Review
(Executive Order 12866)—In accordance
with the criteria in Executive Order
12866, this rule is not a significant
regulatory action subject to OMB
review. OMB makes this determination.
This action will not have an annual
economic effect of $100 million or
adversely affect any economic sector,
productivity, competition, jobs, the
environment, or other units of
government. Therefore, a cost-benefit
and economic analysis is not required.
This action will not create
inconsistencies with other agencies’
actions or otherwise interfere with an
action taken or planned by another
agency. This action will not materially
affect entitlements, grants, user fees,
loan programs, or the rights and
obligations of their recipients. This
action will not raise novel legal or
policy issues.
The Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980
(5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.) requires
preparation of flexibility analyses for
rules that will have a significant
economic effect on a substantial number
of small entities, which include small
businesses, organizations, or
governmental jurisdictions. The
Departments have determined that this
rulemaking will not have a significant
economic effect on a substantial number
of small entities within the meaning of
the Regulatory Flexibility Act.
This rulemaking will impose no
significant costs on small entities; the
exact number of businesses and the
amount of trade that will result from
this Federal land-related activity is
unknown. The aggregate effect is an
insignificant positive economic effect on
a number of small entities, such as
tackle, boat, and gasoline dealers. The
number of small entities affected is
unknown; however, the fact that the
positive effects will be seasonal in
nature and will, in most cases, merely
continue preexisting uses of public
lands indicates that the effects will not
be significant.
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In general, the resources harvested
under this rule will be consumed by the
local harvester and do not result in a
dollar benefit to the economy. However,
we estimate that 24 million pounds of
fish (including 8.3 million pounds of
salmon) are harvested by the local
subsistence users annually and, if given
a dollar value of $3.00 per pound for
salmon (Note: $3.00 per pound is much
higher than the current commercial
value for salmon) and $0.58 per pound
for other fish, would equate to about $34
million in food value Statewide.
Title VIII of ANILCA requires the
Secretaries to administer a subsistence
preference on public lands. The scope of
this program is limited by definition to
certain public lands. Likewise, these
regulations have no potential takings of
private property implications as defined
by Executive Order 12630.
The Service has determined and
certifies pursuant to the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act, 2 U.S.C. 1502 et
seq., that this rulemaking will not
impose a cost of $100 million or more
in any given year on local or State
governments or private entities. The
implementation of this rule is by
Federal agencies, and no cost is
involved to any State or local entities or
Tribal governments.
The Service has determined that these
final regulations meet the applicable
standards provided in Sections 3(a) and
3(b)(2) of Executive Order 12988 (Civil
Justice Reform).
In accordance with Executive Order
13132, the rule does not have sufficient
federalism implications to warrant the
preparation of a Federalism Assessment.
Title VIII of ANILCA precludes the State
from exercising management authority
over wildlife resources on Federal
lands.
In accordance with the President’s
memorandum of April 29, 1994,
‘‘Government-to-Government Relations
with Native American Tribal
Governments’’ (59 FR 22951), 512 DM 2,
and E.O. 13175, we have evaluated
possible effects on Federally recognized
Indian tribes and have determined that
there are no effects. The Bureau of
Indian Affairs is a participating agency
in this rulemaking.
On May 18, 2001, the President issued
Executive Order 13211 on regulations
that significantly affect energy supply,
distribution, or use. This Executive
Order requires agencies to prepare
Statements of Energy Effects when
undertaking certain actions. As this rule
is not a significant regulatory action
under Executive Order 13211, affecting
energy supply, distribution, or use, this
action is not a significant action and no
Statement of Energy Effects is required.
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Drafting Information
William Knauer drafted these
regulations under the guidance of
Thomas H. Boyd, of the Office of
Subsistence Management, Alaska
Regional Office, U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service, Anchorage, Alaska. Taylor
Brelsford, Alaska State Office, Bureau of
Land Management; Rod Simmons,
Alaska Regional Office, U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service; Bob Gerhard, Alaska
Regional Office, National Park Service;
Dr. Glenn Chen, Alaska Regional Office,
Bureau of Indian Affairs; and Steve
Kessler, USDA-Forest Service, provided
additional guidance.
List of Subjects
36 CFR Part 242
Administrative practice and
procedure, Alaska, Fish, National
forests, Public lands, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Wildlife.
50 CFR Part 100
Administrative practice and
procedure, Alaska, Fish, National
forests, Public lands, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Wildlife.
13381
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 3, 472, 551, 668dd,
3101–3126; 18 U.S.C. 3551–3586; 43 U.S.C.
1733.
Subpart C—Board Determinations
2. In Subpart C of 36 CFR part 242 and
50 CFR part 100, ll.24(a)(2) and (3) are
revised to read as follows:
I
For the reasons set out in the preamble,
§ ll.24 Customary and traditional use
the Federal Subsistence Board amends
Title 36, part 242, and Title 50, part 100, determinations.
of the Code of Federal Regulations, as set
(a) * * *
forth below.
(2) Fish determinations. The
following communities and areas have
PART ll—SUBSISTENCE
been found to have a positive customary
MANAGEMENT REGULATIONS FOR
and traditional use determination in the
PUBLIC LANDS IN ALASKA
listed area for the indicated species:
I 1. The authority citation for both 36
CFR Part 242 and 50 CFR Part 100
continues to read as follows:
I
Area
Species
Determination
KOTZEBUE AREA ................................................
NORTON SOUND-PORT CLARENCE AREA:
Norton Sound-Port Clarence Area, waters
draining into Norton Sound between Point
Romanof and Canal Point.
Norton Sound-Port Clarence Area, remainder.
YUKON-NORTHERN AREA:
Yukon River drainage ....................................
All fish .......................................................
Residents of the Kotzebue Area.
All fish .......................................................
Residents of Stebbins, St. Michael, and Kotlik.
All fish .......................................................
Residents of the Norton Sound-Port Clarence
Area.
Salmon, other than fall chum salmon .......
Residents of the Yukon River drainage and the
community of Stebbins.
Residents of the Yukon River drainage and the
communities of Stebbins, Scammon Bay, Hooper bay, and Chevak.
Residents of the Yukon-Northern Area.
Residents of the Yukon-Northern Area, excluding
the residents of the Yukon River drainage and
excluding those domiciled in Unit 26–B.
Residents of the Kuskokwim Area, except those
persons residing on the United States military
installations located on Cape Newenham,
Sparrevohn USAFB, and Tatalina USAFB.
Residents of the communities of Akiachak,
Akiak,
Aniak,
Atmautluak,
Bethel,
Chuathbaluk, Crooked Creek, Eek, Goodnews
Bay, Kasigluk, Kwethluk, Lower Kalskag,
Napakiak, Napaskiak, Nunapitchuk, Oscarville,
Platinum, Quinhagak, Tuluksak, Tuntutuliak,
and Upper Kalskag.
Resident of the communities of Chevak, Newtok,
Tununak, Toksook Bay, Nightmute, Chefornak,
Kipnuk, Mekoryuk, Kwigillingok, Kongiganak,
Eek, and Tuntutuliak.
Residents of the Kuskokwim Area, except those
persons residing on the United States military
installation located on Cape Newenham,
Sparrevohn USAFB, and Tatalina USAFB.
Residents within 20 miles of the coast between
the westernmost tip of the Naskonat Peninsula
and the terminus of the Ishowik River and on
Nunivak Island.
Yukon River drainage ....................................
Fall chum salmon .....................................
Yukon River drainage ....................................
Remaider of the Yukon-Northern Area ..........
Freshwater fish (other than salmon) ........
All fish .......................................................
KUSKOKWIM AREA .............................................
Salmon ......................................................
Rainbow trout ............................................
Pacific cod ................................................
All other fish other than herring ................
Waters around Nunivak Island ......................
BRISTOL BAY AREA:
Nushagak District, including drainages flowing into the district.
Naknek-Kvichak District-Naknek River drainage.
Naknek-Kvichak
District-Kvichak/IliamnaLake Clark drainage.
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Herring and herring roe ............................
Salmon and freshwater fish ......................
Salmon and freshwater fish ......................
Salmon and freshwater fish ......................
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Residents of the Nushagak District and freshwater drainages flowing into the district.
Residents of the Naknek and Kvichak River
drainages.
Residents of the Kvichak/Iliamna-Lake Clark
drainage.
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Area
Species
Determination
Togiak District, including drainages flowing
into the district.
Salmon and freshwater fish ......................
Egegik District, including drainages flowing
into the district.
Salmon and freshwater fish ......................
Ugashik District, including drainages flowing
into the district.
Togiak District ................................................
Salmon and freshwater fish ......................
Remainder of the Bristol Bay Area ................
ALEUTIAN ISLANDS AREA .................................
All fish .......................................................
All fish .......................................................
ALASKA PENINSULA AREA ................................
Halibut .......................................................
CHIGNIK AREA ....................................................
All other fish in the Alaska Peninsula
Area.
Halibut, salmon and fish other than rainbow/steelhead trout.
Salmon ......................................................
Residents of the Togiak District, freshwater
drainages flowing into the district, and the
community of Manokotak.
Residents of South Naknek, the Egegik District
and freshwater drainages flowing into the district.
Residents of the Ugashik District and freshwater
drainages flowing into the district.
Residents of the Togiak District and freshwater
drainages flowing into the district.
Residents of the Bristol Bay Area.
Residents of the Aleutian Islands Area and the
Pribilof Islands.
Residents of the Alaska Peninsula Area and the
communities of Ivanof Bay and Perryville.
Residents of the Alaska Peninsula Area.
KODIAK AREA—except the Mainland District, all
waters along the south side of the Alaska Peninsula bounded by the latitude of Cape Douglas (58°52′ North latitude) mid-stream Shelikof
Strait, and east of the longitude of the southern
entrance of Imuya Bay near Kilokak Rocks
(57°1′22″ North latitude 156°20′30″ West longitude).
Kodiak Area ...................................................
COOK INLET AREA .............................................
PRINCE WILLIAM SOUND AREA:
Southwestern District and Green Island ........
Herring spawn on kelp ..............................
Fish other than rainbow/steelhead trout
and salmon.
Fish other than salmon, Dolly Varden,
trout, char, grayling, and burgot.
Salmon, Dolly Varden, trout, char,
grayling, and burbot.
Salmon ......................................................
North of a line from Porcupine Point to Granite Point, and south of a line from Point
Lowe to Tongue Point.
Copper River drainage upstream from Haley
Creek.
Salmon ......................................................
Gulkana National Wild and Scenic River ......
Freshwater fish .........................................
Chitina Subdistrict of the Upper Copper
River District.
Salmon ......................................................
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Freshwater fish .........................................
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Residents of the Chignik Area.
Residents of the Kodiak Island Borough, except
those residing on the Kodiak Coast Guard
Base.
Residents of the Kodiak Area.
Residents of the Cook Inlet Area.
No Determination.
Residents of the Southwestern District, which is
mainland waters from the outer point on the
north shore of Granite Bay to Cape Fairfield,
and Knight Island, Chenega Island, Bainbridge
Island, Evans Island, Elrington Island,
Latouche Island and adjacent islands.
Residents of the villages of Tatitlek and Ellamar.
Residents of Cantwell, Chisana, Chistochina,
Chitina, Copper Center, Dot Lake, Gakona,
Gakona Junction, Glennallen, Gulkana, Healy
Lake, Kenny Lake, Lower Tonsina, McCarthy,
Mentasta Lake, Nabesna, Northway, Slana,
Tanacross, Tazlina, Tetlin, Tok, Tonsina, and
those individuals that live along the Tok Cutoff
from Tok to Mentasta Pass and along the
Nebesna Road.
Residents of Cantwell, Chisana, Chistochina,
Chitina, Cooper Center, Dot Lake, Gakona,
Gakona Junction, Glennallen, Gulkana, Healy
Lake, Kenny Lake, Lower Tonsina, McCarthy,
Mentasta Lake, Nabesna, Northway, PaxsonSourdough, Slana, Tanacross, Tazlina, Tetlin,
Tok, Tonsina, and those individuals that live
along the Tok Cutoff from Tok to Mentasta
Pass, and along the Nabesna Road.
Residents of Cantwell, Chickaloon, Chisana,
Chistochina, Chitina, Copper Center, Dot
Lake, Gakona, Gakona Junction, Glennallen,
Gulkana, Healy Lake, Kenny Lake, Nabesna,
Northway,
Paxson-Sourdough,
Slana,
Tanacross, Tazlina, Tetlin, Tok, Tonsina, and
those individuals that live along the Tok Cutoff
from Tok to Mentasta Pass, and along the
Nabesna Road.
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Area
13383
Species
Determination
Glennallen Subdistrict of the Upper Copper
River District.
Salmon ......................................................
Waters of the Copper River between National Park Service regulatory markers located near the mouth of Tanada Creek,
and in Tanada Creek between National
Park Service regulatory markers located
near the mouth of Tanada Creek, and in
Tanada Creek between National Park
Service regulatory markers identifying the
open waters of the creek.
Remainder of the Prince William Sound Area
Waters of the Bering River area from Point
Martin to Cape Suckling.
Waters of the Copper River Delta from the
Eyak River to Point Martin.
YAKUTAT AREA:
Freshwater upstream from the terminus of
streams and rivers of the Yakutat Area
from the Doame River to the Tsiu River.
Salmon ......................................................
Residents of the Prince William Sound Area and
residents of Cantwell, Chickaloon, Chisana,
Dot Lake, Healy Lake, Northway, Tanacross,
Tetlin, Tok and those individuals living along
the Alaska Highway from the Alaskan/Canadian border to Dot Lake, along the Tok Cutoff
from Tok to Mentasta Pass, and along the
Nabesna Road.
Residents of Mentasta Lake and Dot Lake.
Salmon ......................................................
Eulachon ...................................................
Residents of the Prince William Sound Area.
Residents of Cordova.
Eulachon ...................................................
Residents of Cordova, Chenega Bay, and
Tatitlek.
Salmon ......................................................
Residents of the area east of Yakutat Bay, including the islands within Yakutat Bay, west of
the Situk River drainage, and south of and including Knight Island.
Residents of the area east of Yakutat Bay, including the islands within Yakutat Bay, west of
the Situk River drainage, and south of and including Knight Island.
Residents of Southeastern Alaska and Yakutat
Freshwater upstream from the terminus of
streams and rivers of the Yakutat Area
from the Doame River to Point Manby.
Dolly Varden, steelhead trout, and smelt
Remainder of the Yakutat Area .....................
SOUTHEASTERN ALASKA AREA:
District 1—Section 1E in waters of the Naha
River and Roosevelt Lagoon.
District 1—Section 1F in Boca de Quadra in
waters of Sockeye Creek and Hugh Smith
Lake within 500 yards of the terminus of
Sockeye Creek.
Districts 2, 3, and 5 and waters draining into
those Districts.
District 5—North of a line from Point Barrie
to Boulder Point.
Dolly Varden, trout, smelt, and eulachon
Salmon, Dolly Varden, trout, smelt, and
eulachon.
Salmon, Dolly Varden, trout, smelt, and
eulachon.
Residents of the City of Saxman.
Salmon, Dolly Varden, trout, smelt, and
eulachon.
Salmon, Dolly Varden, trout, smelt, and
eulachon.
Residents living south of Sumner Strait and west
of Clarence Strait and Kashevaroff Passage.
Residents of the City of Kake and in Kupreanof
Island drainages emptying into Keku Strait
south of Point White and north of the Portage
Bay boat harbor.
Residents living south of Sumner Strait and west
of Clarence Strait and Kashevaroff Passage;
residents of drainages flowing into District 6
north of the latitude of Point Alexander (Mitkof
Island); residents of drainages flowing into Districts 7 & 8, including the communities of Petersburg & Wrangell; and residents of the communities of Meyers Chuck and Kake.
Residents of drainages flowing into District 6
north of the latitude of Point Alexander (Mitkof
Island); residents of drainages flowing into Districts 7 & 8, including the communities of Petersburg & Wrangell; and residents of the communities of Meyers Chuck and Kake.
Residents of drainages flowing into Districts 7 &
8, residents of drainages flowing into District 6
north of the latitude of Point Alexander (Mitkof
Island), and residents of Meyers Chuck.
Residents of the City of Kake and in Kupreanof
Island drainages emptying into Keku Strait
south of Point White and north of the Portage
Bay boat harbor.
Residents of the City of Kake and in Kupreanof
Island drainages emptying into Keku Strait
south of Point White and north of the Portage
Bay boat harbor.
District 6 and waters draining into that District.
Salmon, Dolly Varden, trout, smelt, and
eulachon.
District 7 and waters draining into that District.
Salmon, Dolly Varden, trout, smelt, and
eulachon.
