Fisheries Off West Coast States and in the Western Pacific; Pacific Coast Groundfish Fishery; Specifications and Management Measures; Inseason Adjustments, 18227-18230 [06-3468]
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Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 69 / Tuesday, April 11, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
aircraft halon bottles, without having
received a non-objection notice from the
Administrator in accordance with
§ 82.13(g)(2) and (3).
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I 4. Section 82.13 is amended by
revising paragraphs (g)(1)(ii) and (g)(2)
introductory text to read as follows:
§ 82.13 Recordkeeping and reporting
requirements for class I controlled
substances.
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(g) * * *
(1) * * *
(ii) The quantity of those controlled
substances imported that are used
(including recycled or reclaimed) and,
where applicable, the information
provided with the petition as under
paragraph (g)(2) of this section;
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(2) Petitioning—Importers of Used,
Recycled or Reclaimed Controlled
Substances. For each individual
shipment over 5 pounds of a used
controlled substance as defined in
§ 82.3, except for Group II used
controlled substances shipped in
aircraft halon bottles, an importer must
submit directly to the Administrator, at
least 40 working days before the
shipment is to leave the foreign port of
export, the following information in a
petition:
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[FR Doc. 06–3461 Filed 4–10–06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
50 CFR Part 660
[Docket No. 051014263–6028–03; I.D.
040506A]
Fisheries Off West Coast States and in
the Western Pacific; Pacific Coast
Groundfish Fishery; Specifications and
Management Measures; Inseason
Adjustments
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Inseason adjustments to
management measures; request for
comments.
wwhite on PROD1PC61 with NOTICES
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: NMFS announces changes to
management measures in the
recreational Pacific Coast groundfish
fisheries. These actions, which are
authorized by the Pacific Coast
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Groundfish Fishery Management Plan
(FMP) are intended to protect overfished
groundfish stocks, to reduce possible
confusion in the public over differing
state and Federal regulations, and to
improve the ability to enforce
groundfish regulations.
DATES: Effective 0001 hours (local time)
April 11, 2006. Comments on this rule
will be accepted through May 11, 2006.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments,
identified by I.D. 040506A, by any of the
following methods:
• E-mail:
GroundfishInseason7.nwr@noaa.gov.
Include I.D. number 040506A in the
subject line of the message.
• Federal eRulemaking Portal:
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• Mail: D. Robert Lohn,
Administrator, Northwest Region,
NMFS, 7600 Sand Point Way NE,
Seattle, WA 98115–0070; or Rod
McInnis, Administrator, Southwest
Region, NMFS, 501 West Ocean Blvd,
Suite 4200, Long Beach, CA 90802–
4213. Attn: Jamie Goen.
• Fax: 206–526–6736, Attn: Jamie
Goen.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Jamie Goen (Northwest Region, NMFS),
phone: 206–526–6150; fax: 206–526–
6736; or e-mail: jamie.goen@noaa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Electronic Access
This Federal Register document is
available on the Government Printing
Office’s Web site at: https://
www.gpoaccess.gov/fr/.
Background information and
documents are available at the Pacific
Fishery Management Council’s (Pacific
Council’s) Web site at: https://
www.pcouncil.org.
Background
The Pacific Coast Groundfish FMP
and its implementing regulations at title
50 in the Code of Federal Regulations
(CFR), part 660, subpart G, regulate
fishing for over 80 species of groundfish
off the coasts of Washington, Oregon,
and California. Groundfish
specifications and management
measures are developed by the Pacific
Council, and are implemented by
NMFS. The specifications and
management measures for 2005–2006
were codified in the CFR (50 CFR part
660, subpart G). They were published in
the Federal Register as a proposed rule
on September 21, 2004 (69 FR 56550),
and as a final rule on December 23, 2004
(69 FR 77012). The final rule was
subsequently amended on March 18,
2005 (70 FR 13118); March 30, 2005 (70
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18227
FR 16145); April 19, 2005 (70 FR
20304); May 3, 2005 (70 FR 22808); May
4, 2005 (70 FR 23040); May 5, 2005 (70
FR 23804); May 16, 2005 (70 FR 25789);
May 19, 2005 (70 FR 28852); July 5,
2005 (70 FR 38596); August 22, 2005 (70
FR 48897); August 31, 2005 (70 FR
51682); October 5, 2005 (70 FR 58066);
October 20, 2005 (70 FR 61063); October
24, 2005 (70 FR 61393); November 1,
2005 (70 FR 65861); December 5, 2005
(70 FR 723850); February 17, 2006 (71
FR 8489); and March 27, 2006 (71 FR
10545).
The changes to current groundfish
management measures implemented by
this action were recommended by the
Pacific Council, in consultation with
Pacific Coast Treaty Indian Tribes and
the States of Washington, Oregon, and
California, at its March 6–10, 2006,
meeting in Seattle, WA. At that meeting,
the Pacific Council recommended: (1)
conforming Federal regulations to
protective state measures taken in the
Washington recreational groundfish
fishery that prohibit retention of
rockfish and lingcod in Federal waters
from May 22 through September 30,
2006, in the area from the U.S. border
with Canada to Queets River, WA
(47°31.70′ N. lat.) except on days that
halibut fishing is open, and that prohibit
retention of rockfish and lingcod
seaward of a line approximating the 30–
fm (55–m) depth contour from March 18
through June 15, 2006 in the area from
the Queets River to Leadbetter Point,
WA (46°38.17′ N. lat.); and (2)
conforming Federal regulations to
protective state measures taken for the
Oregon recreational groundfish fishery
that set the marine fish bag limit off
Oregon at 6 fish. These measures are
also needed to conform Federal
groundfish regulations with Federal
halibut regulations implemented on
March 5, 2006 (71 FR 10850, March 3,
2006).
