Fisheries Off West Coast States and in the Western Pacific; Pacific Coast Groundfish Fishery; Application for an Exempted Fishing Permit, 7955-7956 [E7-2963]
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Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 35 / Thursday, February 22, 2007 / Notices
the Government of Mexico established
Rules of Procedure for Article 1904
Binational Panel Reviews (‘‘Rules’’).
These Rules were published in the
Federal Register on February 23, 1994
(59 FR 8686). The panel review in this
matter was requested and terminated
pursuant to these Rules.
requirements of the Regulatory
Flexibility Act (5 USC 601 et seq.) are
inapplicable. Therefore, a regulatory
flexibility analysis is not required and
has not been prepared.
Dated: February 15, 2007.
R. Matthew Priest,
Deputy Assistant Secretary for Textiles and
Apparel.
[FR Doc. 07–794 Filed 2–16–07; 2:26 pm]
Dated: February 15, 2007.
Caratina L. Alston,
United States Secretary, NAFTA Secretariat.
[FR Doc. E7–2903 Filed 2–21–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–DS
BILLING CODE 3510–GT–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
International Trade Administration
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
North American Free Trade Agreement
(NAFTA), Article 1904 Binational Panel
Reviews: Notice of Termination of
Panel Review
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
NAFTA Secretariat, United
States Section, International Trade
Administration, Department of
Commerce.
ACTION: Notice of Consent Motion To
Terminate the Panel Review of the final
antidumping duty determination and
order made by the International Trade
Commission, respecting Purified
Carboxymethylcellulose (‘‘CMC’’) from
Mexico, Secretariat File No. USA–MEX–
2005–1904–05.
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with NOTICES
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: Pursuant to the Notice of
Consent Motion To Terminate the Panel
Review by the complainants, the panel
review is terminated as of February 13,
2007. A panel has not been appointed
to this panel review. Pursuant to Rule
71(2) of the Rules of Procedure for
Article 1904 Binational Panel Review,
this panel review is terminated.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Caratina L. Alston, United States
Secretary, NAFTA Secretariat, Suite
2061, 14th and Constitution Avenue,
Washington, DC 20230, (202) 482–5438.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Chapter
19 of the North American Free-Trade
Agreement (‘‘Agreement’’) establishes a
mechanism to replace domestic judicial
review of final determinations in
antidumping and countervailing duty
cases involving imports from a NAFTA
country with review by independent
binational panels. When a Request for
Panel Review is filed, a panel is
established to act in place of national
courts to review expeditiously the final
determination to determine whether it
conforms with the antidumping or
countervailing duty law of the country
that made the determination.
Under Article 1904 of the Agreement,
which came into force on January 1,
1994, the Government of the United
States, the Government of Canada and
VerDate Aug<31>2005
15:11 Feb 21, 2007
Jkt 211001
[I.D. 021507C]
Fisheries Off West Coast States and in
the Western Pacific; Pacific Coast
Groundfish Fishery; Application for an
Exempted Fishing Permit
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
AGENCY:
Notice; receipt of an exempted
fishing permit application (EFP); intent
to issue the EFP; request for comments.
ACTION:
SUMMARY: NMFS announces the receipt
of an exempted fishing permit (EFP)
application, and the intent to issue EFPs
for vessels participating in an
observation program to monitor the
incidental take of salmon and
groundfish in the shore-based
component of the Pacific whiting
fishery. The EFPs are necessary to allow
trawl vessels fishing for Pacific whiting
to delay sorting their catch, and thus to
retain prohibited species and groundfish
in excess of cumulative trip limits until
the point of offloading. These activities
are otherwise prohibited by Federal
regulations. The EFPs will be effective
no earlier than April 1, 2007, and would
expire no later than December 31, 2007,
but could be terminated earlier under
the terms and conditions of the EFPs
and other applicable laws.
Comments must be received by
March 9, 2007.