District 8 and waters draining into that District.
Salmon, Dolly Varden, trout, smelt, and
eulachon.
District 9—Section 9A ....................................
Salmon, Dolly Varden, trout, smelt, and
eulachon.
District 9—Section 9B north of the latitude of
Swain Point.
Salmon, Dolly Varden, trout, smelt, and
eulachon.
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Residents of the City of Saxman.
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Area
Species
Determination
District 10—West of a line from Pinta Point
to False Point Pybus.
Salmon, Dolly Varden, trout, smelt, and
eulachon.
District 12—South of a line from Fishery
Point to south Passage Point and north of
the latitude of Point Caution.
Salmon, Dolly Varden, trout, smelt, and
eulachon.
District 13—Section 13A south of the latitude
of Cape Edward.
Salmon, Dolly Varden, trout, smelt, and
eulachon.
District 13—Section 13B north of the latitude
of Redfish Cape.
Salmon, Dolly Varden, trout, smelt, and
eulachon.
District 13—Section 13C ................................
Salmon, Dolly Varden, trout, smelt, and
eulachon.
District 13—Section 13C east of the longitude of Point Elizabeth.
Salmon, Dolly Varden, trout, smelt, and
eulachon.
District 14—Section 14B and 14C .................
Salmon, Dolly Varden, trout, smelt, and
eulachon.
Remainder of the Southeastern Alaska Area
Salmon, Dolly Varden, trout, smelt, and
eulachon.
Residents of the City of Kake and in Kupreanof
Island drainages emptying into Keku Strait
south of Point White and north of the Portage
Bay boat harbor.
Residents of the City of Angoon and along the
western shore of Admiralty Island north of the
latitude of Sand Island, south of the latitude of
Thayer Creek, and west of 134°30′ West longitude, including Killisnoo Island.
Residents of the City and Borough of Sitka in
drainages that empty into Section 13B north of
the latitude of Dorothy Narrows.
Residents of the City and Borough of Sitka in
drainages that empty into Section 13B north of
the latitude of Dorothy Narrows.
Residents of the City and Borough of Sitka in
drainages that empty into Section 13B north of
the latitude of Dorothy Narrows.
Residents of the City of Angoon and along the
western shore of Admiralty Island north of the
latitude of Sand Island, south of the latitude of
Thayer Creek, and west of 134°30′ West longitude, including Killisnoo Island.
Residents of the City of Hoonah and in
Chichagof Island drainages on the eastern
shore of Port Frederick from Gartina Creek to
Point Sophia.
Residents of Southeastern Alaska and Yakutat
Areas.
(3) Shellfish determinations. The
following communities and areas have
been found to have a positive customary
and traditional use determination in the
listed area for the indicated species:
Area
Species
Determination
BERING SEA AREA .............................................
ALASKA PENINSULA—ALEUTIAN ISLANDS
AREA.
KODIAK AREA ......................................................
Kodiak Area, except for the Semidi Island,
the North Mainland, and the South Mainland Sections.
COOK INLET AREA:
Federal waters in the Tuxedni Bay Area
within the boundaries of Lake Clark National Park.
PRINCE WILLIAM SOUND AREA ........................
All shellfish ................................................
Shrimp, Dungeness, king, and Tanner
crab.
Shrimp, Dungeness, and Tanner crab .....
King crab ...................................................
Residents of the Bering Sea Area.
Residents of the Alaska Peninsula-Aleutian Islands Area.
Residents of the Kodiak Area.
Residents of the Kodiak Island Borough, except
those residents on the Kodiak Coast Guard
base.
Shellfish ....................................................
Residents of Tuxedni Bay, Chisik Island, and
Tyonek.
Shrimp, clams, Dungeness, king, and
Tanner crab.
Residents of the Prince William Sound Area.
Shellfish,
Tanner
Shellfish,
Tanner
except shrimp, king crab, and
crab.
except shrimp, king crab, and
crab.
Residents of the Southeast Area.
Shellfish, except shrimp, king crab, and
Tanner crab.
Dungeness crab, shrimp, abalone, sea
cucumbers, gum boots, cockles, and
clams, except geoducks.
Residents of the Southeast Area.
SOUTHEASTERN ALASKA—YAKUTAT AREA:
Section 1E south of the latitude of Grant Island light.
Section 1F north of the latitude of the northernmost tip of Mary Island, waters of Boca
de Quadra.
Section 3A and 3B .........................................
District 13 .......................................................
*
*
*
*
*
I 3. In Subpart D of 36 CFR part 242 and
50 CFR part 100, ll.27 and ll.28 are
added effective March 1, 2005, through
March 31, 2006, to read as follows:
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§ ll.27
Subsistence taking of fish.
(a) Applicability. (1) Regulations in
this section apply to the taking of fish
or their parts for subsistence uses.
(2) You may take fish for subsistence
uses at any time by any method unless
you are restricted by the subsistence
fishing regulations found in this section.
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Residents of the Southeast Area.
Residents of the Southeast Area.
The harvest limit specified in this
section for a subsistence season for a
species and the State harvest limit set
for a State season for the same species
are not cumulative, except as modified
by regulations in § ll.27(i). This
means that if you have taken the harvest
limit for a particular species under a
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subsistence season specified in this
section, you may not, after that, take any
additional fish of that species under any
other harvest limit specified for a State
season.
(b) [Reserved].
(c) Methods, means, and general
restrictions. (1) Unless otherwise
specified in this section or under terms
of a required subsistence fishing permit
(as may be modified by this section),
you may use the following legal types of
gear for subsistence fishing:
(i) A set gillnet;
(ii) A drift gillnet;
(iii) A purse seine;
(iv) A hand purse seine;
(v) A beach seine;
(vi) Troll gear;
(vii) A fish wheel;
(viii) A trawl;
(ix) A pot;
(x) A longline;
(xi) A fyke net;
(xii) A lead;
(xiii) A herring pound;
(xiv) A dip net;
(xv) Jigging gear;
(xvi) A mechanical jigging machine;
(xvii) A handline;
(xviii) A cast net;
(xix) A rod and reel; and
(xx) A spear.
(2) You must include an escape
mechanism on all pots used to take fish
or shellfish. The escape mechanisms are
as follows:
(i) A sidewall, which may include the
tunnel, of all shellfish and bottomfish
pots must contain an opening equal to
or exceeding 18 inches in length, except
that in shrimp pots the opening must be
a minimum of 6 inches in length. The
opening must be laced, sewn, or secured
together by a single length of untreated,
100 percent cotton twine, no larger than
30 thread. The cotton twine may be
knotted at each end only. The opening
must be within 6 inches of the bottom
of the pot and must be parallel with it.
The cotton twine may not be tied or
looped around the web bars. Dungeness
crab pots may have the pot lid tie-down
straps secured to the pot at one end by
a single loop of untreated, 100 percent
cotton twine no larger than 60 thread, or
the pot lid must be secured so that,
when the twine degrades, the lid will no
longer be securely closed;
(ii) All king crab, Tanner crab,
shrimp, miscellaneous shellfish and
bottomfish pots may, instead of
complying with paragraph (c)(2)(i) of
this section, satisfy the following: a
sidewall, which may include the tunnel,
must contain an opening at least 18
inches in length, except that shrimp
pots must contain an opening at least 6
inches in length. The opening must be
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laced, sewn, or secured together by a
single length of treated or untreated
twine, no larger than 36 thread. A
galvanic timed-release device, designed
to release in no more than 30 days in
saltwater, must be integral to the length
of twine so that, when the device
releases, the twine will no longer secure
or obstruct the opening of the pot. The
twine may be knotted only at each end
and at the attachment points on the
galvanic timed-release device. The
opening must be within 6 inches of the
bottom of the pot and must be parallel
with it. The twine may not be tied or
looped around the web bars.
(3) For subsistence fishing for salmon,
you may not use a gillnet exceeding 50
fathoms in length, unless otherwise
specified in this section. The gillnet web
must contain at least 30 filaments of
equal diameter or at least 6 filaments,
each of which must be at least 0.20
millimeter in diameter.
(4) Except as otherwise provided for
in this section, you may not obstruct
more than one-half the width of any
stream with any gear used to take fish
for subsistence uses.
(5) You may not use live
nonindigenous fish as bait.
(6) You must have your first initial,
last name, and address plainly and
legibly inscribed on the side of your
fishwheel facing midstream of the river.
(7) You may use kegs or buoys of any
color but red on any permitted gear,
except in the following areas where kegs
or buoys of any color, including red,
may be used:
(i) Yukon-Northern Area; and
(ii) Kuskokwim Area.
(8) You must have your first initial,
last name, and address plainly and
legibly inscribed on each keg, buoy,
stakes attached to gillnets, stakes
identifying gear fished under the ice,
and any other unattended fishing gear
which you use to take fish for
subsistence uses.
(9) You may not use explosives or
chemicals to take fish for subsistence
uses.
(10) You may not take fish for
subsistence uses within 300 feet of any
dam, fish ladder, weir, culvert or other
artificial obstruction, unless otherwise
indicated.
(11) Transactions between rural
residents. Rural residents may exchange
in customary trade subsistenceharvested fish, their parts, or their eggs,
legally taken under the regulations in
this part, for cash from other rural
residents. The Board may recognize
regional differences and define
customary trade differently for separate
regions of the State.
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13385
(i) Bristol Bay Fishery Management
Area—The total cash value per
household of salmon taken within
Federal jurisdiction in the Bristol Bay
Fishery Management Area and
exchanged in customary trade to rural
residents may not exceed $500.00
annually.
(ii) Upper Copper River District—The
total number of salmon per household
taken within the Upper Copper River
District and exchanged in customary
trade to rural residents may not exceed
50% of the annual harvest of salmon by
the household. No more than 50% of the
annual household limit may be sold
under paragraphs ll.27(c)(11) and
(12) when taken together. These
customary trade sales must be
immediately recorded on a customary
trade recordkeeping form. The recording
requirement and the responsibility to
ensure the household limit is not
exceeded rests with the seller.
(12) Transactions between a rural
resident and others. In customary trade,
a rural resident may trade fish, their
parts, or their eggs, legally taken under
the regulations in this part, for cash
from individuals other than rural
residents if the individual who
purchases the fish, their parts, or their
eggs uses them for personal or family
consumption. If you are not a rural
resident, you may not sell fish, their
parts, or their eggs taken under the
regulations in this part. The Board may
recognize regional differences and
define customary trade differently for
separate regions of the State.
(i) Bristol Bay Fishery Management
Area—The total cash value per
household of salmon taken within
Federal jurisdiction in the Bristol Bay
Fishery Management Area and
exchanged in customary trade between
rural residents and individuals other
than rural residents may not exceed
$400.00 annually. These customary
trade sales must be immediately
recorded on a customary trade
recordkeeping form. The recording
requirement and the responsibility to
ensure the household limit is not
exceeded rest with the seller.
(ii) Upper Copper River District—The
total cash value of salmon per
household taken within the Upper
Copper River District and exchanged in
customary trade between rural residents
and individuals other than rural
residents may not exceed $500.00
annually. No more than 50% of the
annual household limit may be sold
under paragraphs ll.27(c)(11) and
(12) when taken together. These
customary trade sales must be
immediately recorded on a customary
trade recordkeeping form. The recording
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requirement and the responsibility to
ensure the household limit is not
exceeded rest with the seller.
(13) No sale to, nor purchase by,
fisheries businesses.
(i) You may not sell fish, their parts,
or their eggs taken under the regulations
in this part to any individual, business,
or organization required to be licensed
as a fisheries business under Alaska
Statute AS 43.75.011 (commercial
limited-entry permit or crew license
holders excluded) or to any other
business as defined under Alaska
Statute 43.70.110(1) as part of its
business transactions.
(ii) If you are required to be licensed
as a fisheries business under Alaska
Statute AS 43.75.011 (commercial
limited-entry permit or crew license
holders excluded) or are a business as
defined under Alaska Statute
43.70.110(1), you may not purchase,
receive, or sell fish, their parts, or their
eggs taken under the regulations in this
part as part of your business
transactions.
(14) Except as provided elsewhere in
this section, you may not take rainbow/
steelhead trout.
(15) You may not use fish taken for
subsistence use or under subsistence
regulations in this part as bait for
commercial or sport fishing purposes.
(16) [Reserved].
(17) Unless specified otherwise in this
section, you may use a rod and reel to
take fish without a subsistence fishing
permit. Harvest limits applicable to the
use of a rod and reel to take fish for
subsistence uses shall be as follows:
(i) If you are required to obtain a
subsistence fishing permit for an area,
that permit is required to take fish for
subsistence uses with rod and reel in
that area. The harvest and possession
limits for taking fish with a rod and reel
in those areas are the same as indicated
on the permit issued for subsistence
fishing with other gear types;
(ii) Except as otherwise provided for
in this section, if you are not required
to obtain a subsistence fishing permit
for an area, the harvest and possession
limits for taking fish for subsistence
uses with a rod and reel are the same
as for taking fish under State of Alaska
subsistence fishing regulations in those
same areas. If the State does not have a
specific subsistence season and/or
harvest limit for that particular species,
the limit shall be the same as for taking
fish under State of Alaska sport fishing
regulations.
(18) Unless restricted in this section,
or unless restricted under the terms of
a subsistence fishing permit, you may
take fish for subsistence uses at any
time.
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(19) Provisions on ADF&G subsistence
fishing permits that are more restrictive
or in conflict with the provisions
contained in this section do not apply
to Federal subsistence users.
(20) You may not intentionally waste
or destroy any subsistence-caught fish
or shellfish; however, you may use for
bait or other purposes, whitefish,
herring, and species for which harvest
limits, seasons, or other regulatory
methods and means are not provided in
this section, as well as the head, tail,
fins, and viscera of legally taken
subsistence fish.
(21) The taking of fish from waters
within Federal jurisdiction is authorized
outside of published open seasons or
harvest limits if the harvested fish will
be used for food in traditional or
religious ceremonies that are part of
funerary or mortuary cycles, including
memorial potlatches, provided that:
(i) Prior to attempting to take fish, the
person (or designee) or Tribal
Government organizing the ceremony
contacts the appropriate Federal
fisheries manager to provide the nature
of the ceremony, the parties and/or
clans involved, the species and the
number of fish to be taken, and the
Federal waters from which the harvest
will occur;
(ii) The taking does not violate
recognized principles of fisheries
conservation, and uses the methods and
means allowable for the particular
species published in the applicable
Federal regulations (the Federal
fisheries manager will establish the
number, species, or place of taking if
necessary for conservation purposes);
(iii) Each person who takes fish under
this section must, as soon as practical,
and not more than 15 days after the
harvest, submit a written report to the
appropriate Federal fisheries manager,
specifying the harvester’s name and
address, the number and species of fish
taken, and the date and locations of the
taking; and
(iv) No permit is required for taking
under this section; however, the
harvester must be eligible to harvest the
resource under Federal regulations.
(d) [Reserved].
(e) Fishing permits and reports. (1)
You may take salmon only under the
authority of a subsistence fishing
permit, unless a permit is specifically
not required in a particular area by the
subsistence regulations in this part, or
unless you are retaining salmon from
your commercial catch consistent with
paragraph (f) of this section.
(2) The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
Office of Subsistence Management may
issue a permit to harvest fish for a
qualifying cultural/educational program
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to an organization that has been granted
a Federal subsistence permit for a
similar event within the previous 5
years. A qualifying program must have
instructors, enrolled students, minimum
attendance requirements, and standards
for successful completion of the course.
Applications must be submitted to the
Office of Subsistence Management 60
days prior to the earliest desired date of
harvest. Permits will be issued for no
more than 25 fish per culture/education
camp. Appeal of a rejected request can
be made to the Federal Subsistence
Board. Application for an initial permit
for a qualifying cultural/educational
program, for a permit when the
circumstances have changed
significantly, when no permit has been
issued within the previous 5 years, or
when there is a request for harvest in
excess of that provided in this
paragraph (e)(2), will be considered by
the Federal Subsistence Board.
(3) If a subsistence fishing permit is
required by this section, the following
permit conditions apply unless
otherwise specified in this section:
(i) You may not take more fish for
subsistence use than the limits set out
in the permit;
(ii) You must obtain the permit prior
to fishing;
(iii) You must have the permit in your
possession and readily available for
inspection while fishing or transporting
subsistence-taken fish;
(iv) If specified on the permit, you
must record, prior to leaving the harvest
site, daily records of the catch, showing
the number of fish taken by species,
location and date of catch, and other
such information as may be required for
management or conservation purposes;
and
(v) If the return of catch information
necessary for management and
conservation purposes is required by a
fishing permit and you fail to comply
with such reporting requirements, you
are ineligible to receive a subsistence
permit for that activity during the
following calendar year, unless you
demonstrate that failure to report was
due to loss in the mail, accident,
sickness, or other unavoidable
circumstances. You must also return
any tags or transmitters that have been
attached to fish for management and
conservation purposes.