Washington Recreational Fishery
Management Measures
At the Pacific Council’s March
meeting, Washington Department of
Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) reported on
its recreational fishery management
measures in 2005. WDFW had analyzed
its 2005 fishery’s catch and had found
that the 2005 Washington recreational
fishery had exceeded its harvest targets
for yelloweye and canary rockfish. To
ensure that its recreational fishery
would not exceed 2006 rockfish harvest
targets, WDFW developed state
regulations in a series of public
meetings held in December 2005
through February 2006. These
regulations prohibit retention of
rockfish and lingcod in WDFW Marine
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Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 69 / Tuesday, April 11, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
Areas 3 and 4 (from the U.S./Canada
border to Queets River) in waters
seaward of the 20–fm (36.9–m) depth
contour from May 22 through
September 30, 2006, except on days that
the recreational halibut fishery is open.
These regulations also prohibit retention
of rockfish and lingcod in WDFW
Marine Area 2 (from Queets River to
Leadbetter Point) in waters seaward of
a line approximating the 30–fm (55–m)
depth contour from March 18 through
June 15, 2006. Yelloweye and canary
rockfish are shelf rockfish species and
are less abundant in nearshore waters,
so these regulations are designed to
reduce the take of these species. The
bulk of recreational fishing off the
Washington coast occurs during spring
and summer, with the more severe
winter weather discouraging much
recreational fishing during the
remainder of the year.
All of the West Coast groundfish
fisheries, including the recreational
fishery, are subject to fishing area
closures intended to reduce
opportunities for incidental catch of
overfished rockfish species. These area
closures, known as Rockfish
Conservation Areas (RCAs), are
bounded by lines approximating fathom
depth contours. NMFS provides
latitude/longitude coordinates defining
the RCA boundary lines at 50 CFR
660.390–660.394. Under Federal
regulations at § 660.370, the boundaries
of RCAs may be revised inseason, as
needed to either increase protection for
overfished species, or increase fisheries
access to more healthy groundfish
species. RCA boundaries may be shifted
to any one of the boundary lines
provided at §§ 660.391–660.394 using
the routine management measure
authority provided at § 660.370. Under
FMP provisions in section 6.2, however,
new routine management measures such
as potential RCA boundary lines must
be established through a two-meeting
Council process and a Federal
rulemaking with a public notice-andcomment process.
Federal regulations at § 660.391(b)
provide latitude/longitude coordinates
to approximate the 30–fm (55–m) depth
contour. WDFW and the Pacific Council
had recommended prohibiting retention
of rockfish and lingcod seaward of the
boundary line at § 660.391(b) that
approximates the 30–fm (55–m) depth
contour, between Queets River and
Leadbetter Point, from March 18
through June 15, 2006. NMFS expects
that implementing this recommendation
would reduce recreational fisheries
interactions with overfished rockfish.
However, the agency could not
complete this Federal Register action in
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time to implement the recommendation
by March 18. State regulations may be
more restrictive than Federal
regulations, and Washington State
regulations already in place prohibit
fishing in this area seaward of the 30 fm
(55 m) boundary line. NMFS
nonetheless wishes to implement this
protective measure as soon as possible,
which is why it is effective in Federal
waters beginning with the date of
publication of this Federal Register
document, April 11, 2006 through June
15, 2006.
There is no federally-designated RCA
boundary at a line approximating the
20–fm (36.9–m) depth contour. Because
the 20–fm (36.9–m) depth contour has
not been established as a potential RCA
boundary that can be made effective
through a routine management measure,
NMFS is unable to implement Federal
regulations that exactly conform to the
state closure. However, there are few
areas off Washington where the 20–fm
(36.9–m) depth contour is offshore of
the 3–nautical mile boundary line
between state and Federal waters.
Therefore, the Pacific Council
recommended that NMFS prohibit
recreational fishing for rockfish and
lingcod in the EEZ between the U.S./
Canada border and the Queets River
between May 22 and September 30,
2006, except on days when Pacific
halibut fishing is open in that area,
knowing that the state regulations
would address state waters seaward of
the 20–fm (36.9–m) depth contour
during that same period. NMFS agrees
with this Pacific Council
recommendation and is implementing it
via this document. NMFS announces
open recreational fishing days for
Pacific halibut on its halibut hotline, at
(206)526 6667 or (800) 662 9825.
Oregon Recreational Fishery
Management Measure
The Oregon Department of Fish and
Wildlife (ODFW) also reported at the
March 2006 Pacific Council meeting on
management measures that the state had
developed in late 2005 for its 2006
recreational fishery. In December 2005,
the Oregon Fish and Wildlife
Commission (Commission) refined
management measures for the 2006
Oregon recreational groundfish fishery,
based on angler effort patterns ODFW
had observed in 2005. The 2005 Oregon
recreational salmon season had been
poor, which led more anglers to
participate in the 2005 groundfish
fishery than ODFW had expected at the
start of 2005. In order to remain within
the 2006 Oregon harvest guideline for
black rockfish and to provide a 12–
month fishing season for 2006, the
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Commission adopted a 6–fish marine
fish bag limit, a reduction from the 10–
fish limit previously in place. At the
Pacific Council’s March meeting, ODFW
asked that the Pacific Council
recommend to NMFS that Federal
groundfish regulations conform to the
more restrictive state marine fish bag
limit, which the Pacific Council did.
