Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic Zone Off Alaska; Pacific Cod Allocations in the Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands Management Area, 50788-50818 [E7-17140]
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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
50 CFR Part 679
[Docket No. 0612242903–7445–03; I.D.
112006I]
RIN 0648–AU48
Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic
Zone Off Alaska; Pacific Cod
Allocations in the Bering Sea and
Aleutian Islands Management Area
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce
ACTION: Final rule.
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AGENCY:
SUMMARY: NMFS issues a final rule to
implement Amendment 85 to the
Fishery Management Plan for
Groundfish of the Bering Sea and
Aleutian Islands Management Area
(FMP) as partially approved by NMFS,
and to implement recent changes to the
Magnuson-Stevens Fishery
Conservation and Management Act
(Magnuson-Stevens Act). This final rule
modifies the current allocations of
Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands
management area (BSAI) Pacific cod
total allowable catch (TAC) among
various harvest sectors and seasonal
apportionments thereof, establishes a
hierarchy for reallocating projected
unharvested amounts of Pacific cod
from certain sectors to other sectors,
revises catcher/processor (CP) sector
definitions, modifies the management of
Pacific cod incidental catch that occurs
in other groundfish fisheries, eliminates
the Pacific cod nonspecified reserve,
subdivides the annual prohibited
species catch (PSC) limits currently
apportioned to the Pacific cod hookand-line gear fisheries between the
catcher vessel (CV) and CP sectors, and
modifies the sideboard restrictions for
American Fisheries Act (AFA) CP
vessels. In addition, this final rule
increases the percentage of the BSAI
Pacific cod TAC apportioned to the
Community Development Quota (CDQ)
Program. The proposed rule for
Amendment 85 included regulations
that would have subdivided the annual
PSC limits currently apportioned to the
Pacific cod trawl fisheries among trawl
sectors. However, NMFS disapproved
these regulations. Therefore, this final
rule does not subdivide the annual PSC
limits for Pacific cod trawl fisheries
among trawl sectors. This final rule is
necessary to implement Amendment 85
and reduce uncertainty about the
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availability of yearly harvests within
sectors caused by reallocations and
maintain stability among sectors in the
BSAI Pacific cod fishery. This final rule
also is necessary to partially implement
recent changes to the Magnuson-Stevens
Act that require a total allocation of 10.7
percent of the TAC of each directed
fishery to the CDQ Program starting
January 1, 2008. This final rule is
intended to promote the goals and
objectives of the Magnuson-Stevens Act,
the FMP, and other applicable laws.
DATES: Effective January 1, 2008.
ADDRESSES: Copies of Amendment 85
and the Environmental Assessment/
Regulatory Impact Review/Final
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (EA/
RIR/FRFA) prepared for this action are
available by mail from NMFS, Alaska
Region, P. O. Box 21668, Juneau, AK
99802–1668, Attn: Ellen Sebastian,
Records Officer; in person at NMFS,
Alaska Region, 709 West 9th Street,
Room 420A, Juneau, AK; or via the
Internet at the NMFS Alaska Region
website at https://www.fakr.noaa.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Becky Carls, 907–586–7228 or
becky.carls@noaa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: NMFS
manages the groundfish fisheries in the
exclusive economic zone of the BSAI
under the FMP. The North Pacific
Fishery Management Council (Council)
prepared the FMP under the authority of
the Magnuson-Stevens Act, 16 U.S.C.
1801 et seq. Regulations governing U.S.
fisheries and implementing the FMP
appear at 50 CFR parts 600 and 679.
Background
Amendment 85 was adopted by the
Council in April 2006 to modify the
current allocations of BSAI Pacific cod
among various harvesting sectors.
Currently, the BSAI Pacific cod nonCDQ TAC is fully distributed among the
following eight competing harvest
sectors: jig, fixed gear (pot and hookand-line gear) CVs less than 60 ft (<18.3
m) length overall (LOA), hook-and-line
CVs greater than or equal to 60 ft (≥18.3
m) LOA, hook-and-line catcher/
processor vessels (CPs), pot CVs less
than 60 ft (≥18.3 m) LOA, pot CPs, trawl
CPs, and trawl CVs. Several FMP
amendments, implemented beginning in
1994, have allocated Pacific cod among
these sectors. Additional background on
the prior history of Pacific cod
allocations among different fishery
sectors and the development of
Amendment 85 is contained in the
preamble to the proposed rule (72 FR
5654; February 7, 2007).
Amendment 85 modifies the non-CDQ
sector allocations currently in place to
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better reflect historical dependency and
use by sector of the Pacific cod resource.
The allocations were based in part on
each sector’s historical retained catch in
addition to socioeconomic and
community concerns. One of the
fundamental issues identified in the
Council’s problem statement was the
need to revise the existing allocations to
better reflect historical retained catch by
sector, thus reducing the need for
frequent and significant reallocations of
quota toward the end of the year from
sectors that are unable or otherwise do
not intend to harvest their entire
allocation. However, the allocations to
the small boat sectors are intended to
expand entry-level, local opportunities
in the BSAI Pacific cod fishery. Other
than providing for this expansion, the
allocations of Pacific cod non-CDQ TAC
are intended to formally institutionalize
the historical pattern of utilization of
this resource.
Amendment 85 and the proposed rule
to implement Amendment 85 as
originally submitted by the Council
included provisions for the CDQ
Program that allocated 10 percent of the
Pacific cod TAC to the CDQ Program as
a directed fishing allocation, created an
incidental catch allowance of Pacific
cod for the CDQ Program, and referred
to the Coast Guard and Maritime
Transportation Act of 2006, Public Law
109–241 (Coast Guard Act) as the basis
for changes to the CDQ Program Pacific
cod allocation. These provisions were
consistent with requirements set forth in
the Magnuson-Stevens Act, as amended
by the Coast Guard Act, at the time
Amendment 85 was submitted by the
Council for Secretarial review. The
Notice of Availability (NOA) for
Amendment 85 was published in the
Federal Register on December 7, 2006
(71 FR 70943), with a 60–day comment
period that ended February 5, 2007.
During review by the Secretary of
Commerce (Secretary) of Amendment
85, the CDQ provisions in the
Magnuson-Stevens Act were amended
once again by the Magnuson-Stevens
Fishery Conservation and Management
Reauthorization Act, Public Law 109–
479 (Magnuson-Stevens Reauthorization
Act), enacted on January 11, 2007. The
Magnuson-Stevens Act now requires
that allocations to the CDQ Program,
including Pacific cod, increase to ‘‘a
total allocation (directed and nontarget
combined) of 10.7 percent effective
January 1, 2008,’’ and that the total
allocation may not be exceeded. As a
result of the Magnuson-Stevens
Reauthorization Act, the portions of
Amendment 85 to the FMP that
addressed the CDQ Program provisions
were no longer consistent with the
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Magnuson-Stevens Act. On March 7,
2007, the Secretary partially approved
Amendment 85, disapproving the CDQ
Program provisions as inconsistent with
the Magnuson-Stevens Act. As
approved, Amendment 85 revised the
current BSAI Pacific cod allocations of
TAC among various non-CDQ harvest
sectors (Table 1), changed incidental
catch allowances, removed the
groundfish reserve for Pacific cod, and
added a new appendix to the FMP.
Shortly after enactment of the
Magnuson-Stevens Reauthorization Act,
NMFS determined that the CDQ
portions of the proposed rule as
submitted by the Council were
inconsistent with the newly amended
Magnuson-Stevens Act, and returned
the rule to the Council for revision
pursuant to section 304(b) of the
Magnuson-Stevens Act. The Council
revised the CDQ portions of the
proposed rule for Amendment 85 to
incorporate the changes brought about
by the Magnuson-Stevens
Reauthorization Act, including a 10.7–
percent allocation of Pacific cod to the
CDQ Program. The Council submitted
the revised proposed rule to NMFS, and
it was published in the Federal Register
on February 7, 2007 (72 FR 5654). The
45–day comment period on the
proposed rule ended March 26, 2007.
NMFS received a total of 16 letters on
Amendment 85 and the proposed rule
that contained 79 unique comments. A
summary of these comments and the
responses by NMFS are provided under
Response to Comments below.
Elements of the Final Rule
A detailed review of the provisions of
Amendment 85 and its implementing
rule is provided in the preamble to the
proposed rule (72 FR 5654; February 7,
2007), and is not repeated here. The
proposed rule is available via the
Internet and from NMFS (see
ADDRESSES). The following provides a
list and brief review of the regulatory
changes made by this final rule to the
management of the BSAI Pacific cod
fishery. NMFS’ rationale for approving
portions of Amendment 85 and the
regulatory provisions in this final rule is
contained in the agency’s response to
comments.
• Increase the percentage of the BSAI
Pacific cod TAC apportioned to the CDQ
Program to 10.7 percent;
• Revise the allocations of BSAI
Pacific cod non-CDQ TAC among
various gear sectors;
• Modify the management of Pacific
cod incidental catch that occurs in other
groundfish fisheries;
• Eliminate the Pacific cod
nonspecified reserve;
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• Establish a hierarchy for the
reallocation of projected unused sector
allocations to other ectors;
• Adjust the seasonal allowances of
Pacific cod to various sectors;
• Subdivide among sectors the annual
PSC limits apportioned to the Pacific
cod hook-and-line gear fisheries;
• Modify the sideboard restrictions
for Pacific cod that are applied to the CP
vessels listed as eligible under the AFA;
and
• Revise the definition for AFA trawl
CP and add definitions for hook-andline CP, non-AFA trawl CP, and pot CP.
As described above, the MagnusonStevens Act now requires that 10.7
percent of the annual Pacific cod TAC
be allocated to the CDQ reserve for
directed and nontarget fishing
combined, effective January 1, 2008.
The 10.7 percent Pacific cod allocation
to the CDQ reserve will be established
annually in the harvest specifications
process required under § 79.20(c). The
CDQ reserve will continue to be
deducted from the Pacific cod TAC
before the remaining Pacific cod TAC is
allocated to the other fishing sectors. All
catch of Pacific cod by any vessel that
is groundfish CDQ fishing, and by any
vessel ≥60 ft (18.3 m) LOA that is
halibut CDQ fishing, will continue to
accrue against the CDQ group’s annual
allocation of Pacific cod and the CDQ
groups will continue to be prohibited
from exceeding their annual allocations
of Pacific cod.
Nine individual non-CDQ sectors will
receive separate BSAI Pacific cod
allocations. The allocations to the
identified sectors were selected using
retained legal catch history, including
fishmeal, from 1995 through 2003, and
other socioeconomic and community
considerations. The allocations better
reflect historical dependency and use by
each sector, with specific consideration
to allow for additional growth in the
small boat, entry-level sectors. These
allocations are listed in Table 1. Because
Pacific cod has been harvested by the
current sectors since the beginning of
2007 under the current allocation
scheme, and the number of sectors and
the overall amount of Pacific cod
available to those sectors as an
allocation and by season will change
with this amendment, the Amendment
85 sector allocations cannot be
implemented mid-year. Therefore, the
allocations, and the final rule
implementing Amendment 85, will be
effective January 1, 2008. NMFS will
amend the 2007–2008 harvest
specifications to reflect the changes to
the Pacific cod TAC allocations.
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TABLE 1. PERCENT SECTOR ALLOCATIONS OF PACIFIC COD NON-CDQ
TAC
Sector
% Allocation
Jig vessels
1.4
Hook-and-line/pot CV <60
ft (18.3 m) LOA
2.0
Hook-and-line CV ≥60 ft
(18.3 m) LOA
0.2
Hook-and-line CP
48.7
Pot CV ≥60 ft (18.3 m)
LOA
8.4
Pot CP
1.5
AFA trawl CP
2.3
(8) Non AFA trawl CP
13.4
Trawl CV
22.1
Currently, NMFS sets aside an
amount of Pacific cod from some
sectors’ allocations as an incidental
catch allowance for use by those sectors
when they are directed fishing for
groundfish other than Pacific cod.
NMFS establishes an incidental catch
allowance either through the annual
harvest specifications process or
inseason. Under this final rule, an
incidental catch allowance for the fixed
gear sectors will continue to be
established at the beginning of the
fishing year by the Regional
Administrator during the annual harvest
specifications process. The incidental
catch allowance for the fixed gear
sectors typically has been set at 500 mt.
The trawl sectors currently do not have
an incidental catch allowance
established at the beginning of the
fishing year. NMFS has not specified an
incidental catch allowance for Pacific
cod in the trawl fisheries in the recent
past because the trawl sectors typically
do not catch an amount of Pacific cod
that would necessitate a directed fishing
prohibition. Also, the seasonal
apportionments to the trawl sectors
have ensured that a sufficient amount of
Pacific cod is left for incidental catch in
groundfish trawl fisheries other than
Pacific cod later in the year. However,
because NMFS anticipates that the trawl
sectors will fully harvest the Pacific cod
allocations under Amendment 85,
NMFS also anticipates it will need to
establish an incidental catch allowance
for each trawl sector. Under this final
rule, each trawl sector will have a
separate incidental catch allowance so
that no trawl sector can erode another
trawl sector’s total allocation and NMFS
will develop incidental catch
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allowances for the trawl sectors on an
inseason basis, rather than through the
annual harvest specification process.
Determining incidental catch needs
inseason as fisheries progress will
provide NMFS with more flexibility to
adjust incidental catch needs for each
trawl sector as a trawl sector’s needs
change.
Current regulations for the annual
harvest specifications process require
that 15 percent of the BSAI TAC for
Pacific cod be placed in the
nonspecified reserve. Half of the
nonspecified reserve, or 7.5 percent of
TAC, is apportioned to the groundfish
CDQ reserve. NMFS typically
apportions the remainder of the Pacific
cod reserve back to the non-CDQ Pacific
cod TAC because U.S. fishing vessels
have demonstrated the capacity to catch
the full TAC allocation. The Council
and NMFS determined that the Pacific
cod reserve is no longer needed because
a direct allocation to the CDQ reserve is
specified, and because the Pacific cod
TAC is fully allocated among CDQ and
non-CDQ harvesting sectors and is fully
harvested. Therefore, this final rule
removes regulations requiring that 15
percent of the Pacific cod TAC be
placed in the nonspecified reserve
during a fishing year.
Under current regulations, if the
Regional Administrator determines that
a sector will be unable to harvest the
entire amount of Pacific cod allocated to
that sector, NMFS reallocates the
projected unused amount of Pacific cod
to other sectors to obtain optimum yield
from the BSAI Pacific cod fishery. This
procedure will continue under this final
rule, but reallocation decisions will be
based in part on the new reallocation
hierarchy established in this final rule,
and also will take into account the
capability of a sector to harvest an
additional amount of Pacific cod. The
reallocation hierarchy is fully described
in the proposed rule and in the
regulatory text below; therefore, that
description is not repeated here. In
general, NMFS will reallocate projected
unused allocations in any inshore sector
(i.e., CV sectors) primarily to other
inshore sectors before reallocating that
amount to any offshore sector (i.e., CP
sectors) and, secondarily, within a gear
type before reallocating that amount to
another gear type. This reallocation
hierarchy is consistent with the
Council’s decision to increase harvest
opportunities for fleets delivering
shoreside and represents a reasonable
balance of National Standard 4, that
allocations should be fair and equitable
to all fishermen, and National Standard
8, to consider the importance of fishery
resources to fishing communities.
Although the intent of Amendment 85
is to revise sector allocations to better
reflect historic dependence and use by
sector and thus reduce the frequency
and amount of inseason reallocations,
the Council and the public noted that
some reallocations are likely to
continue.
Under existing regulations, Pacific
cod allocations are further apportioned
by season for most gear sectors to
protect prey availability for Steller sea
lions (SSLs). The overall BSAI Pacific
cod fishery is limited to seasonal
percentages of TAC of no more than 70
percent between January 1 and June 10,
and 30 percent between June 10 and
December 31. Because this final rule
modifies non-CDQ sector allocations,
this final rule also modifies the seasonal
allowances applicable to these sectors to
maintain the overall 70/30 seasonal split
for all gear types combined and to
maintain, to the extent possible, the
current percentage of the Pacific cod
TAC harvested in the first half of the
year by the non-CDQ sectors. Therefore,
this final rule adjusts the seasonal
allowances for each sector in response
to the changes in sector allocations. This
final rule also changes the jig sector
seasonal allowances from 40–20–40 to
60–20–20. For the Pacific cod allocation
to the CDQ Program, this final rule adds
a prohibition to § 679.7(d) to clarify the
current management measure that the
CDQ groups are prohibited from
exceeding the seasonal allowances of
Pacific cod that are appropriate for the
gear types that they use to catch Pacific
cod CDQ. Also, the regulations
regarding CDQ trawl seasonal
allowances are revised to maintain the
division between trawl CP and trawl CV
that exists in the current regulations.
The BSAI Pacific cod sector allowances
for each sector, including CDQ, by
season, as those seasons are specified
under § 679.23(e)(5), are listed in Table
2.
TABLE 2. SEASONAL ALLOWANCES OF BSAI PACIFIC COD EXPRESSED AS A PERCENTAGE OF EACH SECTOR=S TOTAL
ALLOCATION
Gear Type
A season
C season
60%
20%
20%
CDQ Trawl CV
70%
10%
20%
CDQ Trawl CP
50%
30%
20%
Non-CDQ trawl CV
74%
11%
15%
Non-CDQ trawl CP
75%
25%
0%
CDQ Hook-and-line CP, and hook-and-line CV ≥60 ft (18.3
m) LOA
60%
40%
no C season
Non-CDQ hook-and-line CP, hook-and-line CV ≥60 ft (18.3
m) LOA, pot CP, and pot CV ≥60 ft (18.3 m) LOA
51%
49%
no C season
CDQ jig vessels
40%
20%
40%
Non-CDQ jig vessels
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CDQ Trawl
B season
60%
20%
20%
All other nontrawl vessels
no seasonal allowance
no seasonal allowance
no seasonal allowance
Total non-CDQ percentage
1/1 - 6/10 = 68%
6/10 - 12/31 = 32%
Total CDQ and non-CDQ percentage
1/1 - 6/10 = 67%
6/10 - 12/31 = 33%
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Any unused portion of a seasonal
allowance of Pacific cod from any sector
other than the jig sector will continue to
be reallocated to that sector’s remaining
seasons during the current fishing year.
The Regional Administrator will
continue to reallocate any projected
unused portion of a seasonal allowance
of Pacific cod from the jig sector to the
<60 ft (18.3 m) LOA fixed gear CV
sector. Under this final rule, NMFS will
reallocate a projected unused portion of
the seasonal allowance for the jig sector
C season on or about September 1 of
each year, if possible, to provide the last
rollover from the jig sector when the
<60 ft (18.3 m) LOA fixed gear CV sector
may still be on the fishing grounds.
The total amount of nontrawl halibut
PSC for the non-CDQ fisheries currently
is 833 mt of mortality. Typically, 775 mt
is apportioned to the hook-and-line
Pacific cod fishery and 58 mt to other
nontrawl groundfish fisheries. This final
rule does not change the total amount of
nontrawl halibut PSC mortality
allocated to the hook-and-line Pacific
cod sectors or to the other nontrawl
groundfish fisheries.
Currently, the annual Pacific cod
hook-and-line halibut PSC allowance is
apportioned among three seasons. A
seasonal halibut PSC allowance in the
second season has not been specified in
recent years; thus, a hook-and-line
directed fishery for Pacific cod has not
operated in the summer months. Halibut
bycatch rates are typically high during
the second season. The hook-and-line
CP sector generally supports not
providing a halibut PSC limit in the
second season because the high halibut
bycatch rates could close the directed
Pacific cod fishery prior to the
allocation being fully harvested.
However, the hook-and-line CV sector,
which is constrained by the same PSC
limit, is comprised of smaller vessels
with slower catch rates and a relatively
small Pacific cod allocation compared to
the hook-and-line CP sector. To enable
the hook-and-line CVs to fish for Pacific
cod in the summer months when the
weather is more favorable for these
smaller vessels, this final rule divides
the halibut PSC allowance annually
specified for the hook-and-line Pacific
cod fishery between two fishery sectors:
the hook-and-line CP sector and the
hook-and-line CV sector (CVs ≥60 ft
(18.3 m) LOA and CVs <60 ft (18.3 m)
LOA combined). NMFS can provide
varying amounts of halibut PSC by
season to each sector, tailoring PSC
limits to suit the needs and timing of
each sector. NMFS decision to
disapprove the proposed subdivision of
annual PSC limits apportioned to the
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Pacific cod trawl gear fisheries is
explained below.
Sideboards are harvesting and
processing restrictions that were placed
on AFA trawl CVs and AFA trawl CPs
operating in the BSAI pollock fishery to
protect the interests of other fishermen
and processors that did not benefit
directly from the AFA. This final rule
removes the sideboard limits of BSAI
Pacific cod for the AFA trawl CPs. The
establishment of a separate Pacific cod
allocation to this sector negates the need
for the BSAI Pacific cod sideboard
which protects the historic share of the
non-AFA trawl CP sector from being
eroded by the AFA trawl CP vessels. For
the same reason, BSAI Pacific cod is
added to the list of exceptions to the
groundfish species or species groups for
which sideboard harvest limits are
calculated for the listed AFA trawl CPs.
The halibut and crab PSC sideboard
limits for both AFA sectors are
maintained as currently specified in
regulations.
This final rule modifies or adds
definitions for CPs in accordance with
the Consolidated Appropriations Act,
2005 (Public Law 108–447). This final
rule revises the definition for AFA trawl
CP and adds new definitions for hookand-line CP, non-AFA trawl CP (also
known as the head-and-gut sector), and
pot CP. The new definition for hookand-line CP is substantively consistent
with the Consolidated Appropriations
Act’s definition for the longline CP
subsector. Also, the definition for ‘‘CDQ
reserve’’ is revised to change and update
terms and to generalize the cross
reference. All of the various
housekeeping revisions described in the
proposed rule also are made by this
final rule.
Element of the Proposed Rule Not
Approved
NMFS did not approve one regulatory
change recommended by the Council
and included in the proposed rule. For
reasons explained below, NMFS did not
approve the Council’s recommendation
to further apportion the Pacific cod
trawl fishery crab and halibut PSC
allowances among the trawl sectors.
PSC regulations pertain to certain
species caught in the process of fishing
for groundfish that must be accounted
for, but cannot be retained unless the
vessel participates in the halibut and
salmon donation program at § 679.26.
Regulations at § 679.21 establish PSC
limits for Pacific halibut, three species
of crab, salmon, and herring in the BSAI
trawl groundfish fisheries, and a
separate Pacific halibut PSC limit for
nontrawl gear. These regulations also
establish allocations of each PSC limit
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between the CDQ and non-CDQ
fisheries and a process for apportioning
PSC among non-CDQ fisheries.
Currently, the total amount of halibut
PSC mortality for trawl gear in the nonCDQ fisheries is apportioned in the
annual harvest specifications process
among four fisheries, including the
Pacific cod fishery. The current process
of fishery apportionment will continue
under this final rule. Generally, about
1,400 mt of halibut PSC mortality is
apportioned annually to the BSAI
Pacific cod trawl fishery, but this
amount and actual use can vary from
year to year. Crab PSC limits fluctuate
as resource abundance fluctuates.