DATES:
Send comments or request
for copies of the EFP application to
Gretchen Arentzen, Northwest Region,
NMFS, 7600 Sand Point Way N.E., Bldg.
1, Seattle, WA 98115 0070 or email
EFPwhiting2007.nwr@noaa.gov.
Comments sent via email, including all
attachments, must not exceed a 10
megabyte file size.
ADDRESSES:
PO 00000
Frm 00005
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
7955
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Gretchen Arentzen or Becky Renko at
(206)526 6140.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This
action is authorized by the MagnusonStevens Fishery Conservation and
Management Act provisions at 50 CFR
600.745, which state that EFPs may be
used to authorize fishing activities that
would otherwise be prohibited. At the
November 2006 Pacific Fishery
Management Council (Council) meeting
in Del Mar, California, NMFS received
an application for these EFPs from the
States of Washington, Oregon, and
California. An opportunity for public
testimony was provided during the
Council meeting. The Council
recommended that NMFS issue the
EFPs, as requested by the States, and
forwarded the EFP applications to
NMFS.
Each year since 1992, EFPs have been
issued to vessels in the Pacific whiting
shoreside fishery to allow unsorted
catch to be landed. Without an EFP,
groundfish regulations at 50 CFR
660.306(a) require vessels to sort their
catch at sea. The vessels fishing under
the EFPs are required to deliver catch to
designated processors. EFPs have been
used to: track the incidental take of
Chinook salmon as required in the
Endangered Species Act (ESA) Section 7
Biological Opinion for Chinook salmon
catch in the Pacific whiting fishery; and
to track the catch of whiting and other
groundfish species such that the fishing
industry is not unnecessarily
constrained and that the OYs, harvest
guidelines, sector allocation and
overfished species bycatch limits are not
exceeded.
Over the past five years, the number
of vessels issued these EFPs has been
between 31 and 38 vessels. Issuance of
the 2007 EFPs, to approximately 40
vessels, will allow samplers located at
the shoreside processing facilities to
collect information on the incidental
catch of salmon and groundfish in
unsorted whiting deliveries. Unlike the
at-sea sectors of the Pacific whiting
fishery, where catch is sorted and
processed shortly after it has been taken,
vessels in the shoreside fishery must
hold primary season Pacific whiting on
the vessel for several hours or days until
it can be offloaded at a shoreside
processor. Pacific whiting deteriorates
rapidly, so it must be handled quickly
and immediately chilled to maintain
product quality. This is particularly true
if the Pacific whiting is to be used to
make surimi (a fish paste product). The
quality or grade of surimi is highly
dependent on the freshness of the
Pacific whiting, which demands careful
E:\FR\FM\22FEN1.SGM
22FEN1
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with NOTICES
7956
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 35 / Thursday, February 22, 2007 / Notices
handling and immediate cooling or
processing for the fishery to be
economically feasible. Because rapid
cooling can retard flesh deterioration,
most vessels prefer to dump their
unsorted catch directly below deck into
the refrigerated salt water tanks.
However, dumping the unsorted catch
into the refrigerated salt water tanks
precludes the immediate sorting or
sampling of the catch. As a primary
season fishery, fishers prefer to quickly
and efficiently handle the catch so they
can return to port for offloading.
In 2004, 2005, and 2006, NMFS
provided electronic monitoring systems
to catcher vessels fishing under the
whiting EFP as part of a pilot study to
evaluate if these systems would be
useful tools to verify retention and/or
document discard at sea. Based on the
results from the 2004, 2005, and 2006
pilot studies, NMFS has determined that
an EFP is an effective tool for
monitoring maximized retention in the
whiting fishery.
In addition to providing information
that will be used to monitor the
attainment of the shore-based whiting
allocation, information gathered through
these EFPs is expected to be used in a
future rulemaking. The Council
recommended using EFPs only until a
permanent monitoring program can be
developed and implemented. For 2008,
NMFS intends to implement, through
federal regulation, a monitoring program
for the shore-based Pacific whiting fleet.