NMFS agrees that the 6–fish marine fish
bag limit is likely to reduce effort in the
Oregon recreational fishery, reduce
opportunities for rockfish interception,
and help keep the coastwide fisheries
within the groundfish OYs. For this
reason, and in order to reduce potential
public confusion over differing state and
Federal regulations and to improve the
ability to enforce the regulations, NMFS
is implementing the reduced marine
fish bag limit via this document.
Conforming Federal Recreational
Groundfish Regulations to Federal
Recreational Halibut Regulations
The Pacific Council developed 2006
revisions to the Pacific Halibut Catch
Sharing Plan and management measures
for the 2006 recreational halibut
fisheries during its September and
November 2005 meetings. On January
30, 2006, NMFS published a proposed
rule to implement the Pacific Council’s
recommended revisions to both the
Catch Sharing plan and implementing
regulations (71 FR 4876). The
International Pacific Halibut
Commission held its annual meeting
January 16–20, 2006, where it set 2006
halibut catch levels for U.S. and
Canadian waters. Following that
meeting and the public comment period
on the proposed rule for West Coast
halibut fisheries, NMFS published a
final rule implementing 2006 coastwide
Pacific halibut fisheries regulations, for
waters off the U.S. West Coast and
Alaska (71 FR 10850, March 3, 2006).
That final rule on the halibut fisheries
included management measures that
addressed allowable groundfish
retention in the recreational halibut
fisheries. Specifically, between
Leadbetter Point, WA, and Cape Falcon,
OR, no groundfish except sablefish and
Pacific cod may be taken and retained,
possessed or landed if halibut are
onboard the vessel. And, between Cape
Falcon and Humbug Mountain, OR, no
groundfish except sablefish may be
taken and retained, possessed or landed
if halibut are onboard the vessel.
At the Pacific Council’s March 2006
meeting, their Groundfish Management
Team alerted the Council that halibut
regulations developed through the
halibut rulemaking process conflicted
with groundfish regulations, which do
not address retention of groundfish
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Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 69 / Tuesday, April 11, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
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taken with halibut off Oregon.
Washington recreational groundfish
regulations had a prohibition on the
retention of groundfish, except
sablefish, if halibut were onboard but
did not allow retention of Pacific cod.
Therefore, in order to eliminate
confusion between Federal halibut and
groundfish regulations, the Pacific
Council recommended that NMFS
modify groundfish regulations to
conform to halibut regulations. NMFS
agrees that this revision is needed and
is implementing the Pacific Council’s
recommendation for Washington and
Oregon via this document.
Classification
These actions are taken under the
authority of 50 CFR 660.370(c) and are
exempt from review under Executive
Order 12866.
These actions are authorized by the
Pacific Coast groundfish FMP and its
implementing regulations, and are based
on the most recent data available. The
aggregate data upon which these actions
are based are available for public
inspection at the Office of the
Administrator, Northwest Region,
NMFS, (see ADDRESSES) during business
hours.
Pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(B), there
is good cause to waive prior notice and
an opportunity for public comment on
this action, as notice and comment
would be impracticable and contrary to
the public interest. The data upon
which these recommendations were
based was provided to the Pacific
Council, and the Pacific Council made
its recommendations at its March 6–10,
2006 meeting in Seattle, WA. There was
not sufficient time after that meeting to
draft this notice and undergo proposed
and final rulemaking before these
actions need to be in effect as explained
below. For the actions to be
implemented in this notice, prior notice
and opportunity for comment would be
impracticable and contrary to the public
interest because affording the time
necessary for prior notice and
opportunity for public comment would
impede the Agency’s function of
managing fisheries using the best
available science to approach without
exceeding the OYs for federally
managed species. The adjustments to
management measures in this document
affect recreational fisheries off
Washington and Oregon and must be
implemented immediately to eliminate
confusion for the public and to improve
enforcement by ensuring that Federal
and state recreational regulations
conform to each other.
Revisions to recreational fishery
management measures are needed to
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protect overfished groundfish species
and to keep the harvest of other
groundfish species within the harvest
levels projected for 2006. Without these
measures in place, the fisheries could
risk exceeding harvest levels early in the
year, causing early and unanticipated
fishery closures and economic harm to
the communities. It is unnecessary to
provide a public notice-and-comment
period on the measures that would be
implemented to eliminate conflicts
between Federal groundfish and halibut
regulations because these measures have
already been vetted through a public
notice-and-comment process for the
halibut regulations: proposed rule
published January 30, 2006 (71 FR
4876), and final rule published March 3,
2006 (71 FR 10850). Making the
groundfish regulations conform to the
halibut regulations via this notice is a
housekeeping measure and it is needed
quickly in order to reduce confusion for
the public and enforcement officers.
Delaying any of these changes would
keep management measures in place
that are not based on the best available
data and which could lead to early
closures of the fishery if harvest of
groundfish exceeds levels projected for
2006. This would be contrary to the
public interest because it would impair
achievement of one of the Pacific Coast
Groundfish FMP objectives of providing
for year-round harvest opportunities or
extending fishing opportunities as long
as practicable during the fishing year.
Affording an opportunity for prior
notice and comment on these regulatory
revisions would also be contrary to the
public interest because all of the
measures implemented by this notice
eliminate confusion for the public by
removing conflicts between different
regulations that affect the same waters
and fisheries.