In recent years, the trawl CV and
trawl CP sectors’ directed Pacific cod
fisheries have closed most often (1) due
to reaching the seasonal TAC, (2) to
avoid exceeding specified halibut PSC
allowances, or (3) because a fishing
season has ended. Reaching a crab PSC
limit results in closure of a specific area
to directed fishing. Unlike reaching a
halibut PSC limit, reaching a crab PSC
limit typically does not close BSAI
Pacific cod trawl fisheries, although
occasional crab PSC closures have
occurred in the past.
The Council recommended that the
amount of halibut and crab PSC that
would be apportioned to each trawl
sector for the Pacific cod trawl fishery
under this action be proportional to
each sector’s percentage of Pacific cod
harvested in the Pacific cod target
fishery from 1999 through 2003,
including Pacific cod retained for meal
production. Accordingly, the proposed
rule divided the annual PSC allowance
of halibut and crab specified for the
Pacific cod trawl fishery category among
the trawl sectors as follows: 70.7 percent
for trawl CVs; 4.4 percent for AFA trawl
CPs; and 24.9 percent for non-AFA
trawl CPs. Because the AFA and nonAFA trawl CVs would share a Pacific
cod allocation, the Council decided that
this sector also should receive combined
halibut and crab PSC allowances.
The Council intended the
apportionment of halibut and crab PSC
among the trawl gear sectors that target
Pacific cod to allow each sector to better
plan its operations by being able to
manage its PSC use during the fishing
year without its PSC being eroded by
another sector. Because the Council’s
apportionment of halibut and crab PSC
was proportional to a trawl sector’s
harvest of Pacific cod in a target fishery,
those sectors that harvested Pacific cod
primarily as a target species, rather than
as a species caught incidentally in other
groundfish fisheries, would have
received proportionally higher PSC
allowances. Under this apportionment,
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the trawl CV and AFA trawl CP sectors
would have received higher PSC
allowances than they have historically
used or needed, and the non-AFA trawl
CP sector would have received
significantly less PSC than it has
historically used or needed to optimize
groundfish harvest under current PSC
limits.
During its deliberation on adoption of
Amendment 85, the Council understood
and acknowledged that the percentage
of halibut and crab PSC apportioned to
the non-AFA trawl CP sector could be
constraining compared to average
historic use, but chose not to modify its
decision. The Council determined that
the amount of PSC that would be
apportioned to the non-AFA trawl CP
sector would fall within the range of
what this sector has caught historically.
Under the Council’s recommendation
and the proposed rule, the non-AFA
trawl CP sector would have received 22
percent less halibut PSC and 37 percent
less Zone 1 bairdi (Chionoecetes bairdi)
crab PSC than it has used historically to
prosecute its directed Pacific cod fishery
and only about the average amount of
opilio (Chionoecetes opilio) crab PSC.
Conversely, the AFA trawl CP and the
trawl CV sectors would have received
about 200 percent and 40 percent more
halibut PSC, 19 percent and 116 percent
more bairdi crab PSC, and 3,144 percent
and 20,904 percent more opilio crab
PSC, respectively, than these sectors
have used historically.
Regulations implementing the FMP
must be consistent with the MagnusonStevens Act, including the national
standards, and other applicable law.
NMFS determined that further
apportionment of halibut and crab PSC
among Pacific cod trawl sectors as
proposed by the Council is inconsistent
with National Standards 1, 4, and 9 of
the Magnuson-Stevens Act. National
Standard 1 requires that fishery
management measures prevent
overfishing while maintaining optimum
yield from each fishery, National
Standard 4 requires allocations to be fair
and equitable among affected fishermen,
and National Standard 9 requires that
bycatch and the mortality of any
bycatch be minimized to the extent
practicable. Under the existing open
access management of the non-AFA
Pacific cod trawl fishery, NMFS
determined that the non-AFA trawl CP
sector is unlikely to be able to harvest
its entire allocation of Pacific cod with
the significant reductions in the
proposed amount of halibut and crab
PSC as detailed above. This would
result in a de facto reduction in the nonAFA trawl CP Pacific cod allocation and
would likely reduce this sector’s ability
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to harvest other targeted species. The
Council did not provide any
explanation as to why an additional
reduction in this sector’s harvest of
Pacific cod and other target species not
the subject of this final rule is
appropriate or consistent with National
Standard 4 or other applicable law.
Additionally, because the amount of
PSC allocated to the AFA trawl CP and
the trawl CV sectors is so much greater
than their historical needs, the proposed
PSC allocations to these sectors may
create a disincentive for these sectors to
minimize their bycatch of prohibited
species, which is not consistent with
National Standard 9. Finally, because
the non-AFA trawl CP sector harvests a
significant majority of species other
than pollock and Pacific cod, an
inconsistency with National Standard 1
exists. The non-AFA trawl CP sector
would likely not have PSC remaining
from its Pacific cod fishery that could
then be used to achieve optimum yield
from its other BSAI groundfish fisheries.
Based on the reasons discussed above,
therefore, NMFS disapproved the
apportionment of the annual PSC
allowances of halibut and crab mortality
among the Pacific cod trawl gear sectors.
Regulations pertaining to this element
are not included in this final rule. These
apportionments will continue to be
specified during the annual harvest
specifications process.
NMFS notes that a separate
amendment to the FMP, Amendment
80, was approved by the Secretary on
July 26, 2007. Amendment 80 primarily
allocates several BSAI non-pollock trawl
groundfish fisheries, halibut PSC, and
crab PSC among fishing sectors, and
facilitates the formation of harvesting
cooperatives in the non-AFA trawl CP
sector. The proposed rule to implement
Amendment 80 was published in the
Federal Register on May 30, 2007 (72
FR 30052) and was available for public
comment until June 29, 2007.
Changes in Regulations from the
Proposed Rule to the Final Rule
NMFS made several changes to the
proposed regulatory text in this final
rule. First, NMFS has removed proposed
§ 679.21(e)(3)(v) from the final rule.
Proposed § 679.21(e)(3)(v) included the
proposed PSC allowances for the trawl
sector which NMFS disapproved for the
reasons explained above. Proposed
§ 679.21(e)(3)(vi) reverts back to
§ 679.21(e)(3)(v) in this final rule as a
result of removing proposed
§ 679.21(e)(3)(v). NMFS also has
removed references to proposed
§ 679.21(e)(3)(v) from the final rule.
Second, the proposed regulatory text
at § 679.20(a)(7)(i)(B)(1) regarding CDQ
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seasonal allowances combined all CDQ
trawl vessels into one group. This final
rule revises the proposed regulatory text
to maintain the division between trawl
CP and trawl CV that exists in the
current regulations. No changes to the
CDQ Program seasonal allowances were
intended by the Council.
Last, the proposed regulatory text at
§ 679.20(a)(7)(iii)(B) inadvertently
included the heading ‘‘trawl catcher/
processor sectors.’’ This heading is
changed in this final rule to ‘‘trawl gear
sectors’’ because this part of the
reallocation hierarchy applies to all
trawl gear sectors, not just the trawl CP
sectors.
Response to Comments
As mentioned above, NMFS received
16 letters containing 79 unique
comments during the public comment
periods. Two non-industry letters were
received and 14 letters were received
from the fishing industry. A summary of
those comments, grouped by subject
matter, and NMFS’ responses follow.
Comment on the Intent of Amendment
85
Comment 1: One commenter supports
the intent of Amendment 85 to modify
the allocations of Pacific cod by
codifying the fishery as it is actually
occurring with the goal of reducing
inseason adjustments (reallocations)
from the trawl sectors to the hook-andline sectors. Another commenter
supports the intent of Amendment 85 to
modify the allocations of Pacific cod to
various sectors to better reflect historic
usage.
Response: NMFS notes the support for
Amendment 85 and clarifies that one
intention of this action is to better
reflect historic use, not current use, as
noted in this excerpt from the Council’s
problem statement: ‘‘To reduce
uncertainty and provide stability,
allocations should be adjusted to better
reflect historic use by sector. The basis
for determining sector allocations will
be catch history as well as consideration
of socio-economic and community
factors.’’
Comments on Data Used
Comment 2: The catch history
information used in Amendment 85 was
based on the best scientific information
available (1995–2003 WPR (Weekly
Production Report) and fish ticket data
for retained catch). Preliminary data
from 2004 and 2005 were also
considered. It is appropriate to use WPR
data to calculate catch history by sector
for the CPs because it is the only data
set common to all CP vessels. The use
of WPR data was well noticed to the
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public. The non-inclusion of fishmeal
was consistent with all previous
Council actions involving allocation.
Response: NMFS agrees that the catch
history information used to develop
Amendment 85 and presented in the
proposed rule was based on the best
scientific information available,
consistent with National Standard 2 of
the Magnuson-Stevens Act. Only legally
retained catch was used in determining
harvest history to avoid rewarding
sectors with a high discard rate of
Pacific cod. However, data presented in
the EA/RIR/initial regulatory flexibility
analysis (IRFA) and considered by
NMFS in its decision to approve the
non-CDQ allocations in Amendment 85
did include cod destined for fishmeal
production because it is legally retained
catch. The analysis used data from
Federal WPRs, which include fishmeal
data, and the Alaska Department of Fish
and Game (ADF&G) fish tickets to
calculate sector specific harvest history.
These databases were used because they
are consistent across all sectors and
every sector’s production of Pacific cod
is weighed and reported on WPRs and/
or fish tickets.
Total harvest was calculated based on
retained legal harvest (including Pacific
cod that was turned into fishmeal as the
primary product) from WPRs and
ADF&G fish tickets. In addition, total
harvest (retained and discarded cod,
including fishmeal) from NMFS blend
data, and the catch accounting database
was provided in Section 3.3.5 (Table 3–
24) of the analysis. The NMFS blend
data and data from the catch accounting
database (used since 2003) utilize
observer data, shoreside processor
landings data, and fish tickets. In the
cod target fishery, blend data are
calculated from partial haul samples,
including discards. Observer estimates
are extrapolated for some sectors
because of varying levels of observer
coverage. Because the AFA trawl CP
sector is 100 percent observed, the best
information available for that sector
would be the blend data. However, not
all sectors would be treated equally if
blend data were used because not all
sectors are 100 percent observed.
Therefore, the decision by NMFS to use
WPR data and ADF&G fish tickets, and
to include cod destined for fishmeal in
the determination of harvest history is
fair and equitable, and is consistent
with National Standards 2 and 4 of the
Magnuson-Stevens Act.
Comment 3: The range of dates
selected seriously over-weighted the
pre-Amendment 46 period, an inept
historical analogue to the current fishery
and a period of time for which
Amendment 85 was explicitly designed
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to supersede in order to better reflect
current use and dependence. The
express purpose of Amendment 85 is to
conform allocations to existing realities.
The years most relevant to existing
realities are the most recent years and
the Council failed to consider those
years.
Current allocations are based on
historical usage prior to 1997, and the
Council’s problem statement seeks to
address the fact that ‘‘the current
allocations do not correspond with
actual dependency and use by sectors.’’
Allocations set in 1997 closely tracked
actual usage at that time to determine
what are now the current allocations.
Therefore, any history prior to 1997
should not be used because it is
different from the ‘‘actual use’’ which
Amendment 85 is intended to reflect.
Beginning in 1998, Pacific cod had to
be retained by all vessels as long as
directed fishing was open; no sector
should be penalized for discarded fish
that were legally discarded prior to that.
Comparing sectors that only target cod
with sectors that both target and have
incidental catches of cod is not
comparing apples to apples. The
Council considered data that contained
only retained catch, so they understate
the amount of Pacific cod the non-AFA
trawl CPs needed to prosecute other
fisheries in the years prior to 1998.
Under the current regulatory scheme
that fish would be retained and counted.
In 1999, the AFA identified a number
of AFA vessels and granted them
exclusive access to BSAI pollock. The
non-AFA trawl CPs were excluded from
targeting pollock and increased their
harvest share of Pacific cod. All but one
of the AFA trawl CPs ceased to target
Pacific cod.
Rewarding one sector over the other
for legal discard activity from 10 years
prior to final Council action does not
correspond to dependencies developed
in light of the current management era,
which began with a new cod allocation
in 1997, 100 percent mandatory
retention in 1998, and the AFA in 1999
which preempted the head-and-gut
(H&G) fleet from the largest groundfish
fishery in North America. Therefore,
earlier years do not indicate ‘‘present
participation’’ or ‘‘actual use.’’
Response: As stated in the response to
Comment 1, the allocations established
by Amendment 85 and this final rule are
intended to better reflect a sector’s
historic use, not current use. In
referencing the Council’s problem
statement, the commenter appears to
equate ‘‘actual’’ with current, but this is
not what the Council meant by ‘‘actual.’’
The problem statement also states, ‘‘The
basis for determining sector allocations
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50793
will be catch history as well as
consideration of socio-economic and
community factors.’’ One year or just a
few recent years is not reflective of
catch history and dependence over time.
No one year in the history from 1995 to
2003 was given more weight than any
other.
The Council had several options
available in setting the allocation
percentages, including the harvest
histories from several specific set of
years, and an option to select direct
allocation percentages from within the
range of analyzed percentages. The
Council chose to select allocations for
the non-CDQ sectors that were within
the range of analyzed percentages, and
that more closely represent an average
of retained catch for most sectors from
1995 through 2003.
Harvest history for each sector was
based on annual retained catch. The
data presented in the EA/RIR/FRFA
include historic harvest from 1995
through 2003 as the primary basis for
determining historic use of Pacific cod
by sector, although data from 2004 to
2005 are provided as well. The starting
year of 1995 was chosen because it
includes data from the early years of
sector allocations of Pacific cod TAC
that began in 1994 with the
implementation of BSAI Amendment 24
to the FMP (59 FR 4009, January 28,
1994). This set of years also includes
changes in Pacific cod harvest due to
impacts beginning in 1998 from
implementation of improved retention/
improved utilization measures to reduce
discards, from AFA legislation in 1999,
and from Steller sea lion protection
measures beginning in 2001, all of
which had impacts on all sectors to
varying degrees. Pacific cod has been a
valuable species for a long time,
therefore, it is important to also
consider the time period before these
major legislative and regulatory
programs to determine historic
dependence and use. Also,
consideration of just three or four recent
years does not show dependency by the
sectors over time and may be unduly
biased because of increased market
demand for Pacific cod in recent years
for some products, potential decreased
participation due to BSAI crab
rationalization, and the likelihood of
competition for Pacific cod among
sectors in anticipation of this action.
At the time the Amendment 85
analysis was initiated by the Council in
late 2004, the data from 2003 were the
most recent available. Rather than
continually adding years as the action
progressed, the data analyzed for the
allocation options stopped with the data
from 2003. The Council and NMFS
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considered more recent (2004 and 2005)
harvest data from the NMFS catch
accounting database in reviewing
harvest history to illustrate recent
harvest trends as that information
became available, but it was not
available in the same format as the data
from 1995 through 2003. However, for
the reasons stated above, this two-year
data set was not used as the sole basis
for the allocations. Additionally, the
data showed that some sectors increased
their harvest of Pacific cod during the
recent past, compared to their 1995
through 2003 harvest, and were not
constrained by their allocation in doing
so because they did not harvest their
entire allocation. Not all sectors had the
advantage of such flexibility. Therefore,
based upon all these reasons, focusing
on more recent years does not provide
an equitable standard upon which to
assess the dependence of Pacific cod by
all sectors. The use of data from 1995
through 2003 provides a more
appropriate basis to determine historic
harvest share.
In 1994 under Amendment 24, the
trawl sectors were allocated 54 percent
of the Pacific cod TAC, the fixed gear
sectors received 44 percent, and the jig
gear sector received 2 percent. This
allocation was approximately equal to
the average percent of Pacific cod taken
with trawl gear or fixed gear between
1991 and 1993. In 1997 under
Amendment 46, the allocation to the
trawl sector was reduced to 47 percent
and then equally divided between trawl
CPs and trawl CVs. The reduced
allocation to the trawl sector was
determined by an industry negotiating
committee and closely represented the
harvest percentages taken by trawl and
fixed gear at that time while retaining
the 2–percent allocation for jig gear. The
split between trawl CVs and trawl CPs
was agreed upon by a separate
negotiation between representatives of
the trawl sectors to maintain a directed
fishery for trawl CVs which were more
dependent on directed fishing for
Pacific cod. These basic trawl and fixed
gear percentage allocations of Pacific
cod TAC have remained unchanged
since 1997. The fixed gear sectors were
divided in 2000 and the pot sectors in
2004, but the overall split between trawl
and fixed gear sectors and between
trawl CPs and trawl CVs did not change.
The high discard rates of Pacific cod
is an issue that the Council has been
addressing for some time. The problem
statement for Amendment 46 states:
‘‘Management measures are needed to
ensure that the Pacific cod TAC is
harvested in a manner which reduces
discards in the target fisheries, reduces
PSC mortality, reduces nontarget
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bycatch of Pacific cod and other
groundfish species, takes into account
the social and economic aspects of
variable allocations and addresses
impacts of the fishery on habitat.’’
The Council’s intent under
Amendment 85 was to calculate historic
catch by using retained harvest of
Pacific cod, because Pacific cod is
required to be retained (in both the
directed fishery, and up to the
maximum retainable allowance when
the directed Pacific cod fishery is
closed) and it was not the intent to
‘‘reward’’ sectors that have higher
discards of Pacific cod. This is why
discarded Pacific cod was not included
in the harvest history data. All of the
harvest data provided were considered
in the allocation decision by the Council
and by NMFS. Most sectors have
incidental catch of Pacific cod in their
fisheries. The exceptions are the jig and
pot gear sectors. By using historic catch
over the same set of years and using the
same data set for all sectors (see
response to Comment 2), all sectors
were treated fairly and equitably,
consistent with National Standard 4 of
the Magnuson-Stevens Act.
Comment 4: The use of WPRs to
calculate the round weight of cod
harvested by the AFA trawl CP sector
for the years after 1998 is a significant
source of error in the catch history
tables set forth in the draft analysis. The
use of observer reports and scale
weights is universally recognized as a
more accurate way of calculating a
vessel’s total catch than the somewhat
antiquated WPR approach. The use of
WPR data as a basis for the AFA trawl
CP catch history is inconsistent with the
requirement that management measures
be based on ‘‘the best scientific evidence
available.’’ The draft analysis should be
revised to clarify that observer data (not
WPRs) represent the best available data
for the post–1998 catch history of the
AFA trawl CP sector.
Response: The Council’s and NMFS’
use of WPR data rather than NMFS
blend data and the catch accounting
database, which both use observer data
as one component, is explained in the
response to Comment 2. WPR data and
blend data estimate catch using different
methods. WPR data represents a
consistent database across all sectors;
every sector’s product is weighed, and
landed weights are converted to round
weights. The blend data estimate catch
based on vessel catch reports augmented
by observer data, and are used for inseason management. The blend data use
observer estimates of discards, which
affect the total catch estimates. In the
cod target fishery, observer estimates are
based primarily on partial haul
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sampling. In general, CPs <125 ft (38.1
m) LOA are observed 30 percent of the
time, and blend data use WPR data
when there are no observer data
available. Finally, during the years
considered to establish allocations (1995
2003), the more accurate flow scales
were used more extensively in the AFA
CP sector than in other sectors. Because
the AFA trawl CP sector is 100 percent
observed, the best information available
for that sector would be the blend data.
However, blend data are not available
by vessel length for the CV sectors,
which primarily affects the <60 ft (18.3
m) fixed gear CVs. Also, the non-AFA
trawl CPs <125 ft (38.1 m) LOA are
observed 30 percent of the time, so WPR
data are used when there are no
observer data available. These two
datasets rely on different estimation
methods and do not provide identical
estimates of catch by sector. Use of
blend data for some sectors and WPR
data for other sectors would be
problematic because any estimation
error among sectors could be
exacerbated if different datasets are used
to determine sector specific allocations.
Therefore, the best available data when
comparing Pacific cod harvests among
all sectors for the determination of
harvest history is WPR data and ADF&G
fish tickets (see response to Comment
2). Acknowledging that observer data
are used to monitor catch for this one
sector because it is 100 percent observed
would not change the decision on the
amendment. Therefore, no changes will
be made to the analysis concerning this
subject.
Comment 5: The data used in the draft
analysis excludes Pacific cod utilized in
the production of meal from the AFA
trawl CP’s catch history. It is
inappropriate for the draft analysis to
exclude or otherwise discount Pacific
cod used for meal production from any
of the tables used to depict catch history
for the AFA trawl CP sector. There is no
justification for excluding the official
catch data from an analysis that
purportedly reflects the catch history of
this sector. The combined effect of using
WPR-based catch accounting to
calculate the AFA trawl CP catch
history and excluding the catch used to
make meal results in an inaccurate
estimate of the sector’s catch history
that understates the AFA trawl CP
sector’s historic use and dependency on
cod. The draft analysis should be
revised to clarify that meal is a ‘‘legally
retainable product’’ insofar as that term
is used in connection with Amendment
85 and other regulations governing the
BSAI groundfish fishery; and that all
legally retained cod taken as bycatch in
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the directed pollock fishery will be
included in the AFA trawl CP sector’s
catch history for purposes of
Amendment 85.
Response: The concern about fishmeal
not being included in calculations of
harvest history was a result of some
commenters relying on a draft analysis
distributed prior to the April 2006
Council meeting. As explained in the
response to Comment 2, WPR data
represent the best available information
for comparing Pacific cod catch across
and among sectors. WPR data include
Pacific cod destined for fishmeal.
However, in the early development of
the Amendment 85 analysis, data for
Pacific cod destined for fishmeal were
removed from the WPR data and
Council analytical documents up to the
April 2006 Council meeting continued
to exclude fishmeal data. At the April
2006 Council meeting, in light of public
comment, WPR data that included
fishmeal data was provided for Council
consideration. As explained in response
to Comment 2, the history considered in
setting non-CDQ allocation percentages
in Amendment 85 included Pacific cod
that was turned into fishmeal as the
primary product. Several tables that
incorporated fishmeal in the harvest
history were presented to the Council in
April 2006 for its consideration and
similar tables were included in the
Secretarial review draft analysis issued
in January 2007. The analysis was not
revised in light of this comment because
the data on fishmeal were considered
and included in setting the Pacific cod
allocation to the AFA trawl CP sector
and the historic catch data including
fishmeal are presented in the analysis.
Comment 6: The H&G sector
allocation of 13.4 percent is 0.2 percent
less than the sector’s straight 95–03
average. The action was taken in 2006,
however the last year considered was
2003. This sector’s ‘‘historic use’’ and
‘‘actual dependency’’ are not adequately
reflected if 2004 and 2005 are not taken
into consideration for a final action
taken in 2006. The Magnuson-Stevens
Act instructs that recency must be
considered as well. By allocating the
H&G sector an amount of cod less than
its average harvest for the historical
period of 1995 to 2003, the Council
simply ignored the present participation
consideration.