(f) Relation to commercial fishing
activities. (1) If you are a Federallyqualified subsistence user who also
commercial fishes, you may retain fish
for subsistence purposes from your
lawfully-taken commercial catch.
(2) When participating in a
commercial and subsistence fishery at
the same time, you may not use an
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amount of combined fishing gear in
excess of that allowed under the
appropriate commercial fishing
regulations.
(g) You may not possess, transport,
give, receive, or barter subsistence-taken
fish or their parts which have been
taken contrary to Federal law or
regulation or State law or regulation
(unless superseded by regulations in
this part).
(h) [Reserved]
(i) Fishery management area
restrictions. (1) Kotzebue Area. The
Kotzebue Area includes all waters of
Alaska between the latitude of the
westernmost tip of Point Hope and the
latitude of the westernmost tip of Cape
Prince of Wales, including those waters
draining into the Chukchi Sea.
(i) You may take fish for subsistence
purposes without a permit.
(ii) You may take salmon only by
gillnets, beach seines, or a rod and reel.
(iii) In the Kotzebue District, you may
take sheefish with gillnets that are not
more than 50 fathoms in length, nor
more than 12 meshes in depth, nor have
a stretched-mesh size larger than 7
inches.
(iv) You may not obstruct more than
one-half the width of a stream, creek, or
slough with any gear used to take fish
for subsistence uses, except from May
15 to July 15 and August 15 to October
31 when taking whitefish or pike in
streams, creeks, or sloughs within the
Kobuk River drainage and from May 15
to October 31 in the Selawik River
drainage. Only one gillnet 100 feet or
less in length with a stretched-mesh size
from 21⁄2 to 41⁄2 inches may be used per
site. You must check your net at least
once in every 24-hour period.
(2) Norton Sound-Port Clarence Area.
The Norton Sound-Port Clarence Area
includes all waters of Alaska between
the latitude of the westernmost tip of
Cape Prince of Wales and the latitude of
Point Romanof, including those waters
of Alaska surrounding St. Lawrence
Island and those waters draining into
the Bering Sea.
(i) Unless otherwise restricted in this
section, you may take fish at any time
in the Port Clarence District.
(ii) In the Norton Sound District, you
may take fish at any time except as
follows:
(A) In Subdistricts 2 through 6, if you
are a commercial fishermen, you may
not fish for subsistence purposes during
the weekly closures of the State
commercial salmon fishing season,
except that from July 15 through August
1, you may take salmon for subsistence
purposes 7 days per week in the
Unalakleet and Shaktoolik River
drainages with gillnets which have a
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stretched-mesh size that does not
exceed 41⁄2 inches, and with beach
seines;
(B) In the Unalakleet River from June
1 through July 15, you may take salmon
only from 8 a.m. Monday until 8 p.m.
Saturday.
(iii) You may take salmon only by
gillnets, beach seines, fishwheel, or a
rod and reel.
(iv) You may take fish other than
salmon by set gillnet, drift gillnet, beach
seine, fish wheel, pot, long line, fyke
net, jigging gear, spear, lead, or a rod
and reel.
(v) In the Unalakleet River from June
1 through July 15, you may not operate
more than 25 fathoms of gillnet in the
aggregate nor may you operate an
unanchored gillnet.
(vi) You must have a subsistence
fishing permit for net fishing in all
waters from Cape Douglas to Rocky
Point.
(vii) Only one subsistence fishing
permit will be issued to each household
per year.
(3) Yukon-Northern Area. The YukonNorthern Area includes all waters of
Alaska between the latitude of Point
Romanof and the latitude of the
westernmost point of the Naskonat
Peninsula, including those waters
draining into the Bering Sea, and all
waters of Alaska north of the latitude of
the westernmost tip of Point Hope and
west of 141° West longitude, including
those waters draining into the Arctic
Ocean and the Chukchi Sea.
(i) Unless otherwise restricted in this
section, you may take fish in the YukonNorthern Area at any time. You may
subsistence fish for salmon with rod and
reel in the Yukon River drainage 24
hours per day, 7 days per week, unless
rod and reel are specifically otherwise
restricted in § ll.27(i)(3).
(ii) For the Yukon River drainage,
Federal subsistence fishing schedules,
openings, closings, and fishing methods
are the same as those issued for the
subsistence taking of fish under Alaska
Statutes (AS 16.05.060), unless
superseded by a Federal Special Action.
(iii) In the following locations, you
may take salmon during the open
weekly fishing periods of the State
commercial salmon fishing season and
may not take them for 24 hours before
the opening of the State commercial
salmon fishing season:
(A) In District 4, excluding the
Koyukuk River drainage;
(B) In Subdistricts 4B and 4C from
June 15 through September 30, salmon
may be taken from 6 p.m. Sunday until
6 p.m. Tuesday and from 6 p.m.
Wednesday until 6 p.m. Friday;
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13387
(C) In District 6, excluding the
Kantishna River drainage, salmon may
be taken from 6 p.m. Friday until 6 p.m.
Wednesday.
(iv) During any State commercial
salmon fishing season closure of greater
than five days in duration, you may not
take salmon during the following
periods in the following districts:
(A) In District 4, excluding the
Koyukuk River drainage, salmon may
not be taken from 6 p.m. Friday until 6
p.m. Sunday;
(B) In District 5, excluding the Tozitna
River drainage and Subdistrict 5D,
salmon may not be taken from 6 p.m.
Sunday until 6 p.m. Tuesday.
(v) Except as provided in this section,
and except as may be provided by the
terms of a subsistence fishing permit,
you may take fish other than salmon at
any time.
(vi) In Districts 1, 2, 3, and Subdistrict
4A, excluding the Koyukuk and Innoko
River drainages, you may not take
salmon for subsistence purposes during
the 24 hours immediately before the
opening of the State commercial salmon
fishing season.
(vii) In Districts 1, 2, and 3:
(A) After the opening of the State
commercial salmon fishing season
through July 15, you may not take
salmon for subsistence for 18 hours
immediately before, during, and for 12
hours after each State commercial
salmon fishing period;
(B) After July 15, you may not take
salmon for subsistence for 12 hours
immediately before, during, and for 12
hours after each State commercial
salmon fishing period.
(viii) In Subdistrict 4A after the
opening of the State commercial salmon
fishing season, you may not take salmon
for subsistence for 12 hours
immediately before, during, and for 12
hours after each State commercial
salmon fishing period; however, you
may take chinook salmon during the
State commercial fishing season, with
drift gillnet gear only, from 6 p.m.
Sunday until 6 p.m. Tuesday and from
6 p.m. Wednesday until 6 p.m. Friday.
(ix) You may not subsistence fish in
the following drainages located north of
the main Yukon River:
(A) Kanuti River upstream from a
point 5 miles downstream of the State
highway crossing;
(B) Bonanza Creek;
(C) Jim River including Prospect and
Douglas Creeks.
(x) You may not subsistence fish in
the Delta River.
(xi) In Beaver Creek downstream from
the confluence of Moose Creek, a gillnet
with mesh size not to exceed 3-inches
stretch-measure may be used from June
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15 through September 15. You may
subsistence fish for all non-salmon
species but may not target salmon
during this time period (retention of
salmon taken incidentally to nonsalmon directed fisheries is allowed).
From the mouth of Nome Creek
downstream to the confluence of Moose
Creek, only rod and reel may be used.
From the mouth of Nome Creek
downstream to the confluence of
O’Brien Creek, the daily harvest and
possession limit is 5 grayling; from the
mouth of O’Brien Creek downstream to
the confluence of Moose Creek, the
daily harvest and possession limit is 10
grayling. The Nome Creek drainage of
Beaver Creek is closed to subsistence
fishing for grayling.
(xii) You may not subsistence fish in
the Toklat River drainage from August
15 through May 15.
(xiii) You may take salmon only by
gillnet, beach seine, fish wheel, or rod
and reel, subject to the restrictions set
forth in this section.
(xiv) In District 4, if you are a
commercial fisherman, you may not
take salmon for subsistence purposes
during the State commercial salmon
fishing season using gillnets with
stretched-mesh larger than 6-inches
after a date specified by ADF&G
emergency order issued between July 10
and July 31.
(xv) In Districts 4, 5, and 6, you may
not take salmon for subsistence
purposes by drift gillnets, except as
follows:
(A) In Subdistrict 4A upstream from
the mouth of Stink Creek, you may take
chinook salmon by drift gillnets less
than 150 feet in length from June 10
through July 14, and chum salmon by
drift gillnets after August 2;
(B) In Subdistrict 4A downstream
from the mouth of Stink Creek, you may
take chinook salmon by drift gillnets
less than 150 feet in length from June 10
through July 14;
(C) In the Yukon River mainstem,
Subdistricts 4B and 4C with a Federal
subsistence fishing permit, you may
take chinook salmon during the last 18hour period of the weekly regulatory
opening(s) by drift gillnets no more than
150 feet long and no more than 35
meshes deep, from June 10 through July
14.
(xvi) Unless otherwise specified in
this section, you may take fish other
than salmon and halibut by set gillnet,
drift gillnet, beach seine, fish wheel,
long line, fyke net, dip net, jigging gear,
spear, lead, or rod and reel, subject to
the following restrictions, which also
apply to subsistence salmon fishing:
(A) During the open weekly fishing
periods of the State commercial salmon
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fishing season, if you are a commercial
fisherman, you may not operate more
than one type of gear at a time, for
commercial, personal use, and
subsistence purposes;
(B) You may not use an aggregate
length of set gillnet in excess of 150
fathoms and each drift gillnet may not
exceed 50 fathoms in length;
(C) In Districts 4, 5, and 6, you may
not set subsistence fishing gear within
200 feet of other operating commercial
use, personal use, or subsistence fishing
gear except that, at the site
approximately 1 mile upstream from
Ruby on the south bank of the Yukon
River between ADF&G regulatory
markers containing the area known
locally as the ‘‘Slide,’’ you may set
subsistence fishing gear within 200 feet
of other operating commercial or
subsistence fishing gear, and in District
4, from Old Paradise Village upstream to
a point 4 miles upstream from Anvik,
there is no minimum distance
requirement between fish wheels;
(D) During the State commercial
salmon fishing season, within the
Yukon River and the Tanana River
below the confluence of the Wood
River, you may use drift gillnets and
fish wheels only during open
subsistence salmon fishing periods;
(E) In Birch Creek, gillnet mesh size
may not exceed 3-inches stretchmeasure from June 15 through
September 15.
(xvii) In District 4, from September 21
through May 15, you may use jigging
gear from shore ice.
(xviii) You must possess a subsistence
fishing permit for the following
locations:
(A) For the Yukon River drainage
from the mouth of Hess Creek to the
mouth of the Dall River;
(B) For the Yukon River drainage from
the upstream mouth of 22 Mile Slough
to the U.S.-Canada border;
(C) Only for salmon in the Tanana
River drainage above the mouth of the
Wood River.
(xix) Only one subsistence fishing
permit will be issued to each household
per year.
(xx) In Districts 1, 2, and 3, you may
not possess chinook salmon taken for
subsistence purposes unless the dorsal
fin has been removed immediately after
landing.
(xxi) In the Yukon River drainage,
chinook salmon must be used primarily
for human consumption and may not be
targeted for dog food. Dried chinook
salmon may not be used for dogfood
anywhere in the Yukon River drainage.
Whole fish unfit for human
consumption (due to disease,
deterioration, deformities), scraps, and
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small fish (16 inches or less) may be fed
to dogs. Also, whole chinook salmon
caught incidentally during a subsistence
chum salmon fishery in the following
time periods and locations may be fed
to dogs:
(A) After July 10 in the Koyukuk River
drainage;
(B) After August 10, in Subdistrict 5D,
upstream of Circle City.
(4) Kuskokwim Area. The Kuskokwim
Area consists of all waters of Alaska
between the latitude of the westernmost
point of Naskonat Peninsula and the
latitude of the southernmost tip of Cape
Newenham, including the waters of
Alaska surrounding Nunivak and St.
Matthew Islands and those waters
draining into the Bering Sea.
(i) Unless otherwise restricted in this
section, you may take fish in the
Kuskokwim Area at any time without a
subsistence fishing permit.
(ii) For the Kuskokwim area, Federal
subsistence fishing schedules, openings,
closings, and fishing methods are the
same as those issued for the subsistence
taking of fish under Alaska Statutes (AS
16.05.060), unless superseded by a
Federal Special Action.
(iii) In District 1 and in those waters
of the Kuskokwim River between
Districts 1 and 2, excluding the
Kuskokuak Slough, you may not take
salmon for 16 hours before or during,
and for 6 hours after each State open
commercial salmon fishing period for
District 1.
(iv) In District 1, Kuskokuak Slough,
from June 1 through July 31 only, you
may not take salmon for 16 hours before
and during each State open commercial
salmon fishing period in the district.
(v) In Districts 4 and 5, from June 1
through September 8, you may not take
salmon for 16 hours before or during,
and for 6 hours after each State open
commercial salmon fishing period in
each district.
(vi) In District 2, and anywhere in
tributaries that flow into the
Kuskokwim River within that district,
from June 1 through September 8 you
may not take salmon by net gear or
fishwheel for 16 hours before or during,
and for 6 hours after each open
commercial salmon fishing period in the
district. You may subsistence fish for
salmon with rod and reel 24 hours per
day, 7 days per week, unless rod and
reel are specifically restricted by this
paragraph (i)(4) of this section.
(vii) You may not take subsistence
fish by nets in the Goodnews River east
of a line between ADF&G regulatory
markers placed near the mouth of the
Ufigag River and an ADF&G regulatory
marker placed near the mouth of the
Tunulik River 16 hours before or during,
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and for 6 hours after each State open
commercial salmon fishing period.
(viii) You may not take subsistence
fish by nets in the Kanektok River
upstream of ADF&G regulatory markers
placed near the mouth 16 hours before
or during, and for 6 hours after each
State open commercial salmon fishing
period.
(ix) You may not take subsistence fish
by nets in the Arolik River upstream of
ADF&G regulatory markers placed near
the mouth 16 hours before or during,
and for 6 hours after each State open
commercial salmon fishing period.
(x) You may only take salmon by
gillnet, beach seine, fish wheel, or rod
and reel subject to the restrictions set
out in this section, except that you may
also take salmon by spear in the Holitna,
Kanektok, and Arolik River drainages,
and in the drainage of Goodnews Bay.
(xi) You may not use an aggregate
length of set gillnets or drift gillnets in
excess of 50 fathoms for taking salmon.
(xii) You may take fish other than
salmon by set gillnet, drift gillnet, beach
seine, fish wheel, pot, long line, fyke
net, dip net, jigging gear, spear, lead,
handline, or rod and reel.
(xiii) You must attach to the bank
each subsistence gillnet operated in
tributaries of the Kuskokwim River and
fish it substantially perpendicular to the
bank and in a substantially straight line.
(xiv) Within a tributary to the
Kuskokwim River in that portion of the
Kuskokwim River drainage from the
north end of Eek Island upstream to the
mouth of the Kolmakoff River, you may
not set or operate any part of a set
gillnet within 150 feet of any part of
another set gillnet.
(xv) The maximum depth of gillnets is
as follows:
(A) Gillnets with 6-inch or smaller
stretched-mesh may not be more than 45
meshes in depth;
(B) Gillnets with greater than 6-inch
stretched-mesh may not be more than 35
meshes in depth.
(xvi) You may take halibut only by a
single handheld line with no more than
two hooks attached to it.
(xvii) You may not use subsistence set
and drift gillnets exceeding 15 fathoms
in length in Whitefish Lake in the Ophir
Creek drainage. You may not operate
more than one subsistence set or drift
gillnet at a time in Whitefish Lake in the
Ophir Creek drainage. You must check
the net at least once every 24 hours.
(xviii) You may take rainbow trout
only in accordance with the following
restrictions:
(A) You may take rainbow trout only
by the use of gillnets, dip nets, fyke
nets, handline, spear, rod and reel, or
jigging through the ice;
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(B) You may not use gillnets, dip nets,
or fyke nets for targeting rainbow trout
from March 15 through June 15;
(C) If you take rainbow trout
incidentally in other subsistence net
fisheries and through the ice, you may
retain them for subsistence purposes;
(D) There are no harvest limits with
handline, spear, rod and reel, or jigging.
(5) Bristol Bay Area. The Bristol Bay
Area includes all waters of Bristol Bay,
including drainages enclosed by a line
from Cape Newenham to Cape
Menshikof.