For these reasons, good cause also
exists to waive the 30 day delay in
effectiveness requirement under 5
U.S.C. 553 (d)(3).
List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 660
Administrative practice and
procedure, Fisheries, Fishing, Indians.
Dated: April 5, 2006.
Alan D. Risenhoover,
Acting Director, Office of Sustainable
Fisheries, National Marine Fisheries Service.
For the reasons set out in the
preamble, 50 CFR part 660 is amended
as follows:
I
PART 660—FISHERIES OFF WEST
COAST STATES AND IN THE
WESTERN PACIFIC
1. The authority citation for part 660
continues to read as follows:
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18229
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
2. In § 660.384, paragraphs (c)(1)
introductory text, (c)(1)(i)(B), and
(c)(2)(iii) are revised to read as follows:
I
§ 660.384 Recreational fishery
management measures.
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(c) * * *
(1) Washington. For each person
engaged in recreational fishing off the
coast of Washington, the groundfish bag
limit is 15 groundfish per day, including
rockfish and lingcod, and is open yearround (except for lingcod). In the Pacific
halibut fisheries, retention of groundfish
is governed in part by annual
management measures for Pacific
halibut fisheries, which are published in
the Federal Register. South of
Leadbetter Point, WA to the
Washington/Oregon border, when
Pacific halibut are onboard the vessel,
no groundfish may be taken and
retained, possessed or landed, except
sablefish and Pacific cod. The following
sublimits and closed areas apply:
(i) * * *
(B) Recreational Rockfish
Conservation Area. Fishing for
groundfish with recreational gear is
prohibited within the recreational RCA.
It is unlawful to take and retain,
possess, or land groundfish taken with
recreational gear within the recreational
RCA. A vessel fishing in the recreational
RCA may not be in possession of any
groundfish. [For example, if a vessel
participates in the recreational salmon
fishery within the RCA, the vessel
cannot be in possession of groundfish
while in the RCA. The vessel may,
however, on the same trip fish for and
retain groundfish shoreward of the RCA
on the return trip to port.]
(1) Between the U.S. border with
Canada and the Queets River and from
May 22 through September 30, 2006,
taking and retaining, possessing or
landing, any rockfish or lingcod in the
EEZ is prohibited, except on days when
the Pacific halibut fishery is open in this
area. Days open to Pacific halibut
recreational fishing off Washington are
announced on the NMFS hotline at
(206)526–6667 or (800)662–9825.
(2) Between the Queets River and
Leadbetter Point, recreational fishing for
rockfish and lingcod is prohibited
seaward of a boundary line
approximating the 30 fm (55 m) depth
contour from April 11, 2006 through
June 15, 2006. Coordinates for the
boundary line approximating the 30 fm
(55 m) depth contour are listed in
§ 660.391.
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Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 69 / Tuesday, April 11, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
(iii) Bag limits, size limits. The bag
limits for each person engaged in
recreational fishing in the EEZ seaward
of Oregon are two lingcod per day,
which may be no smaller than 24 in (61
cm) total length; and 6 marine fish per
day, which excludes Pacific halibut,
salmonids, tuna, perch species,
sturgeon, sanddabs, lingcod, striped
bass, hybrid bass, offshore pelagic
species and baitfish (herring, smelt,
anchovies and sardines), but which
includes rockfish, greenling, cabezon
and other groundfish species. In the
Pacific halibut fisheries, retention of
groundfish is governed in part by
annual management measures for
Pacific halibut fisheries, which are
published in the Federal Register.
Between the Oregon border with
Washington and Cape Falcon, when
Pacific halibut are onboard the vessel,
groundfish may not be taken and
retained, possessed or landed, except
sablefish and Pacific cod. Between Cape
Falcon and Humbug Mountain, during
days open to the Oregon Central Coast
‘‘all-depth’’ sport halibut fishery, when
Pacific halibut are onboard the vessel,
no groundfish may be taken and
retained, possessed or landed, except
sablefish. ‘‘All-depth’’ season days are
established in the annual management
measures for Pacific halibut fisheries,
which are published in the Federal
Register and are announced on the
NMFS halibut hotline, 1–800–662–9825.
The minimum size limit for cabezon
retained in the recreational fishery is 16
in (41 cm) and for greenling is 10 in (26
cm). Taking and retaining canary
rockfish and yelloweye rockfish is
prohibited at all times and in all areas.
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[FR Doc. 06–3468 Filed 4–10–06; 8:45 am]
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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
50 CFR Part 679
[Docket No. 060216045–6045–01; I.D.
040506C]
Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic
Zone Off Alaska; Pacific Cod by
Catcher Vessels Using Trawl Gear in
the Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands
Management Area
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Temporary rule; closure.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: NMFS is prohibiting directed
fishing for Pacific cod by catcher vessels
using trawl gear in the Bering Sea and
Aleutian Islands management area
(BSAI). This action is necessary to
prevent exceeding the 2006 second
seasonal allowance of the Pacific cod
total allowable catch (TAC) specified for
catcher vessels using trawl gear in the
BSAI.
DATES: Effective 1200 hrs, Alaska local
time (A.l.t.), April 6, 2006, through 1200
hrs, A.l.t., June 10, 2006.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Josh
Keaton, 907–586–7228.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: NMFS
manages the groundfish fishery in the
BSAI exclusive economic zone
according to the Fishery Management
Plan for Groundfish of the Bering Sea
and Aleutian Islands Management Area
(FMP) prepared by the North Pacific
Fishery Management Council under
authority of the Magnuson-Stevens
Fishery Conservation and Management
Act. Regulations governing fishing by
U.S. vessels in accordance with the FMP
appear at subpart H of 50 CFR part 600
and 50 CFR part 679.