Response: NMFS disagrees that the
non-AFA trawl CP sector was allocated
an amount of Pacific cod that is less
than its average historic harvest for the
period 1995 to 2003 (average historic
harvest). NMFS believes that the
commenter’s reference to 13.6 percent is
likely based on data in the analysis that
excludes fishmeal in the calculation of
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average sector harvest share (see Table
3–11 in the EA/RIR/FRFA). The Council
and NMFS included fishmeal in
determining historic harvest. When
fishmeal is included in the calculation,
the head-and-gut (non-AFA trawl CP)
sector average historic harvest from
1995 to 2003 is 13.4 percent. The nonAFA trawl CP sector received exactly its
1995 to 2003 average historic harvest as
its allocation under Amendment 85. The
Council and NMFS also considered
more recent participation in 2004 and
2005, but for reasons provided in the
response to Comment 3, chose not to
include more recent participation in
determining historic use and
dependence.
Comment 7: The draft analysis should
be revised to include at least one table
(based on official catch data and
including fish utilized in meal
production) that clearly shows the total
retained catch of cod by the AFA trawl
CP sector during the period following
adoption of the AFA (e.g., the years
1999–2003).
Response: Appendix G of the analysis
prepared for Amendment 85 and this
rulemaking (see ADDRESSES) includes
Pacific cod catch data, including
fishmeal, for the AFA trawl CP sector
for the years 1995 through 2003.
Therefore, NMFS does not need to
revise the analysis to include this table.
Comment 8: Neither the EA/RIR/IRFA
before the Council nor the Secretarial
draft had simply one table which
showed the complete picture of each
sectors’ history. It takes three tables to
complete the 1995–2005 picture.
Response: Table 3–24 in the
Secretarial review draft of the EA/RIR/
IRFA gives the data for BSAI Pacific cod
non-CDQ allocations, catch and
reallocations by sector from 1995
through 2005. The proposed rule
purposely used two tables and the
Secretarial review draft analysis used
three to present the historical catch data
as the average share of the retained
Pacific cod harvest over various time
periods. Table 3–9 in the EA/RIR/IRFA
was used to show the complete picture
of each sector’s history for the years
under consideration for allocations
(1995 - 2003), and Table 3–12 shows the
catch history for 2004 and 2005 in a
two-part table. The data from 1995
through 2003 used in Table 3 in the
proposed rule were from a different
source than the data for 2004 and 2005
used in Table 4. Separate tables were
used to help draw attention to this fact
in the proposed rule and for the same
reason in the EA/RIR/FRFA.
Comment 9: The proposed allocation
to the H&G sector cannot be justified by
the fact that the H&G sector had a lower
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harvest share in 1995–1998, nine to
twelve years ago and prior to the
implementation of several significant
regulatory changes culminating in the
AFA that fundamentally changed the
dynamics of the fishery, and that as a
result its ‘‘average historical’’ retained
catch was 13.4 percent. The sector’s
performance in those earlier years is of
no relevance to the goal that the Council
was seeking to achieve.
Response: NMFS disagrees. The
reasons why data from 1995 through
1998 are included in the calculation of
average historic harvest are explained in
the response to Comment 3. While the
data may represent a period of time
when the non-AFA trawl CP sector was
not maximizing its retained harvest of
Pacific cod, it does represent a period of
time when other sectors were
maximizing their harvest. The Council’s
goal was to adjust allocations ‘‘to better
reflect historic use by sector.’’ NMFS
determined that the years selected by
the Council are consistent with that
goal.
Comment 10: The Council was not
required to use one particular set of
‘‘correct’’ years in conforming the
allocations to existing reality, but the
allocation to the non-AFA trawl CP
sector was clearly beyond any rational
assessment of ‘‘actual use.’’ Within the
range of options presented to the
Council in the Amendment 85
document (April draft), the period from
2000 to 2003 clearly was most reflective
of actual current participation in the
fishery. Under that approach, the nonAFA trawl CP sector averaged 16.2
percent. At the other extreme, under the
option least reflective of actual current
participation, from 1995 to 2002, the
non-AFA trawl CP sector average 13.2
percent. Incredibly, the Council chose to
allocate an even smaller share to the
non-AFA trawl CP sector than the 1995–
2003 average of 13.6 percent. The
Council’s proposal of 13.4 percent does
not reflect the non-AFA trawl CP
sector’s current or even its relevant
recent participation in this fishery. This
reduction was not part of an across-theboard cut that treated all sectors
equitably. Some sectors received an
increase above their actual use and the
non-AFA trawl CP sector received the
largest decrease.
Response: See the response to
Comment 3 for a discussion of the years
considered to determine average historic
harvest. The non-AFA trawl CP sector
catch history from 1995 through 2003 is
13.6 percent only if fishmeal is not
included. However, the Council’s
allocation recommendation included
Pacific cod that was turned into
fishmeal as the primary product when
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developing the Pacific cod sector
allocations because Pacific cod destined
for fishmeal production is legally
retained catch (see response to
Comment 2). Table 3–119 of the EA/
RIR/FRFA shows that when fishmeal is
included in the calculation, which the
Council did in taking final action, the
non-AFA trawl CP sector’s average from
1995 through 2003 matches exactly the
new allocation: 13.4 percent of the nonCDQ Pacific cod TAC. Some sectors
received allocations that are greater than
their historic harvest during 1995
through 2003 and others less, but the
non-AFA trawl CP sector was the only
sector to receive exactly its average
share of the retained harvest from 1995
through 2003.
Comment 11: Comparing the harvest
information from 2004 and 2005 with
the Amendment 85 allocations reveals
that the non-AFA trawl CP sector
suffered nearly an order of magnitude
loss greater than any other sector (most
of which received allocations at or
above their 2004–2005 average).
Comparing the Amendment 85
allocation to the average of 1998–2003
(a range from when cod became a 100–
percent retention species to the last year
of data the Council had when making
their decision), the non-AFA trawl CP
fleet still lost far more than any other
sector going from an average of 15.7
percent to 13.4 percent (relative loss of
14.5 percent).
Response: The Council had harvest
data from 2004 and 2005 available when
it took final action on Amendment 85.
It was not available in the same format
as the years from 1995 through 2003,
but it was considered by the Council.
The non-AFA trawl CP sector allocation
is exactly its catch history from 1995
through 2003. As stated previously (see
responses to Comments 2 and 3), the
Council chose to look at history and
dependency over a number of years, not
just one or two recent years. Although
the non-AFA trawl CP sector’s retention
of Pacific cod has increased over the last
several years, that sector always had the
opportunity to retain Pacific cod in
higher amounts than they historically
did. For various reasons, the sector
chose to focus on other species as a
business decision. The Council
determined that the new allocations
were needed to better reflect historic use
and chose not to define historic use as
just the last two or three years.
Comments on Allocation Issues
Comment 12: The increase in
allocation percentage to fixed gear from
trawl gear is consistent with the historic
trend in the way the BSAI cod fishery
is prosecuted as well as with previous
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Council actions regarding BSAI cod
allocations in Amendments 24 and 46.
Stabilizing the increased historic
proportion of fixed gear harvest via
allocation of BSAI Pacific cod in
Amendment 85 will ensure the
continued experience of reduced halibut
and crab bycatch, improved product
quality, and reduced benthic impacts
associated with fixed gear cod fisheries
as compared to trawl cod fisheries.
Response: Amendment 85 is intended
to better reflect historic usage by the
various harvest sectors while addressing
coastal community needs. The Pacific
cod allocations to the trawl and fixed
gear sectors set in 1994 under
Amendment 24 (54 percent and 44
percent, respectively), were
approximately equal to the average
percentage of Pacific cod taken with
these gear types during 1991 through
1993, with a 2–percent allocation for jig
gear. The Pacific cod allocations set in
1996 under Amendment 46 were arrived
at by industry negotiation and were
chosen to represent more closely the
harvest percentage taken by trawl and
fixed gear sectors at that time (47
percent and 51 percent, respectively),
while maintaining the 2–percent
allocation for jig gear. Under
Amendment 85, if the harvest sectors
were similarly grouped, the allocations
would be 37.8 percent for trawl gear,
60.8 percent for fixed gear, and 1.4
percent for jig gear. NMFS has
determined that the sector allocations
proposed under Amendment 85 better
reflect the historic use by the various
harvest sectors as a whole than do the
current sector allocations, and has
approved them. NMFS notes the second
comment.
Comment 13: All sectors received
amounts that reflect recent
participation, except the AFA CPs
which received more, and the small boat
fleets which also received much more
than their history, as a policy decision.
Only the H&G fleet has suffered a set
back so large that both its directed
fishery and its non-cod directed
fisheries are jeopardized, while the
other sectors’ annual fish plans were not
affected.
Response: NMFS approved the nonCDQ sector allocation percentages in
Amendment 85. The following is NMFS’
rationale for that decision. Amendment
85 will separate trawl CPs into two
sectors, AFA and non-AFA, for
purposes of Pacific cod allocations. The
AFA trawl CP fleet will be restricted to
a separate allocation slightly greater
than its historic catch from 1995
through 2003, but 62.3 percent below its
current sideboard limit for catch of
Pacific cod. Separating the two sectors
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will protect the historic catch of the
non-AFA trawl CPs better than leaving
these two sectors combined with a
lower shared allocation that reflects
their combined history, but with the
same AFA sideboard limit. Although the
AFA trawl CP sector decreased its
average harvest share between 2000 and
2003, this fleet is a cooperative that
more likely will catch its Pacific cod
allocation in a manner that minimizes
the bycatch of non-target species.
Bycatch is a consideration under
National Standards 4, 5, and 9 of the
Magnuson-Stevens Act. Because the
allocation to the AFA trawl CP sector is
slightly higher than this sector’s historic
catch, it should be sufficient for this
sector to cooperatively manage its
allocation and maintain a directed
fishery, in addition to meeting its needs
for incidental catch in its pollock and
yellowfin sole fisheries. This ability to
maintain the opportunity for these few
directed fisheries is important because
AFA sideboard provisions restrict this
sector’s ability to participate in other
BSAI fisheries and AFA trawl CPs are
prohibited from fishing in the Gulf of
Alaska.
Only the non-AFA trawl CP sector
will receive an allocation equal to its
exact average historic harvest share from
1995 through 2003. The allocation to
this sector is reflective of its
dependence on the Pacific cod fishery
over many years. About half of its
historic Pacific cod harvest occurs as
incidental catch in flatfish (primarily
yellowfin sole and rock sole), Atka
mackerel, and rockfish fisheries. The
BSAI flatfish fisheries are the primary
revenue source for this sector and often
incur high incidental catches of Pacific
cod. Note that the trawl CP sectors
combined have contributed 49.1 percent
on average to the total annual
reallocations of Pacific cod to other nontrawl sectors between 2000 and 2004.
Based on environmental considerations,
the nature of these sectors’ fisheries,
average historic harvest, and to protect
the non-AFA trawl CP harvest, NMFS
determined that the allocations under
Amendment 85 to the trawl CP sectors
are a reasonable balance of the National
Standards under the Magnuson Act.
The hook-and-line CV ≥60 ft (18.3 m)
LOA sector will receive an allocation
above its average historic harvest, and
this allocation will no longer be shared
with the hook-and-line CV <60 ft (18.3
m) LOA sector. This will allow Pacific
cod to remain open to directed fishing
for a longer period of time. Existing
regulations governing bycatch require
that all Pacific cod be retained when
directed fishing is open. Thus, discard
of Pacific cod by the hook-and-line CV
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≥60 ft (18.3 m) LOA sector should be
reduced when targeting other species,
particularly Pacific halibut, and to a
lesser extent in its sablefish and rockfish
fisheries, an important consideration
under National Standards 4, 5, and 9.
The allocations are not based solely
on historic harvest share, but also are
based on socioeconomic considerations,
consistent with National Standard 8. For
this reason, the allocations are higher
than the average historic harvest for the
jig sector and the fixed gear CV <60 ft
(18.3 m) LOA sector. Under National
Standard 8, NMFS must take into
account the importance of fishery
resources to fishing communities to
provide for the sustained participation
of such communities. By maintaining
allocations above the average harvest
history for these two entry level sectors,
Amendment 85 maintains and expands
local opportunities for resident
fishermen in small, coastal communities
near the fishing grounds to participate
in the BSAI Pacific cod fishery.
The increase in the allocation to the
fixed gear CV <60 ft (18.3 m) LOA sector
from 0.7 to 2.0 percent of the non-CDQ
Pacific cod TAC is fair and equitable.
This sector has been successfully
harvesting part of the allocation to the
general hook-and line CV and pot CV
allocations, all of its allocation since
2002, and reallocations from the jig
sector since 2004. Its share of the
harvest in 2004 and 2005 averaged 1.7
percent. The small CV sectors have been
favored in previous allocation measures
for BSAI Pacific cod to encourage
growth in this entry level sector. Such
actions have been successful as
illustrated by the steadily increasing
harvests by this small boat sector. The
allocation of 2.0 percent to the fixed
gear CV <60 ft (18.3 m) LOA sector is
necessary to provide sufficient Pacific
cod for this sector to harvest under its
own direct allocation, separate from the
hook-and-line and pot CV ≥60 ft (18.3
m) LOA sector allocations these small
boats currently may fish under, and to
allow continued growth in this small
boat sector.
Although the jig sector allocation of
1.4 percent of the Pacific cod TAC is 14
times higher than its historic harvest
share, it is a reduction from it current
allocation of 2.0 percent. The intent of
this allocation is to provide for an entry
level fishery. The reduced allocation to
the jig sector still allows for growth in
this sector and is closer to its historic
harvest share than its current allocation.
Additionally, this allocation serves as a
‘‘bank’’ for anticipated growth in the
harvest of Pacific cod in all catcher
vessel sectors given that unused
portions of the jig gear allocation are
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annually reallocated first to the fixed
gear <60 ft (18.3 m) LOA sector (another
small boat, entry-level sector), and then
to other CV fleets that deliver to fishing
communities. Also, under Amendment
85, reallocations from the jig sector will
be available to the fixed gear <60 ft (18.3
m) LOA sector earlier in the year. Being
able to harvest the fish earlier in the
year when the weather is preferable for
these small boats (safety is a
consideration under National Standard
10), should enable this sector to harvest
more of the reallocated fish than it does
currently. Therefore, in light of the
likelihood of reallocations of any
unused allocations to the <60 ft (18.3 m)
LOA fixed gear sector, and to other CV
fleets that deliver shoreside to fishing
communities, the allocation of 1.4
percent of the Pacific cod TAC to the jig
sector is fair and equitable and meets
the purpose and need of the action to
consider socio-economic and
community factors.
For the small boat sectors to receive
allocations above their average historic
harvest, some sectors must receive less
than their average historic harvest. The
four sectors that will receive lower
allocations than their average historic
harvests are the pot CV ≥60 ft (18.3 m)
LOA, hook-and-line CP, pot CP, and
trawl CV sectors. Their allocations
represent a reasonable balancing of
Magnuson-Stevens Act National
Standard requirements while also
meeting the purpose and need of the
action. The pot CV ≥60 ft (18.3 m) LOA
sector and the hook-and-line CP sector
will receive allocations that are closer to
their average historic harvests than are
their current allocations and are only
slightly less than their average historic
harvests. Because the small boat sectors
will receive allocations above their
historic harvest it is expected that the
pot CV ≥60 ft (18.3 m) LOA sector and
the hook-and-line CP sector also may
receive reallocations toward the end of
the fishing year, which will make their
share of the TAC closer to their historic
share of the harvest. Additionally, the
pot CV ≥60 ft (18.3 m) LOA and trawl
CV sectors may receive reallocations of
Pacific cod from other CVs or from CPs
of the same gear type. Also, the pot
sectors are primarily dependent on crab
fisheries rather than on the Pacific cod
fishery. The pot CP and trawl CV sectors
are the only sectors, other than the fixed
gear <60 ft (18.3 m) LOA sector, that
will receive allocations that are less
reflective of their average historic
harvests between 1995 and 2003. Recent
trends demonstrate that the pot CP and
the trawl CV sectors’ harvest shares
have decreased in recent years, such
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that the allocations under Amendment
85 better reflect these sectors’ average
harvest shares between 2000 and 2003
than do the current allocations. The
AFA trawl CP sector was the only other
sector that decreased its average harvest
share between 2000 and 2003, but was
not selected to fund the increases in
other sector allocations for the reasons
stated above. The allocation to the pot
CP sector is fair and equitable because
of its more recent decreased harvest
share and its greater dependence on the
crab fisheries. Although the trawl CV
sector allocation is reduced, a combined
allocation of Pacific cod to the AFA and
non-AFA trawl CVs will take advantage
of the existing AFA inshore cooperative
structure for discussion and agreement
concerning access to fishing grounds
and harvesting activities in a manner
that optimizes the allocation to this
sector for all CVs. Additionally, public
testimony at the April 2006 Council
meeting requested that the two trawl CV
sectors remain combined. A combined
allocation also is larger than separate
allocations to either the non-AFA or
AFA CVs, thus providing some
protection in the event that trawl vessels
that have not historically participated in
the fishery choose to do so.
Comment 14: The AFA trawl sectors
would receive the largest aggregate
increased share of the Pacific cod
fishery under the Council proposal – 1.2
percent over the combined AFA trawl
CP and trawl CV history from 1999
through 2005.
Response: The data presented in the
analysis include historic harvest from
1995 through 2003 as the primary basis
for determining historic use of Pacific
cod by sector, although data from 2004
to 2005 are presented as well. The
Council did not make its proposal based
on catch history from 1999 through
2005 based on reasons given in response
to Comment 3. The trawl CV and AFA
trawl CP sectors do not receive a
combined allocation. The AFA trawl CP
sector will receive a share of the nonCDQ Pacific cod TAC that is 0.1 percent
higher than its historic share from 1995
through 2003. The AFA trawl CV sector
will receive an allocation in
combination with the non-AFA CV
sector. That allocation will be 1.9
percent less than its historic share from
1995 through 2003. Combining the AFA
trawl CP sector with the trawl CV sector
results in a combined decreased share of
1.8 percent of the non-CDQ Pacific cod
TAC.
Comment 15: The proposed allocation
of 13.4 percent to the non-AFA trawl CP
sector is significantly less than this
sector’s actual dependence and use. The
allocation scheme proposed by
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Amendment 85 will put the H&G sector
in an economically precarious position,
slashing its recent usage of cod by up to
30 percent based on its harvest in 2004.
The APA requires agency actions, such
as Amendment 85, to bear a rational
relationship to the problems they are
intended to address. Reducing the nonAFA trawl CP’s allocation so
substantially below its actual harvest
levels over the past seven years does not
serve the Council’s ‘‘primary objective’’
of reducing the need for annual
reallocations. The Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking relies upon figures that
clearly demonstrate this point. The
Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
specifically points out that the non-AFA
trawl CP sector’s retained harvest ‘‘has
not been less than 15.3 percent since
2000.’’ There is no rational basis in the
record to justify the reduction in cod
TAC suffered by the H&G sector in this
Council recommendation.
Response: The allocations were based
on long-term dependence and catch
history over many years. The harvest
history was not based on just one or two
years of harvest by a particular sector
(see responses to Comments 3 and 13).
The Council had the option to select
from six sets of specific years or to
select percentages for the Pacific cod
allocations that fall within the range of
percentages analyzed. The Council
chose the latter course of action. Thus,
as the information was presented in the
analysis, the focus was on Pacific cod
harvest history from the years 1995
through 2003. NMFS recognizes that the
selection of certain year sets will be
more beneficial to some sectors than the
selection of other year sets. In setting
the percentages, the Council made a
reasonable balance of the National
Standards under the Magnuson-Stevens
Act, particularly National Standards 4
and 8 which deal with allocations and
community considerations respectively.
In examining the Council’s action,
NMFS determined that the allocations
reasonably reflect the historic harvest of
Pacific cod by each sector between 1995
and 2003. NMFS determined that
consideration of the earlier years (1995
through 1998) is reasonable and that
calculating harvest history through
2003, rather than 2004 or 2005, is
reasonable for the reasons given in
response to Comment 3.
As stated in the proposed rule, the
primary objective of the Council was to
reduce the level and frequency of
annual reallocations, and thus enhance
stability so each sector may better plan
its fishing year and operate more
efficiently. Annual reallocations are
expected to be reduced under
Amendment 85, and are thus related to
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the revised allocations to each sector
that more closely reflect historic use by
most sectors than do current allocations,
while considering socioeconomic and
community factors. As noted in the
response to Comment 13, nearly half of
the annual reallocations between 2000
and 2004 have come from the trawl CP
sectors and those reallocations averaged
19.4 percent of the initial trawl CP
sector allocation.
Comment 16: National Standard 4
provides that ‘‘If it becomes necessary to
allocate or assign fishing privileges
among various U.S. fishermen, such
allocation shall be...fair and equitable to
all such fishermen...’’ Elaboration of this
requirement under § 600.325(c)(3)(i)(A)
requires that the particular allocation
chosen be ‘‘rationally connected to the
achievement of OY [optimum yield] or
the furtherance of a legitimate FMP
objective...’’ and that ‘‘the motive for
making a particular allocation should be
justified in terms of the objectives of the
FMP; otherwise, the disadvantaged user
groups or individuals would suffer
without cause.’’ In this case, the
objective to conform allocations to
current usage (to reduce late-year
reallocations of unharvested fish) and
dependency cannot be rationally served
by reducing the non-AFA trawl CP
sector allocation to one-quarter to onefifth below its actual recent harvest
levels or by allocating more than recent
harvest levels to other sectors. Under
National Standard 4, an allocation may
impose a hardship on one group if it is
outweighed by the total benefits
received by another group or groups.
The Council would have had to make an
estimate of the benefits and hardships
imposed by the allocation and compare
them to those of alternative allocation
schemes, including the status quo. The
Council did not do that.
Response: NMFS has determined that
the allocations are fair and equitable to
all sectors. Between the two quotes from
the Code of Federal Regulations is the
sentence ‘‘Inherent in an allocation is
the advantaging of one group to the
detriment of another.’’ This action also
is designed to increase the Pacific cod
allocation to the small boat sectors
which is a legitimate FMP objective.
The management objectives in the FMP
include promoting sustainable fisheries
and communities. Because the small
boat sectors deliver to fishing
communities, increasing allocations to
these sectors should promote these
fishing communities. This action also
will decrease the amount of Pacific cod
that is reallocated to other sectors later
in the season, facilitating these sectors’
ability to achieve optimum yield by
better planning their fishing year and
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operating more efficiently. The response
to Comment 3 provides NMFS’ rationale
for why the years 1995 through 2003 are
a reasonable, fair, and equitable set of
years for determining the average
historic share of the retained Pacific cod
harvest. Using that set of years, the nonAFA trawl CP sector received a fair and
equitable allocation which is exactly its
average historic harvest share from 1995
through 2003. Please see the response to
Comment 13 for a discussion of all
sectors’ allocations.
Comment 17: Every sector was
allocated its target and incidental cod
needs, except the H&G sector. This
discrepancy is not specifically
highlighted in the draft Secretarial
Review. The H&G fleet was allocated an
insufficient amount for accommodating
both a directed fishery and incidental
catch needs and, by inference, was
given a choice: target or bycatch, but not
both. This violates National Standard 4,
that allocations be fair and equitable to
all fishermen. When one sector must
decide between its target fishery and its
other groundfish fisheries, while others
have been allocated in excess of or close
to their recent harvests, it is neither fair
nor equitable, particularly in light of the
fact that it was never addressed in the
EA/RIR/IRFA.