(i) Unless restricted in this section, or
unless under the terms of a subsistence
fishing permit, you may take fish at any
time in the Bristol Bay area.
(ii) In all State commercial salmon
districts, from May 1 through May 31
and October 1 through October 31, you
may subsistence fish for salmon only
from 9 a.m. Monday until 9 a.m. Friday.
From June 1 through September 30,
within the waters of a commercial
salmon district, you may take salmon
only during State open commercial
salmon fishing periods.
(iii) In the Egegik River from 9 a.m.
June 23 through 9 a.m. July 17, you may
take salmon only during the following
times: from 9 a.m. Tuesday to 9 a.m.
Wednesday and from 9 a.m. Saturday to
9 a.m. Sunday.
(iv) You may not take fish from waters
within 300 feet of a stream mouth used
by salmon.
(v) You may not subsistence fish with
nets in the Tazimina River and within
one-fourth mile of the terminus of those
waters during the period from
September 1 through June 14.
(vi) Within any district, you may take
salmon, herring, and capelin by drift
and set gillnets only.
(vii) Outside the boundaries of any
district, you may take salmon by set
gillnet only, except that you may also
take salmon by spear in the Togiak
River, excluding its tributaries.
(viii) The maximum lengths for set
gillnets used to take salmon are as
follows:
(A) You may not use set gillnets
exceeding 10 fathoms in length in the
Egegik River;
(B) In the remaining waters of the
area, you may not use set gillnets
exceeding 25 fathoms in length.
(ix) You may not operate any part of
a set gillnet within 300 feet of any part
of another set gillnet.
(x) You must stake and buoy each set
gillnet. Instead of having the identifying
information on a keg or buoy attached
to the gillnet, you may plainly and
legibly inscribe your first initial, last
name, and subsistence permit number
on a sign at or near the set gillnet.
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(xi) You may not operate or assist in
operating subsistence salmon net gear
while simultaneously operating or
assisting in operating commercial
salmon net gear.
(xii) During State closed commercial
herring fishing periods, you may not use
gillnets exceeding 25 fathoms in length
for the subsistence taking of herring or
capelin.
(xiii) You may take fish other than
salmon, herring, capelin, and halibut by
gear listed in this part unless restricted
under the terms of a subsistence fishing
permit.
(xiv) You may take salmon only under
authority of a subsistence fishing
permit.
(xv) Only one subsistence fishing
permit for salmon may be issued to each
household per year.
(xvi) In the Togiak River section and
the Togiak River drainage, you may not
possess coho salmon taken under the
authority of a subsistence fishing permit
unless both lobes of the caudal fin (tail)
or the dorsal fin have been removed.
(xvii) You may take rainbow trout
only by rod and reel or jigging gear.
Rainbow trout daily harvest and
possession limits are 2 per day/2 in
possession with no size limit from April
10 through October 31 and 5 per day/
5 in possession with no size limit from
November 1 through April 9.
(xviii) If you take rainbow trout
incidentally in other subsistence net
fisheries, or through the ice, you may
retain them for subsistence purposes.
(6) Aleutian Islands Area. The
Aleutian Islands Area includes all
waters of Alaska west of the longitude
of the tip of Cape Sarichef, east of 172°
East longitude, and south of 54°36′
North latitude.
(i) You may take fish other than
salmon, rainbow/steelhead trout, or char
at any time unless restricted under the
terms of a subsistence fishing permit. If
you take rainbow/steelhead trout
incidentally in other subsistence net
fisheries, you may retain them for
subsistence purposes.
(ii) In the Unalaska District, you may
take salmon for subsistence purposes
from 6 a.m. until 9 p.m. from January 1
through December 31, except as may be
specified on a subsistence fishing
permit.
(iii) In the Adak, Akutan, Atka-Amlia,
and Umnak Districts, you may take
salmon at any time.
(iv) You may not subsistence fish for
salmon in the following waters:
(A) The waters of Unalaska Lake, its
tributaries and outlet stream;
(B) The waters of Summers and
Morris Lakes and their tributaries and
outlet streams;
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(C) All streams supporting
anadromous fish runs that flow into
Unalaska Bay south of a line from the
northern tip of Cape Cheerful to the
northern tip of Kalekta Point;
(D) Waters of McLees Lake and its
tributaries and outlet stream;
(E) All freshwater on Adak Island and
Kagalaska Island in the Adak District.
(v) You may take salmon by seine and
gillnet, or with gear specified on a
subsistence fishing permit.
(vi) In the Unalaska District, if you
fish with a net, you must be physically
present at the net at all times when the
net is being used.
(vii) You may take fish other than
salmon by gear listed in this part unless
restricted under the terms of a
subsistence fishing permit.
(viii) You may take salmon, trout, and
char only under the terms of a
subsistence fishing permit, except that
you do not need a permit in the Akutan,
Umnak, and Atka-Amlia Islands
Districts.
(ix) You may take no more than 250
salmon for subsistence purposes unless
otherwise specified on the subsistence
fishing permit, except that in the
Unalaska and Adak Districts, you may
take no more than 25 salmon plus an
additional 25 salmon for each member
of your household listed on the permit.
You may obtain an additional permit.
(x) You must keep a record on the
reverse side of the permit of
subsistence-caught fish. You must
complete the record immediately upon
taking subsistence-caught fish and must
return it no later than October 31.
(xi) The daily harvest limit for halibut
is two fish, and the possession limit is
two daily harvest limits. You may not
possess sport-taken and subsistencetaken halibut on the same day.
(7) Alaska Peninsula Area. The
Alaska Peninsula Area includes all
waters of Alaska on the north side of the
Alaska peninsula southwest of a line
from Cape Menshikof (57°28.34′ North
latitude, 157°55.84′ West longitude) to
Cape Newenham (58°39.00′ North
latitude, 162° West longitude) and east
of the longitude of Cape Sarichef Light
(164°55.70′ West longitude) and on the
south side of the Alaska Peninsula from
a line extending from Scotch Cape
through the easternmost tip of Ugamak
Island to a line extending 135° southeast
from Kupreanof Point (55°33.98′ North
latitude, 159°35.88′ West longitude).
(i) You may take fish, other than
salmon, rainbow/steelhead trout, or
char, at any time unless restricted under
the terms of a subsistence fishing
permit. If you take rainbow/steelhead
trout incidentally in other subsistence
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net fisheries or through the ice, you may
retain them for subsistence purposes.
(ii) You may take salmon, trout, and
char only under the authority of a
subsistence fishing permit.
(iii) You must keep a record on the
reverse side of the permit of
subsistence-caught fish. You must
complete the record immediately upon
taking subsistence-caught fish and must
return it no later than October 31.
(iv) You may take salmon at any time
except within 24 hours before and
within 12 hours following each State
open weekly commercial salmon fishing
period within a 50-mile radius of the
area open to commercial salmon fishing,
or as may be specified on a subsistence
fishing permit.
(v) You may not subsistence fish for
salmon in the following waters:
(A) Russell Creek and Nurse Lagoon
and within 500 yards outside the mouth
of Nurse Lagoon;
(B) Trout Creek and within 500 yards
outside its mouth.
(vi) You may take salmon by seine,
gillnet, rod and reel, or with gear
specified on a subsistence fishing
permit.
(vii) You may take fish other than
salmon by gear listed in this part unless
restricted under the terms of a
subsistence fishing permit.
(viii) You may not use a set gillnet
exceeding 100 fathoms in length.
(ix) You may take halibut for
subsistence purposes only by a single
handheld line with no more than two
hooks attached.
(x) You may take no more than 250
salmon for subsistence purposes unless
otherwise specified on your subsistence
fishing permit.
(xi) The daily harvest limit for halibut
is two fish and the possession limit is
two daily harvest limits. You may not
possess sport-taken and subsistencetaken halibut on the same day.
(8) Chignik Area. The Chignik Area
includes all waters of Alaska on the
south side of the Alaska Peninsula
bounded by a line extending 135°
southeast for 3 miles from a point near
Kilokak Rocks at 57°10.34′ North
latitude, 156°20.22′ West longitude (the
longitude of the southern entrance to
Imuya Bay) then due south, and a line
extending 135°southeast from
Kupreanof Point at 55°33.98′ North
latitude, 159°35.88′ West longitude.
(i) You may take fish other than
salmon, rainbow/steelhead trout, or char
at any time, except as may be specified
by a subsistence fishing permit. If you
take rainbow/steelhead trout
incidentally in other subsistence net
fisheries, you may retain them for
subsistence purposes.
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(ii) You may not take salmon in the
Chignik River, upstream from the
ADF&G weir site or counting tower, in
Black Lake, or any tributary to Black
and Chignik Lakes.
(iii) You may take salmon, trout, and
char only under the authority of a
subsistence fishing permit.
(iv) You must keep a record on your
permit of subsistence-caught fish. You
must complete the record immediately
upon taking subsistence-caught fish and
must return it no later than October 31.
(v) If you hold a commercial fishing
license, you may not subsistence fish for
salmon from 48 hours before the first
State commercial salmon fishing
opening in the Chignik Area through
September 30.
(vi) You may take salmon by seines,
gillnets, rod and reel, or with gear
specified on a subsistence fishing
permit, except that in Chignik Lake you
may not use purse seines.
(vii) You may take fish other than
salmon by gear listed in this part unless
restricted under the terms of a
subsistence fishing permit.
(viii) You may take halibut for
subsistence purposes only by a single
handheld line with no more than two
hooks attached.
(ix) You may take no more than 250
salmon for subsistence purposes unless
otherwise specified on the subsistence
fishing permit.
(x) The daily harvest limit for halibut
is two fish, and the possession limit is
two daily harvest limits. You may not
possess sport-taken and subsistencetaken halibut on the same day.
(9) Kodiak Area. The Kodiak Area
includes all waters of Alaska south of a
line extending east from Cape Douglas
(58°51.10′ North latitude), west of 150°
West longitude, north of 55°30.00′ North
latitude, and north and east of a line
extending 135° southeast for three miles
from a point near Kilokak Rocks at
57°10.34′ North latitude, 156°20.22′
West longitude (the longitude of the
southern entrance of Imuya Bay), then
due south.
(i) You may take fish other than
salmon, rainbow/steelhead trout, char,
bottomfish, or herring at any time unless
restricted by the terms of a subsistence
fishing permit. If you take rainbow/
steelhead trout incidentally in other
subsistence net fisheries, you may retain
them for subsistence purposes.
(ii) You may take salmon for
subsistence purposes 24 hours a day
from January 1 through December 31,
with the following exceptions:
(A) From June 1 through September
15, you may not use salmon seine
vessels to take subsistence salmon for 24
hours before or during, and for 24 hours
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after any State open commercial salmon
fishing period. The use of skiffs from
any type of vessel is allowed;
(B) From June 1 through September
15, you may use purse seine vessels to
take salmon only with gillnets, and you
may have no other type of salmon gear
on board the vessel.
(iii) You may not subsistence fish for
salmon in the following locations:
(A) Womens Bay closed waters—all
waters inside a line from the tip of the
Nyman Peninsula (57°43.23′ North
latitude, 152°31.51′ West longitude), to
the northeastern tip of Mary’s Island
(57°42.40′ North latitude, 152°32.00′
West longitude), to the southeastern
shore of Womens Bay at 57°41.95′ North
latitude, 152°31.50′ West longitude;
(B) Buskin River closed waters—all
waters inside of a line running from a
marker on the bluff north of the mouth
of the Buskin River at approximately
57°45.80′ North latitude, 152°28.38′
West longitude, to a point offshore at
57°45.35′ North latitude, 152°28.15′
West longitude, to a marker located
onshore south of the river mouth at
approximately 57°45.15′ North latitude,
152°28.65′ West longitude;
(C) All waters closed to commercial
salmon fishing within 100 yards of the
terminus of Selief Bay Creek;
(D) In Afognak Bay north and west of
a line from the tip of Last Point to the
tip of River Mouth Point;
(E) From August 15 through
September 30, all waters 500 yards
seaward of the terminus of Little Kitoi
Creek;
(F) All freshwater systems of Afognak
Island.
(iv) You must have a subsistence
fishing permit for taking salmon, trout,
and char for subsistence purposes. You
must have a subsistence fishing permit
for taking herring and bottomfish for
subsistence purposes during the State
commercial herring sac roe season from
April 15 through June 30.
(v) With a subsistence salmon fishing
permit you may take 25 salmon plus an
additional 25 salmon for each member
of your household whose names are
listed on the permit. You may obtain an
additional permit if you can show that
more fish are needed.
(vi) You must record on your
subsistence permit the number of
subsistence fish taken. You must
complete the record immediately upon
landing subsistence-caught fish, and
must return it by February 1 of the year
following the year the permit was
issued.
(vii) You may take fish other than
salmon and halibut by gear listed in this
part unless restricted under the terms of
a subsistence fishing permit.
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(viii) You may take salmon only by
gillnet, rod and reel, or seine.
(ix) You must be physically present at
the net when the net is being fished.
(x) You may take halibut only by a
single handheld line with not more than
two hooks attached to it.
(xi) The daily harvest limit for halibut
is two fish, and the possession limit is
two daily harvest limits. You may not
possess sport-taken and subsistencetaken halibut on the same day.
(10) Cook Inlet Area. The Cook Inlet
Area includes all waters of Alaska
enclosed by a line extending east from
Cape Douglas (58°51′06″ North latitude)
and a line extending south from Cape
Fairfield (148°50′15″ West longitude).
(i) Unless restricted in this section, or
unless restricted under the terms of a
subsistence fishing permit, you may
take fish at any time in the Cook Inlet
Area. If you take rainbow/steelhead
trout incidentally in other subsistence
net fisheries, you may retain them for
subsistence purposes.
(ii) You may not take grayling or
burbot for subsistence purposes.
(iii) You may take fish by gear listed
in this part unless restricted in this
section or under the terms of a
subsistence fishing permit (as may be
modified by this section).
(iv) You may only take salmon, Dolly
Varden, trout, and char under authority
of a Federal subsistence fishing permit.
Seasons, harvest and possession limits,
and methods and means for take are the
same as for the taking of those species
under Alaska sport fishing regulations
(5 AAC 56).
(v) You may only take smelt with dip
nets in fresh water from April 1 through
June 15. There are no harvest or
possession limits for smelt.
(vi) Gillnets may not be used in
freshwater, except for the taking of
whitefish in the Tyone River drainage.
(11) Prince William Sound Area. The
Prince William Sound Area includes all
waters and drainages of Alaska between
the longitude of Cape Fairfield and the
longitude of Cape Suckling.
(i) You may take fish, other than
rainbow/steelhead trout, in the Prince
William Sound Area only under
authority of a subsistence fishing
permit, except that a permit is not
required to take eulachon.
(ii) You may take fish by gear listed
in paragraph (c)(1) of this part unless
restricted in this section or under the
terms of a subsistence fishing permit.
(iii) If you catch rainbow/steelhead
trout incidentally in other subsistence
net fisheries, you may retain them for
subsistence purposes, unless restricted
in this section.
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13391
(iv) In the Copper River drainage, you
may take salmon only in the waters of
the Upper Copper River District, or in
the vicinity of the Native Village of
Batzulnetas. You may accumulate
harvest limits of salmon authorized for
the Copper River drainage upstream
from Haley Creek with harvest limits for
salmon authorized under State of Alaska
sport fishing regulations.
(v) In the Upper Copper River District,
you may take salmon only by fish
wheels, rod and reel, or dip nets.
(vi) Rainbow/steelhead trout and
other freshwater fish caught incidentally
to salmon by fish wheel in the Upper
Copper River District may be retained.
(vii) Freshwater fish other than
rainbow/steelhead trout caught
incidentally to salmon by dip net in the
Upper Copper River District may be
retained. Rainbow/steelhead trout
caught incidentally to salmon by dip net
in the Upper Copper River District must
be released unharmed to the water.
(viii) You may not possess salmon
taken under the authority of an Upper
Copper River District subsistence
fishing permit, or rainbow/steelhead
trout caught incidentally to salmon by
fishwheel, unless the anal (ventral) fin
has been immediately removed from the
fish. You must immediately record all
retained fish on the subsistence permit.
Immediately means prior to concealing
the fish from plain view or transporting
the fish more than 50 feet from where
the fish was removed from the water.
(ix) You may take salmon in the
Upper Copper River District from May
15 through September 30 only.