At its September 2006 meeting, the
Pacific Council was provided with a
joint agency report on whiting fishery
monitoring and management, and
subsequently provided guidance to
NMFS on development of draft
alternatives for the monitoring program.
Based on information learned during the
2004, 2005 and 2006 EFPs, guidance
from the Pacific Council, and
informational meetings between Federal
and state agencies and industry
members, NMFS developed a draft set of
monitoring program alternatives and
accompanying draft regulations to be
implemented in the 2008 fishery. These
draft alternatives and regulations were
presented to the Pacific Council at their
November 2006 meeting. An
opportunity for public testimony was
provided during the Council meeting.
NMFS will complete the EA and
provide a final draft to the Council in
April 2007, at which time the Council
will take final action on the proposed
alternatives. NMFS will then publish
the proposed rule prior to the start date
of the 2008 shore-based primary Pacific
whiting season. Given this timeline,
2007 will serve as a transition year, in
which the EFPs issued to participating
VerDate Aug<31>2005
14:11 Feb 21, 2007
Jkt 211001
vessels will have requirements as
similar as possible to the proposed
Federal regulations. In addition, NMFS
intends to implement, through notice
and comment rulemaking, temporary
processor regulations for 2007. That
action is intended to address catch
accounting difficulties that occurred
during the 2006 Pacific whiting
shoreside fishery and to improve the
agency’s ability to monitor the
attainment of allocations, bycatch
limits, and prohibited species take. The
proposed action defines requirements
for recordkeeping, reporting, catch
sorting, and weighing that apply to
individuals who receive, buy, or accept
Pacific whiting from a vessel using
midwater trawl gear during the primary
season for the shore-based sector. NMFS
anticipates publishing shortly a
proposed rule to implement this action
in the Federal Register.
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
Dated: February 15, 2007.
James P. Burgess,
Acting Director, Office of Sustainable
Fisheries, National Marine Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. E7–2963 Filed 2–21–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–S
COMMITTEE FOR THE
IMPLEMENTATION OF TEXTILE
AGREEMENTS
Determination under the Textile and
Apparel Commercial Availability
Provision of the Dominican RepublicCentral America-United States Free
Trade Agreement (CAFTA–DR
Agreement)
February 15, 2007.
Committee for the
Implementation of Textile Agreements
(CITA).
ACTION: Determination to add a product
in unrestricted quantities to Annex 3.25
of the CAFTA-DR Agreement
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: The Committee for the
Implementation of Textile Agreements
(CITA) has determined that certain twoway stretch woven fabric of polyester/
rayon/spandex, as specified below, are
not available in commercial quantities
in a timely manner in the CAFTA-DR
region. The product will be added to the
list in Annex 3.25 of the CAFTA-DR in
unrestricted quantities.
EFFECTIVE DATE: February 22, 2007.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Richard Stetson, Office of Textiles and
Apparel, U.S. Department of Commerce,
(202) 482 2582.
PO 00000
Frm 00006
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION ONLINE:
https://web.ita.doc.gov/tacgi/
CaftaReqTrack.nsf. Reference number:
17.2007.01.16.Fabric.Sandler,Travis&
RosenbergforLidoIndustries.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Authority: Section 203(o)(4) of the
Dominican Republic-Central America-United
States Free Trade Agreement Implementation
Act (CAFTA-DR Act); the Statement of
Administrative Action (SAA), accompanying
the CAFTA-DR Act; Presidential
Proclamations 7987 (February 28, 2006) and
7996 (March 31, 2006).
BACKGROUND:
The CAFTA-DR Agreement provides a
list in Annex 3.25 for fabrics, yarns, and
fibers that the Parties to the CAFTA-DR
Agreement have determined are not
available in commercial quantities in a
timely manner in the territory of any
Party. The CAFTA-DR Agreement
provides that this list may be modified
pursuant to Article 3.25(4)-(5), when the
President of the United States
determines that a fabric, yarn, or fiber is
not available in commercial quantities
in a timely manner in the territory of
any Party. See Annex 3.25, Note; see
also section 203(o)(4)(C) of the Act.