In economic terms, NMFS’ inseason
manager estimates that under
Amendment 85, the H&G sector would
lose about 10,000 metric tons of cod in
2007 compared to expected harvest
under the status quo. NMFS’ in-season
manager also estimates that in order to
account for the incidental catch needs of
the fleet for its flatfish and other
fisheries, the agency will only be able to
allow for a directed fishery of 10 or 11
days, whereas currently, the directed
cod fishery is seldom closed. Owners,
employees, observer providers, support
companies, and the ports the vessels
call on may suffer economic hardship
under Amendment 85. We respectfully
request that the Secretary disapprove
the allocations.
Response: NMFS has approved the
non-CDQ allocations of Pacific cod
under Amendment 85. Every sector,
except the small boat sector, was
allocated an amount of Pacific cod that
reflects its average historic harvest and
dependence over many years that
included target and incidental catch to
the extent that incidental catch was
retained. Information on the historic
harvest share for the non-AFA trawl CP
sector was provided in the EA/RIR/
FRFA, just as it was for all the other
sectors. The non-AFA trawl CP sector’s
allocation of 13.4 percent of the Pacific
cod non-CDQ TAC is 100 percent of its
average historic harvest between 1995
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and 2003, an exact reflection of its
historic use and reflective of this
sector’s dependence on the resource
over many years. Its recent increase in
directed fishing for Pacific cod does not
reflect a long-term dependence on the
fishery. NMFS acknowledges that
accommodating target and incidental
catch may be more difficult for the nonAFA trawl CP sector when compared to
its most recent few years’ harvest.
The economic impacts of Amendment
85 were analyzed in the RIR and IRFA.
Because this action is principally
designed to reapportion access to the
Pacific cod resource among current user
groups, it represents tradeoffs (i.e., some
entities are negatively affected while
others are positively affected). The
estimates referred to by the commenter
were provided by NMFS a few weeks
after the April 2006 Council meeting as
a worst case scenario using lower
acceptable biological catch (ABC) and
TAC levels than actually were
established for 2007 and assuming that
the non-AFA trawl CP sector would
continue conducting its fisheries as it
does currently. Revising the estimates
for 2007 based on the actual TAC and
with a CDQ allocation of 10.7 percent
would yield an estimate of 19 to 20 days
of directed fishing under current nonAFA trawl CP fishing practices. If
incidental catch rates of Pacific cod in
other groundfish fisheries are reduced
below the current rates, the non-AFA
trawl CP sector should be able to
maintain a directed fishery for Pacific
cod for an even longer period of time.
As stated in the EA/RIR/FRFA on pages
294 and 295: ‘‘With a lower potential
allocation compared to recent years, this
sector will likely need to determine how
much of its cod allocation will be used
as incidental catch to other target
fisheries versus to fund the directed cod
fishery,’’ and ‘‘Absent a cooperative
structure as approved [by the Council]
in [proposed] Amendment 80, it is
expected that compliance with the
groundfish retention standards and
management of a lower Pacific cod
allocation to serve both directed and
incidental catch needs, will be
substantially more difficult.’’ See
response to Comment 16 regarding
consistency of Amendment 85 and this
final rule with National Standard 4.
Comment 18: The loss of a directed
cod fishery leaves the H&G fleet with no
fishery from the end of the yellowfin
sole fishery (which ended in mid-April
of 2006) until July, when the ‘‘B’’ season
starts. No other fleet will see its current
operations disrupted by Amendment 85
the way that the H&G sector will.
Response: Under existing regulations,
Pacific cod allocations are further
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apportioned by season for most gear
sectors to protect prey availability for
Steller sea lions. Currently, the trawl
CPs, AFA and non-AFA combined,
receive 50 percent of their allocation in
the A season, 30 percent in the B
season, and 20 percent in the C season.
See the proposed rule for more details
on seasonal allowances. Beginning in
2004, the trawl CP sector Pacific cod
fishery has closed in mid-March due to
reaching it’s a season allowance. The B
season for trawl CPs opens on April 1
and closes on June 10. More than half
the incidental catch of Pacific cod by
trawl CPs occurs after March.
Amendment 85 changed the seasonal
allowances for the trawl CP sectors so
that 75 percent of the allocation may be
harvested in the A season, with the
remaining 25 percent harvested in the B
season. This was done to maintain to
the extent possible the current
percentage of non-CDQ Pacific cod TAC
available for harvest in the early part of
the year when fishing for Pacific cod is
more advantageous. If incidental catch
rates of Pacific cod in other fisheries are
kept low, the non-AFA trawl CP sector
should be able to maintain a directed
fishery for Pacific cod.
Comment 19: The AFA trawl CP
sector was funded with more than their
recent (99–05) usage of 1.9 percent. That
sector has its pollock fishery cod
bycatch needs met at the all time high
1.5 million mt pollock TAC level, even
as the pollock biomass and TAC are on
a downward trend. With a 2.3–percent
allocation, and lower pollock TAC,
more cod can be used to enhance their
directed fishery, which is essentially an
IFQ [individual fishing quota] since
only one vessel is used in the fleet to
directed fish on cod. That vessel is also
an AFA eligible CP, and while on the
record it was stated that it has nowhere
to go other than cod, the vessel has
access to the yellowfin sole sideboard
and the directed pollock fishery of the
AFA CPs. It is the vessel owner’s
decision not to fish pollock or yellowfin
sole with that vessel.
Response: The AFA trawl CP sector
will receive an allocation that is 0.1
percent above its average historic share
of 2.2 percent of the Pacific cod harvest.
NMFS provided the agency’s
explanation for approving the AFA
trawl CP Pacific cod allocation in the
response to Comment 13. NMFS agrees
that it is each vessel owner’s decision
whether or not to harvest fish in the
fisheries open to that particular vessel.
However, it is a goal of this amendment
to allocate Pacific cod to specific sectors
based on average historic harvest, not to
determine what fisheries are open to
specific vessels or to establish other
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vessel-specific provisions for access to
Pacific cod or other groundfish. Also,
the AFA trawl CP sector allocation is
less than its current sideboard limit for
harvesting Pacific cod (see response to
Comment 13).
Comment 20: The reduced ability to
target Pacific cod during the A season
for the CP trawl sector has resulted in
more rollovers to fixed gear; the cod that
would have been caught in March when
the fish are most aggregated, has not
been caught. The fishery in the last two
years has closed in early-mid March due
to the 50 percent season limit and
reduced cod TACs. This has benefitted
the fixed gear sector which gets the
rollover in the C season, at the end of
the year. The Steller sea lion
management measures drastically
altered cod fishing patterns and
harvests. The patterns were altered
because of the seasonal apportionments,
not because of changed priorities or
reduced dependency on the part of the
harvesters.
Response: Almost all gear types,
excluding <60 ft (18.3 m) LOA fixed
gear, are restricted in their amount of
Pacific cod catch in the first half of the
year because of SSL protection
measures, not just the trawl CP sector.
A goal of Amendment 85 is to reduce
the amount of reallocations due to
unharvested Pacific cod left toward the
end of the fishing year. The trawl CP
sectors have not harvested their entire
allocation in any year since that sector
began receiving a separate Pacific cod
allocation in 1997. The jig sector is the
only other sector that has also had
Pacific cod reallocated from it in every
year it has received a Pacific cod
allocation. Beginning in 2004, NMFS
has closed the trawl CP sector Pacific
cod fishery in mid-March due to
reaching its ‘‘A’’ season allowance. The
B season opens on April 1 and closes on
June 10. In 2005, NMFS closed the trawl
CP sector Pacific cod directed fishery on
August 18 because it had reached its
halibut PSC mortality limit. In 2006,
NMFS closed the trawl CP sector Pacific
cod directed fishery on June 8 (just
before the end of the B season), opened
it on July 19, and closed it on August
31 due to halibut PSC mortality
considerations. So in the last two years,
the trawl CP sector Pacific cod directed
fishery has been closed during the C
season due to reaching its halibut PSC
mortality limit. Halibut PSC mortality
limits and seasonal allowances to
protect SSLs have affected most sectors
to varying degrees. It is up to each sector
to try to keep its Pacific cod incidental
catch rates and PSC catch rates low if it
wants to maintain a directed fishery for
Pacific cod. Also note that the seasonal
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allowance percentages have changed
under Amendment 85 (see response to
Comment 22).
Comment 21: The State waters Pacific
cod fishery has taken 3 percent of the
Pacific cod ABC for the past two years,
to fund a fishery in Adak which is
closed to trawl CPs over 100 ft. This
reduces the BSAI Pacific cod TAC by 3
percent. While this is calculated by
NMFS to be taken ‘‘off the top,’’ if one
looks at the allocations to each sector,
it can be argued that it’s really the H&G
sector that took the hit. The H&G
sector’s 2004–2005 harvest (Table 3–12
- retained, incl. meal) was 17.7 percent.
The H&G allocation is 13.4 percent. The
cumulative effect of the increased CDQ
and State waters fishery, is a further
reduction in TAC of 6.2 percent. The
original ITAC was 92.5 percent of TAC,
now it will be 86.3 percent of TAC. This
reduction is spread disproportionately
among sectors.
Response: NMFS disagrees. The
Council is free to choose how much of
the Federal Pacific cod TAC it allocates
to small vessels regardless of the
existence of a State of Alaska-managed
Pacific cod fishery in State waters. The
State waters Pacific cod fishery is not
within the Council’s or NMFS’
jurisdiction and can be modified by the
State at any time. The amount of Pacific
cod set aside for the State waters fishery
has not and will not come from the nonAFA trawl CP sector allocation alone.
Additionally, all trawl CPs ≤100 ft (≤
30.5 m) do not have access to the State
waters Pacific cod fishery, not just the
non-AFA trawl CPs.
The process followed by NMFS in
setting the allocations for Pacific cod
each year in the annual specifications
process is to first deduct the amount of
Pacific cod for the State waters fishery
from the ABC. The remainder is the
TAC for a particular year. NMFS then
deducts the amount of Pacific cod
allocated to the CDQ Program. Finally,
the remaining non-CDQ TAC is divided
among the sectors. The reductions are
taken before allocations are made to the
non-CDQ sectors and, thus, affect all
sectors proportionately.
Comment 22: The EA/RIR/IRFA
analyzed the impact of reallocating cod
from trawl to fixed gear and determined
that the trawl CP sector would have no
C season cod, unless it rolled from
within the sector’s B season. Even with
no cod TAC reductions, the trawl CPs
will be severely constrained with the 50
percent limit for the A season, and this
will filter through to the end of the year.
The other trawl and fixed gear fleets that
were well funded are in no worse
position than they were prior to the
Amendment 85 action.
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Response: The Council directed that
allocations for the A and B seasons for
trawl gear and the A season for fixed
gear sectors be calculated to maintain
the current seasonal percentage of the
non-CDQ TAC that is allocated to those
sectors. This was done to allow directed
fishing for Pacific cod earlier in the year
when there is less PSC bycatch, Pacific
cod harvest rates are highest, and to
maintain SSL protection measures.
Under this action, the A season
allowance for the non-CDQ trawl CP
sectors will increase from 50 percent to
75, with the remaining 25 percent
seasonal allowance available in the B
season. That is why there would be a C
season harvest only if seasonal
allowances roll over from the A or B
seasons to the C season.
Comment 23: The non-AFA trawl CP
fleet makes important economic
contributions to remote Alaskan
communities that the Council’s reduced
allocation to that sector may well
jeopardize. The non-AFA trawl CP fleet
fishes year round, using support
services and relying on vendors which
would normally be closed in the late
spring/summer months were it not for
this fleet’s activities. The State of Alaska
assesses all fish landed in Alaska,
regardless of gear or sector designation.
Whether harvested by CVs or CPs, the
same landing taxes would be generated,
and given back to the communities in
which the fish would be offloaded. Any
suggestion that community impacts
support imposing the burden of funding
the increased small-boat allocations
solely (or even primarily) upon the nonAFA CP fleet is not based in fact or
supported by the record.
Response: NMFS acknowledges that
the non-AFA trawl CP fleet makes
economic contributions to the
communities visited by vessels in that
sector. Based on the EA/RIR/FRFA,
NMFS does not expect a significant
impact on remote Alaskan communities
due to the non-AFA trawl CP allocation
under Amendment 85. Any potential
negative effects on remote Alaskan
communities are likely to be
outweighed by the positive impacts of
the increased allocations to the small
boat sectors, which are based primarily
out of Alaskan communities. See
response to Comment 13 regarding the
‘‘funding’’ of the allocations to the small
boat sectors.
Comment 24: A separate section of the
Magnuson-Stevens Act, 16 U.S.C.
1853(b)(6) requires the Council and the
Secretary to consider a certain set of
relevant factors as a condition to
establishing a limited access system for
a fishery.
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Response: NMFS agrees that section
303(b)(6) of the Magnuson-Stevens Act
(16 U.S.C. 1853(b)(6)) requires the
Council and NMFS to take into account
several factors when establishing a
limited access system. However,
Amendment 85 does not establish a
limited access system for the Pacific cod
fishery because it does not affect
existing participation requirements for
the BSAI Pacific cod fishery. Therefore,
section 303(b)(6) is not applicable to
Amendment 85.
Comment 25: NMFS should approve
Amendment 85 with a Pacific cod
allocation for the AFA trawl CP sector
significantly greater than the 2.3 percent
proposed by the Council. Appropriately
calculated, the retained legal catch of
the AFA trawl CP sector averaged
approximately 2.5 percent of the total
retained legal catch of BSAI cod
between 1999 and 2003, the relevant
years following passage of the AFA in
1998. The 2.3–percent allocation
recommended by the Council and
contained in the proposed amendment
represents the absolute minimum
amount necessary to fund both the
bycatch needs of the AFA trawl CP
pollock fishery and the relatively small
directed fishery that at least one of the
AFA trawl CP vessels has been
conducting in the BSAI for many years.
Ultimately, the way the incidental catch
allowance is established and managed
will determine the extent to which these
objectives can be accomplished.
Response: The AFA trawl CP sector
will receive an allocation that is slightly
higher than its average historic harvest
from 1995 to 2003, one of only two nonsmall boat sectors to do so. About 44
percent of the Pacific cod harvested by
the AFA trawl CP sector during that
time period was taken incidentally
when these vessels were targeting BSAI
pollock. See the response to Comment 3
for why these years of historical harvest
are appropriate. The allocation to the
AFA trawl CP sector should be
sufficient for this sector to cooperatively
manage its allocation and maintain a
directed fishery in addition to meeting
its incidental catch needs in other
fisheries. The incidental catch
allowance for the AFA trawl CPs will be
established inseason with the intent of
maintaining a directed Pacific cod
fishery.
Comment 26: We support the
proposed rule’s plan to manage each of
the trawl sector incidental catch
allowances on an inseason basis. The
proposed amendment should be revised
to direct NMFS to manage any
incidental catch allowance established
in connection with the AFA trawl CP
sector’s Pacific cod allocation to
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facilitate, to the maximum extent
practicable, the prosecution of an early
season directed Pacific cod fishery
without jeopardizing the need to retain
sufficient Pacific cod for bycatch in the
directed pollock fishery later in the
year.
Response: NMFS notes the support for
establishing trawl sector incidental
catch allowances on an inseason basis.
NMFS’ existing policy for establishing
incidental catch allowances is to
facilitate, to the extent practicable,
directed fisheries while retaining
amounts needed as incidental catch in
other directed fisheries. NMFS does not
need regulatory authority to continue
this policy, so no regulatory changes are
necessary.
Comment 27: Tables 3 and 8 of the
proposed rule are inaccurate and
understate the legally retained BSAI
Pacific cod catch history of the AFA
trawl CP sector. Table 3 does not use the
‘‘best available data’’ to calculate the
AFA trawl CP sector’s catch history for
the years after 1998. In Table 8, the
range for the AFA trawl CP sector
includes a lower end point of 0.9
percent. That number is misleading for
several reasons: first, it is derived by
excluding fish utilized in the
production of meal; and second, it is
generated by using a WPR approach to
calculate retained catch. This is
inaccurate and prejudicial in that it
suggests a level of usage and
dependency that is significantly lower
than accurately calculated catch would
indicate.
Response: Regarding Table 3 in the
proposed rule, the response to Comment
2 explains why WPR data were used
instead of observer data to calculate
catch history. The purpose of including
Table 8 was to demonstrate the wide
range of allocations that were
considered by the Council. The
allocation to the AFA trawl CP sector is
slightly above its catch history as
calculated from WPR data from 1995
through 2003. Also see responses to
Comments 13 and 25.
Comment 28: We prefer to purchase
all of the Pacific cod for our restaurant
chain from a particular AFA trawl CP
because of the high quality of the
product. If the amount of Pacific cod
available for that vessel to harvest were
to decline, we would likely be forced to
purchase lower quality processed cod
from foreign commodity markets.
Response: Under Amendment 85 and
this final rule, the AFA trawl CP sector
will receive an allocation of Pacific cod
that is slightly above its historic harvest.
Because the AFA trawl CP sector
operates as a cooperative and has the
ability to control its harvest, NMFS
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anticipates that the amount of Pacific
cod allocated to the AFA trawl CP sector
will be sufficient to maintain the
sector’s directed fishery while meeting
its incidental catch needs in other
fisheries.
Comments on Dependency on the
Pacific Cod Fishery
Comment 29: The non-AFA trawl CP
sector asserted that the Pacific cod
allocation they received will be
insufficient to prosecute their flatfish
fisheries. However, that does not appear
to be the case. From 1999 to 2003, the
non-AFA trawl CP sector took 54
percent of their Pacific cod in directed
Pacific cod fishing and 46 percent
incidentally while targeting other
species (flatfish, etc.). In 2003, 63
percent of the non-AFA trawl CP sector
Pacific cod was taken in directed Pacific
cod fishing and 37 percent was taken
incidentally. The allocation the nonAFA trawl CP sector received is 90
percent of its 1997 to 2003 average catch
history. For comparison, the pot CP
sector received an allocation that is 88
percent of its 1997 to 2003 catch history.
The trawl CV sector allocation was 97
percent of its 1997 to 2003 catch history.
The hook-and-line CP sector received an
allocation that is 97 percent of its 1997
to 2003 catch history. However the
hook-and-line CP sector’s dependency
on BSAI Pacific cod is four times that
of the non-AFA trawl CP sector and
more than twice that of the pot CP
sector and the trawl CV sector.
Response: Please see the EA/RIR/
FRFA for the best available data on the
BSAI Pacific cod fishery. All the sectors
are dependent on the BSAI Pacific cod
resource, albeit to varying degrees.
Based on the average annual estimated
total first wholesale revenue from
groundfish products between 1999 and
2003, the hook-and-line CP sector is
more dependent than the other sectors
on the BSAI Pacific cod resource.
Comment 30: The proposed
allocations do not correlate with actual
dependency and use by sector. The nonAFA trawl CP sector is highly
dependent on Pacific cod as a directed
fishery and as an incidentally caught
species in every target fishery the sector
prosecutes. The H&G fleet will lose most
of its directed cod fishery under the
Amendment 85 allocation because
almost half of the cod harvested by the
H&G fleet is incidental cod in other
groundfish fisheries. This fishery now
represents over a quarter of all non-AFA
trawl CP sector revenues. This aggregate
figure, as large as it is, masks the fact
that Pacific cod accounts for well over
half of the revenues for particular nonAFA trawl CP vessels, particularly the
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smaller vessels in the fleet. If the
Amendment 85 allocation and CDQ
increases took place in 2007, and
assuming a harvest equal to that of 2005,
the fleet would shut down in late May
due to insufficient cod. The sector
would lose 34 percent of its annual 1999
to 2004 average revenues for the fleet.
Response: NMFS acknowledges that
the non-AFA trawl CP sector Pacific cod
allocation under Amendment 85 is less
than the percentage harvested by the
sector in very recent years and that this
sector’s harvest has increased in recent
years. However, the allocation is not
based on one or two recent years, but is
reflective of long-term dependence as
evidenced by harvest over a longer
period of time. The Council decided
that long-term dependence was
appropriate and NMFS determined that
the record supports this approach (see
response to Comment 15). Based on
recent fishing practices by the fleet,
NMFS has determined that this sector
will maintain a directed Pacific cod
fishery and will be able to prosecute
other fisheries (see response to
Comment 17).
Comment 31: The analysis does not
address the issue of lost revenue from
low allocations on either the H&G fleet’s
other groundfish fisheries or from loss
of the target fishery itself. Stating that 21
percent of the annual revenues of the
fleet are from cod oversimplifies the
picture. The information before the
Council on Amendment 80 (June 2006
C–1 Supplemental to Amendment 80)
states that the H&G sector’s revenues
from cod are actually 25 percent (99–04
avg). However, we are more realistically
100 percent dependent on cod because
it is critical to all our target fisheries.
Not only will we lose some percentage
revenue from loss of a directed cod
fishery, but we can lose the value of the
non-cod groundfish target fishery as
well. The Council and the analysis for
Amendment 85 also failed to consider
that the non-AFA trawl CP sector is
dependent on Pacific cod for incidental
catch in its flatfish, mackerel, and
rockfish fisheries. The first real analysis
of the impact of the Council’s decision
upon the non-AFA trawl CP sector was
made by NMFS only several weeks later,
and it found that impact to be severe.
Substantial bycatch of Pacific cod in
these fisheries is inevitable. This
bycatch amounts to almost half of the
non-AFA trawl CP sector’s harvest of
Pacific cod. We are no less dependent
on our cod revenue than a cod longliner
which does not engage in any other
groundfish fisheries. The reduction in
the Pacific cod allocation to the nonAFA trawl CP sector will affect its entire
BSAI fishing effort. Without cod, no one
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in the H&G fleet can fish in any BSAI
target.
Response: NMFS believes that the
non-AFA trawl CP sector has a
sufficient Pacific cod allocation for a
directed Pacific cod fishery. The size of
the directed Pacific cod fishery will
depend on the sector’s need for Pacific
cod as incidental catch in its other
directed groundfish fisheries. The EA/
RIR/IRFA examined this issue and
concluded that the sector’s directed
fishery is likely to be affected by the
allocation. The EA/RIR/FRFA
acknowledges the need for the
allocation to include incidental catch
needs on page 279: ‘‘The problem
statement for this amendment
emphasizes that the Pacific cod
allocations should be adjusted in order
to reduce uncertainty in, and provide
stability to, the sectors. Allocating
appropriate amounts of incidentally
caught cod, so that each sector’s
directed fisheries can be harvested, is an
important concern when creating
stability.’’ Also stated on page 293: ‘‘As
mentioned above, the non-AFA trawl CP
sector harvests a significant portion of
its BSAI Pacific cod as incidental catch
in a non-Pacific cod target fishery. Table
3–101 shows that the non-AFA trawl CP
sector harvested about 54 percent of its
total retained cod harvest in the target
cod fishery on average during 1999 to
2003; the remaining 46 percent was
harvested as incidental to all other
target fisheries, primarily the flatfish
fisheries (yellowfin sole, rock sole,
flathead sole, Atka mackerel, and Pacific
ocean perch). With a lower potential
allocation compared to recent years, this
sector will likely need to determine how
much of its cod allocation will be used
as incidental catch to other target
fisheries versus to fund the directed cod
fishery.’’ Also, see response to Comment
17.