(x) The total annual harvest limit for
subsistence salmon fishing permits in
combination for the Glennallen
Subdistrict and the Chitina Subdistrict
is as follows:
(A) For a household with 1 person, 30
salmon, of which no more than 5 may
be chinook salmon taken by dip net and
no more than 5 chinook taken by rod
and reel;
(B) For a household with 2 persons,
60 salmon, of which no more than 5
may be chinook salmon taken by dip net
and no more than 5 chinook taken by
rod and reel, plus 10 salmon for each
additional person in a household over 2
persons, except that the household’s
limit for chinook salmon taken by dip
net or rod and reel does not increase;
(C) Upon request, permits for
additional salmon will be issued for no
more than a total of 200 salmon for a
permit issued to a household with 1
person, of which no more than 5 may
be chinook salmon taken by dip net and
no more than 5 chinook taken by rod
and reel, or no more than a total of 500
salmon for a permit issued to a
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household with 2 or more persons, of
which no more than 5 may be chinook
salmon taken by dip net and no more
than 5 chinook taken by rod and reel.
(xi) The following apply to Upper
Copper River District subsistence
salmon fishing permits:
(A) Only one subsistence fishing
permit per subdistrict will be issued to
each household per year. If a household
has been issued permits for both
subdistricts in the same year, both
permits must be in your possession and
readily available for inspection while
fishing or transporting subsistence-taken
fish in either subdistrict. A qualified
household may also be issued a
Batzulnetas salmon fishery permit in the
same year;
(B) Multiple types of gear may be
specified on a permit, although only one
unit of gear may be operated at any one
time;
(C) You must return your permit no
later than October 31 of the year in
which the permit is issued, or you may
be denied a permit for the following
year;
(D) A fish wheel may be operated only
by one permit holder at one time; that
permit holder must have the fish wheel
marked as required by Section
ll.27(i)(11) and during fishing
operations;
(E) Only the permit holder and the
authorized member of the household
listed on the subsistence permit may
take salmon;
(F) You must personally operate your
fish wheel or dip net;
(G) You may not loan or transfer a
subsistence fish wheel or dip net permit
except as permitted.
(xii) If you are a fishwheel owner:
(A) You must register your fish wheel
with ADF&G or the Federal Subsistence
Board;
(B) Your registration number and a
wood, metal, or plastic plate at least 12
inches high by 12 inches wide bearing
either your name and address, or your
Alaska driver’s license number, or your
Alaska State identification card number
in letters and numerals at least 1 inch
high, must be permanently affixed and
plainly visible on the fish wheel when
the fish wheel is in the water;
(C) Only the current year’s registration
number may be affixed to the fish
wheel; you must remove any other
registration number from the fish wheel;
(D) You are responsible for the fish
wheel; you must remove the fish wheel
from the water at the end of the permit
period;
(E) You may not rent, lease, or
otherwise use your fish wheel used for
subsistence fishing for personal gain.
(xiii) If you are operating a fishwheel:
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(A) You may operate only one fish
wheel at any one time;
(B) You may not set or operate a fish
wheel within 75 feet of another fish
wheel;
(C) No fish wheel may have more than
two baskets;
(D) If you are a permittee other than
the owner, you must attach an
additional wood, metal, or plastic plate
at least 12 inches high by 12 inches
wide, bearing your name and address in
letters and numerals at least 1 inch high,
to the fish wheel so that the name and
address are plainly visible.
(xiv) A subsistence fishing permit
may be issued to a village council, or
other similarly qualified organization
whose members operate fish wheels for
subsistence purposes in the Upper
Copper River District, to operate fish
wheels on behalf of members of its
village or organization. The following
additional provisions apply to
subsistence fishing permits issued
under this paragraph (i)(11)(xiv):
(A) The permit will list all households
and household members for whom the
fish wheel is being operated. The permit
will identify a person who will be
responsible for each fish wheel in a
similar manner to a fish wheel owner as
described in paragraph (i)(11)(xii) of this
section;
(B) The allowable harvest may not
exceed the combined seasonal limits for
the households listed on the permit; the
permittee will notify the ADF&G or
Federal Subsistence Board when
households are added to the list, and the
seasonal limit may be adjusted
accordingly;
(C) Members of households listed on
a permit issued to a village council or
other similarly qualified organization
are not eligible for a separate household
subsistence fishing permit for the Upper
Copper River District;
(D) The permit will include
provisions for recording daily catches
for each fish wheel; location and
number of fish wheels; full legal name
of the individual responsible for the
lawful operation of each fish wheel as
described in paragraph (i)(11)(xii) of this
section; and other information
determined to be necessary for effective
resource management.
(xv) You may take salmon in the
vicinity of the former Native village of
Batzulnetas only under the authority of
a Batzulnetas subsistence salmon
fishing permit available from the
National Park Service under the
following conditions:
(A) You may take salmon only in
those waters of the Copper River
between National Park Service
regulatory markers located near the
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mouth of Tanada Creek and
approximately one-half mile
downstream from that mouth and in
Tanada Creek between National Park
Service regulatory markers identifying
the open waters of the creek;
(B) You may use only fish wheels, dip
nets, and rod and reel on the Copper
River and only dip nets, spears, and rod
and reel in Tanada Creek;
(C) You may take salmon only from
May 15 through September 30 or until
the season is closed by special action;
(D) You may retain chinook salmon
taken in a fishwheel in the Copper
River. You may not take chinook salmon
in Tanada Creek;
(E) You must return the permit to the
National Park Service no later than
October 15.
(xvi) You may take pink salmon for
subsistence purposes from freshwater
with a dip net from May 15 until
September 30, 7 days per week, with no
harvest or possession limits in the
following areas:
(A) Green Island, Knight Island,
Chenega Island, Bainbridge Island,
Evans Island, Elrington Island, Latouche
Island, and adjacent islands, and the
mainland waters from the outer point of
Granite Bay located in Knight Island
Passage to Cape Fairfield;
(B) Waters north of a line from
Porcupine Point to Granite Point, and
south of a line from Point Lowe to
Tongue Point.
(12) Yakutat Area. The Yakutat Area
includes all waters and drainages of
Alaska between the longitude of Cape
Suckling and the longitude of Cape
Fairweather.
(i) Unless restricted in this section or
unless restricted under the terms of a
subsistence fishing permit, you may
take fish at any time in the Yakutat
Area.
(ii) You may not take salmon during
the period commencing 48 hours before
a State opening of commercial salmon
net fishing season and ending 48 hours
after the closure. This applies to each
river or bay fishery individually.
(iii) When the length of the weekly
State commercial salmon net fishing
period exceeds two days in any Yakutat
Area salmon net fishery, the subsistence
fishing period is from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m.
on Saturday in that location.
(iv) You may take salmon, trout (other
than steelhead), and char only under
authority of a subsistence fishing
permit. You may take steelhead trout
only in the Situk and Ahrnklin Rivers
and only under authority of a Federal
subsistence fishing permit.
(v) If you take salmon, trout, or char
incidentally by gear operated under the
terms of a subsistence permit for
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salmon, you may retain them for
subsistence purposes. You must report
any salmon, trout, or char taken in this
manner on your permit calendar.
(vi) You may take fish by gear listed
in this part unless restricted in this
section or under the terms of a
subsistence fishing permit.
(vii) In the Situk River, each
subsistence salmon fishing permit
holder shall attend his or her gillnet at
all times when it is being used to take
salmon.
(viii) You may block up to two-thirds
of a stream with a gillnet or seine used
for subsistence fishing.
(ix) You must remove the dorsal fin
from subsistence-caught salmon when
taken.
(x) You may not possess subsistencetaken and sport-taken salmon on the
same day.
(xi) You must possess a subsistence
fishing permit to take Dolly Varden. The
daily harvest and possession limit is 10
Dolly Varden of any size.
(13) Southeastern Alaska Area. The
Southeastern Alaska Area includes all
waters between a line projecting
southwest from the westernmost tip of
Cape Fairweather and Dixon Entrance.
(i) Unless restricted in this section or
under the terms of a subsistence fishing
permit, you may take fish other than
salmon, trout, grayling, and char in the
Southeastern Alaska Area at any time.
(ii) You must possess a subsistence
fishing permit to take salmon, trout,
grayling, or char. You must possess a
subsistence fishing permit to take
eulachon from any freshwater stream
flowing into fishing Sections 1C or 1D.
(iii) In the Southeastern Alaska Area,
a rainbow trout is defined as a fish of
the species Oncorhyncus mykiss less
than 22 inches in overall length. A
steelhead is defined as a rainbow trout
with an overall length of 22 inches or
larger.
(iv) Unless otherwise specified in this
§ ll.27(i)(13), allowable gear for
salmon or steelhead is restricted to gaffs,
spears, gillnets, seines, dip nets, cast
nets, handlines, or rod and reel.
(v) Unless otherwise specified in this
§ ll.27(i)(13), you may use a handline
for snagging salmon or steelhead.
(vi) You may fish with a rod and reel
within 300 feet of a fish ladder unless
the site is otherwise posted by the
USDA Forest Service. You may not fish
from, on, or in a fish ladder.
(vii) You may accumulate annual
Federal subsistence harvest limits
authorized for the Southeastern Alaska
Area with harvest limits authorized
under State of Alaska sport fishing
regulations.
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(viii) If you take salmon, trout, or char
incidentally with gear operated under
terms of a subsistence permit for other
salmon, they may be kept for
subsistence purposes. You must report
any salmon, trout, or char taken in this
manner on your subsistence fishing
permit.
(ix) No permits for the use of nets will
be issued for the salmon streams
flowing across or adjacent to the road
systems within the city limits of
Petersburg, Wrangell, and Sitka.
(x) You shall immediately remove the
pelvic fins of all salmon when taken.
(xi) You may not possess subsistencetaken and sport-taken salmon on the
same day.
(xii) If a harvest limit is not otherwise
listed for sockeye in this § ll.27(i)(13),
the harvest limit for sockeye salmon is
the same as provided for State
subsistence or personal use fisheries. If
a harvest limit is not established for the
State subsistence or personal use
fisheries, the possession limit is 10
sockeye and the annual harvest limit is
20 sockeye per household for that
stream.
(xiii) For the Salmon Bay Lake
system, the daily harvest and season
limit per household is 30 sockeye
salmon.
(xiv) For Virginia Lake (Mill Creek),
the daily harvest limit per household is
20 sockeye salmon, and the season limit
per household is 40 sockeye salmon.
(xv) For Thoms Creek, the daily
harvest limit per household is 20
sockeye salmon, and the season limit
per household is 40 sockeye salmon.
(xvi) The Sarkar River system above
the bridge is closed to the use of all nets
by both Federally-qualified and nonFederally qualified users.
(xvii) Only Federally-qualified
subsistence users may harvest sockeye
salmon in streams draining into Falls
Lake Bay, Gut Bay, or Pillar Bay. In the
Falls Lake Bay and Gut Bay drainages,
the possession limit is 10 sockeye
salmon per household. In the Pillar Bay
drainage, the individual possession
limit is 15 sockeye salmon with a
household possession limit of 25
sockeye salmon.
(xviii) From July 7 through July 31,
you may take sockeye salmon in the
waters of the Klawock River and
Klawock Lake only from 8 a.m. Monday
until 5 p.m. Friday.
(xix) You may take chinook, sockeye,
and coho salmon in the mainstem of the
Stikine River only under the authority
of a Federal subsistence fishing permit.
Each Stikine River permit will be issued
to a household and will be valid for 15
days. Permits may be revalidated for
additional 15-day periods. Only dipnets,
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13393
spears, gaffs, rod and reel, beach seine,
or gillnet not exceeding 15 fathoms in
length with mesh size no larger than 51⁄2
inches may be used.
(A) You may take chinook salmon
from May 15 through June 20. The
annual limit is 5 chinook salmon per
household.
(B) You may take sockeye salmon
from July 1 through July 31. The annual
limit is 40 sockeye salmon per
household.
(C) You may take coho salmon from
August 15 through October 1. The
annual limit is 20 coho salmon per
household.
(D) You may retain other salmon
taken incidentally by gear operated
under terms of this permit. The
incidentally taken salmon must be
reported on your permit calendar.
(E) The total annual guideline harvest
level for the Stikine River fishery is 125
chinook, 600 sockeye, and 400 coho
salmon. All salmon harvested, including
incidentally taken salmon, will count
against the guideline for that species.
(xx) You may take coho salmon under
the terms of a subsistence fishing
permit, except in the Stikine and Taku
Rivers. There is no closed season. The
daily harvest limit is 20 coho salmon
per household. Only dipnets, spears,
gaffs, handlines, and rod and reel may
be used. Bait may only be used from
September 15 through November 15.
(xxi) Unless noted on a Federal
subsistence harvest permit, there are no
harvest limits for pink or chum salmon.
(xxii) Unless otherwise specified in
this § ll.27(i)(13), you may take
steelhead under the terms of a
subsistence fishing permit. The open
season is January 1 through May 31. The
daily household harvest and possession
limit is one with an annual household
limit of two. You may only use a dip
net, gaff, handline, spear, or rod and reel
with artificial lure or fly. You may not
use bait. The permit conditions and
systems to receive special protection
will be determined by the local Federal
fisheries manager in consultation with
ADF&G.
(xxiii) You may take steelhead trout
on Prince of Wales and Kosciusko
Islands under the terms of Federal
subsistence fishing permits. You must
obtain a separate permit for the winter
and spring seasons.
(A) The winter season is December 1
through the last day of February, with
a harvest limit of 2 fish per household.
You may use only a dip net, handline,
spear, or rod and reel with artificial lure
or fly. You may not use bait. The winter
season may be closed when the harvest
level cap of 100 steelhead for Prince of
Wales/Kosciusko Islands has been
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reached. You must return your winter
season permit within 15 days of the
close of the season and before receiving
another permit for a Prince of Wales/
Kosciusko steelhead subsistence fishery.
The permit conditions and systems to
receive special protection will be
determined by the local Federal
fisheries manager in consultation with
ADF&G.
(B) The spring season is March 1
through May 31, with a harvest limit of
5 fish per household. You may use only
a dip net, handline, spear, or rod and
reel with artificial lure or fly. You may
not use bait. The spring season may be
closed prior to May 31 if the harvest
quota of 600 fish minus the number of
steelhead harvested in the winter
subsistence steelhead fishery is reached.
You must return your spring season
permit within 15 days of the close of the
season and before receiving another
permit for a Prince of Wales/Kosciusko
steelhead subsistence fishery. The
permit conditions and systems to
receive special protection will be
determined by the local Federal
fisheries manager in consultation with
ADF&G.
(xxiv) In addition to the requirement
for a Federal subsistence fishing permit,
the following restrictions for the harvest
of Dolly Varden, brook trout, grayling,
cutthroat, and rainbow trout apply:
(A) The daily household harvest and
possession limit is 20 Dolly Varden;
there is no closed season or size limit;
(B) The daily household harvest and
possession limit is 20 brook trout; there
is no closed season or size limit;
(C) The daily household harvest and
possession limit is 20 grayling; there is
no closed season or size limit;
(D) The daily household harvest limit
is 6 and the household possession limit
is 12 cutthroat or rainbow trout in
combination; there is no closed season
or size limit;
(E) You may only use a rod and reel
with artificial fly or lure unless the use
of bait is specifically permited in 5 AAC
47;
(F) The permit conditions and
systems to receive special protection
will be determined by the local Federal
fisheries manager in consultation with
ADF&G.
§ ll.28
Subsistence taking of shellfish.
(a) Regulations in this section apply to
subsistence taking of Dungeness crab,
king crab, Tanner crab, shrimp, clams,
abalone, and other shellfish or their
parts.
(b) [Reserved].
(c) You may take shellfish for
subsistence uses at any time in any area
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of the public lands by any method
unless restricted by this section.
(d) Methods, means, and general
restrictions. (1) The harvest limit
specified in this section for a
subsistence season for a species and the
State harvest limit set for a State season
for the same species are not cumulative.
This means that if you have taken the
harvest limit for a particular species
under a subsistence season specified in
this section, you may not, after that, take
any additional shellfish of that species
under any other harvest limit specified
for a State season.
(2) Unless otherwise provided in this
section or under terms of a required
subsistence fishing permit (as may be
modified by this section), you may use
the following legal types of gear to take
shellfish:
(i) Abalone iron;
(ii) Diving gear;
(iii) A grappling hook;
(iv) A handline;
(v) A hydraulic clam digger;
(vi) A mechanical clam digger;
(vii) A pot;
(viii) A ring net;
(ix) A scallop dredge;
(x) A sea urchin rake;
(xi) A shovel; and
(xii) A trawl.
(3) You are prohibited from buying or
selling subsistence-taken shellfish, their
parts, or their eggs, unless otherwise
specified.
(4) You may not use explosives and
chemicals, except that you may use
chemical baits or lures to attract
shellfish.