The 2006 second seasonal allowance
of the Pacific cod TAC specified for
catcher vessels using trawl gear in the
BSAI is 4,091 metric tons (mt) as
established by the 2006 and 2007 final
harvest specifications for groundfish in
the BSAI (71 FR 10894, March 3, 2006)
and the adjustment on March 14, 2006
(71 FR 13777, March 17, 2006), for the
period 1200 hrs, A.l.t., April 1, 2006,
through 1200 hrs, A.l.t., June 10, 2006.
See § 679.20(c)(3)(iii), § 679.20(c)(5),
and § 679.20(a)(7)(i)(B).
In accordance with § 679.20(d)(1)(i),
the Administrator, Alaska Region,
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NMFS (Regional Administrator), has
determined that the 2006 second
seasonal allowance of the Pacific cod
TAC specified for catcher vessels using
trawl gear in the BSAI will soon be
reached. Therefore, the Regional
Administrator is establishing a directed
fishing allowance of 4,041 mt, and is
setting aside the remaining 50 mt as
bycatch to support other anticipated
groundfish fisheries. In accordance with
§ 679.20(d)(1)(iii), the Regional
Administrator finds that this directed
fishing allowance has been reached.
Consequently, NMFS is prohibiting
directed fishing for Pacific cod by
catcher vessels using trawl gear in the
BSAI.
After the effective date of this closure
the maximum retainable amounts at
§ 679.20(e) and (f) apply at any time
during a trip.
Classification
This action responds to the best
available information recently obtained
from the fishery. The Assistant
Administrator for Fisheries, NOAA,
(AA), finds good cause to waive the
requirement to provide prior notice and
opportunity for public comment
pursuant to the authority set forth at 5
U.S.C. 553(b)(B) as such requirement is
impracticable and contrary to the public
interest. This requirement is
impracticable and contrary to the public
interest as it would prevent NMFS from
responding to the most recent fisheries
data in a timely fashion and would
delay the closure of Pacific cod by
catcher vessels using trawl gear in the
BSAI. NMFS was unable to publish a
notice providing time for public
comment because the most recent,
relevant data only became available as
of April 5, 2006.
The AA also finds good cause to
waive the 30-day delay in the effective
date of this action under 5 U.S.C.
553(d)(3). This finding is based upon
the reasons provided above for waiver of
prior notice and opportunity for public
comment.
This action is required by § 679.20
and is exempt from review under
Executive Order 12866.
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
Dated: April 5, 2006.
Alan D. Risenhoover,
Acting Director, Office of Sustainable
Fisheries, National Marine Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 06–3463 Filed 4–6–06; 2:56 pm]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–S
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11APR1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 71, Number 69 (Tuesday, April 11, 2006)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 18227-18230]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 06-3468]
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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
50 CFR Part 660
[Docket No. 051014263-6028-03; I.D. 040506A]
Fisheries Off West Coast States and in the Western Pacific;
Pacific Coast Groundfish Fishery; Specifications and Management
Measures; Inseason Adjustments
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Inseason adjustments to management measures; request for
comments.
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SUMMARY: NMFS announces changes to management measures in the
recreational Pacific Coast groundfish fisheries. These actions, which
are authorized by the Pacific Coast Groundfish Fishery Management Plan
(FMP) are intended to protect overfished groundfish stocks, to reduce
possible confusion in the public over differing state and Federal
regulations, and to improve the ability to enforce groundfish
regulations.
DATES: Effective 0001 hours (local time) April 11, 2006. Comments on
this rule will be accepted through May 11, 2006.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments, identified by I.D. 040506A, by any
of the following methods:
E-mail: GroundfishInseason7.nwr@noaa.gov. Include I.D.
number 040506A in the subject line of the message.
Federal eRulemaking Portal: www.regulations.gov. Follow
the instructions for submitting comments.
Mail: D. Robert Lohn, Administrator, Northwest Region,
NMFS, 7600 Sand Point Way NE, Seattle, WA 98115-0070; or Rod McInnis,
Administrator, Southwest Region, NMFS, 501 West Ocean Blvd, Suite 4200,
Long Beach, CA 90802-4213. Attn: Jamie Goen.
Fax: 206-526-6736, Attn: Jamie Goen.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jamie Goen (Northwest Region, NMFS),
phone: 206-526-6150; fax: 206-526-6736; or e-mail: jamie.goen@noaa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Electronic Access
This Federal Register document is available on the Government
Printing Office's Web site at: https://www.gpoaccess.gov/fr/.
Background information and documents are available at the Pacific
Fishery Management Council's (Pacific Council's) Web site at: https://
www.pcouncil.org.