What this sector is ‘‘losing’’ is the
opportunity to harvest an amount of
Pacific cod that is larger than its historic
use and dependence. The trawl CP
sector has not harvested its entire
allocation of Pacific cod since
allocations began in 1994. The trawl CP
sector has been the largest contributor to
the yearly reallocations that this
amendment is designed to reduce,
therefore, the allocation to the trawl CPs
is justified. Also see response to
Comment 30.
The commenter may be assuming
there is hard cap management under
Amendment 85, but Amendment 85
does not include this provision (see
response to Comment 77).
Comment 32: Incidental catch of
Pacific cod allows harvesters to
maximize the value of the other target
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species because it is in large part the
highest valued species in each of those
non-AFA trawl CP target fisheries.
Response: NMFS acknowledges that
Pacific cod is a valuable species. The
non-AFA trawl CP sector will have to
manage its Pacific cod allocation to
accommodate target and nontarget
needs to optimize the value of its
harvest of BSAI groundfish.
Comment 33: Non-AFA vessels are
excluded from any access to the pollock
fishery and now the Council is
proposing to take away from them a
significant portion of the Pacific cod
fishery that, over a demonstrated period
of years, they have used and are
dependent upon, while at the same time
augmenting the fishing privileges of
AFA trawl CP vessels that have neither
been using nor depending upon the cod
fishery at more than a minimal level
during that same relevant period. That
proposal does not comport with this
Council’s obligation to ‘‘protect other
fisheries . . . and the participants in
those fisheries . . . from adverse impacts
caused by [the AFA] or fishery
cooperatives in the directed pollock
fishery.’’
One final noteworthy recognition by
the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking is
that the Council decided to ‘‘maximize
the opportunity for a directed Pacific
cod fishery’’ for the AFA trawl CP
sector, 72 FR 5662 (col. 1, top), but was
content to underfund the non-AFA
trawl CP sector to such an extent that it
‘‘may be constrained in its ability to
conduct a directed fishery for Pacific
cod in order to have sufficient Pacific
cod available for incidental catch in its
other fisheries.’’ Id. (col. 1, bottom).
This turns upside down the Council’s
obligations under the AFA.
Response: Sideboards are intended to
prevent a sector from using advantages
gained from a rationalized fishery in a
fishery that is not rationalized. The
current AFA CP Pacific cod sideboard
prevents AFA trawl CPs from harvesting
a larger share of Pacific cod than the
sector harvested before the AFA.
Amendment 85 will separate the trawl
CPs that currently share one allocation
into two sectors, AFA and non-AFA.
The AFA trawl CP sector will receive
0.1 percent of non-CDQ TAC above its
average harvest history under
Amendment 85 and the non-AFA trawl
CP sector will receive exactly its average
historic harvest. The AFA trawl CP fleet
will be restricted to a separate allocation
slightly greater than its historic catch
from 1995 through 2003, but 62.3
percent below its current sideboard
limit for catch of Pacific cod. Although
the non-AFA vessels are excluded from
the pollock fishery in the BSAI, AFA
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sideboard provisions will continue to
restrict those vessels from participating
in other BSAI fisheries, and AFA trawl
CPs will continue to be prohibited from
fishing in the Gulf of Alaska. Therefore,
NMFS has determined that the AFA
trawl CP allocation of Pacific cod under
Amendment 85 is consistent with the
AFA. Also, separating the two sectors
will protect the historic catch of the
non-AFA trawl CPs better than leaving
these two sectors combined with a
lower shared allocation that reflects
their combined history, but with the
same AFA sideboard. NMFS believes
the allocations of Pacific cod to the AFA
and non-AFA trawl CP sectors are
sufficient for each sector’s directed
Pacific cod fishery and for their
incidental catch needs and that the
allocation for the non-AFA trawl CP
sector will be better protected under
Amendment 85 than leaving the sectors
combined.
Comment 34: To whatever extent the
sector’s total catch history is not
reflected in the initial allocation made
under Amendment 85, there will be
insufficient fish in the AFA trawl CP
sector’s allocation to meet the bycatch
needs of the pollock fishery without
depleting, at least to some extent, the
allocation that would otherwise be
available to our directed cod vessel. As
a consequence, the directed cod fishery
that vessel has traditionally conducted
during the early part of the fishing year
will likely be curtailed, if not
eliminated.
Response: Given that the allocation to
the AFA trawl CP sector under
Amendment 85 is slightly higher than
its average historic harvest, that
allocation should be sufficient for this
sector to cooperatively manage its
allocation and maintain a directed
fishery in addition to meeting its needs
for incidental catch in its pollock and
yellowfin sole fisheries.
Comment 35: The Council increased
the allocation to the AFA trawl CP
sector so that Pacific cod would not be
a limiting factor in prosecuting the BSAI
pollock fishery. From 1999 to 2003, the
AFA trawl CP sector took 84 percent of
its Pacific cod in directed Pacific cod
fishing and only 15 percent in the
pollock fishery. The proposed rule
states that 44 percent of the Pacific cod
taken by this sector occurs incidentally
in the pollock fishery. This is in contrast
to the analysis (15 percent), therefore
the proposed rule must be including
fishmeal and other factors. Either way,
it does not appear that the allocation
this sector received under Amendment
85 will be constraining in the pollock
fishery.
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Response: As stated in the proposed
rule, the allocation to the AFA trawl CP
sector was chosen to ‘‘maximize the
opportunity for a directed Pacific cod
fishery and to minimize the potential for
an increase in discards of Pacific cod if
catch exceeds the MRA.’’ The
commenter apparently relied on the
April 2006 draft analysis and used Table
3–105 which excluded fishmeal.
However, the information was revised
before submission to the Secretary. The
EA/RIR/FRFA includes fishmeal in the
revised information in Table 3–101 and
states on page 294 that, ‘‘the AFA CP
sector harvested about 56 percent of its
total retained cod harvest in the target
cod fishery on average during 1999–
2003, the remaining 44 percent was
harvested as incidental to other target
fisheries, primarily pollock.’’
Additionally, in the final Council
motion from April 2006, the Council
explicitly noted that in order to
determine PSC, the percentage of Pacific
cod harvested in the Pacific cod target
fishery by the trawl sectors should be
calculated on the basis of all cod catch
from 1999 through 2003, including that
designated for fishmeal production.
Comment 36: Only the hook-and-line
CP sector has a large and primary
dependence on BSAI Pacific cod; it is
the sector with the most dependence on
the BSAI Pacific cod resource. Over 80
percent of the wholesale revenues of the
hook-and-line CP sector come from
BSAI cod.
Response: NMFS agrees that the hookand-line CP sector is the sector that has
the highest portion of its income from
its Pacific cod fishery. However, other
sectors also depend on Pacific cod for a
significant portion of their income.
Comment 37: The H&G sector’s
Pacific cod use and dependence must be
considered and accommodated by
Amendment 85, just as was that of the
hook-and-line CP sector.
Response: The non-AFA trawl CP
sector will receive exactly its 1995 to
2003 average historic harvest under
Amendment 85. The hook-and-line CP
sector will receive 48.7 percent of the
non-CDQ Pacific cod TAC under
Amendment 85, which is closer to its
average historic harvest than its current
allocation of 40.8 percent. The hookand-line CP sector’s new allocation is
less in all cases than its share of the
retained harvest under various year
groupings: from 1995 through 2003,
from 2000 through 2003, and from 2004
and 2005 (see Amendment 85 proposed
rule Tables 3 and 4). However, its
history is much larger than its current
allocation due to reallocations of
unused Pacific cod from other sectors,
primarily the trawl CP sector.
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Amendment 85 was designed to reduce
the amount and frequency of these
reallocations to increase stability for all
sectors.
Comment 38: Amendment 85 will
provide increased stability to the sectors
with the most dependence on Pacific
cod by removing the uncertainty of the
amount of the potential annual harvest
for each sector (i.e., reduce annual
rollovers). This stability will promote
efficiency and planning for those same
sectors. For example, the increased
stability of the BSAI Pacific cod
allocation may facilitate the formation
of a hook-and-line CP cooperative that
can result in increased utilization and
efficiency.
Response: NMFS agrees that
Amendment 85 will increase stability in
the BSAI Pacific cod fishery.
Comment 39: The Council was
consistent with past allocation actions
by not including fishmeal when
considering dependency on the
resource.
Response: Contrary to the
commenter’s conclusion, the record for
Amendment 85 and this final rule
clearly demonstrate that the Council not
only considered fishmeal data, but
included fishmeal in the calculation of
catch history for the AFA trawl CP
sector allocation. When vessels directly
affected by a proposed allocation action
process fishmeal, it has been
considered. It depends on what sectors
or vessels are affected by an action as to
whether fishmeal has been included or
excluded. Fishmeal was not particularly
relevant other past allocation actions. In
current and proposed actions, fishmeal
was excluded in the preliminary
analysis for Gulf rationalization, which
has been tabled. There is now an option
to exclude fishmeal in the Gulf of
Alaska Pacific cod sector-split analysis.
However, these actions exclude the AFA
trawl CPs, which are the primary
producers of fishmeal. Therefore it is
consistent to include fishmeal in
considering a sector’s dependency on
Pacific cod under Amendment 85.
Comments on Groundfish Retention
Standard Under Amendment 79
Comment 40: The allocation to the
H&G fleet affects the Amendment 79
groundfish retention standard (GRS)
which the H&G fleet must meet, starting
in 2008. Once Pacific cod is closed to
directed fishing, and is taken as an
incidental catch in other fisheries, it is
subject to a maximum retainable
amount of 20 percent of the total
groundfish catch aboard a vessel. This
will make compliance with the
groundfish retention standards of
Amendment 79 very difficult for most
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vessels. The Aleutian Island cod fishery
is a very high retention fishery, and it
essentially is no longer an option for us.
According to NMFS inseason managers,
the fleet will only have enough fish to
fund an early directed cod fishery,
which is essential as it occurs
simultaneous to the rock sole fishery.
The loss of our Aleutian Islands cod
target is going to pose a retention
hardship for two reasons: one, we lose
our March cod target fishery in lieu of
bycatch needs for the rest of the year,
and two, the H&G fleet’s cod will be on
bycatch status for the majority of the
year. So the reduced allocation has put
the fleet in a position of mandatory
discards of a mandatory retention
species, until or unless the sector is able
to form cooperatives under Amendment
80.
Response: As explained in the
response to Comment 17, based on the
actual TAC for 2007, but with the larger
CDQ allocation of 10.7 percent, NMFS
estimates there would be 19 to 20 days
of directed fishing under the current
practices of the non-AFA trawl CP
sector. If the sector reduces its
incidental catch needs for Pacific cod in
its other directed fisheries, its Pacific
cod directed fishery could last longer.
Typically, the non-AFA trawl CP sector
targets Atka mackerel, rock sole,
yellowfin sole and Pacific cod in
January and the Pacific cod fishery
peaks in March. The non-AFA trawl CP
sector usually catches 80 percent of its
Pacific cod allocation in the first two
seasons, which is its seasonal
allowance. To meet the GRS after their
directed Pacific cod fishery is closed,
the non-AFA trawl CPs will need to fish
in a manner that maintains incidental
catch rates at levels that minimize
regulatory discards. Therefore, meeting
the GRS under Amendment 85 may be
more difficult for the non-AFA trawl CP
sector.
If directed fishing for Pacific cod has
not been closed to the non-AFA trawl
CP sector, then this sector has had to
keep their entire catch of Pacific cod,
which improves their retention rate. But
if the non-AFA trawl CP Pacific cod
directed fishery will now be closed most
of the year, the non-AFA trawl CP sector
must retain up to the MRA. Any catch
over the MRA must be discarded and
those discards will count in the
retention calculation under the GRS,
potentially making it more difficult to
comply with the GRS.
However, compliance with the GRS
should be easier for the vessels that join
a cooperative under Amendment 80,
which was approved by the Secretary on
July 26, 2007. The non-AFA trawl CPs
may form harvesting cooperatives by the
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start of 2008 if Amendment 80 is
implemented by January 1, 2008, which
also is the effective date for this final
rule to implement Amendment 85.
Additionally, the Council has adopted a
regulatory amendment that would
adjust the accounting period for MRA
amounts for particular species including
Pacific cod. If approved by the
Secretary, this adjustment also would be
effective by January 1, 2008, and would
reduce regulatory discards and facilitate
compliance with the GRS under
Amendment 79 to the FMP.
Comment 41: The revised Secretarial
review EA/RIR/IRFA (October 2006)
merely references the Groundfish
Retention Standard (GRS) in one
sentence that acknowledges that Pacific
cod, as a highly retained species, is
important to the non-AFA trawl CP
sector in meeting the GRS. Neither
Section 2.3.9 (Cumulative Effects) nor
Section 2.3.9.1 (Past and Present
Actions) mentions the Amendment 79
GRS in relation to the sector’s cod
allocation and what the loss of its
directed fishery and lowered allocation
will do to the sector’s ability to meet the
retention standard. There is no attempt
to estimate the impact of a reduced
allocation on the ability of the sector, or
small vessels in particular, to meet the
GRS scheduled for implementation in
2008. The analysis should have
considered the impact of the non-AFA
trawl CP sector’s Amendment 85
allocation on the ability of this sector to
function under status quo management
(no harvesting cooperatives) when the
GRS is imposed in 2008. The tipping
point on meeting the GRS with regard
to this action is the reduced cod
allocation, not the open access race for
fish.
Response: The Secretarial review draft
EA/RIR/IRFA does discuss the
cumulative effects of Amendment 85 in
conjunction with the GRS and
Amendment 80 in Section 2.3.9
‘‘Cumulative Effects’’ under section
2.3.9.2 ‘‘Recent and Reasonably
Foreseeable Future Actions.’’ Improved
retention rates are the intended effect of
the GRS action under Amendment 79.
Implementation of Amendments 79, 80,
and 85 are planned for 2008. The GRS
would be phased in over a four-year
period.
The reduced allocation to the nonAFA trawl CP sector likely will reduce
its directed fishery, but the vessels still
will be retaining Pacific cod to comply
with improved retention/improved
utilization requirements up to the 20
percent MRA percentage established for
Pacific cod after the directed fishery is
closed. The catch of Pacific cod beyond
the 20 percent MRA threshold must be
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discarded. However, a vessel’s total
catch of Pacific cod still would be
included in the calculation used by
NMFS to assess compliance with the
annual GRS ratio of retained catch to
total catch. Thus, NMFS expects the
GRS program would provide an
incentive for the sector to fish for its
other targeted groundfish species in a
manner that reduces the incidental
catch of Pacific cod to the extent
practicable. In 2008, the GRS will be at
a relatively low level to reflect fleetwide status quo. As the GRS ratio steps
up over the next four years, NMFS
anticipates that it will parallel other
new proposed management measures
that provide additional opportunity for
retention of groundfish, including
proposed adjustments to the MRA
accounting period for some species and
Amendment 80.
The EA/RIR/FRFA recognizes that
compliance with the GRS by the nonAFA trawl CP fleet with its new Pacific
cod allocation under Amendment 85
will be more difficult. However, the
purpose of Amendment 85 was to
allocate Pacific cod based on historical
retained catch in addition to
socioeconomic and community
concerns, not to allocate Pacific cod in
a manner that would facilitate
compliance with the GRS. There are
other ways the fleet can improve its
retention rates of Pacific cod without
the allocation it has had in the past. For
example, by avoiding fishing in areas
with high bycatch rates of Pacific cod.
Regarding the estimation of economic
impacts, the Secretarial review draft
analysis stated ‘‘The Groundfish PSEIS
[Programmatic Supplemental
Environmental Impact Statement] noted
that the availability and consistency of
data limits the ability to analyze the
effects of past actions on the economic
condition of selected sectors of the
Alaska groundfish fishery. According to
the Groundfish PSEIS, analyses are also
limited by the difficulty of delineating
the cause-and-effect relationships
between multiple factors and the
resultant economic effects. Many factors
substantially affect the economic status
of the Alaska groundfish fishery.
Changes in markets, biological
conditions and fishery management
regulations can result in changes in the
revenues and operating costs of firms
participating in the fisheries and
changes in fleet size and composition.
Isolating the effects of a single factor is
seldom possible.’’
Amendment 80 will provide target
allocations of Atka mackerel, flathead
sole, Pacific ocean perch, rock sole, and
yellowfin sole to the non-AFA trawl CP
sector and allows the formation of
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harvest cooperatives. Sector allocations
and associated cooperatives will allow
participants to focus less on harvest
maximization and more on optimizing
harvest. The Secretarial review draft
analysis further notes that, ‘‘Absent a
cooperative structure as approved (by
the Council) in Amendment 80, it is
expected that compliance with the
groundfish retention standards and
management of a lower Pacific cod
allocation to serve both directed and
incidental catch needs, will be
substantially more difficult.’’ Note that
the GRS pertains only to non-AFA trawl
CP vessels that are ≥125 ft (38.1 m)
LOA, not to smaller vessels. However,
under Amendment 80, the GRS will
apply to all non-AFA trawl CP vessels
regardless of length.
Comments on Cumulative Effects
Comment 42: By applying the 13.4–
percent allocation to, and deducting the
3 percent State water set-aside and 10.7
percent CDQ allocation from, the 2005
TAC for Pacific cod, the H&G fleet
allocation would have been 23,911 mt,
a loss of 6,000 mt from the H&G actual
harvest in 2005. This represents a loss
of $11 million in Pacific cod alone. The
H&G fleet fully harvested 23,911 mt of
Pacific cod by mid-June in 2005. The
fleet would have been unable to harvest
its other directed fisheries after June
11th and lost $43 million in its second
half of the year target fisheries. In
comparing the losses of different fleets,
if the longline fleet lost 6,095 mt, that
would be a loss of $11 million. The
same fish represents a loss of $54
million to the H&G fleet, or, roughly 35
percent of its annual revenues. This was
not analyzed in any Amendment 85
document.
Response: The non-AFA trawl CP
fleet will have less Pacific cod available
than it does under the current
allocations, however, this scenario
would not happen under Amendment
85. Because NMFS anticipates that the
trawl sectors will fully harvest the
Pacific cod allocations under
Amendment 85, NMFS also anticipates
it will need to establish an incidental
catch allowance for each trawl sector.
Under this final rule, NMFS will
develop incidental catch allowances for
each trawl sector on an inseason basis,
rather than through the annual harvest
specification process. The directed
fishery for the non-AFA trawl CP sector
will likely be shorter than in the past,
thus the possible loss, but under
Amendment 85 the other non-AFA
trawl CP fisheries will be managed with
the intent of avoiding closures for lack
of sufficient Pacific cod. Also, under
this final rule, the non-AFA trawl CP
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sector will continue to be managed
under a soft cap for incidental catch of
Pacific cod.
Comment 43: The non-AFA CP fleet
has not received representative
allocations. We see that if these
allocations were in effect in 2005, the
fleet would have shut down in June,
losing 35 percent of its annual revenues.
This incurs economic harm not only to
our fleet but also to remote communities
that depend on the activities of the nonAFA CP fleet. As the sole harvesters of
target fisheries that will be left in the
water because of an inadequate cod
allocation, communities will not receive
landing tax revenues from that fish, and
support service revenues from that fleet.
Amendment 80 allocates 90 percent of
the Atka mackerel and Pacific ocean
perch to the H&G fleet. However, we
saw that if Amendment 85, the State
water fishery and the increased CDQ
were in effect in 2005, half of the Atka
mackerel would have been left in the
water and all of the Pacific ocean perch,
from a June 11th closure. This directly
harms the residents of Atka and Adak.
Stranding fish is not obtaining optimum
yield.
Response: Under this action, an
incidental catch allowance of Pacific
cod will be established for use in the
other non-AFA trawl CP sector directed
fisheries. See response to Comment 42.
Comment 44: Effective 2007, the
Central Gulf of Alaska Rockfish Pilot
Program goes into effect. Originally a
two-year program, it was recently
extended to five years under the
Magnuson-Stevens Act reauthorization.
That program limits participation in the
Central Gulf rockfish fisheries to 15
H&G vessels. As with Gulf cod, and
BSAI pollock, entry into other fisheries
by the H&G fleet, and therefore other
options, is becoming more restricted.
These fisheries would have provided
relief in the event that the lowered cod
allocation shuts down the H&G fisheries
prematurely.
Response: Amendment 85 does not
contain measures that would prevent
the non-AFA trawl CP sector from
prosecuting its target fisheries. NMFS
agrees that participation in Gulf of
Alaska and BSAI fisheries is becoming
more restricted as participation in these
fisheries becomes more restricted. See
response to Comment 42.
Comments on Small Boat Sector
Allocations
Comment 45: The allocation process
was reasonably fair and equitable. The
jig and <60 ft (18.3 m) LOA fixed gear
CV sectors received allocations larger
than their respective catch histories.
Accordingly, the majority of the other
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sectors then received allocations smaller
than their respective catch histories to
offset and ‘‘fund’’ those increases.
However, the allocations in Amendment
85 were the result of a fair and equitable
process and did not discriminate by
residency.
Response: Comment noted.
Comment 46: Other considerations
given to the small boat sectors under
Amendment 85 include (1) adjusting the
jig trimester apportionment to put more
fish in the A season, (2) establishing a
new hook-and-line CV halibut PSC
category that enables longline CVs to
fish in the summer months, and (3) a
new hierarchy of potential rollovers.
The Council felt these considerations
and the resulting allocations in
Amendment 85 amply addressed
National Standard 8.
Response: Comment noted.
Comment 47: We support the
principle of adequately funding small
boat, entry-level fisheries.
Response: Comment noted.
Comment 48: Allocations to the jig
and <60 ft (18.3 m) LOA fixed gear
sectors were made without
consideration of either the Alaska State
waters fishery in which such vessels
could participate or the likelihood that
those Pacific cod allocations will, in
fact, be utilized. A result of this overallocation is that much of the cod nonCDQ TAC allocated to these sectors will
rollover, first through various inshore
fisheries, including to the trawl catcher
vessel fleet; none, however, will likely
ever roll back to the H&G sector. Such
a result is at odds with the Amendment
85 goal of minimizing rollovers.
Response: NMFS disagrees. The State
waters Pacific cod fishery was
considered by the Council when the
allocations to sectors were made. This
fishery was established by the State to
meet local needs in the area of Adak,
Alaska, in the Aleutian Islands and is
not readily accessible to small boat
operators fishing in other coastal areas
of the Bering Sea. Additionally, the
purpose of Amendment 85 is to revise
the allocations to the various sectors to
more closely reflect historic harvest; a
goal of the amendment is to decrease
rollovers, not eliminate them. The
Council’s purpose in giving the small
boat sectors allocations greater than
their histories was to encourage the
growth of these entry-level sectors in
accordance with National Standard 8.
Since 2001, the <60 ft (18.3 m) LOA
fixed gear CV sector has harvested all of
its allocation and since 2002 has
harvested increasing amounts of
rollovers from the jig sector, including
in 2006, the first year of the State waters
fishery. The allocation to the jig sector
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is reduced under Amendment 85. Also,
the amount of the reallocations from the
small boat sectors is historically much
smaller than the amount of the
reallocations from the trawl sectors,
thus supporting the Council’s goal of
increasing stability.