(5) Marking requirements for
subsistence shellfish gear are as follows:
(i) You must plainly and legibly
inscribe your first initial, last name, and
address on a keg or buoy attached to
unattended subsistence fishing gear,
except when fishing through the ice,
when you may substitute for the keg or
buoy a stake inscribed with your first
initial, last name, and address inserted
in the ice near the hole; subsistence
fishing gear may not display a
permanent ADF&G vessel license
number;
(ii) Kegs or buoys attached to
subsistence crab pots also must be
inscribed with the name or United
States Coast Guard number of the vessel
used to operate the pots.
(6) Pots used for subsistence fishing
must comply with the escape
mechanism requirements found in
§ ll.27(c)(2).
(7) You may not mutilate or otherwise
disfigure a crab in any manner which
would prevent determination of the
minimum size restrictions until the crab
has been processed or prepared for
consumption.
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(e) Taking shellfish by designated
harvest permit. (1) Any species of
shellfish that may be taken by
subsistence fishing under this part may
be taken under a designated harvest
permit.
(2) If you are a Federally-qualified
subsistence user (beneficiary), you may
designate another Federally-qualified
subsistence user to take shellfish on
your behalf. The designated fisherman
must obtain a designated harvest permit
prior to attempting to harvest shellfish
and must return a completed harvest
report. The designated fisherman may
harvest for any number of beneficiaries
but may have no more than two harvest
limits in his/her possession at any one
time.
(3) The designated fisherman must
have in possession a valid designated
harvest permit when taking, attempting
to take, or transporting shellfish taken
under this section, on behalf of a
beneficiary.
(4) You may not fish with more than
one legal limit of gear as established by
this section.
(5) You may not designate more than
one person to take or attempt to take
shellfish on your behalf at one time.
You may not personally take or attempt
to take shellfish at the same time that a
designated fisherman is taking or
attempting to take shellfish on your
behalf.
(f) If a subsistence shellfishing permit
is required by this section, the following
conditions apply unless otherwise
specified by the subsistence regulations
in this section:
(1) You may not take shellfish for
subsistence in excess of the limits set
out in the permit unless a different limit
is specified in this section;
(2) You must obtain a permit prior to
subsistence fishing;
(3) You must have the permit in your
possession and readily available for
inspection while taking or transporting
the species for which the permit is
issued;
(4) The permit may designate the
species and numbers of shellfish to be
harvested, time and area of fishing, the
type and amount of fishing gear and
other conditions necessary for
management or conservation purposes;
(5) If specified on the permit, you
must keep accurate daily records of the
catch involved, showing the number of
shellfish taken by species, location and
date of the catch, and such other
information as may be required for
management or conservation purposes;
(6) You must complete and submit
subsistence fishing reports at the time
specified for each particular area and
fishery;
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(7) If the return of catch information
necessary for management and
conservation purposes is required by a
subsistence fishing permit and you fail
to comply with such reporting
requirements, you are ineligible to
receive a subsistence permit for that
activity during the following calendar
year, unless you demonstrate that
failure to report was due to loss in the
mail, accident, sickness, or other
unavoidable circumstances.
(g) Subsistence take by commercial
vessels. No fishing vessel which is
commercially licensed and registered
for shrimp pot, shrimp trawl, king crab,
Tanner crab, or Dungeness crab fishing
may be used for subsistence take during
the period starting 14 days before an
opening and ending 14 days after the
closure of a respective open season in
the area or areas for which the vessel is
registered. However, if you are a
commercial fisherman, you may retain
shellfish for your own use from your
lawfully taken commercial catch.
(h) You may not take or possess
shellfish smaller than the minimum
legal size limits.
(i) Unlawful possession of subsistence
shellfish. You may not possess,
transport, give, receive, or barter
shellfish or their parts taken in violation
of Federal or State regulations.
(j) (1) An owner, operator, or
employee of a lodge, charter vessel, or
other enterprise that furnishes food,
lodging, or guide services may not
furnish to a client or guest of that
enterprise, shellfish that has been taken
under this section, unless:
(i) The shellfish has been taken with
gear deployed and retrieved by the
client or guest who is a Federallyqualified subsistence user;
(ii) The gear has been marked with the
client’s or guest’s name and address;
and
(iii) The shellfish is to be consumed
by the client or guest or is consumed in
the presence of the client or guest.
(2) The captain and crewmembers of
a charter vessel may not deploy, set, or
retrieve their own gear in a subsistence
shellfish fishery when that vessel is
being chartered.
(k) Subsistence shellfish areas and
pertinent restrictions. (1) Southeastern
Alaska-Yakutat Area. No marine waters
are currently identified under Federal
subsistence management jurisdiction.
(2) Prince William Sound Area. No
marine waters are currently identified
under Federal subsistence management
jurisdiction.
(3) Cook Inlet Area. (i) You may take
shellfish for subsistence purposes only
as allowed in this section (k)(3).
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15:51 Mar 18, 2005
Jkt 205001
(ii) You may not take king crab,
Dungeness crab, or shrimp for
subsistence purposes.
(iii) In the subsistence taking of
Tanner crab:
(A) Male Tanner crab may be taken
only from July 15 through March 15;
(B) The daily harvest and possession
limit is 5 male Tanner crabs;
(C) Only male Tanner crabs 51⁄2
inches or greater in width of shell may
be taken or possessed;
(D) No more than 2 pots per person,
regardless of type, with a maximum of
2 pots per vessel, regardless of type,
may be used to take Tanner crab.
(iv) In the subsistence taking of clams:
(A) The daily harvest and possession
limit for littleneck clams is 1,000 and
the minimum size is 1.5 inches in
length;
(B) The daily harvest and possession
limit for butter clams is 700 and the
minimum size is 2.5 inches in length.
(v) Other than as specified in this
section, there are no harvest, possession,
or size limits for other shellfish, and the
season is open all year.
(4) Kodiak Area. (i) You may take crab
for subsistence purposes only under the
authority of a subsistence crab fishing
permit issued by the ADF&G.
(ii) The operator of a commercially
licensed and registered shrimp fishing
vessel must obtain a subsistence fishing
permit from the ADF&G before
subsistence shrimp fishing during a
State closed commercial shrimp fishing
season or within a closed commercial
shrimp fishing district, section, or
subsection. The permit must specify the
area and the date the vessel operator
intends to fish. No more than 500
pounds (227 kg) of shrimp may be in
possession aboard the vessel.
(iii) The daily harvest and possession
limit is 12 male Dungeness crabs per
person; only male Dungeness crabs with
a shell width of 61⁄2 inches or greater
may be taken or possessed. Taking of
Dungeness crab is prohibited in water
25 fathoms or more in depth during the
14 days immediately before the State
opening of a commercial king or Tanner
crab fishing season in the location.
(iv) In the subsistence taking of king
crab:
(A) The annual limit is six crabs per
household; only male king crab with
shell width of 7 inches or greater may
be taken or possessed;
(B) All crab pots used for subsistence
fishing and left in saltwater unattended
longer than a 2-week period must have
all bait and bait containers removed and
all doors secured fully open;
(C) You may only use one crab pot,
which may be of any size, to take king
crab;
PO 00000
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13395
(D) You may take king crab only from
June 1 through January 31, except that
the subsistence taking of king crab is
prohibited in waters 25 fathoms or
greater in depth during the period 14
days before and 14 days after State open
commercial fishing seasons for red king
crab, blue king crab, or Tanner crab in
the location;
(E) The waters of the Pacific Ocean
enclosed by the boundaries of Womens
Bay, Gibson Cove, and an area defined
by a line 1⁄2 mile on either side of the
mouth of the Karluk River, and
extending seaward 3,000 feet, and all
waters within 1,500 feet seaward of the
shoreline of Afognak Island are closed
to the harvest of king crab except by
Federally-qualified subsistence users.
(v) In the subsistence taking of Tanner
crab:
(A) You may not use more than five
crab pots to take Tanner crab;
(B) You may not take Tanner crab in
waters 25 fathoms or greater in depth
during the 14 days immediately before
the opening of a State commercial king
or Tanner crab fishing season in the
location;
(C) The daily harvest and possession
limit per person is 12 male crabs with
a shell width 51⁄2 inches or greater.
(5) Alaska Peninsula-Aleutian Islands
Area. (i) The operator of a commercially
licensed and registered shrimp fishing
vessel must obtain a subsistence fishing
permit from the ADF&G prior to
subsistence shrimp fishing during a
closed State commercial shrimp fishing
season or within a closed commercial
shrimp fishing district, section, or
subsection; the permit must specify the
area and the date the vessel operator
intends to fish; no more than 500
pounds (227 kg) of shrimp may be in
possession aboard the vessel.
(ii) The daily harvest and possession
limit is 12 male Dungeness crabs per
person; only crabs with a shell width of
51⁄2 inches or greater may be taken or
possessed.
(iii) In the subsistence taking of king
crab:
(A) The daily harvest and possession
limit is six male crabs per person; only
crabs with a shell width of 61⁄2 inches
or greater may be taken or possessed;
(B) All crab pots used for subsistence
fishing and left in saltwater unattended
longer than a 2-week period must have
all bait and bait containers removed and
all doors secured fully open;
(C) You may take crabs only from June
1 through January 31.
(iv) The daily harvest and possession
limit is 12 male Tanner crabs per
person; only crabs with a shell width of
51⁄2 inches or greater may be taken or
possessed.
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 53 / Monday, March 21, 2005 / Rules and Regulations
(6) Bering Sea Area. (i) In that portion
of the area north of the latitude of Cape
Newenham, shellfish may only be taken
by shovel, jigging gear, pots, and ring
net.
(ii) The operator of a commercially
licensed and registered shrimp fishing
vessel must obtain a subsistence fishing
permit from the ADF&G prior to
subsistence shrimp fishing during a
closed commercial shrimp fishing
season or within a closed commercial
shrimp fishing district, section, or
subsection; the permit must specify the
area and the date the vessel operator
intends to fish; no more than 500
pounds (227 kg) of shrimp may be in
possession aboard the vessel.
(iii) In waters south of 60° North
latitude, the daily harvest and
possession limit is 12 male Dungeness
crabs per person.
(iv) In the subsistence taking of king
crab:
(A) In waters south of 60° North
latitude, the daily harvest and
possession limit is six male crabs per
person;
(B) All crab pots used for subsistence
fishing and left in saltwater unattended
longer than a 2-week period must have
all bait and bait containers removed and
all doors secured fully open;
(C) In waters south of 60° North
latitude, you may take crab only from
June 1 through January 31;
(D) In the Norton Sound Section of
the Northern District, you must have a
subsistence permit.
(v) In waters south of 60°North
latitude, the daily harvest and
possession limit is 12 male Tanner
crabs.
Dated: January 19, 2005.
Thomas H. Boyd,
Acting Chair, Federal Subsistence Board.
Dated: January 25, 2005.
Steve Kessler,
Subsistence Program Leader, USDA-Forest
Service.
[FR Doc. 05–5469 Filed 3–18–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410–11–P; 4310–55–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 61
[LA–69–2–7617c; FRL–7887–2]
National Emission Standards for
Hazardous Air Pollutants; Delegation
of Authority to Louisiana; Correction
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
AGENCY:
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15:51 Mar 18, 2005
Jkt 205001
Direct final rule; correcting
amendment.
ACTION:
SUMMARY: EPA is correcting the
delegation of standards for national
emission standards for hazardous air
pollutants which EPA approved as part
of the delegation of authority to
Louisiana on March 26, 2004. This
document corrects an error in the final
rule pertaining to the EPA’s delegation
of national emission standards for
hazardous air pollutants for asbestos to
Louisiana.
DATES: This amendment is effective on
March 21, 2005.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jeff
Robinson, (214) 665–6435 or by e-mail
at Robinson.Jeffrey@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Throughout this document wherever
‘‘we,’’ or ‘‘our’’ are used we mean EPA.
On March 26, 2004, (69 FR 15687), we
published a final rulemaking action
announcing the delegation of authority
of certain NESHAPs to the Louisiana
Department of Environmental Quality.
EPA received no public comments on
the direct final rule, therefore, the
effective date of action was April 26,
2004. Subsequently, the Louisiana
Department of Environmental Quality
notified EPA that we had not included
the delegation of subpart M—Asbestos
in the chart detailing the current part 61
standards delegated to Louisiana. The
original part 61 delegation to Louisiana
occurred on October 14, 1983, with
formal notification in the Federal
Register on February 7, 1984 (49 FR
4471). In the notification, Louisiana was
authorized to assume NESHAP partial
delegation responsibilities for future
standards and requirements. This
administrative rulemaking action
reflects EPA’s delegation of subpart M—
Asbestos to Louisiana. Section 553 of
the Administrative Procedure Act, 5
U.S.C. 553(b)(B), provides that, when an
agency for good cause finds that notice
and public procedure are impracticable,
unnecessary or contrary to the public
interest, the agency may issue a rule
without providing notice and an
opportunity for public comment. We
have determined that there is good
cause for making today’s rule final
without prior proposal and opportunity
for comment because we are merely
correcting a historical delegation that
occurred in a previous action. Thus,
notice and public procedure are
unnecessary. We find that this
constitutes good cause under 5 U.S.C.
553(b)(B). Statutory and Executive
Order Reviews Under Executive Order
12866 (58 FR 51735, October 4, 1993),
this action is not a ‘‘significant
PO 00000
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Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
regulatory action’’ and is therefore not
subject to review by the Office of
Management and Budget. For this
reason, this action is also not subject to
Executive Order 13211, ‘‘Actions
Concerning Regulations That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use’’ (66 FR 28355 (May
22, 2001)). Because the agency has made
a ‘‘good cause’’ finding that this action
is not subject to notice-and-comment
requirements under the Administrative
Procedures Act or any other statute as
indicated in the SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION section above, it is not
subject to the regulatory flexibility
provisions of the Regulatory Flexibility
Act (5 U.S.C 601 et seq.), or to sections
202 and 205 of the Unfunded Mandates
Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA) (Public
Law 104–4). In addition, this action
does not significantly or uniquely affect
small governments or impose a
significant intergovernmental mandate,
as described in sections 203 and 204 of
UMRA. This rule also does not have a
substantial direct effect on one or more
Indian tribes, on the relationship
between the Federal Government and
Indian tribes, or on the distribution of
power and responsibilities between the
Federal Government and Indian tribes,
as specified by Executive Order 13175
(59 FR 22951, November 9, 2000), nor
will it have substantial direct effects on
the States, on the relationship between
the National Government and the States,
or on the distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of governments, as specified by
Executive Order 13132 (64 FR 43255,
August 10, 1999). This rule also is not
subject to Executive Order 13045 (62 FR
19885, April 23, 1997), because it is not
economically significant. This technical
correction action does not involve
technical standards; thus the
requirements of section 12(d) of the
National Technology Transfer and
Advancement Act of 1995 (15 U.S.C.
272 note) do not apply. The rule also
does not involve special consideration
of environmental justice related issues
as required by Executive Order 12898
(59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994). In
issuing this rule, EPA has taken the
necessary steps to eliminate drafting
errors and ambiguity, minimize
potential litigation, and provide a clear
legal standard for affected conduct, as
required by section 3 of Executive Order
12988 (61 FR 4729, February 7, 1996).
EPA has complied with Executive Order
12630 (53 FR 8859, March 15, 1998) by
examining the takings implications of
the rule in accordance with the
‘‘Attorney General’s Supplemental
Guidelines for the Evaluation of Risk
E:\FR\FM\21MRR1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 70, Number 53 (Monday, March 21, 2005)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 13377-13396]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 05-5469]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Forest Service
36 CFR Part 242
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
50 CFR Part 100
RIN 1018-AT46
Subsistence Management Regulations for Public Lands in Alaska,
Subpart C and Subpart D--2005-06 Subsistence Taking of Fish and
Shellfish Regulations
AGENCIES: Forest Service, Agriculture; Fish and Wildlife Service,
Interior.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This final rule establishes regulations for seasons, harvest
limits, methods, and means related to taking of fish and shellfish for
subsistence uses during the 2005-06 regulatory year. The rulemaking is
necessary because Subpart D is subject to an annual public review
cycle. This rulemaking replaces the fish and shellfish taking
regulations included in the ``Subsistence Management Regulations for
Public Lands in Alaska, Subpart C and Subpart D--2004 Subsistence
Taking of Fish and Wildlife Regulations,'' which expire on March 31,
2005. This rule also amends the Customary and Traditional Use
Determinations of the Federal Subsistence Board (Section ----.24 of
Subpart C).
DATES: Sections ----.24(a)(2) and (3) are effective April 1, 2005.