Background
The Pacific Coast Groundfish FMP and its implementing regulations
at title 50 in the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR), part 660, subpart
G, regulate fishing for over 80 species of groundfish off the coasts of
Washington, Oregon, and California. Groundfish specifications and
management measures are developed by the Pacific Council, and are
implemented by NMFS. The specifications and management measures for
2005-2006 were codified in the CFR (50 CFR part 660, subpart G). They
were published in the Federal Register as a proposed rule on September
21, 2004 (69 FR 56550), and as a final rule on December 23, 2004 (69 FR
77012). The final rule was subsequently amended on March 18, 2005 (70
FR 13118); March 30, 2005 (70 FR 16145); April 19, 2005 (70 FR 20304);
May 3, 2005 (70 FR 22808); May 4, 2005 (70 FR 23040); May 5, 2005 (70
FR 23804); May 16, 2005 (70 FR 25789); May 19, 2005 (70 FR 28852); July
5, 2005 (70 FR 38596); August 22, 2005 (70 FR 48897); August 31, 2005
(70 FR 51682); October 5, 2005 (70 FR 58066); October 20, 2005 (70 FR
61063); October 24, 2005 (70 FR 61393); November 1, 2005 (70 FR 65861);
December 5, 2005 (70 FR 723850); February 17, 2006 (71 FR 8489); and
March 27, 2006 (71 FR 10545).
The changes to current groundfish management measures implemented
by this action were recommended by the Pacific Council, in consultation
with Pacific Coast Treaty Indian Tribes and the States of Washington,
Oregon, and California, at its March 6-10, 2006, meeting in Seattle,
WA. At that meeting, the Pacific Council recommended: (1) conforming
Federal regulations to protective state measures taken in the
Washington recreational groundfish fishery that prohibit retention of
rockfish and lingcod in Federal waters from May 22 through September
30, 2006, in the area from the U.S. border with Canada to Queets River,
WA (47[deg]31.70' N. lat.) except on days that halibut fishing is open,
and that prohibit retention of rockfish and lingcod seaward of a line
approximating the 30-fm (55-m) depth contour from March 18 through June
15, 2006 in the area from the Queets River to Leadbetter Point, WA
(46[deg]38.17' N. lat.); and (2) conforming Federal regulations to
protective state measures taken for the Oregon recreational groundfish
fishery that set the marine fish bag limit off Oregon at 6 fish. These
measures are also needed to conform Federal groundfish regulations with
Federal halibut regulations implemented on March 5, 2006 (71 FR 10850,
March 3, 2006).
Washington Recreational Fishery Management Measures
At the Pacific Council's March meeting, Washington Department of
Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) reported on its recreational fishery
management measures in 2005. WDFW had analyzed its 2005 fishery's catch
and had found that the 2005 Washington recreational fishery had
exceeded its harvest targets for yelloweye and canary rockfish. To
ensure that its recreational fishery would not exceed 2006 rockfish
harvest targets, WDFW developed state regulations in a series of public
meetings held in December 2005 through February 2006. These regulations
prohibit retention of rockfish and lingcod in WDFW Marine
[[Page 18228]]
Areas 3 and 4 (from the U.S./Canada border to Queets River) in waters
seaward of the 20-fm (36.9-m) depth contour from May 22 through
September 30, 2006, except on days that the recreational halibut
fishery is open. These regulations also prohibit retention of rockfish
and lingcod in WDFW Marine Area 2 (from Queets River to Leadbetter
Point) in waters seaward of a line approximating the 30-fm (55-m) depth
contour from March 18 through June 15, 2006. Yelloweye and canary
rockfish are shelf rockfish species and are less abundant in nearshore
waters, so these regulations are designed to reduce the take of these
species. The bulk of recreational fishing off the Washington coast
occurs during spring and summer, with the more severe winter weather
discouraging much recreational fishing during the remainder of the
year.
All of the West Coast groundfish fisheries, including the
recreational fishery, are subject to fishing area closures intended to
reduce opportunities for incidental catch of overfished rockfish
species. These area closures, known as Rockfish Conservation Areas
(RCAs), are bounded by lines approximating fathom depth contours. NMFS
provides latitude/longitude coordinates defining the RCA boundary lines
at 50 CFR 660.390-660.394. Under Federal regulations at Sec. 660.370,
the boundaries of RCAs may be revised inseason, as needed to either
increase protection for overfished species, or increase fisheries
access to more healthy groundfish species. RCA boundaries may be
shifted to any one of the boundary lines provided at Sec. Sec.
660.391-660.394 using the routine management measure authority provided
at Sec. 660.370. Under FMP provisions in section 6.2, however, new
routine management measures such as potential RCA boundary lines must
be established through a two-meeting Council process and a Federal
rulemaking with a public notice-and-comment process.
Federal regulations at Sec. 660.391(b) provide latitude/longitude
coordinates to approximate the 30-fm (55-m) depth contour. WDFW and the
Pacific Council had recommended prohibiting retention of rockfish and
lingcod seaward of the boundary line at Sec. 660.391(b) that
approximates the 30-fm (55-m) depth contour, between Queets River and
Leadbetter Point, from March 18 through June 15, 2006. NMFS expects
that implementing this recommendation would reduce recreational
fisheries interactions with overfished rockfish. However, the agency
could not complete this Federal Register action in time to implement
the recommendation by March 18. State regulations may be more
restrictive than Federal regulations, and Washington State regulations
already in place prohibit fishing in this area seaward of the 30 fm (55
m) boundary line. NMFS nonetheless wishes to implement this protective
measure as soon as possible, which is why it is effective in Federal
waters beginning with the date of publication of this Federal Register
document, April 11, 2006 through June 15, 2006.
There is no federally-designated RCA boundary at a line
approximating the 20-fm (36.9-m) depth contour. Because the 20-fm
(36.9-m) depth contour has not been established as a potential RCA
boundary that can be made effective through a routine management
measure, NMFS is unable to implement Federal regulations that exactly
conform to the state closure. However, there are few areas off
Washington where the 20-fm (36.9-m) depth contour is offshore of the 3-
nautical mile boundary line between state and Federal waters.