Comment 49: The non-AFA trawl CP
sector was cut in order to fund a 4
percent small boat fishery. When asked
by another Council member what was
the rationale for the H&G allocation of
13.2 percent (as originally introduced)
rather than the mid-point years’ average,
the maker of the motion stated ‘‘It was
really how to fund that 4 percent and
make the numbers work and that is my
rationale for that number.’’ While
creating room and incentives for growth
in the small hook-and-line and pot
catcher vessel and jig fisheries was a
goal of Amendment 85, the cost for
doing so should not fall on only one of
the most cod-dependent sectors.
Shifting of cod from one of the most
dependent sectors (non-AFA trawl CP)
to perhaps the least runs counter to the
objective of matching cod allocations
with use and historical dependence.
During Council discussion on
Amendment 85, the maker of the motion
stated that the trawl sector should fund
the jig set-aside since the fixed gear
sector had been doing that in the past.
This was given as the justification for so
dramatically decreasing the non-AFA
trawl catcher-processor allocation (from
recent use above 18 percent to an
allocation of only 13.4 percent). The
record does not support the assertion
that the fixed gear fleet and not the
trawl fleet had historically funded
increases for the small boat sector. It is
not clear from the record that the
(proposed) jig allocation actually came
from any one sector; however, if the
assumption was that the new allocation
percentages represented a shift in the
responsibility for the jig set-aside from
fixed gear to the trawl sector, then all
trawl sectors should have been similarly
assessed.
There was no consideration or
analysis of the possibility,
appropriateness, or impact of imposing
the burden of funding those increases
unequally. The Secretarial review draft
analysis expressly acknowledges this,
stating that the extra allocations to the
small sector were ‘‘deducted . . .
principally from the non-AFA sector
amounts.’’ It is not fair and equitable to
impose the burden on the non-AFA
sectors and not on the AFA sectors,
particularly given the AFA’s mandate to
the Council to protect the non-AFA fleet
from AFA encroachment in fisheries
other than pollock. There was no
separate analysis, or vote, on spreading
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the burden of the small boat incentives
unequally. What is clear is that no
rationale has ever been given for
disadvantaging either the non-AFA
sectors generally (which the Secretarial
review draft analysis asserts is the group
that the Council disadvantaged) or the
H&G sector in particular.
The estimated cost, at 2007 TAC and
2005 harvest rates, to the H&G fleet of
an estimated $46 million, or 34 percent
of their annual revenues, far outweighs
the benefit to a small boat fleet which
has historically never harvested its
allocation. We have no quarrel with the
Council’s decision to make those
adjustments. There is no justification,
however, for imposing the burden of
funding them entirely or primarily upon
the H&G sector.
Response: Neither the non-AFA trawl
CP sector nor any other sector
exclusively funded the allocation to the
small boat sectors. Despite the remarks
made by the Council member and based
on the average historic harvest from
1995 to 2003, it would appear that
neither the AFA trawl CP sector nor the
non-AFA trawl CP sector funded the
small boat sector allocations because the
former will receive slightly above its
average historic harvest and the latter
will receive exactly its average historic
harvest. There is nothing in the
Secretarial review draft analysis
addressing the impact on other sectors
because there were no specific amounts
taken from any particular sector to fund
the small boat sectors.
For the small boat sectors to receive
allocations above their average historic
harvest, four sectors will receive less
than their 1995 to 2003 average historic
harvests: pot CV ≥60 ft (18.3 m) LOA,
hook-and-line CP, pot CP, and trawl CV
(see paragraph seven of the response to
Comment 13). The trawl CV sector is
comprised of AFA and non-AFA
vessels, so considering all the sectors
that will receive an allocation below
their average historic harvest, most of
them are non-AFA sectors. The nonAFA sectors are not disadvantaged, they
merely outnumber the AFA sectors by a
ratio of eight to one.
Comment 50: The Council made a
policy decision to deviate from its stated
goal of conforming actual use and
dependency by allocating to the jig and
<60 ft (18.3 m) LOA fixed gear CV
sectors a combined 2.4 percent above
their historic harvest of the Pacific cod
TAC. Assuming that the Council would
be justified in shifting that 2.4 percent
to those sectors because of the predicted
salutary impact on coastal communities
and related economic and social
consequences, it is not legitimate to take
that 2.4 percent entirely from other non-
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AFA sectors. In the analysis for
Amendment 85, the potential impact of
providing the small boat sectors with an
allocation above their actual use and
dependency was limited to a scenario in
which the extra shares needed to fund
that incentive were taken from all other
sectors proportionally; no analysis was
made of the disproportionate impacts
that would result from the scenario,
eventually chosen by the Council, of
taking that extra 2.4 percent exclusively
from non-AFA sectors.
Response: The Pacific cod allocations
for the jig and <60 ft (18.3 m) LOA fixed
gear sectors did not come exclusively
from any particular sectors. As
explained in the response to Comment
49, several sectors received less than
their 1995 to 2003 average historic
harvest of Pacific cod to fund the small
boat sectors.
Comments on Reallocations
Comment 51: Amendment 85 will not
resolve the reallocation issues raised in
the problem statement created by the
Council for the action. By overallocating cod to small, shore-based
fisheries that have a history of underfishing current allocations, and ignoring
the important aspect of Alaska’s
creation of a state waters fishery, this
action insures continued rollovers at or
above current levels.
Response: The problem statement
does not seek to eliminate inseason
reallocations, but to decrease them by
adjusting Pacific cod allocations to
better reflect historic use by sector.
Historically, 76.6 percent of the
reallocations between 2000 and 2004
resulted from the trawl sectors not
harvesting their entire allocations, with
a much smaller amount of unharvested
Pacific cod coming from the small,
shore-based fisheries. Based on this
information, NMFS determined that the
new allocations to the sectors will
reduce reallocations in the future. Also,
see response to Comment 48.
Comment 52: NMFS will likely set the
incidental catch allowance for the nonAFA trawl CP sector higher than the
anticipated need, to ensure that there is
enough Pacific cod available to fund
other sector fisheries. The cod which is
not used in the incidental catch
allowance will probably not be enough
to fund a separate (late-season) directed
fishery, so will roll over to another
sector. This will continue the very
situation (rollovers) which Amendment
85 was supposed to fix. In effect, the
H&G sector loses cod allocation well
beyond the amounts that were rolling
over in the past, and the allocation
scheme ensures that more fish will roll
over in the future.
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Response: As explained in response to
Comment 48, Amendment 85 was not
intended to eliminate rollovers. Under
this final rule, NMFS will create an
incidental catch allowance for the nonAFA trawl CP sector to use for Pacific
cod caught incidentally in its other
directed fisheries. Because the non-AFA
trawl CP sector tends to target Pacific
cod early in the year, NMFS will
estimate an incidental catch allowance
early in the year in order to close the
sector’s directed fishery while there is
enough of the sector’s Pacific cod
allocation remaining for incidental
catch in the other non-AFA trawl CP
groundfish fisheries. Whether the
allowance is set too high will depend on
how well the non-AFA trawl CP sector
can avoid Pacific cod incidental catch in
its other fisheries. If the sector can lower
its incidental catch rate, the directed
fishery will have more Pacific cod
available for its target fishery. Pacific
cod still may be harvested and retained
once the directed fishery is closed,
albeit at the lower rate of 20 percent
under MRA regulations. A large portion
of the Pacific cod harvest in this sector
historically has been taken as incidental
catch. This trend is expected to
continue until vessels are able to form
cooperatives and opportunities to
change fishing strategies present
themselves.
The commenter presents only one
scenario. NMFS anticipates that without
cooperatives, the Pacific cod fishery will
be prosecuted much as it has been in the
past. NMFS will do its best to ensure
that each trawl sector can fully harvest
its allocation. If the non-AFA trawl CP
sector can reduce its incidental catch of
Pacific cod, it may be that the incidental
catch amount will be greater than the
sector’s needs, but not large enough for
another directed fishery.
A goal of Amendment 85 is to reduce
reallocations, not eliminate them. NMFS
has determined that the allocations will
result in lower amounts of reallocations
from all sectors. If Amendment 80 is
implemented by January 1, 2008, NMFS
will manage Pacific cod for the nonAFA trawl CP sector in accordance with
Amendment 80.
Comment 53: The current allocations
(from the 1995 action) do not reflect
actual catch by sectors of BSAI Pacific
cod, principally due to rollovers of
uncaught allocations from the trawl and
jig sectors. The trawl sectors
consistently have not caught their
allocation which has resulted in
rollovers from the trawl sectors to the
fixed gear sectors every year since 1995
- both before and after SSL mitigation
measures. The average rollover from the
trawl sectors has been 16,765 mt per
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year (1995 - 2005). At the same time, the
freezer-longliners are the only sector
that consistently caught their entire
allocation on an annual basis. Since
1995, the freezer-longliners have also
been catching the majority of the
rollover from the trawl sectors and
uncaught allocations from other sectors
as well (jig, pot, etc.).
Response: The EA/RIR/FRFA contains
the data concerning this issue in Table
3–24 and it represents the best scientific
information available on the subject.
Comment 54: The increasing trend in
the fixed gear allocation is a reflection
of trawl rollovers. Trawl sectors have
not caught their allocations for a
number of reasons, one of which is
halibut PSC mortality. From 1995 to
2005, the combined trawl sectors caught
a decreasing amount of Pacific cod
while increasing the rate of halibut PSC
mortality by 47 percent (mt halibut PSC
per mt Pacific cod). During the same
time period, the hook-and-line sectors
were catching an increasing amount of
Pacific cod while decreasing the rate of
halibut PSC mortality by 31 percent. In
2005, the trawl rate was 3.4 times higher
than the hook-and-line rate (mt halibut
PSC per mt Pacific cod).
Response: The EA/RIR/FRFA
examines reallocation among gear types
in Section 3.3.5.7 and it represents the
best scientific information available on
the subject.
Comment 55: NMFS should
disapprove the rollover (reallocation)
hierarchy contained in the proposed
rule because the inshore sectors already
have healthy allocations and would be
first in line for the rollovers. NMFS
should send this portion of Amendment
85 back to the Council with instructions
to give non-AFA trawl CPs priority
access to the rollovers from the jig and
<60 ft (18.3 m) LOA fixed gear sectors.
Response: NMFS has determined that
the reallocation hierarchy proposed by
the Council is consistent with the
purpose and need for Amendment 85
and that it is consistent with the
Magnuson-Stevens Act and other
applicable law and has approved it with
this final rule. This reallocation
hierarchy is consistent with the
Council’s decision to increase the
harvest opportunities for the fleets that
deliver shoreside to coastal fishing
communities, a consideration under
National Standard 8.
Comment 56: Prioritizing rollovers to
the AFA trawl CP sector would help
accomplish the Council’s goal of
‘‘maximizing to the extent practicable’’
the opportunity for the AFA trawl CP
sector to conduct its directed cod
fishery at the beginning of the year.
Knowing that the surplus ‘‘C season’’
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cod that has traditionally rolled over
from the AFA trawl CP sector during the
last half of the fishing year would be
available to support nontarget needs in
the AFA trawl CP sector during the
pollock A and B seasons would help
facilitate inseason incidental catch
management so as to permit full funding
of the directed cod fishery that one AFA
trawl CP vessel conducts early in the
year.
Response: See response to Comment
55 which is applicable to the AFA CP
sector as well as the non-AFA CP sector.
Also see the responses to Comments 13
and 25 for more information regarding
the AFA trawl CP sector allocations.
Comments on Process Followed for
Adoption of Amendment 85
Comment 57: The Council’s action
was taken too quickly for the regulated
community to provide informed public
comment. The process for consideration
of Amendment 85 made it difficult, if
not impossible, for the public to
comment effectively on, or the Council
to understand the impacts of, the
decisions it was making. The
Magnuson-Stevens Act generally
prescribes that a regional fishery
management council will hold public
hearings in conjunction with the FMP
amendment process. See 16 U.S.C.
1852(h)(3). The law also provides for a
separate opportunity for ‘‘interested
persons’’ to make comment at ‘‘business
meetings of a Council.’’
Response: The public was provided
ample notice and opportunity to
comment on Amendment 85 in
accordance with APA and MagnusonStevens Act procedures. The public had
several opportunities to comment on
Pacific cod sector allocations at Council
meetings prior to the Council’s final
action in April 2006 and during the
comment period on the FMP
amendment. The December 2004
Council meeting was the first
opportunity the public had to comment
specifically on Amendment 85 at the
first presentation of the discussion
paper for Amendment 85. Amendment
85 was on the agenda of every Council
meeting from December 2004 until final
action in April of 2006, for a total of
eight Council meetings. The Federal
Register notice for the April 2006
Council meeting included a statement
that final action would be taken on
Amendment 85. A draft analysis of
Amendment 85 was prepared by the
Council and made available for public
review prior to the Council taking
action. The analysis was then further
refined to reflect the effects of the
Council’s action prior to submission for
Secretarial review.
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Comment 58: The non-AFA trawl CP
sector lacked the opportunity to discern
and explain the implications of the
Council’s actions before the Council’s
final decision making. As a result, the
non-AFA trawl CP fleet focused its
public testimony in support of options
that best mirrored the sector’s recent use
and dependence. The first indication
that the Council was developing an
option that included a non-AFA trawl
CP sector allocation that was at the
lowest end of the range under
consideration and heavily weighted prefull retention and pre-AFA years, came
when the Council began their
deliberations. No further public
comment was allowed before final
action, however. The non-AFA trawl CP
sector has no representation on the
Council. Without the benefit of an H&G
representative on the Council to
participate in the deliberations, the
Council members cannot and clearly did
not fully realize the impact of their
actions. The result was the non-AFA
trawl CP fleet was denied a reasonable
opportunity to discern and explain the
implications of the Council’s proposed
action before final action was taken.
Response: There were many
opportunities for the public to comment
on Amendment 85 (see the response to
Comment 57). Several allocation options
were presented in the draft analysis that
was released to the public in March
2006. These options included
allocations to the non-AFA trawl CP
sector that ranged from 12.7 to 16.2
percent of the non-CDQ BSAI Pacific
cod TAC. The April draft of the EA/RIR/
IRFA presented the Council with the
information it needed to make the
allocation decisions in various tables,
with more information on fishmeal
presented to the Council and the public
at the April Council meeting before
public testimony and final action by the
Council. After receiving public
comment, the Council chose the option
to select percentages for Pacific cod
allocated to each sector that fell within
the range of percentages analyzed.
Please see the response to Comment 3
for an explanation of the consideration
of catch history from 1995 through
2003. No year was weighted more
heavily than any other. Only the first
three years of history out of a total of
nine years considered were before full
retention and the AFA. Not having a
representative on the Council should
not negatively impact a sector. The
Council members take a sworn oath to
manage in the best interests of all and
are to act impartially.
Comment 59: No preliminary
preferred alternative was identified by
the Council. As a result, the analysts,
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public, and the Council did not have the
opportunity to fully understand,
comment on, and evaluate the impacts
of Amendment 85. Identifying a
preliminary preferred alternative before
final action may not be required, but for
complicated actions it should be.
Response: As the commenter notes,
the Council was not required to identify
a preliminary preferred alternative
before taking final action on
Amendment 85. The analysis before the
Council in April 2006 provided the
Council and the public with the
information necessary for final action on
Amendment 85. Each option under
consideration for each component was
fully analyzed and when an option in
one component may have affected
options under consideration in another
component, those impacts were
identified and explained in such a way
that the Council and the public could
understand the impacts of its decision.
For example, seasonal allowances were
changed to maintain to the extent
possible the current percentage of nonCDQ Pacific cod TAC available for
harvest in the early part of the year
when fishing for Pacific cod is more
advantageous. NMFS notes the
commenter’s statement that a
preliminary preferred alternative should
be identified by the Council prior to
taking final actions that are
complicated.
Comment 60: The Amendment 85
decision making process was rushed, its
analyses were inadequate, and the
impacts of the Council decision were
not well understood. When the Council
chose the ‘‘mix and match’’ approach
instead of a ‘‘packaged alternative’’ and
moved directly to final action, rather
than selecting its desired allocation as a
preliminary preferred alternative for
further analysis and public comment,
the Council basically acted without
understanding the impacts of this
decision. When one aggrieved
stakeholder was able to convince
Council members that it suffered from
certain unintended consequences, the
Council took the matter up again to
institute a discrete fix for one vessel.
However, the law requires that all
members of the public have an
opportunity to understand the impacts
of a proposed action and an equal
opportunity to be heard in the process.
As originally passed, the Council
recommended that Amendment 85
allocate the H&G sector an amount of
Pacific cod that was just over its average
harvest, 13.7 percent during the 1995–
2003 period. The telling fact that this
process devolved into a matter of
political compromise rather than
informed decision making, in violation
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of National Standard 2, was that the
Council decided to reconsider final
action upon discovery of an
‘‘unintended consequence.’’ Expressing
concern that the 1.5–percent allocation
chosen for the AFA catcher-processor
sector might disproportionately impact
the one vessel in that sector that targets
cod (notwithstanding the recent use of
that sector in the range of 1 percent), the
Council voted to increase the AFA
catcher-processor sector’s allocation to
2.3 percent. Part of the Pacific cod that
went to ‘‘fund’’ that increase came from
the H&G sector, which ended up with a
reduced allocation of just 13.4 percent.
This action should also have been
analyzed in light of the statutory
protections the American Fisheries Act
grants to non-pollock fisheries. Such
weighing and analysis was lacking in
this instance. There was no opportunity
for public input during the
reconsideration and the Amendment 85
allocation was made without the
Council having made a reasonable
record of how the allocation it chose for
the AFA sector ‘‘protects’’ the non-AFA
fleets. Further, this allocation exceeds
the AFA catcher-processor sector’s
current use (i.e., since 2001) by as much
as 90 percent. It was incumbent upon
the Council to make a good-faith effort
to examine and fulfill its duties to the
non-AFA sectors that funded this
reallocation. That was not done. The
stated rationale for the revision was the
(highly questionable) bycatch needs of
the AFA trawl CP sector. At the very
least the non-AFA trawl CP fleet had far
greater bycatch needs that were ignored
not only in Amendment 85 and in
Council discussion but were
exacerbated once a table using fishmeal
was presented during the Council
discussion, but not analyzed in the EA/
RIR/IRFA, surfaced. But no opportunity
was allowed for public comment at that
point, and there is no non-AFA trawl CP
sector representative on the Council
who would have been in a position to
alert Council members to the disparity.
We support full Secretarial
disapproval of the amendment based on
lack of adequate analysis which resulted
in the Council not fully understanding
the impact of their actions, and based on
the fact that the Council action did not
take the non-AFA trawl CP recent
history into consideration. The ultimate
impact has been to jeopardize the
viability of the H&G fleet, in particular,
the vessels which are heavily reliant on
cod.
Response: The public was notified
that final action on Amendment 85
would be taken at the April 2006
Council meeting (see response to
Comment 57). A draft analysis was
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prepared prior to that meeting. Because
there were questions about including
Pacific cod that was turned into
fishmeal as the primary product in the
calculations of retained legal harvest,
tables showing that information were
passed out at the Council meeting (see
response to Comment 2) prior to public
testimony and the Council’s
deliberation, so the public had an
opportunity to respond to the
information. The fishmeal data were
included in the Secretarial review draft
analysis. The Council and NMFS
consider fishmeal to be part of the
retained legal harvest for Pacific cod.
Fishmeal is the primary product from
the AFA trawl CP sector’s incidental
catch of Pacific cod. To exclude it from
the AFA sector’s history would be
equivalent to excluding the non-AFA
trawl CP’s sector’s incidental catch
history from its other fisheries.
Excluding fishmeal from the AFA trawl
CP sector’s harvest would result in a
harvest share of 0.8 percent, or 65
percent below this sector’s new
allocation, not 90 percent. Catch history
was calculated over a number of years,
not just one or two recent years. The
Council chose allocations from the
within the range of percentages
analyzed to balance catch history with
consideration of socioeconomic and
community factors, including
allocations to the small boat sectors that
were above their average historic
harvest. Members of all sectors and the
public at large have had an equal
opportunity to comment on the
Council’s allocation decision, and their
opinions have been considered, as
evidenced by this response to comments
section of the final rule. No procedural
irregularity occurred during the
development of Amendment 85. The
information presented in the Secretarial
review draft analysis for this action
represents the most current,
comprehensive set of information
available, recognizing that some
information, such as operational costs,
is unavailable.
The original proposal before the
Council was to allocate 13.2 percent of
the non-CDQ Pacific cod TAC to the
non-AFA trawl CP sector. In a later
motion, the jig sector allocation was cut
from 2.0 percent to 1.5 percent and the
non-AFA trawl CP sector allocation was
increased to 13.7 percent, partly in
consideration of the State waters Pacific
cod fishery. This clearly shows that
there were advocates on the Council for
the allocation needs of the non-AFA
trawl CP sector. The following day, the
Council voted to reconsider its action
because the AFA trawl CP ‘‘allocation of
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1.5 percent was not reflective of the
historic usage and that it would better
lie somewhere between 2 and 2.5
percent’’ and ‘‘not to provide for a
directed fishery for any one vessel
because there is no guarantee that there
will be ongoing directed fishing by any
one vessel with these allocations.’’ The
increased allocation to the AFA trawl
CP sector this second day resulted in a
deduction from several sectors: 0.3
percent from the non-AFA trawl CP
sector, 0.3 percent from the hook-andline CP sector, 0.1 percent from the jig
sector, and 0.1 percent from the pot CV
sector. As explained in previous
responses, NMFS has determined that
these allocations are fair and meet the
goals of the problem statement.
Council members are to act
impartially and in the best interests of
all. In fact, several members of the
Council spoke on behalf of the non-AFA
trawl CP sector during the Council
deliberations on Amendment 85. This is
one reason the original proposal of a
13.2–percent allocation to the non-AFA
trawl CP was initially increased to 13.7
percent. Again, the final allocation of
13.4 percent is exactly the non-AFA
trawl CP sector’s average historic
harvest from 1995 through 2003.
Amendment 85 ‘‘protects’’ the non-AFA
trawl CP fleet in part by separating the
trawl CPs into two sectors. Also see
responses to Comments 13, and 33, and
58.
Comment 61: No detailed or legally
sufficient impacts analysis of the
alternatives was ever prepared.
Amendment 85 and its supporting
analyses were simply not ready for final
decision at the April 2006 meeting.
Rather, they should have been further
developed and a preliminary preferred
alternative specified. By choosing a set
of percentages in the manner that the
Council did, and taking final action in
the same meeting, there was no
opportunity for development of a legally
sufficient analysis of the likely impacts
of the hybrid alternative.
The Council reserved itself the option
of simply setting allocations for each
sector within the range of percentages
correlated with one of the baseline
periods for a particular sector. However,
the RIR and IRFA contained no detailed
analysis of the tangible, practical
impacts of these proposed allocations
on the H&G fleet’s fisheries and fishing
strategies as they are legally required to
be, and that NMFS inseason
management was able to ascertain after
the Council’s vote on Amendment 85.
The Council’s deliberations regarding
the factors the Magnuson-Stevens Act
requires it to consider in allocation
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decisions was not (nor could it have
been), informed by objective analysis.