Sections ----.27 and ----.28 are effective April 1, 2005, through March
31, 2006.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Chair, Federal Subsistence Board, c/o
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Attention: Thomas H. Boyd, Office of
Subsistence Management; (907) 786-3888. For questions specific to
National Forest System lands, contact Steve Kessler, Regional
Subsistence Program Manager, USDA, Forest Service, Alaska Region, (907)
786-3592.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
Title VIII of the Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act
(ANILCA) (16 U.S.C. 3111-3126) requires that the Secretary of the
Interior and the Secretary of Agriculture (Secretaries) implement a
joint program to grant a preference for subsistence uses of fish and
wildlife resources on public lands, unless the State of Alaska enacts
and implements laws of general applicability that are consistent with
ANILCA and that provide for the subsistence definition, preference, and
participation specified in Sections 803, 804, and 805 of ANILCA. In
1978, the State implemented a program that the Department of the
Interior previously found to be consistent with ANILCA. However, in
December 1989, the Alaska Supreme Court ruled in McDowell v. State of
Alaska that the rural preference in the State subsistence statute
violated the Alaska Constitution. The Court's ruling in McDowell
required the State to delete the rural preference from the subsistence
statute and, therefore, negated State compliance with ANILCA. The Court
stayed the effect of the decision until July 1, 1990.
As a result of the McDowell decision, the Department of the
Interior and the Department of Agriculture (Departments) assumed, on
July 1, 1990, responsibility for implementation of Title VIII of ANILCA
on public lands. On June 29, 1990, the Temporary Subsistence Management
Regulations for Public Lands in Alaska were published in the Federal
Register (55 FR 27114). On January 8, 1999 (64 FR 1276), the
Departments extended jurisdiction to include waters in which there
exists a Federal reserved water right. This amended rule conformed the
Federal Subsistence Management Program to the Ninth Circuit's ruling in
Alaska v. Babbitt. Consistent with Subparts A, B, and C of these
regulations as revised May 7, 2002 (67 FR 30559), the Departments
established a Federal Subsistence Board to administer the Federal
Subsistence Management Program. The Board's composition includes a
Chair appointed by the Secretary of the Interior with concurrence of
the Secretary of Agriculture; the Alaska Regional Director, U.S. Fish
and Wildlife Service; the Alaska Regional Director, U.S. National Park
Service; the Alaska State Director, U.S. Bureau of Land Management; the
Alaska Regional Director, U.S. Bureau of Indian Affairs; and the Alaska
Regional Forester, USDA Forest Service. Through the Board, these
agencies participated in the development of regulations for Subparts A,
B, and C, and the annual Subpart D regulations.
All Board members have reviewed this rule and agree with its
substance. Because this rule relates to public lands managed by
agencies in both the Departments of Agriculture and the Interior,
identical text will be incorporated into 36 CFR part 242 and 50 CFR
part 100.
[[Page 13378]]
Applicability of Subparts A, B, and C
Subparts A, B, and C (unless otherwise amended) of the Subsistence
Management Regulations for Public Lands in Alaska, 50 CFR 100.1 to
100.23 and 36 CFR 242.1 to 242.23, remain effective and apply to this
rule. Therefore, all definitions located at 50 CFR 100.4 and 36 CFR
242.4 apply to regulations found in this subpart.
Federal Subsistence Regional Advisory Councils
Pursuant to the Record of Decision, Subsistence Management
Regulations for Federal Public Lands in Alaska, April 6, 1992, and the
Subsistence Management Regulations for Federal Public Lands in Alaska,
36 CFR 242.11 and 242.22 (2002) and 50 CFR 100.11 and 100.22 (2002),
and for the purposes identified therein, we divide Alaska into 10
subsistence resource regions, each of which is represented by a Federal
Subsistence Regional Advisory Council (Regional Council). The Regional
Councils provide a forum for rural residents with personal knowledge of
local conditions and resource requirements to exercise a meaningful
role in the subsistence management of fish and wildlife on Alaska
public lands. The Regional Council members represent varied
geographical, cultural, and user diversity within each region.
The Regional Councils had a substantial role in reviewing the
proposed rule ( 69 FR 5105, February 3, 2004) and making
recommendations for this final rule. Moreover, the Council Chairs, or
their designated representatives, presented their Council's
recommendations at the Board meeting of January 11-13, 2005.
Summary of Changes
Section ----.24 (Customary and traditional use determinations) was
originally published in the Federal Register (57 FR 22940) on May 29,
1992. Since that time, the Board has made a number of Customary and
Traditional Use Determinations at the request of impacted subsistence
users. Those modifications, along with some administrative corrections,
were last published in the Federal Register on February 3, 2004 (69 FR
5105). During its January 11-13, 2005, meeting, the Board made new
determinations in addition to various annual season and harvest limit
changes. The public has had extensive opportunity to review and comment
on all changes. Additional details on the recent Board modifications
are contained below in Analysis of Proposals Adopted by the Board.
Subpart D regulations are subject to an annual cycle and require
development of an entire new rule each year. Customary and traditional
use determinations are also subject to an annual review process
providing for modification each year. We published proposed Subpart D
regulations for the 2005-06 seasons, harvest limits, and methods and
means on February 3, 2004, in the Federal Register (69 FR 5105). A 45-
day comment period providing for public review of the proposed rule and
calling for proposals was advertised by mail, radio, and newspaper.
During that period, the Regional Councils met and, in addition to other
Regional Council business, received suggestions for proposals from the
public. The Board received a total of 30 proposals for changes to
Customary and Traditional Use Determinations or to Subpart D.
Subsequent to the review period, the Board prepared a booklet
describing the proposals and distributed it to the public. The public
had an additional 30 days in which to comment on the proposals for
changes to the regulations. The 10 Regional Councils then met again,
received public comments, and formulated their recommendations to the
Board on proposals for their respective regions. One of the proposals
was not considered, being withdrawn before Board consideration. These
final regulations reflect Board review and consideration of Regional
Council recommendations and public comments on the remaining proposals.
Analysis of Proposals Rejected by the Board
The Board rejected 11 proposals. With one exception, all of these
actions were based on recommendations from at least one Regional
Council.
The Board rejected one proposal that requested significant
restrictions on the exercise of customary trade. The Board rejected
this proposal as an unnecessary restriction on subsistence users.
One proposal requested us to restrict the size of gillnets in the
Yukon River. This proposal was rejected because it would have resulted
in Federal regulations that are more restrictive than State regulations
and the Board viewed it as an unnecessary restriction on subsistence
users.
One proposal to establish a 6-day fall chum salmon season in
Subdistrict 5D was rejected based on conservation concerns and the
ability of in-season managers to protect salmon runs for long-term
subsistence opportunities.
The Board rejected two proposals requesting revisions to the
subsistence fishing schedule for the Yukon and Kuskokwim Rivers. The
Board rejected these proposals because the current fishing schedules
are a result of a coordinated effort by users and government bodies to
rebuild depressed salmon stocks and are for the long-term benefit of
all users. Additionally, in-season managers already have the authority
to relax schedules when run strength is adequate to allow additional
harvest.
The Board rejected one proposal that would have removed the
requirement for a Federal subsistence fishing permit for steelhead in
the Yakutat Fishery Management Area. This proposal was rejected because
the Board cited a need to have harvest data on a resource that is
vulnerable to overharvest.
The Board rejected one proposal contrary to the recommendation of
the Regional Council in order to prevent detrimental impacts to
subsistence users from harassment when taking resources for ceremonial
purposes and in order to assure long-term conservation of the resources
being used.
Two proposals rejected by the Board related to the incidental take
of fish in the Southeastern Alaska Area. The Board viewed these
proposals as serving no useful purpose, addressing no conservation
concerns, being confusing to the users, and generally being
unenforceable.
The Board rejected one proposal that would have removed a closure
restriction in the Kutlaku Lake area. This proposal was rejected
because of a continuing conservation concern for the sockeye salmon
stocks of this system.
The Board rejected one proposal that would have placed additional
harvest restrictions on steelhead in southeast Alaska. This proposal
was rejected because the Board sees no immediate conservation concern
for steelhead and thus the proposal would have placed unnecessary
restrictions on subsistence users.
Analysis of Proposals Adopted by the Board
The Board adopted 17 proposals. A number of proposals dealing with
the same issue were dealt with as a package. Some proposals were
adopted as submitted and others were adopted with modifications
suggested by the respective Regional Council or developed during the
Board's public deliberations.
All of the adopted proposals were recommended for adoption by at
least one of the Regional Councils and were based on meeting customary
and traditional uses, conforming with harvest practices, or protecting
fish populations. Detailed information
[[Page 13379]]
relating to justification for the action on each proposal may be found
in the Board meeting transcripts, available for review at the Office of
Subsistence Management, 3601 C Street, Suite 1030, Anchorage, Alaska,
or on the Office of Subsistence Management Web site (https://
alaska.fws.gov/asm/home.html). Additional technical clarifications and
removal of excess or duplicative text have been made, which result in a
more readable document.
In the Cook Inlet Fishery Management Area, we corrected the text to
prohibit the use of gillnets in freshwater. This action is necessary to
protect populations of rainbow trout, steelhead, and other freshwater
species susceptible to over harvest and was addressed in a Correcting
Amendment published June 28, 2000 (65 FR 39815). Through an
administrative error, we failed to carry through with this correction
in later rulemaking documents. There is no impact on subsistence users
because no one uses a gillnet to fish for smelt in freshwater in this
area.
In the final rule, we deleted the reference to the Holitna River in
Sec. ----.27(h)(4) because the Holitna River is not within
jurisdiction as identified in Sec. ----.3(b). Similarly, we also
deleted reference to Tuxedni Bay in Sec. ----.24(a)(3). An opinion by
the Department of the Interior Solicitor's Office concluded that the
boundaries of the Alaska Maritime National Wildlife Refuge do not
extend below mean high tide and that those waters are not within
Federal jurisdiction as identified in Sec. ----.3. When questions of
jurisdiction are brought to our attention, we immediately review the
issue and make any appropriate modifications to our regulations as we
have done here. In addition, we revised the regulations pertaining to
specific management areas as follows:
Yukon-Northern Fishery Management Area
The Board adopted one proposal affecting residents of the Yukon-
Northern Fishery Management Area, resulting in the following change to
the regulations found in Sec. ----.27.
Established a drift gillnet fishery for king salmon in
Districts 4B and 4C of the Yukon River.
Kuskokwim Fishery Management Area
The Board adopted two proposals affecting residents of the
Kuskokwim Fishery Management Area, resulting in the following changes
to the regulations found in Sec. ----.24.
Revised the customary and traditional use determination
for rainbow trout.
Bristol Bay Fishery Management Area
The Board adopted one proposal affecting residents of the Bristol
Bay Fishery Management Area, resulting in the following change to the
regulations found in Sec. ----.27.
Removed the permit requirement when harvesting char and
rainbow trout.
Prince William Sound Fishery Management Area
The Board adopted five proposals affecting residents of the Prince
William Sound Fishery Management Area, resulting in the following
changes to the regulations found in Sec. Sec. ----.24 and ------.27.
Established customary and traditional use determinations
for eulachon in portions of the fishery management area.
Revised the customary and traditional use determination
for salmon in the Chitina and Glennallen Subdistricts of the fishery
management area.
Established limits on the amount of salmon that may be
sold in customary trade in the Upper Copper River District.
Additionally, the Board concurred in the correction of an
administrative error relative to restrictions on the taking of salmon
in the Prince William Sound Area.
Southeastern Alaska Fishery Management Area
The Board adopted nine proposals affecting residents of the
Southeastern Alaska Fishery Management Area, resulting in the following
changes to the regulations found in Sec. ----.27.
Revised regulations to allow fishing with rod and reel
within 300 feet of a fish ladder unless posted by the USDA Forest
Service.
Specified specific gear types allowable for the taking of
salmon and steelhead.
Established harvest limits for sockeye salmon.
Clarified that there are generally no harvest limits for
pink or chum salmon.
Established regulations for a southeast Alaska steelhead
fishery.
Provided for the use of handlines for snagging for salmon
and steelhead. Established a definition of snagging.
Allowed the accumulation of subsistence harvest limits
with sport harvest limits.
Simplified the coho salmon harvest regulations, removed
the annual harvest limit, and removed the prohibition on retaining
incidentally-caught trout and sockeye salmon.
Provided harvest regulations for cutthroat trout, rainbow
trout, Dolly Varden, grayling, and brook trout.
Additionally, following consultation with the Transboundary Panel
and the Pacific Salmon Commission, the Board has implemented
regulations for the subsistence harvest of chinook and coho salmon in
the Stikine River.
Administrative Procedure Act Compliance
The Board finds that additional public notice under the
Administrative Procedure Act (APA) for this final rule is unnecessary
and contrary to the public interest. The Board has provided extensive
opportunity for public input and involvement in excess of standard APA
requirements, including participation in multiple Regional Council
meetings, additional public review and comment on all proposals for
regulatory change, and opportunity for additional public comment during
the Board meeting prior to deliberation. Additionally, an
administrative mechanism exists (and has been used by the public) to
request reconsideration of the Board's decision on any particular
proposal for regulatory change. Over the 12 years the Program has been
operating, no benefit to the public has been demonstrated by delaying
the effective date of regulations. A lapse in regulatory control could
seriously affect the continued viability of fish and shellfish
populations, adversely impact future subsistence opportunities for
rural Alaskans, and would generally fail to serve the overall public
interest. Therefore, the Board finds good cause pursuant to 5 U.S.C.
553(d) to make this rule effective less than 30 days after publication.
Conformance With Statutory and Regulatory Authorities
National Environmental Policy Act Compliance
A Draft Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS) for developing a
Federal Subsistence Management Program was distributed for public
comment on October 7, 1991. That document described the major issues
associated with Federal subsistence management as identified through
public meetings, written comments, and staff analysis and examined the
environmental consequences of four alternatives. Proposed regulations
(Subparts A, B, and C) that would implement the preferred alternative
were included in the DEIS as an appendix. The DEIS and the proposed
administrative regulations presented a framework for an annual
regulatory
[[Page 13380]]
cycle regarding subsistence hunting and fishing regulations (Subpart
D). The Final Environmental Impact Statement (FEIS) was published on
February 28, 1992.
Based on the public comment received, the analysis contained in the
FEIS, and the recommendations of the Federal Subsistence Board and the
Department of the Interior's Subsistence Policy Group, the Secretary of
the Interior, with the concurrence of the Secretary of Agriculture,
through the U.S. Department of Agriculture-Forest Service, implemented
Alternative IV as identified in the DEIS and FEIS (Record of Decision
on Subsistence Management for Federal Public Lands in Alaska (ROD),
signed April 6, 1992). The DEIS and the selected alternative in the
FEIS defined the administrative framework of an annual regulatory cycle
for subsistence hunting and fishing regulations. The final rule for
Subsistence Management Regulations for Public Lands in Alaska, Subparts
A, B, and C (57 FR 22940, published May 29, 1992; amended January 8,
1999, 64 FR 1276; June 12, 2001, 66 FR 31533; and May 7, 2002, 67 FR
30559) implemented the Federal Subsistence Management Program and
included a framework for an annual cycle for subsistence hunting and
fishing regulations.
An environmental assessment was prepared in 1997 on the expansion
of Federal jurisdiction over fisheries and is available by contacting
the office listed under FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT. The Secretary
of the Interior, with the concurrence of the Secretary of Agriculture,
determined that the expansion of Federal jurisdiction did not
constitute a major Federal action significantly affecting the human
environment and has therefore signed a Finding of No Significant
Impact.
Compliance With Section 810 of ANILCA
The intent of all Federal subsistence regulations is to accord
subsistence uses of fish and wildlife on public lands a priority over
the taking of fish and wildlife on such lands for other purposes,
unless restriction is necessary to conserve healthy fish and wildlife
populations. A Section 810 analysis was completed as part of the FEIS
process. The final Section 810 analysis determination appeared in the
April 6, 1992, ROD, which concluded that the Federal Subsistence
Management Program may have some local impacts on subsistence uses, but
the program is not likely to significantly restrict subsistence uses.
Paperwork Reduction Act
The information collection requirements contained in this rule have
been approved by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) under the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.) and assigned
OMB control number 1018-0075, which expires August 31, 2006. We may not
conduct or sponsor, and you are not required to respond to, a
collection of information request unless it displays a currently valid
OMB control number.
Other Requirements
Regulatory Planning and Review (Executive Order 12866)--In
accordance with the criteria in Executive Order 12866, this rule is not
a significant regulatory action subject to OMB review. OMB makes this
determination. This action will not have an annual economic effect of
$100 million or adversely affect any economic sector, productivity,
competition, jobs, the environment, or other units of government.
Therefore, a cost-benefit and economic analysis is not required. This
action will not create inconsistencies with other agencies' actions or
otherwise interfere with an action taken or planned by another agency.