Therefore, the Pacific Council recommended that NMFS prohibit
recreational fishing for rockfish and lingcod in the EEZ between the
U.S./Canada border and the Queets River between May 22 and September
30, 2006, except on days when Pacific halibut fishing is open in that
area, knowing that the state regulations would address state waters
seaward of the 20-fm (36.9-m) depth contour during that same period.
NMFS agrees with this Pacific Council recommendation and is
implementing it via this document. NMFS announces open recreational
fishing days for Pacific halibut on its halibut hotline, at (206)526
6667 or (800) 662 9825.
Oregon Recreational Fishery Management Measure
The Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife (ODFW) also reported at
the March 2006 Pacific Council meeting on management measures that the
state had developed in late 2005 for its 2006 recreational fishery. In
December 2005, the Oregon Fish and Wildlife Commission (Commission)
refined management measures for the 2006 Oregon recreational groundfish
fishery, based on angler effort patterns ODFW had observed in 2005. The
2005 Oregon recreational salmon season had been poor, which led more
anglers to participate in the 2005 groundfish fishery than ODFW had
expected at the start of 2005. In order to remain within the 2006
Oregon harvest guideline for black rockfish and to provide a 12-month
fishing season for 2006, the Commission adopted a 6-fish marine fish
bag limit, a reduction from the 10-fish limit previously in place. At
the Pacific Council's March meeting, ODFW asked that the Pacific
Council recommend to NMFS that Federal groundfish regulations conform
to the more restrictive state marine fish bag limit, which the Pacific
Council did. NMFS agrees that the 6-fish marine fish bag limit is
likely to reduce effort in the Oregon recreational fishery, reduce
opportunities for rockfish interception, and help keep the coastwide
fisheries within the groundfish OYs. For this reason, and in order to
reduce potential public confusion over differing state and Federal
regulations and to improve the ability to enforce the regulations, NMFS
is implementing the reduced marine fish bag limit via this document.
Conforming Federal Recreational Groundfish Regulations to Federal
Recreational Halibut Regulations
The Pacific Council developed 2006 revisions to the Pacific Halibut
Catch Sharing Plan and management measures for the 2006 recreational
halibut fisheries during its September and November 2005 meetings. On
January 30, 2006, NMFS published a proposed rule to implement the
Pacific Council's recommended revisions to both the Catch Sharing plan
and implementing regulations (71 FR 4876). The International Pacific
Halibut Commission held its annual meeting January 16-20, 2006, where
it set 2006 halibut catch levels for U.S. and Canadian waters.
Following that meeting and the public comment period on the proposed
rule for West Coast halibut fisheries, NMFS published a final rule
implementing 2006 coastwide Pacific halibut fisheries regulations, for
waters off the U.S. West Coast and Alaska (71 FR 10850, March 3, 2006).
That final rule on the halibut fisheries included management measures
that addressed allowable groundfish retention in the recreational
halibut fisheries. Specifically, between Leadbetter Point, WA, and Cape
Falcon, OR, no groundfish except sablefish and Pacific cod may be taken
and retained, possessed or landed if halibut are onboard the vessel.
And, between Cape Falcon and Humbug Mountain, OR, no groundfish except
sablefish may be taken and retained, possessed or landed if halibut are
onboard the vessel.
At the Pacific Council's March 2006 meeting, their Groundfish
Management Team alerted the Council that halibut regulations developed
through the halibut rulemaking process conflicted with groundfish
regulations, which do not address retention of groundfish
[[Page 18229]]
taken with halibut off Oregon. Washington recreational groundfish
regulations had a prohibition on the retention of groundfish, except
sablefish, if halibut were onboard but did not allow retention of
Pacific cod. Therefore, in order to eliminate confusion between Federal
halibut and groundfish regulations, the Pacific Council recommended
that NMFS modify groundfish regulations to conform to halibut
regulations. NMFS agrees that this revision is needed and is
implementing the Pacific Council's recommendation for Washington and
Oregon via this document.
Classification
These actions are taken under the authority of 50 CFR 660.370(c)
and are exempt from review under Executive Order 12866.
These actions are authorized by the Pacific Coast groundfish FMP
and its implementing regulations, and are based on the most recent data
available. The aggregate data upon which these actions are based are
available for public inspection at the Office of the Administrator,
Northwest Region, NMFS, (see ADDRESSES) during business hours.
Pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(B), there is good cause to waive prior
notice and an opportunity for public comment on this action, as notice
and comment would be impracticable and contrary to the public interest.
The data upon which these recommendations were based was provided to
the Pacific Council, and the Pacific Council made its recommendations
at its March 6-10, 2006 meeting in Seattle, WA. There was not
sufficient time after that meeting to draft this notice and undergo
proposed and final rulemaking before these actions need to be in effect
as explained below. For the actions to be implemented in this notice,
prior notice and opportunity for comment would be impracticable and
contrary to the public interest because affording the time necessary
for prior notice and opportunity for public comment would impede the
Agency's function of managing fisheries using the best available
science to approach without exceeding the OYs for federally managed
species. The adjustments to management measures in this document affect
recreational fisheries off Washington and Oregon and must be
implemented immediately to eliminate confusion for the public and to
improve enforcement by ensuring that Federal and state recreational
regulations conform to each other.
Revisions to recreational fishery management measures are needed to
protect overfished groundfish species and to keep the harvest of other
groundfish species within the harvest levels projected for 2006.