The CAFTA-DR Act requires the
President to establish procedures
governing the submission of a request
and providing opportunity for interested
entities to submit comments and
supporting evidence before a
commercial availability determination is
made. In Presidential Proclamations
7987 and 7996, the President delegated
to CITA the authority under section
203(o)(4) of CAFTA-DR Act for
modifying the Annex 3.25 list. On
February 23, 2006, CITA published
interim procedures it would follow in
considering requests to modify the
Annex 3.25 list (71 FR 9315).
On January 16, 2007, the Chairman of
CITA received a request from Sandler,
Travis & Rosenberg, P.A., on behalf of
Lido Industries, for certain two-way
stretch woven fabric of polyester/rayon/
spandex, of the specifications detailed
below. On January 18, 2007, CITA
notified interested parties of, and posted
on its website, the accepted petition and
requested that interested entities
provide, by January 30, 2007, a response
advising of its objection to the request
or its ability to supply the subject
product, and rebuttals to responses by
February 5, 2007.
No interested entity filed a response
advising of its objection to the request
or its ability to supply the subject
product.
In accordance with Section 203(o)(4)
of the CAFTA-DR Act, and its
E:\FR\FM\22FEN1.SGM
22FEN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 72, Number 35 (Thursday, February 22, 2007)]
[Notices]
[Pages 7955-7956]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E7-2963]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
[I.D. 021507C]
Fisheries Off West Coast States and in the Western Pacific;
Pacific Coast Groundfish Fishery; Application for an Exempted Fishing
Permit
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Notice; receipt of an exempted fishing permit application
(EFP); intent to issue the EFP; request for comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: NMFS announces the receipt of an exempted fishing permit (EFP)
application, and the intent to issue EFPs for vessels participating in
an observation program to monitor the incidental take of salmon and
groundfish in the shore-based component of the Pacific whiting fishery.
The EFPs are necessary to allow trawl vessels fishing for Pacific
whiting to delay sorting their catch, and thus to retain prohibited
species and groundfish in excess of cumulative trip limits until the
point of offloading. These activities are otherwise prohibited by
Federal regulations. The EFPs will be effective no earlier than April
1, 2007, and would expire no later than December 31, 2007, but could be
terminated earlier under the terms and conditions of the EFPs and other
applicable laws.
DATES: Comments must be received by March 9, 2007.
ADDRESSES: Send comments or request for copies of the EFP application
to Gretchen Arentzen, Northwest Region, NMFS, 7600 Sand Point Way N.E.,
Bldg. 1, Seattle, WA 98115 0070 or email EFPwhiting2007.nwr@noaa.gov.
Comments sent via email, including all attachments, must not exceed a
10 megabyte file size.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Gretchen Arentzen or Becky Renko at
(206)526 6140.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This action is authorized by the Magnuson-
Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act provisions at 50 CFR
600.745, which state that EFPs may be used to authorize fishing
activities that would otherwise be prohibited. At the November 2006
Pacific Fishery Management Council (Council) meeting in Del Mar,
California, NMFS received an application for these EFPs from the States
of Washington, Oregon, and California. An opportunity for public
testimony was provided during the Council meeting. The Council
recommended that NMFS issue the EFPs, as requested by the States, and
forwarded the EFP applications to NMFS.
Each year since 1992, EFPs have been issued to vessels in the
Pacific whiting shoreside fishery to allow unsorted catch to be landed.
Without an EFP, groundfish regulations at 50 CFR 660.306(a) require
vessels to sort their catch at sea. The vessels fishing under the EFPs
are required to deliver catch to designated processors. EFPs have been
used to: track the incidental take of Chinook salmon as required in the
Endangered Species Act (ESA) Section 7 Biological Opinion for Chinook
salmon catch in the Pacific whiting fishery; and to track the catch of
whiting and other groundfish species such that the fishing industry is
not unnecessarily constrained and that the OYs, harvest guidelines,
sector allocation and overfished species bycatch limits are not
exceeded.