This action will not materially affect entitlements, grants, user fees,
loan programs, or the rights and obligations of their recipients. This
action will not raise novel legal or policy issues.
The Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980 (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.)
requires preparation of flexibility analyses for rules that will have a
significant economic effect on a substantial number of small entities,
which include small businesses, organizations, or governmental
jurisdictions. The Departments have determined that this rulemaking
will not have a significant economic effect on a substantial number of
small entities within the meaning of the Regulatory Flexibility Act.
This rulemaking will impose no significant costs on small entities;
the exact number of businesses and the amount of trade that will result
from this Federal land-related activity is unknown. The aggregate
effect is an insignificant positive economic effect on a number of
small entities, such as tackle, boat, and gasoline dealers. The number
of small entities affected is unknown; however, the fact that the
positive effects will be seasonal in nature and will, in most cases,
merely continue preexisting uses of public lands indicates that the
effects will not be significant.
In general, the resources harvested under this rule will be
consumed by the local harvester and do not result in a dollar benefit
to the economy. However, we estimate that 24 million pounds of fish
(including 8.3 million pounds of salmon) are harvested by the local
subsistence users annually and, if given a dollar value of $3.00 per
pound for salmon (Note: $3.00 per pound is much higher than the current
commercial value for salmon) and $0.58 per pound for other fish, would
equate to about $34 million in food value Statewide.
Title VIII of ANILCA requires the Secretaries to administer a
subsistence preference on public lands. The scope of this program is
limited by definition to certain public lands. Likewise, these
regulations have no potential takings of private property implications
as defined by Executive Order 12630.
The Service has determined and certifies pursuant to the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act, 2 U.S.C. 1502 et seq., that this rulemaking will
not impose a cost of $100 million or more in any given year on local or
State governments or private entities. The implementation of this rule
is by Federal agencies, and no cost is involved to any State or local
entities or Tribal governments.
The Service has determined that these final regulations meet the
applicable standards provided in Sections 3(a) and 3(b)(2) of Executive
Order 12988 (Civil Justice Reform).
In accordance with Executive Order 13132, the rule does not have
sufficient federalism implications to warrant the preparation of a
Federalism Assessment. Title VIII of ANILCA precludes the State from
exercising management authority over wildlife resources on Federal
lands.
In accordance with the President's memorandum of April 29, 1994,
``Government-to-Government Relations with Native American Tribal
Governments'' (59 FR 22951), 512 DM 2, and E.O. 13175, we have
evaluated possible effects on Federally recognized Indian tribes and
have determined that there are no effects. The Bureau of Indian Affairs
is a participating agency in this rulemaking.
On May 18, 2001, the President issued Executive Order 13211 on
regulations that significantly affect energy supply, distribution, or
use. This Executive Order requires agencies to prepare Statements of
Energy Effects when undertaking certain actions. As this rule is not a
significant regulatory action under Executive Order 13211, affecting
energy supply, distribution, or use, this action is not a significant
action and no Statement of Energy Effects is required.
[[Page 13381]]
Drafting Information
William Knauer drafted these regulations under the guidance of
Thomas H. Boyd, of the Office of Subsistence Management, Alaska
Regional Office, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Anchorage, Alaska.
Taylor Brelsford, Alaska State Office, Bureau of Land Management; Rod
Simmons, Alaska Regional Office, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service; Bob
Gerhard, Alaska Regional Office, National Park Service; Dr. Glenn Chen,
Alaska Regional Office, Bureau of Indian Affairs; and Steve Kessler,
USDA-Forest Service, provided additional guidance.
List of Subjects
36 CFR Part 242
Administrative practice and procedure, Alaska, Fish, National
forests, Public lands, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements,
Wildlife.
50 CFR Part 100
Administrative practice and procedure, Alaska, Fish, National
forests, Public lands, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements,
Wildlife.
0
For the reasons set out in the preamble, the Federal Subsistence Board
amends Title 36, part 242, and Title 50, part 100, of the Code of
Federal Regulations, as set forth below.
PART ------SUBSISTENCE MANAGEMENT REGULATIONS FOR PUBLIC LANDS IN
ALASKA
0
1. The authority citation for both 36 CFR Part 242 and 50 CFR Part 100
continues to read as follows:
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 3, 472, 551, 668dd, 3101-3126; 18 U.S.C.
3551-3586; 43 U.S.C. 1733.
Subpart C--Board Determinations
0
2. In Subpart C of 36 CFR part 242 and 50 CFR part 100, ----.24(a)(2)
and (3) are revised to read as follows:
Sec. ----.24 Customary and traditional use determinations.
(a) * * *
(2) Fish determinations. The following communities and areas have
been found to have a positive customary and traditional use
determination in the listed area for the indicated species:
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Area Species Determination
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
KOTZEBUE AREA................... All fish............................................. Residents of the
Kotzebue Area.
NORTON SOUND-PORT CLARENCE AREA:
Norton Sound-Port Clarence All fish............................................. Residents of Stebbins,
Area, waters draining into St. Michael, and
Norton Sound between Point Kotlik.
Romanof and Canal Point.
Norton Sound-Port Clarence All fish............................................. Residents of the Norton
Area, remainder. Sound-Port Clarence
Area.
YUKON-NORTHERN AREA:
Yukon River drainage........ Salmon, other than fall chum salmon.................. Residents of the Yukon
River drainage and the
community of Stebbins.
Yukon River drainage........ Fall chum salmon..................................... Residents of the Yukon
River drainage and the
communities of
Stebbins, Scammon Bay,
Hooper bay, and
Chevak.
Yukon River drainage........ Freshwater fish (other than salmon).................. Residents of the Yukon-
Northern Area.
Remaider of the Yukon- All fish............................................. Residents of the Yukon-
Northern Area. Northern Area,
excluding the
residents of the Yukon
River drainage and
excluding those
domiciled in Unit 26-
B.
KUSKOKWIM AREA.................. Salmon............................................... Residents of the
Kuskokwim Area, except
those persons residing
on the United States
military installations
located on Cape
Newenham, Sparrevohn
USAFB, and Tatalina
USAFB.
Rainbow trout........................................ Residents of the
communities of
Akiachak, Akiak,
Aniak, Atmautluak,
Bethel, Chuathbaluk,
Crooked Creek, Eek,
Goodnews Bay,
Kasigluk, Kwethluk,
Lower Kalskag,
Napakiak, Napaskiak,
Nunapitchuk,
Oscarville, Platinum,
Quinhagak, Tuluksak,
Tuntutuliak, and Upper
Kalskag.
Pacific cod.......................................... Resident of the
communities of Chevak,
Newtok, Tununak,
Toksook Bay,
Nightmute, Chefornak,
Kipnuk, Mekoryuk,
Kwigillingok,
Kongiganak, Eek, and
Tuntutuliak.
All other fish other than herring.................... Residents of the
Kuskokwim Area, except
those persons residing
on the United States
military installation
located on Cape
Newenham, Sparrevohn
USAFB, and Tatalina
USAFB.
Waters around Nunivak Island Herring and herring roe.............................. Residents within 20
miles of the coast
between the
westernmost tip of the
Naskonat Peninsula and
the terminus of the
Ishowik River and on
Nunivak Island.
BRISTOL BAY AREA:
Nushagak District, including Salmon and freshwater fish........................... Residents of the
drainages flowing into the Nushagak District and
district. freshwater drainages
flowing into the
district.
Naknek-Kvichak District- Salmon and freshwater fish........................... Residents of the Naknek
Naknek River drainage. and Kvichak River
drainages.
Naknek-Kvichak District- Salmon and freshwater fish........................... Residents of the
Kvichak/Iliamna-Lake Clark Kvichak/Iliamna-Lake
drainage. Clark drainage.
[[Page 13382]]
Togiak District, including Salmon and freshwater fish........................... Residents of the Togiak
drainages flowing into the District, freshwater
district. drainages flowing into
the district, and the
community of
Manokotak.
Egegik District, including Salmon and freshwater fish........................... Residents of South
drainages flowing into the Naknek, the Egegik
district. District and
freshwater drainages
flowing into the
district.
Ugashik District, including Salmon and freshwater fish........................... Residents of the
drainages flowing into the Ugashik District and
district. freshwater drainages
flowing into the
district.
Togiak District............. Herring spawn on kelp................................ Residents of the Togiak
District and
freshwater drainages
flowing into the
district.
Remainder of the Bristol Bay All fish............................................. Residents of the
Area. Bristol Bay Area.
ALEUTIAN ISLANDS AREA........... All fish............................................. Residents of the
Aleutian Islands Area
and the Pribilof
Islands.
ALASKA PENINSULA AREA........... Halibut.............................................. Residents of the Alaska
Peninsula Area and the
communities of Ivanof
Bay and Perryville.
All other fish in the Alaska Peninsula Area.......... Residents of the Alaska
Peninsula Area.
CHIGNIK AREA.................... Halibut, salmon and fish other than rainbow/steelhead Residents of the
trout. Chignik Area.
KODIAK AREA--except the Mainland Salmon............................................... Residents of the Kodiak
District, all waters along the Island Borough, except
south side of the Alaska those residing on the
Peninsula bounded by the Kodiak Coast Guard
latitude of Cape Douglas Base.
(58[deg]52' North latitude) mid-
stream Shelikof Strait, and
east of the longitude of the
southern entrance of Imuya Bay
near Kilokak Rocks
(57[deg]1'22'' North latitude
156[deg]20'30'' West longitude).
Kodiak Area................. Fish other than rainbow/steelhead trout and salmon... Residents of the Kodiak
Area.
COOK INLET AREA................. Fish other than salmon, Dolly Varden, trout, char, Residents of the Cook
grayling, and burgot. Inlet Area.
Salmon, Dolly Varden, trout, char, grayling, and No Determination.
burbot.
PRINCE WILLIAM SOUND AREA:
Southwestern District and Salmon............................................... Residents of the
Green Island. Southwestern District,
which is mainland
waters from the outer
point on the north
shore of Granite Bay
to Cape Fairfield, and
Knight Island, Chenega
Island, Bainbridge
Island, Evans Island,
Elrington Island,
Latouche Island and
adjacent islands.
North of a line from Salmon............................................... Residents of the
Porcupine Point to Granite villages of Tatitlek
Point, and south of a line and Ellamar.
from Point Lowe to Tongue
Point.
Copper River drainage Freshwater fish...................................... Residents of Cantwell,
upstream from Haley Creek. Chisana, Chistochina,
Chitina, Copper
Center, Dot Lake,
Gakona, Gakona
Junction, Glennallen,
Gulkana, Healy Lake,
Kenny Lake, Lower
Tonsina, McCarthy,
Mentasta Lake,
Nabesna, Northway,
Slana, Tanacross,
Tazlina, Tetlin, Tok,
Tonsina, and those
individuals that live
along the Tok Cutoff
from Tok to Mentasta
Pass and along the
Nebesna Road.
Gulkana National Wild and Freshwater fish...................................... Residents of Cantwell,
Scenic River. Chisana, Chistochina,
Chitina, Cooper
Center, Dot Lake,
Gakona, Gakona
Junction, Glennallen,
Gulkana, Healy Lake,
Kenny Lake, Lower
Tonsina, McCarthy,
Mentasta Lake,
Nabesna, Northway,
Paxson-Sourdough,
Slana, Tanacross,
Tazlina, Tetlin, Tok,
Tonsina, and those
individuals that live
along the Tok Cutoff
from Tok to Mentasta
Pass, and along the
Nabesna Road.
Chitina Subdistrict of the Salmon............................................... Residents of Cantwell,
Upper Copper River District. Chickaloon, Chisana,
Chistochina, Chitina,
Copper Center, Dot
Lake, Gakona, Gakona
Junction, Glennallen,
Gulkana, Healy Lake,
Kenny Lake, Nabesna,
Northway, Paxson-
Sourdough, Slana,
Tanacross, Tazlina,
Tetlin, Tok, Tonsina,
and those individuals
that live along the
Tok Cutoff from Tok to
Mentasta Pass, and
along the Nabesna
Road.
[[Page 13383]]
Glennallen Subdistrict of Salmon............................................... Residents of the Prince
the Upper Copper River William Sound Area and
District. residents of Cantwell,
Chickaloon, Chisana,
Dot Lake, Healy Lake,
Northway, Tanacross,
Tetlin, Tok and those
individuals living
along the Alaska
Highway from the
Alaskan/Canadian
border to Dot Lake,
along the Tok Cutoff
from Tok to Mentasta
Pass, and along the
Nabesna Road.
Waters of the Copper River Salmon............................................... Residents of Mentasta
between National Park Lake and Dot Lake.
Service regulatory markers
located near the mouth of
Tanada Creek, and in Tanada
Creek between National Park
Service regulatory markers
located near the mouth of
Tanada Creek, and in Tanada
Creek between National Park
Service regulatory markers
identifying the open waters
of the creek.
Remainder of the Prince Salmon............................................... Residents of the Prince
William Sound Area. William Sound Area.
Waters of the Bering River Eulachon............................................. Residents of Cordova.
area from Point Martin to
Cape Suckling.
Waters of the Copper River Eulachon............................................. Residents of Cordova,
Delta from the Eyak River Chenega Bay, and
to Point Martin. Tatitlek.
YAKUTAT AREA:
Freshwater upstream from the Salmon............................................... Residents of the area
terminus of streams and east of Yakutat Bay,
rivers of the Yakutat Area including the islands
from the Doame River to the within Yakutat Bay,
Tsiu River. west of the Situk
River drainage, and
south of and including
Knight Island.
Freshwater upstream from the Dolly Varden, steelhead trout, and smelt............. Residents of the area
terminus of streams and east of Yakutat Bay,
rivers of the Yakutat Area including the islands
from the Doame River to within Yakutat Bay,
Point Manby. west of the Situk
River drainage, and
south of and including
Knight Island.
Remainder of the Yakutat Dolly Varden, trout, smelt, and eulachon............. Residents of
Area. Southeastern Alaska
and Yakutat
SOUTHEASTERN ALASKA AREA:
District 1--Section 1E in Salmon, Dolly Varden, trout, smelt, and eulachon..... Residents of the City
waters of the Naha River of Saxman.
and Roosevelt Lagoon.
District 1--Section 1F in Salmon, Dolly Varden, trout, smelt, and eulachon..... Residents of the City
Boca de Quadra in waters of of Saxman.
Sockeye Creek and Hugh
Smith Lake within 500 yards
of the terminus of Sockeye
Creek.
Districts 2, 3, and 5 and Salmon, Dolly Varden, trout, smelt, and eulachon..... Residents living south
waters draining into those of Sumner Strait and
Districts. west of Clarence
Strait and Kashevaroff
Passage.
District 5--North of a line Salmon, Dolly Varden, trout, smelt, and eulachon..... Residents of the City
from Point Barrie to of Kake and in
Boulder Point. Kupreanof Island
drainages emptying
into Keku Strait south
of Point White and
north of the Portage
Bay boat harbor.
District 6 and waters Salmon, Dolly Varden, trout, smelt, and eulachon..... Residents living south
draining into that District. of Sumner Strait and
west of Clarence
Strait and Kashevaroff
Passage; residents of
drainages flowing into
District 6 north of
the latitude of Point
Alexander (Mitkof
Island); residents of
drainages flowing into
Districts 7 & 8,
including the
communities of
Petersburg & Wrangell;
and residents of the
communities of Meyers
Chuck and Kake.
District 7 and waters Salmon, Dolly Varden, trout, smelt, and eulachon..... Residents of drainages
draining into that District. flowing into District
6 north of the
latitude of Point
Alexander (Mitkof
Island); residents of
drainages flowing into
Districts 7 & 8,
including the
communities of
Petersburg & Wrangell;
and residents of the
communities of Meyers
Chuck and Kake.
District 8 and waters Salmon, Dolly Varden, trout, smelt, and eulachon..... Residents of drainages
draining into that District. flowing into Districts
7 & 8, residents of
drainages flowing into
District 6 north of
the latitude of Point
Alexander (Mitkof
Island), and residents
of Meyers Chuck.
District 9--Section 9A...... Salmon, Dolly Varden, trout, smelt, and eulachon..... Residents of the City
of Kake and in
Kupreanof Island
drainages emptying
into Keku Strait south
of Point White and
north of the Portage
Bay boat harbor.
District 9--Section 9B north Salmon, Dolly Varden, trout, smelt, and eulachon..... Residents of the City
of the latitude of Swain of Kake and in
Point. Kupreanof Island
drainages emptying
into Keku Strait south
of Point White and
north of the Portage
Bay boat harbor.
[[Page 13384]]
District 10--West of a line Salmon, Dolly Varden, trout, smelt, and eulachon..... Residents of the City
from Pinta Point to False of Kake and in
Point Pybus. Kupreanof Island