Without these measures in place, the fisheries could risk exceeding
harvest levels early in the year, causing early and unanticipated
fishery closures and economic harm to the communities. It is
unnecessary to provide a public notice-and-comment period on the
measures that would be implemented to eliminate conflicts between
Federal groundfish and halibut regulations because these measures have
already been vetted through a public notice-and-comment process for the
halibut regulations: proposed rule published January 30, 2006 (71 FR
4876), and final rule published March 3, 2006 (71 FR 10850). Making the
groundfish regulations conform to the halibut regulations via this
notice is a housekeeping measure and it is needed quickly in order to
reduce confusion for the public and enforcement officers. Delaying any
of these changes would keep management measures in place that are not
based on the best available data and which could lead to early closures
of the fishery if harvest of groundfish exceeds levels projected for
2006. This would be contrary to the public interest because it would
impair achievement of one of the Pacific Coast Groundfish FMP
objectives of providing for year-round harvest opportunities or
extending fishing opportunities as long as practicable during the
fishing year. Affording an opportunity for prior notice and comment on
these regulatory revisions would also be contrary to the public
interest because all of the measures implemented by this notice
eliminate confusion for the public by removing conflicts between
different regulations that affect the same waters and fisheries.
For these reasons, good cause also exists to waive the 30 day delay
in effectiveness requirement under 5 U.S.C. 553 (d)(3).
List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 660
Administrative practice and procedure, Fisheries, Fishing, Indians.
Dated: April 5, 2006.
Alan D. Risenhoover,
Acting Director, Office of Sustainable Fisheries, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
0
For the reasons set out in the preamble, 50 CFR part 660 is amended as
follows:
PART 660--FISHERIES OFF WEST COAST STATES AND IN THE WESTERN
PACIFIC
0
1. The authority citation for part 660 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
0
2. In Sec. 660.384, paragraphs (c)(1) introductory text, (c)(1)(i)(B),
and (c)(2)(iii) are revised to read as follows:
Sec. 660.384 Recreational fishery management measures.
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(1) Washington. For each person engaged in recreational fishing off
the coast of Washington, the groundfish bag limit is 15 groundfish per
day, including rockfish and lingcod, and is open year-round (except for
lingcod). In the Pacific halibut fisheries, retention of groundfish is
governed in part by annual management measures for Pacific halibut
fisheries, which are published in the Federal Register. South of
Leadbetter Point, WA to the Washington/Oregon border, when Pacific
halibut are onboard the vessel, no groundfish may be taken and
retained, possessed or landed, except sablefish and Pacific cod. The
following sublimits and closed areas apply:
(i) * * *
(B) Recreational Rockfish Conservation Area. Fishing for groundfish
with recreational gear is prohibited within the recreational RCA. It is
unlawful to take and retain, possess, or land groundfish taken with
recreational gear within the recreational RCA. A vessel fishing in the
recreational RCA may not be in possession of any groundfish. [For
example, if a vessel participates in the recreational salmon fishery
within the RCA, the vessel cannot be in possession of groundfish while
in the RCA. The vessel may, however, on the same trip fish for and
retain groundfish shoreward of the RCA on the return trip to port.]
(1) Between the U.S. border with Canada and the Queets River and
from May 22 through September 30, 2006, taking and retaining,
possessing or landing, any rockfish or lingcod in the EEZ is
prohibited, except on days when the Pacific halibut fishery is open in
this area. Days open to Pacific halibut recreational fishing off
Washington are announced on the NMFS hotline at (206)526-6667 or
(800)662-9825.
(2) Between the Queets River and Leadbetter Point, recreational
fishing for rockfish and lingcod is prohibited seaward of a boundary
line approximating the 30 fm (55 m) depth contour from April 11, 2006
through June 15, 2006. Coordinates for the boundary line approximating
the 30 fm (55 m) depth contour are listed in Sec. 660.391.
* * * * *
(2) * * *
[[Page 18230]]
(iii) Bag limits, size limits. The bag limits for each person
engaged in recreational fishing in the EEZ seaward of Oregon are two
lingcod per day, which may be no smaller than 24 in (61 cm) total
length; and 6 marine fish per day, which excludes Pacific halibut,
salmonids, tuna, perch species, sturgeon, sanddabs, lingcod, striped
bass, hybrid bass, offshore pelagic species and baitfish (herring,
smelt, anchovies and sardines), but which includes rockfish, greenling,
cabezon and other groundfish species. In the Pacific halibut fisheries,
retention of groundfish is governed in part by annual management
measures for Pacific halibut fisheries, which are published in the
Federal Register. Between the Oregon border with Washington and Cape
Falcon, when Pacific halibut are onboard the vessel, groundfish may not
be taken and retained, possessed or landed, except sablefish and
Pacific cod. Between Cape Falcon and Humbug Mountain, during days open
to the Oregon Central Coast ``all-depth'' sport halibut fishery, when
Pacific halibut are onboard the vessel, no groundfish may be taken and
retained, possessed or landed, except sablefish. ``All-depth'' season
days are established in the annual management measures for Pacific
halibut fisheries, which are published in the Federal Register and are
announced on the NMFS halibut hotline, 1-800-662-9825. The minimum size
limit for cabezon retained in the recreational fishery is 16 in (41 cm)
and for greenling is 10 in (26 cm). Taking and retaining canary
rockfish and yelloweye rockfish is prohibited at all times and in all
areas.
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[FR Doc. 06-3468 Filed 4-10-06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-22-S[FEDREG][VOL]*[/VOL][NO]*[/NO][DATE]*[/
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