Over the past five years, the number of vessels issued these EFPs
has been between 31 and 38 vessels. Issuance of the 2007 EFPs, to
approximately 40 vessels, will allow samplers located at the shoreside
processing facilities to collect information on the incidental catch of
salmon and groundfish in unsorted whiting deliveries. Unlike the at-sea
sectors of the Pacific whiting fishery, where catch is sorted and
processed shortly after it has been taken, vessels in the shoreside
fishery must hold primary season Pacific whiting on the vessel for
several hours or days until it can be offloaded at a shoreside
processor. Pacific whiting deteriorates rapidly, so it must be handled
quickly and immediately chilled to maintain product quality. This is
particularly true if the Pacific whiting is to be used to make surimi
(a fish paste product). The quality or grade of surimi is highly
dependent on the freshness of the Pacific whiting, which demands
careful
[[Page 7956]]
handling and immediate cooling or processing for the fishery to be
economically feasible. Because rapid cooling can retard flesh
deterioration, most vessels prefer to dump their unsorted catch
directly below deck into the refrigerated salt water tanks. However,
dumping the unsorted catch into the refrigerated salt water tanks
precludes the immediate sorting or sampling of the catch. As a primary
season fishery, fishers prefer to quickly and efficiently handle the
catch so they can return to port for offloading.
In 2004, 2005, and 2006, NMFS provided electronic monitoring
systems to catcher vessels fishing under the whiting EFP as part of a
pilot study to evaluate if these systems would be useful tools to
verify retention and/or document discard at sea. Based on the results
from the 2004, 2005, and 2006 pilot studies, NMFS has determined that
an EFP is an effective tool for monitoring maximized retention in the
whiting fishery.
In addition to providing information that will be used to monitor
the attainment of the shore-based whiting allocation, information
gathered through these EFPs is expected to be used in a future
rulemaking. The Council recommended using EFPs only until a permanent
monitoring program can be developed and implemented. For 2008, NMFS
intends to implement, through federal regulation, a monitoring program
for the shore-based Pacific whiting fleet. At its September 2006
meeting, the Pacific Council was provided with a joint agency report on
whiting fishery monitoring and management, and subsequently provided
guidance to NMFS on development of draft alternatives for the
monitoring program. Based on information learned during the 2004, 2005
and 2006 EFPs, guidance from the Pacific Council, and informational
meetings between Federal and state agencies and industry members, NMFS
developed a draft set of monitoring program alternatives and
accompanying draft regulations to be implemented in the 2008 fishery.
These draft alternatives and regulations were presented to the Pacific
Council at their November 2006 meeting. An opportunity for public
testimony was provided during the Council meeting. NMFS will complete
the EA and provide a final draft to the Council in April 2007, at which
time the Council will take final action on the proposed alternatives.
NMFS will then publish the proposed rule prior to the start date of the
2008 shore-based primary Pacific whiting season. Given this timeline,
2007 will serve as a transition year, in which the EFPs issued to
participating vessels will have requirements as similar as possible to
the proposed Federal regulations. In addition, NMFS intends to
implement, through notice and comment rulemaking, temporary processor
regulations for 2007. That action is intended to address catch
accounting difficulties that occurred during the 2006 Pacific whiting
shoreside fishery and to improve the agency's ability to monitor the
attainment of allocations, bycatch limits, and prohibited species take.
The proposed action defines requirements for recordkeeping, reporting,
catch sorting, and weighing that apply to individuals who receive, buy,
or accept Pacific whiting from a vessel using midwater trawl gear
during the primary season for the shore-based sector. NMFS anticipates
publishing shortly a proposed rule to implement this action in the
Federal Register.
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
Dated: February 15, 2007.
James P. Burgess,
Acting Director, Office of Sustainable Fisheries, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. E7-2963 Filed 2-21-07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-22-S