The allocation and its management to
the H&G sector does not meet the
objectives of the Problem Statement,
and the effects were not adequately
analyzed in either the Amendment 85
EA/RIR/IRFA (March draft) or the
Secretarial Review Draft. Nowhere is the
impact of any allocation, under any year
option, analyzed as to its real
operational impact on the sector: the
sector’s need to balance target versus
incidental cod, and loss of the ability to
target cod or prosecute flatfish fisheries
with such a reduced allocation. With
the H&G sector receiving such different
treatment than other sectors, or different
from what was presented in the
analysis, it was virtually impossible for
the sector to provide appropriate public
comment. Council members did not
realize the impact that such a low
allocation had or the instability placed
on the fleet from losing their directed
fishery. Nor did they know the effect on
the sector’s ability to attain certain
groundfish retention levels. These
changes happened in the Council
deliberations, so the sector could not
comment. Without such analysis, and
without H&G representation on the
Council, Council members did not make
an informed decision.
The CDQ Pacific cod allocation
increase from 7.5 percent to 10.7
percent and the State of Alaska 3
percent share of the ABC will affect
Amendment 85’s ability to minimize
reallocations, and to correlate each
sector’s allocation with dependency and
use. The amendment should be only
partially approved or there should be a
mandate to review the action in the near
future to determine how well the
problem statement was addressed.
Response: As is the normal procedure,
a draft EA/RIR/IRFA was prepared prior
to the April Council meeting and was
made available to the Council and the
public prior to the Council taking action
on Amendment 85. The analysis was
then further refined to reflect the effects
of the Council’s action prior to
submission for Secretarial review.
Impacts on the non-AFA trawl CP sector
and all the other sectors were well
analyzed prior to Council’s final action
and expanded upon in the analyses that
were released for public comment with
the FMP and the proposed rule. The
analysis and other materials provided to
the Council before it took final action
were more than adequate and the
Secretarial review draft analysis is
legally sufficient. As stated in the IRFA,
‘‘Because this action is principally
designed to ’reapportion’ access to the
cod resource among current user groups
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(at the ’sector level’), by definition, it
represents tradeoffs.’’
The Secretarial review draft analysis
expects that ‘‘management of a lower
Pacific cod allocation [to the non-AFA
trawl CP sector] to serve both directed
and incidental catch needs, will be
substantially more difficult,’’ without a
cooperative structure as approved in
Amendment 80. The non-AFA trawl CP
sector will receive exactly its average
historic harvest. This is lower than its
more recent harvests, so if the sector
reduces incidental catch of Pacific cod
in other directed fisheries, it will have
more Pacific cod available for its
directed fisheries. However, the nonAFA trawl CP sector did not receive
‘‘different treatment than other sectors,
or different from what was presented in
the analysis’’ beyond dealing with
issues unique to its sector, all of which
was presented in the Secretarial review
draft analysis. In determining the
average historic harvest of the AFA
trawl CP sector, the Council chose not
to include the history of nine AFA
vessels (AFA 9) that were bought out
under the AFA, the history of which
was included when its Pacific cod
sideboard was created. Therefore, under
Amendment 85, the AFA trawl CP
sector will have an allocation that is
substantially below its former Pacific
cod sideboard allocation that included
AFA 9 history. By excluding from
consideration the AFA 9 history, which
was extinguished by section 209 of the
AFA, and by separating the two sectors,
Amendment 85 protects the non-AFA
trawl CPs. These two sectors will no
longer be sharing a single allocation that
would be lower under Amendment 85 if
the sectors were left together with the
same sideboard for the AFA trawl CPs.
The Council took note of a possible
legislated increase in the Pacific cod
allocation to the CDQ Program (see
response to Comments 74 and 75) and
of the State waters Pacific cod fishery
(see response to Comment 48) when it
took final action. NMFS has determined
that the problem statement was well
addressed by the Council.
Comment 62: Because the analytical
and public comment processes were
short-circuited, the Council’s decision
was uninformed and arbitrary, based
more on compromise than a reasoned
consideration of the relevant MagnusonStevens Act factors and the purposes
which the Amendment was intended to
serve. The analysis available to the
Council at the time of decision making,
as well as the decision making record,
is devoid of any empirical, analytical
linkage between the allocation scheme
chosen and the Magnuson-Stevens Act
standards Congress requires a council to
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consider when allocating fishing
privileges. The Magnuson-Stevens Act
and Amendment 85 itself specify goals
and requirements for this Pacific cod
allocation scheme but the Council’s
cursory and flawed deliberative process
on Amendment 85 failed to connect the
Council’s choices with these goals and
requirements. Accordingly, the action
taken by the Council on Amendment 85
represents arbitrary and capricious
decision making, in violation of the
Magnuson-Stevens Act and the APA.
The Magnuson-Stevens Act establishes
standards with respect to the relevant
criteria a fishery management council
must consider when, as here, it makes
resource allocations. Specifically that
sectors of industry are treated equally,
that residents of different States are
treated equally, that socioeconomic
concerns are taken into consideration,
that fisheries are managed to optimum
yield, that allocations are for the net
benefit of the Nation, current
participation, historical use,
dependence on the fishery, and other
factors. The APA requires that the
impacts of Federal regulations be
understood and considered at the time
decisions are made. The Council’s
cursory and flawed deliberative process
on Amendment 85 failed to connect the
Council’s choices with these goals and
requirements (under administrative law
precepts). Accordingly, the action taken
by the Council on Amendment 85
would be arbitrary and capricious
decision making if implemented.
Response: The analytical and public
comment processes for Amendment 85
and this final rule were not shortcircuited, as explained in response to
Comment 57. The Council discussed its
action in some depth with various
allocation amounts presented before
final action was taken, including how
the Magnuson-Stevens Act National
Standards were met by Amendment 85.
The impacts of Amendment 85 were
discussed in the analysis available to
the Council and to the public before the
April 2006 Council meeting. The
Council’s decisions were guided by its
problem statement which specified the
factors that would be considered in its
allocation decisions. The draft EA/RIR/
IRFA addressed the Magnuson-Stevens
Act requirements and the Council
fulfilled these requirements. The
allocations chosen were within the
options considered in the draft analysis.
Decisions by NMFS on FMP
amendments and proposed regulations
recommended by the Council must be
consistent with the Magnuson-Stevens
Act and APA. NMFS has determined
that Amendment 85 meets all APA and
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Magnuson-Stevens Act requirements
(see response to Comment 57).
Comment 63: The EA/RIR/IRFA states
that the non-AFA trawl CP fleet does
not target on pollock because the
headed and gutted pollock sells for less
than the cost of production. This is
inaccurate. While the price of H&G
pollock has been low in the past, there
were several H&G vessels that had a
viable pollock target and market prior to
the AFA. Since the AFA, the value of
H&G pollock has increased dramatically
and the fleet has suffered from not
having access to this vast and valuable
resource, which comprised 75 percent
of the total allowable 2 million mt catch
in the BSAI in 2006.
Response: The statement in the EA/
RIR/IRFA was in reference to the fleet
in the GOA. Given the comment, NMFS
determined the statement was confusing
and revised the final analysis by
removing the statement.
Comment 64: The Amendment 85
package provided for Secretarial review
not only inadequately estimates the
impact on the non-AFA trawl CP fleet
of its dramatically reduced allocation
but primarily cites Amendment 80
cooperative provisions as the tool that
will help mitigate the adverse impacts
of Amendment 85 and allow the sector
to gain the most value out of its reduced
Pacific cod allocations. This seems to
violate the principal of evaluating the
impacts and providing the rationale for
the current proposed amendment
without relying on a future action not
yet implemented.
Response: NMFS cannot find support
for the commenter’s assertion that the
Amendment 85 package submitted to
the Secretary primarily cites
Amendment 80 cooperative provisions
as justification for approval of
Amendment 85. The response to
Comment 13 explains how the analysis
for Amendment 85 and this final rule
adequately present information
concerning the impacts of the action on
all sectors, including the non-AFA trawl
CP sector. NMFS partially approved
Amendment 85 based on the record for
Amendment 85 and not on any possible
future actions that might mitigate its
impacts.
Comment 65: NMFS cannot now
substitute post hoc rationalizations for
the absent Council deliberation based
on informed public participation on
these central issues. The Council’s
decisional record for Amendment 85
lacks the required support for the
recommendations the Council made.
Response: NMFS is required to
examine and consider the entire record
before making a decision whether to
approve, disapprove, or partially
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approve an action recommended by a
council. After considering the entire
record developed for Amendment 85
and the proposed rule, NMFS decided
to partially approve Amendment 85 and
partially approve the proposed rule for
reasons provided in this preamble.
Comment 66: By allocating cod based
on rates of harvest that stretch back as
far as 1995, while ignoring current use
and dependence of the H&G sector,
Amendment 85, as recommended by the
Council, violates the substantive
provisions of the Magnuson-Stevens Act
(factors to take into account when
allocating fishing privileges).
Response: National Standard 4
requires allocations to be (1) fair and
equitable, (2) reasonably calculated to
promote conservation, and (3) carried
out in such manner than no particular
individual, corporation, or other entity
acquires an excessive share. In
compliance with the requirement that
the allocation be fair and equitable, the
Council used catch history from 1995
through 2003. The Council also
considered more recent catch history
from 2004 and 2005, but chose not to
develop allocations including that
history. (See response to Comment 3.)
The Council took into account current
use and dependence of the non-AFA
trawl CP sector, and all other sectors, in
making its allocation recommendations,
but ultimately did not use them
exclusively. Nothing in the MagnusonStevens Act or other applicable law
requires the Council or NMFS to
develop allocations that include present
participation, just that the information
be considered and a reasonable
explanation provided if it is excluded.
Socioeconomic considerations and
community factors, such as favoring the
small boat fisheries, also were
considered. Also see responses to
Comments 3 and 48.
Comment 67: The commenter believes
that Amendment 85 is consistent with
the National Standards of the
Magnuson-Stevens Act and other
applicable law. The resulting sector
allocations from Amendment 85 take
into account the catch history, historic
dependence, and ability to engage in
other fisheries by each of the sectors.
Consideration was also given to the
potential impacts and sustained
participation of coastal communities
and small-boat fishermen.
Response: NMFS agrees that
Amendment 85 as partially approved by
NMFS is consistent with the MagnusonStevens Act and other applicable law.
The remaining comments are noted.
Comment 68: The allocations in
Amendment 85 were the result of a fair
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and equitable process and did not
discriminate by residency.
Response: Comment noted.
Comment 69: Amendment 85 is
consistent with the Problem Statement
and purpose of the action.
Response: Comment noted.
Comment 70: Keep the proposed rule/
final rule process moving forward on
the regulatory track so that Amendment
85 can be implemented prior by January
1, 2008 (i.e., in place for the 2008
season), because revisions to the
allocations are long overdue.
Response: This final rule will be
published in sufficient time to be
effective on January 1, 2008.
Comments on Prohibited Species Catch
Allowances
Comment 71: The Secretary should
disapprove the PSC allocation portion of
Amendment 85. Amendment 85 would
allocate PSC for Pacific cod separately
to each trawl sector for use only in the
Pacific cod fishery. Any sector which
has PSC remaining after the cod fishery
is completed will be unable to use it
anywhere else. Sectors with sufficient
PSC to harvest their cod allocation will
have no incentive to use it carefully;
there would be little incentive for
minimizing bycatch rates in other
sectors and could result in increased
PSC use, in violation of National
Standards 1 and 9 of the MagnusonStevens Act. After the H&G sector
prosecutes its Amendment 85 directed
cod fishery, which NMFS estimates will
last only about 10 or 11 days, there still
may not be enough cod and associated
prohibited species catch (PSC) of
halibut and crab for the H&G sector to
fully prosecute its other directed
groundfish fisheries. Non-AFA trawl
CPs will not be able to fund their PSC
needs from other PSC allocations (e.g.,
from the yellowfin sole fishery group)
because there will not be enough
available. NMFS inseason management
could re-allocate unused PSC to other
sectors, but that would occur late in the
year when it clearly was not going to be
used, and would likely be too late for it
to be effectively used by other trawl
sectors. NMFS can simply continue to
manage PSC in the trawl sectors as it
does now to optimize the total catch in
all trawl fisheries.
Response: NMFS did not approve the
proposed apportionment of Pacific cod
trawl fishery halibut and crab PSC
allowances among the trawl sectors for
the reasons discussed above under the
section ‘‘Element of Proposed Rule Not
Approved.’’ NMFS did approve the
hook-and-line PSC apportionment.
Additionally, a detailed response to
comments regarding the non-AFA trawl
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CP sector’s directed Pacific cod fishery
and incidental catch of Pacific cod is
provided in response to Comments 13,
42, and 52.
Comment 72: The PSC sideboard
allocation specified for the AFA trawl
CP sector’s Pacific cod fishery should be
treated as a ‘‘cap’’ or ‘‘limit’’ on PSC
usage in the sector’s directed Pacific cod
fishery--not as an allocation to that
particular fishery. AFA CP sideboards
on PSC species are not currently
apportioned among target species. None
of the AFA trawl CP PSC should be
allocated in a way that might result in
any of that PSC allocation being
‘‘stranded’’ in a particular fishery and
unavailable to support other nonpollock target fisheries in which the
AFA trawl CP sector’s vessels may want
to participate (e.g., yellowfin sole).
Response: NMFS did not approve the
proposed halibut and crab PSC
apportionments for the trawl sectors.
Additional explanation for this decision
is provided earlier in the preamble
under the section ‘‘Element of Proposed
Rule Not Approved.’’
Comment 73: The Secretary should
disapprove the PSC allocation method
contained in Amendment 85, instead
allocating PSC using current
methodology or the allocation method
contained in Amendment 80, depending
on the implementation date for
Amendment 80.
Response: NMFS did not approve the
proposed trawl PSC apportionments.
PSC will be allocated under the current
regulatory method until that method is
changed by future rulemaking as
described in response to Comment 72.
NMFS notes that the proposed rule for
Amendment 80 includes new provisions
for PSC apportionments among trawl
sectors.
Comments on CDQ Allocation
Comment 74: After Amendment 85
was passed by the Council, the CDQ
allocation was modified by the Coast
Guard Bill and subsequently by the
Magnuson-Stevens Reauthorization Act.
The commenter assumes that the 10.7
percent total allocation to the CDQ
Program will be analyzed in the
proposed rule.
Response: The 10.7–percent
allocation to the CDQ Program was
analyzed in the EA/RIR/IRFA for the
proposed rule and the EA/RIR/FRFA for
this final rule.
Comment 75: The Magnuson-Stevens
Act now requires an allocation to the
CDQ Program of 10.7 percent. The
Council’s final action on Amendment 85
adhered to the prior 7.5 percent CDQ
allocation, and the Council has taken no
further action since that time.
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Accordingly, it is not accurate to say
that the ‘‘Council’’ proposed a 10
percent directed fishing CDQ allowance
in submitting Amendment 85 to NMFS.
The only proposal upon which the
Council has voted chose to leave the
CDQ allowance at 7.5 percent. Council
staff cannot revise the CDQ allocation
proposed by the Council to bring it into
compliance with existing law. The
Magnuson-Stevens Act requires the
Secretary under such circumstances to
remand the proposal to the Council,
with an explanation, so that the Council
may consider what appropriate
corrective action to take. The proper
course at this point to resolve the
problem is to decline to adopt the
proposed rule and to remand the sector
and CDQ Program allocations to the
Council for its consideration and action
pursuant to the law. A remand would
permit the Council to undertake a
proper analysis of the unanalyzed
impact of taking a larger CDQ share,
before the Council finalizes new
allocations.
Response: The Council determined
that no further action on Amendment 85
was needed by the Council after the
Coast Guard and Maritime
Transportation Act of 2006 (Public Law
109–241; Coast Guard Act) was passed
because its decision in April 2006
contemplated a Congressional
adjustment to the allocations of Pacific
cod to the CDQ Program. The Council’s
intent was that the CDQ allocation
under Amendment 85 would be either
7.5 percent of the Pacific cod TAC or
whatever allocation was
Congressionally legislated when
Amendment 85 was submitted to the
Secretary for review. The Council voted
to maintain the status quo level of a 7.5
percent CDQ Pacific cod allocation as its
preferred alternative, but inherent in
that vote was the Council’s
acknowledgment that legislation likely
would be enacted in the coming months
that would overrule whatever action the
Council took on the CDQ Program
allocation at its April 2006 meeting. The
Council clearly recognized that
legislation affecting the CDQ Program
was imminent and could be enacted
subsequent to its decision but before
Secretarial review of Amendment 85. It
was recognized during Council
discussion that the proposed rule would
need to accommodate any legislated
increase in the CDQ allocation. The
President signed the Coast Guard Act
into law on July 11, 2006, after the
Council selected a final preferred
alternative for Amendment 85. The
Coast Guard Act amendments to the
Magnuson-Stevens Act included a
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change to make the CDQ Program
Pacific cod allocation a directed fishing
allocation of 10 percent upon the
establishment of sector allocations
(Section 305(i)(1)(B)(ii)(1)). NMFS
notified the Council at its October 2006
meeting that the increased CDQ
allocations required under the Coast
Guard Act would have to be
incorporated into Amendment 85 for it
to be consistent with the MagnusonStevens Act, and that the changes were
being incorporated into the regulations
implementing Amendment 85. The
Council asked about its ability to review
the changes being made to Amendment
85 to comply with the Coast Guard Act,
and was advised by NOAA General
Counsel that because Amendment 85
had not yet been submitted to the
Secretary for review, the Council could
request further review it if desired. The
Council did not request further review
of Amendment 85 at this meeting or at
any other time prior to its submission of
Amendment 85 to the Secretary.
Subsequent to the Coast Guard Act,
the Magnuson-Stevens Act was
reauthorized and signed into law on
January 12, 2007. These more recent
changes to the Magnuson-Stevens Act
increase the CDQ Program’s Pacific cod
allocation to 10.7 percent (directed and
nontarget combined) effective January 1,
2008. (Note: A provision was also
included to trigger this increase in 2007
if a sector of the BSAI Pacific cod
fishery forms a fishing cooperative in
2007.) In accordance with section
304(b)(1)(B) of the Magnuson-Stevens
Act, NMFS determined that the
originally submitted proposed rule for
Amendment 85 that contained a 10
percent Pacific cod CDQ Program
allocation with an additional amount for
incidental catch was inconsistent with
the Magnuson-Stevens Act, and
returned it to the Council to be revised.
Thus, the proposed rule was revised to
contain regulatory amendments to
increase the CDQ Pacific cod allocation
to 10.7 percent to be consistent with the
Magnuson-Stevens Act. The increased
allocation of Pacific cod to the CDQ
Program was within the allocations to
the Program analyzed in the March draft
of the EA/RIR/IRFA.
Although the revised submission from
the Council of the proposed rule for
Amendment 85 incorporated these new
changes, the FMP language could not be
changed because it had already been
published and was available for public
comment. Therefore, NMFS did not
approve those parts of the FMP
amendment that are now inconsistent
with the Magnuson-Stevens Act and
refer to a 10–percent allocation of
Pacific cod TAC as a directed fishing
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allowance to the CDQ Program, specify
the creation of an incidental catch
allowance of Pacific cod for the CDQ
Program, or reference changes to the
CDQ Program Pacific cod allocations
through the Coast Guard Act.
Amendment 85 as approved by NMFS
and the regulations in this final rule rely
on the Magnuson-Stevens Act
requirement for a 10.7–percent
allocation of Pacific cod TAC to the
CDQ Program rather than a specific FMP
provision.
See response to Comment 74
regarding the analysis of the 10.7–
percent allocation of Pacific cod to the
CDQ Program.
Comment 76: The loss of Pacific cod
TAC to the CDQ Program is felt by all
sectors, but it is not felt proportionately
to recency or dependency. Additionally,
93 percent of the CDQ cod is directed
to their freezer longline partners, and
half of that fleet is involved in
harvesting CDQ. Therefore they get the
bulk of it back as a sector, and half the
sector benefits.
Response: Because the CDQ Program
allocation of Pacific cod is subtracted
from the Pacific cod TAC before any
allocations are made to the non-CDQ
sectors, all non-CDQ sectors are affected
proportionately by the CDQ Program
allocation. NMFS acknowledges that
many of the same hook-and-line CP
vessels that fish the non-CDQ BSAI
Pacific cod fishery partner with the CDQ
groups to prosecute the BSAI Pacific
cod CDQ fishery. While some
participants in the hook-and-line CP
sector will have access to the increased
CDQ cod quota and receive some benefit
from the harvest of CDQ cod, the cost
of the royalty payment to the CDQ
groups, and other program
requirements, such as 200 percent
observer coverage, reduce the benefit to
the non-CDQ hook-and-line CP sector.
Comments on Hard Cap Management of
Pacific Cod Incidental Catch
Allowances
Comment 77: We support NMFS’s
management of the trawl sector’s
incidental catch allowance as outlined
in the proposed rule, which is that
inseason management manages each
trawl sector to a soft cap. The non-AFA
trawl CP sector testified in support of
hard cap management, however it did so
in a truly different context. It was
inconceivable that the fleet would be so
disenfranchised from its last seven years
of catch history share. We respectfully
request disapproval of hard cap
management for the non-AFA trawl CP
fleet and soft cap management of Pacific
cod H&G incidental catch allowance
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under both Amendment 85 and
Amendment 80.
Response: Although representatives of
the non-AFA trawl CP sector may have
testified in support of hard cap
management of their Pacific cod
allocation, the Council did not include
such a requirement in their final action
on Amendment 85. Therefore,
Amendment 85 and this final rule do
not include such a provision. NMFS
will continue soft cap management of
incidental catch of Pacific cod for the
non-AFA trawl CP sector under this
final rule. However, NMFS notes that
Amendment 80 as approved by the
Secretary includes hard cap
management requirements.
Comment 78: The non-AFA trawl CP
sector allocation will be managed more
conservatively than other sector
allocations, i.e., a ‘‘hard cap’’ allocation
that when reached will prohibit further
fishing in the BSAI. The action on
Amendment 85 should not be
predicated on mitigation from
Amendment 80. The Secretary should
disapprove that portion of Amendment
85 that specifies that the non-AFA trawl
CPs will be managed under a hard cap.
Response: Neither Amendment 85 nor
this final rule require that the non-AFA
trawl CP sector’s Pacific cod allocation
be managed as a hard cap. See response
to Comment 77. Also see response to
Comment 64 that NMFS’ Amendment
85 decision did not rely on Amendment
80 for mitigation.
Comment on Commercial Fisheries
Comment 79: All quotas allocated
should be cut in half this year and all
quotas should continue to be cut by 10
percent in each succeeding year. The
figures that show healthy stocks gained
from the commercial fishing profiteers
are a conflict of interest for them
because they financially gain from
telling this agency everything is great.
Ban bottom trawling entirely now.
Response: NMFS conservatively
manages the BSAI Pacific cod fishery
based on the best scientific information
available. To ensure conservation of the
resource, the status of the Pacific cod
stock is reviewed by NMFS and the
Council each year through a public
scientific review process before the TAC
is allocated. The commercial fishing
industry does not set the harvest levels.
This action is intended to allocate
Pacific cod TAC among various gear
groups. NMFS reviewed the impacts of
Amendment 85 in the EA/RIR/FRFA
and concluded that it would not result
in a significant impact on the human
environment. This action is not
intended to ban specific gear types.
Banning trawling or reducing harvests
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are not the goals of this action and
would need to be addressed in a
separate regulatory action developed
through the Council process.
Classification
The Acting Administrator, Alaska
Region, NMFS, determined that
Amendment 85 is necessary for the
conservation and management of the
Pacific cod fishery and that it is
consistent with the Magnuson-Stevens
Fishery Conservation and Management
Act and other applicable laws.
This final rule has been determined to
be not significant for the purposes of
Executive Order 12866.
A FRFA was prepared. The FRFA
incorporates the IRFA, a summary of the
significant issues raised by the public
comments in response to the IRFA,
NMFS’ responses to those comments,
and a summary of the analyses
completed to support the action. The
need for and objectives of this action are
contained at the beginning of the
preamble and in the SUMMARY section
of the preamble. The legal basis for this
action is also contained in the preamble.
A summary of the FRFA follows. A copy
of this analysis is available from NMFS
(see ADDRESSES).
No comments were received that
raised significant issues in response to
the IRFA specifically, therefore, no
changes were made to the rule as a
result of comments on the IRFA.
However, several comments were
received on the economic impacts of
Amendment 85 on different sectors of
the industry. For a summary of the
comments received, refer to the section
above titled ‘‘Comments and
Responses.’’ In response to public
comment, one sentence was removed
from the RIR regarding the non-AFA
trawl CP sector targeting pollock
because it was an ambiguous statement
that related to activity in the Gulf of
Alaska and the statement has no bearing
on any decision in the analysis.
Additionally, NMFS did not approve
the proposed regulatory change that
would have subdivided among trawl
sectors the annual PSC limits
apportioned to the Pacific cod trawl gear
fisheries. The reasons are discussed
above under the section ‘‘Element of
Proposed Rule Not Approved’’ and
include: (1) the Council did not provide
any explanation as to why an additional
reduction in this sector’s harvest of
Pacific cod and other target species that
would result from a reduction in its
halibut and crab PSC is appropriate or
consistent with National Standard 4 or
other applicable law, (2) the amount of
PSC allocated to the AFA trawl CP and
the trawl CV sectors is much greater
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than their historical needs and may
create a disincentive for these sectors to
minimize their bycatch of prohibited
species, which is not consistent with
National Standard 9, and (3) the nonAFA trawl CP sector harvests a
significant majority of species other
than pollock and Pacific cod, and would
likely not have PSC remaining from its
Pacific cod fishery to use to achieve
optimum yield from its other BSAI
groundfish fisheries, an inconsistency
with National Standard 1.
Description and Estimate of Number of
Small Entities to which the Rule will
Apply
For purposes of the Regulatory
Flexibility Act, the Small Business
Administration (SBA) has established
that a business involved in fish
harvesting is a small business if it is
independently owned and operated and
not dominant in its field of operation
(including its affiliates) and if it has
combined annual gross receipts not in
excess of $4.0 million for all its
affiliated operations worldwide. A
seafood processor is a small business if
it is independently owned and operated,
not dominant in its field of operation,
and employs 500 or fewer persons on a
full-time, part-time, temporary, or other
basis, at all its affiliated operations
worldwide.
Because the SBA does not have a size
criterion for businesses that are
involved in both the harvesting and
processing of seafood products, NMFS
has in the past applied and continues to
apply SBA’s fish harvesting criterion for
these businesses because CPs are first
and foremost fish harvesting businesses.
Therefore, a business involved in both
the harvesting and processing of seafood
products is a small business if it meets
the $4.0 million criterion for fish
harvesting operations. NMFS currently
is reviewing its small entity size
classification for all CPs in the United
States. However, until new guidance is
adopted, NMFS will continue to use the
annual receipts standard for CPs. NMFS
plans to issue new guidance in the near
future.
The FRFA used the most recent year
of data available to conduct this analysis
(2003). As stated previously, the
commercial entities directly regulated
by the action are divided into nine
sectors for the purpose of (non-CDQ)
BSAI Pacific cod allocations, and the
CDQ allocation is considered a separate
sector. A description of the participants
in, and the eligibility requirements for,
each non-CDQ sector and a description
of the CDQ sector is provided in detail
in the RIR.
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50813
Vessels that were considered large
entities, for purposes of the FRFA, were
those with individual annual gross
receipts greater than $4.0 million, or
those affiliated under owners of
multiple vessels, contractual
relationships, and/or affiliated through
fishing cooperative membership (e.g.,
AFA) that, when combined with
earnings from all such affiliated
operations, had aggregate annual gross
revenues greater than $4.0 million.
Insufficient documentation of multiple
and joint-ownership structures,
contractual affiliations, interlocking
agreements, etc., among vessels in the
various fleets of interest, herein, exist
with which to confidently estimate the
number of directly regulated small (and
large) entities. Thus, the FRFA is
understood to likely overestimate the
actual number of directly regulated
small entities subject to this action.
The majority of the CVs in all gear
sectors can be considered small entities
under a conservative application of the
existing threshold criterion. In 2003
only the AFA trawl CVs were
considered large entities, as they are
known to be party to a harvest
cooperative system. The remaining 138
CVs of all gear types appear to meet the
criterion for a small entity, as applied by
evaluating the 2003 gross revenue data
on a per vessel basis. However, as just
noted, little is known about the
ownership structure of the vessels in the
fleets. Thus, based on the best available
data, the following vessels appear to
meet the application of the criterion
above for a small entity in 2003: 25
hook-and-line and pot CVs <60 ft (18.3
m) LOA; 22 non-AFA trawl CVs; 15 jig
CVs; 6 hook-and-line CVs ≥60 ft (18.3
m) LOA; and 70 pot CVs ≥60 ft (18.3 m)
LOA.
In the CP sector, the available data
indicate that fewer than half meet the
threshold for a small entity, as applied
by evaluating the 2003 gross revenue on
a per vessel basis. Thirty-one of the 81
participating vessels in 2003 had gross
receipts not in excess of $4.0 million.
Again, because little is known about the
ownership structure of the vessels in the
fleets, it is likely that the FRFA
overestimates the number of small
entities. Thus, based on the best
available data, the following vessels
meet the application of the criterion
above for a small entity in 2003: 24
hook-and-line CPs; 4 non-AFA trawl
CPs; and 3 pot CPs. In sum, of the 310
vessels participating in 2003, 169
vessels are estimated to be small entities
directly regulated by the action.
The six CDQ groups participating in
the CDQ Program are not-for-profit
entities that are not dominant in the
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overall BSAI fishing industry. Thus, the
six CDQ groups directly regulated by the
action are considered small entities or
‘‘small organizations’’ under the RFA.
Therefore, under a conservative
application of the SBA criterion and the
best available data, the total number of
small entities directly regulated by the
action is estimated as 175.
Recordkeeping and Reporting
Requirements
This regulation does not impose new
recordkeeping or reporting requirements
on the directly regulated small entities.
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Description of Significant Alternatives
A FRFA should contain ‘‘a
description of the steps the agency has
taken to minimize the significant
economic impact on small entities
consistent with the stated objectives of
applicable statutes, including a
statement of the factual, policy, and
legal reasons for selecting the alternative
adopted in the final rule and why each
one of the other significant alternatives
to the rule considered by the agency
which affect the impact on small
entities was rejected.’’
The FRFA analyzed the ‘‘no action’’
alternative (Alternative 1) and the
selected action (Alternative 2). Each of
these alternatives was comprised of the
same set of eight components, or issues.
The eight components are discussed in
detail in the RIR. Alternative 1 would
continue the following: (1) the current
overall gear allocations in the BSAI
Pacific cod fishery that were established
under Amendment 46 in 1997; (2) the
current CDQ allocation of 7.5 percent of
the BSAI Pacific cod TAC; and (3) the
current apportionment of the fixed gear
portion of the BSAI Pacific cod nonCDQ TAC established under
Amendment 77 in 2004. Alternative 1
also would continue a shared halibut
PSC allowance to the BSAI hook-andline Pacific cod fishery category.
Before the Council made its decisions
for Amendment 85, thus forming
Alternative 2, it considered several
options under each of the eight
components. These many options are
analyzed in the RIR. The combination of
these options resulted in the evaluation
of a multitude of potential alternatives.
Amendment 85 is thus one derivation of
many possible options, reflecting an
effort to balance the economic and
social objectives for the action against
the potential burden placed on directly
regulated entities (especially those
which are ‘‘small’’). One option was
selected under each of the eight
components to comprise the Council’s
final preferred alternative, or
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Alternative 2. Alternative 2 is described
in detail in the RIR.
Alternative 2 was selected because it
accomplishes the objective of revising
allocations of BSAI Pacific cod among
various harvest sectors that in general
more closely reflect historical use by
sector than do current allocations, thus
reducing the need for reallocations
during the fishing year. Alternative 2
also increases the allocation of Pacific
cod to the CDQ Program as required by
recent changes in the Magnuson-Stevens
Act. The revised allocations will reduce
uncertainty about the availability of
yearly harvests within sectors that is
caused by reallocations, and maintain
stability among sectors in the BSAI
Pacific cod fishery.
Alternative 1, no regulatory change,
would have no direct impact on small
entities. However, it also would not
have increased the allocation to the <60
ft (18.3 m) LOA fixed gear sector, one
of the smallest of the small entities,
whose allocation is increased under
Alternative 2. Alternative 1 would not
revise allocations of BSAI Pacific cod
among various harvest sectors that more
closely reflect historical use by sector
than do current allocations, thus the
need for reallocations during the fishing
year would not be reduced. Alternative
1 also would not increase the allocation
of Pacific cod to the CDQ Program,
contrary to new requirements in the
Magnuson-Stevens Act. Therefore,
Alternative 1 would not meet the
objectives of this action and was
rejected.
Steps Taken to Minimize the Significant
Economic Impact on Small Entities
Several measures are included in the
rule that will reduce impacts on small
entities. Economic opportunity and
stability are facilitated for small entities
participating in the Pacific cod fisheries
by establishing BSAI Pacific cod
allocations for the smallest of the small
entities (jig vessels and the <60 ft (18.3
m) LOA hook-and-line and pot CVs) that
represent a net increase over their catch
history. This provides for potential
growth in those sectors. On average
during 1995 to 2003, the combined
harvest history by these sectors was
about 0.5 percent of the retained BSAI
Pacific cod harvest. However, in recent
years it appears that the <60 ft (18.3 m)
LOA fixed gear CV sector has increased
its participation in the BSAI Pacific cod
fishery and could benefit from
additional quota, if it were made
available.
The BSAI Pacific cod fisheries are
currently managed through a complex
series of permits, gear and area
endorsements, and licenses. Many are
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predicated on historical participation
and/or performance thresholds (e.g.,
meeting or exceeding a specific
threshold landing in a specific series of
seasons, etc.). Many of these
requirements result in extremely high
entry costs and physical barriers for
small vessels and entry level operations.
To relieve these burdens and obstacles
to participation, an important means of
accommodating small entities can be
‘‘exemptions’’ from these requirements
such as acquiring some specific permits,
and/or meeting historical catch and
participation thresholds, that are
extended to particularly vulnerable or
disproportionately burdened classes of
smaller vessels. For example, the <60 ft
(18.3 m) LOA fixed gear CV sector does
not need a valid licence limitation
program licence to fish Pacific cod and
is not required to have a Pacific cod
endorsement. Recognizing the
opportunity to facilitate and sustain
small entity participation, the Council
incorporated a number of exemptions
for small entities in the final preferred
action. Treatment of these provisions is
provided in the RIR.
This final rule maintains the current
reallocation process whereby any
unused jig quota is first considered for
reallocation to the <60 ft (18.3 m) LOA
fixed gear CV sector before being
reallocated to any other sector. The rule
also changes the jig sector seasonal
allowance such that 20 percent more of
the jig allocation is allowed to be
harvested in the first half of the year.
Thus, more Pacific cod may potentially
be harvested by the <60 ft (18.3 m) LOA
fixed gear CV sector earlier in the year,
when the weather is preferable for this
small boat sector. The rule also specifies
that the third trimester of the jig
allocation, if it is to be reallocated,
should be available to the <60 ft (18.3
m) LOA fixed gear CV sector on or about
September 1. The intent of this
provision is to reallocate quota between
the small boat CV sectors as early in the
year as possible, in order for these
sectors to have an opportunity to
harvest the quota under better weather
conditions.
Not approving the proposed
regulatory change that would have
subdivided among trawl sectors the
annual PSC limits apportioned to the
Pacific cod trawl gear fisheries, will
help minimize the effects of the reduced
allocation on the small entities that are
members of the non-AFA trawl CP
sector by reducing the chance that the
non-AFA trawl CP sector’s directed
fishery for Pacific cod may be closed
due to an insufficient PSC allowance.
This action increases the BSAI Pacific
cod allocation to the CDQ Program from
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7.5 percent of the Pacific cod TAC to
10.7 percent, as mandated by the recent
amendments to the Magnuson-Stevens
Act. A tradeoff exists in terms of
impacts on the small entities in the nonCDQ sectors whose allocations will be
reduced (proportionally by 3.2 percent)
by the increase to the CDQ Program.
However, the action represents a
positive effect on the six small entities
that comprise the CDQ groups in terms
of potential revenues resulting from an
increased allocation. This increase in
royalty payments is estimated as
approximately $1.1 million.
Nonetheless, efforts to minimize the
burden on the smallest of small entities,
as discussed above, by exempting them
from the most onerous permit and
recency requirements, and by allocating
Pacific cod TAC amounts in excess of
their recent Pacific cod harvest levels,
reflect a sincere effort to address the
needs of these small entities.
In sum, many vessels in each sector
directly regulated by Alternative 2 are
small entities. Because this action is
principally designed to reapportion
access to the cod resource among
current user groups, by definition, it
represents tradeoffs (i.e., some small
entities could be negatively affected,
while others are positively affected). In
addition, the six CDQ groups will
receive an increased allocation under
this action.
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Small Entity Compliance Guide
Section 212 of the Small Business
Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of
1996 states that, for each rule or group
of related rules for which an agency is
required to prepare a FRFA, the agency
shall publish one or more guides to
assist small entities in complying with
the rule, and shall designate such
publications as ‘‘small entity
compliance guides.’’ The agency shall
explain the actions a small entity is
required to take to comply with a rule
or group of rules.
The preamble to this final rule serves
as the small entity compliance guide.
This action does not require any
additional compliance from small
entities that is not described in the
preamble. Copies of this final rule are
available from NMFS (see ADDRESSES)
and at the following website: https://
www.fakr.noaa.gov.
List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 679
Alaska, Fisheries, Recordkeeping and
reporting requirements.
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Dated: August 23, 2007.
Samuel D. Rauch III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator For
Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
For the reasons set out in the
preamble, 50 CFR part 679 is amended
as follows:
I
PART 679—FISHERIES OF THE
EXCLUSIVE ECONOMIC ZONE OFF
ALASKA
1. The authority citation for part 679
continues to read as follows:
I
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 773 et seq.; 1801 et
seq.; 3631 et seq.; and Pub. L. 108 199, 118
Stat. 110.
2. In § 679.2, remove the definition for
‘‘AFA catcher/processor’’, revise the
definition for ‘‘CDQ reserve’’, and add
definitions for ‘‘AFA trawl catcher/
processor’’, ‘‘Hook-and-line catcher/
processor’’, ‘‘Non-AFA trawl catcher/
processor’’, and ‘‘Pot catcher/processor’’
in alphabetical order to read as follows:
I
§ 679.2
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
AFA trawl catcher/processor means:
(1) For purposes of BS pollock and all
BSAI groundfish fisheries other than
Atka mackerel, flathead sole, Greenland
turbot, Pacific cod, Pacific ocean perch,
rock sole, and yellowfin sole, a catcher/
processor that is permitted to harvest BS
pollock under § 679.4(l)(2).
(2) For purposes of BSAI Atka
mackerel, flathead sole, Greenland
turbot, Pacific cod, Pacific ocean perch,
rock sole, and yellowfin sole, a catcher/
processor that is permitted to harvest BS
pollock and that is listed under
§ 679.4(l)(2)(i).
*
*
*
*
*
CDQ reserve means the amount of
each groundfish TAC apportioned under
§ 679.20, the amount of each catch limit
for halibut, or the amount of TAC for
crab that has been set aside for purposes
of the CDQ Program.
*
*
*
*
*
Hook-and-line catcher/processor
means a catcher/processor vessel that is
named on a valid LLP license that is
noninterim and transferable, or that is
interim and subsequently becomes
noninterim and transferable, and that is
endorsed for Bering Sea or Aleutian
Islands catcher/processor fishing
activity, catcher/processor, Pacific cod,
and hook-and-line gear.
*
*
*
*
*
Non-AFA trawl catcher/processor
means, for purposes of BSAI Atka
mackerel, flathead sole, Greenland
turbot, Pacific cod, Pacific ocean perch,
rock sole, and yellowfin sole, a catcher/
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50815
processor vessel using trawl gear and
that:
(1) Is not an AFA trawl catcher/
processor listed under § 679.4(l)(2)(i);
(2) Is named on a valid LLP license
that is endorsed for Bering Sea or
Aleutian Islands trawl catcher/processor
fishing activity; and
(3) Was used to harvest with trawl
gear in the BSAI and process not less
than a total of 150 mt of Atka mackerel,
flathead sole, Greenland turbot, Pacific
cod, Pacific ocean perch, rock sole, or
yellowfin sole between January 1, 1997,
and December 31, 2002.
*
*
*
*
*
Pot catcher/processor means a
catcher/processor vessel that is named
on a valid LLP license that is
noninterim and transferable, or that is
interim and subsequently becomes
noninterim and transferable, and that is
endorsed for Bering Sea or Aleutian
Islands catcher/processor fishing
activity, catcher/processor, Pacific cod,
and pot gear.
*
*
*
*
*
I 3. In § 679.7, revise paragraph (d)(5)
and add paragraph (d)(25) to read as
follows:
§ 679.7
Prohibitions.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) * * *
(5) For a CDQ group, exceed a CDQ
or a halibut PSQ.
*
*
*
*
*
(25) For a CDQ group, exceed a
seasonal allowance of Pacific cod under
§ 679.20(a)(7)(i)(B).
*
*
*
*
*
I 4. In § 679.20, remove paragraph
(b)(1)(iv) and revise the section’s
introductory text and paragraph (a)(7) to
read as follows:
§ 679.20
General limitations.
This section applies to vessels
engaged in directed fishing for
groundfish in the GOA or the BSAI.
(a) * * *
(7) Pacific cod TAC, BSAI—(i) CDQ
reserve and seasonal allowances. (A) A
total of 10.7 percent of the annual
Pacific cod TAC will be allocated to the
CDQ Program in the annual harvest
specifications required under paragraph
(c) of this section. The Pacific cod CDQ
allocation will be deducted from the
annual Pacific cod TAC before
allocations to the non-CDQ sectors are
made under paragraph (a)(7)(ii) of this
section.
(B) The BSAI Pacific cod CDQ gear
allowances by season, as those seasons
are specified under § 679.23(e)(5), are as
follows:
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Gear Type
A season
(1) Trawl
B season
C season
60%
20%
20%
(i) Trawl CV
70%
10%
20%
(ii) Trawl CP
50%
30%
20%
(2) Hook-and-line CP and hook-and-line CV ≥60 ft (18.3
m) LOA
60%
40%
no C season
(3) Jig
40%
20%
40%
(4) All other non-trawl gear
no seasonal allowance
no seasonal allowance
no seasonal allowance
(ii) Non-CDQ allocations—(A) Sector
allocations. The remainder of the BSAI
Pacific cod TAC after subtraction of the
CDQ reserve for Pacific cod will be
allocated to non-CDQ sectors as follows:
Sector
% Allocation
(1) Jig vessels
1.4
(2) Hook-and-line/pot CV
<60 ft (18.3 m) LOA
2
(3) Hook-and-line CV ≥60 ft
(18.3 m) LOA
(4) Hook-and-line CP
0.2
48.7
(5) Pot CV ≥60 ft (18.3 m)
LOA
8.4
(6) Pot CP
1.5
(7) AFA trawl CP
2.3
(8) Non AFA trawl CP
13.4
(9) Trawl CV
22.1
(B) Incidental catch allowance.
During the annual harvest specifications
process set forth at paragraph (c) of this
section, the Regional Administrator will
specify an amount of Pacific cod that
NMFS estimates will be taken as
incidental catch in directed fisheries for
groundfish other than Pacific cod by the
hook-and-line and pot gear sectors. This
amount will be the incidental catch
allowance and will be deducted from
the aggregate portion of Pacific cod TAC
annually allocated to the hook-and-line
and pot gear sectors before the
allocations under paragraph (a)(7)(ii)(A)
of this section are made to these sectors.
(iii) Reallocation among non-CDQ
sectors. If, during a fishing year, the
Regional Administrator determines that
a non-CDQ sector will be unable to
harvest the entire amount of Pacific cod
allocated to that sector under paragraph
(a)(7)(ii)(A) of this section, the Regional
Administrator will reallocate the
projected unused amount of Pacific cod
to other sectors through notification in
the Federal Register. Any reallocation
decision by the Regional Administrator
will take into account the capability of
a sector to harvest the reallocated
amount of Pacific cod, and the following
reallocation hierarchy:
(A) Catcher vessel sectors. The
Regional Administrator will reallocate
projected unharvested amounts of
Pacific cod TAC from a catcher vessel
sector as follows: first to the jig sector,
or to the less than 60 ft (18.3 m) LOA
hook-and-line or pot catcher vessel
sector, or to both of these sectors;
second, to the greater than or equal to
60 ft (18.3 m) LOA hook-and-line or to
the greater than or equal to 60 ft (18.3
m) LOA pot catcher vessel sectors; and
third to the trawl catcher vessel sector.
If the Regional Administrator
determines that a projected unharvested
amount from the jig sector allocation,
the less than 60 ft (18.3 m) LOA hookand-line or pot catcher vessel sector
allocation, or the greater than or equal
to 60 ft (18.3 m) LOA hook-and-line
catcher vessel sector allocation is
unlikely to be harvested through this
hierarchy, the Regional Administrator
will reallocate that amount to the hookand-line catcher/processor sector. If the
Regional Administrator determines that
a projected unharvested amount from a
greater than or equal to 60 ft (18.3 m)
LOA pot catcher vessel sector allocation
is unlikely to be harvested through this
hierarchy, the Regional Administrator
will reallocate that amount to the pot
catcher/processor sector in accordance
with the hierarchy set forth in paragraph
(a)(7)(iii)(C) of this section. If the
Regional Administrator determines that
a projected unharvested amount from a
trawl catcher vessel sector allocation is
unlikely to be harvested through this
hierarchy, the Regional Administrator
will reallocate that amount to the other
trawl sectors in accordance with the
hierarchy set forth in paragraph
(a)(7)(iii)(B) of this section.
(B) Trawl gear sectors. The Regional
Administrator will reallocate any
projected unharvested amounts of
Pacific cod TAC from a trawl sector
(trawl catcher vessel, AFA trawl
catcher/processor, and non-AFA trawl
catcher/processor sectors) to other trawl
sectors before unharvested amounts are
reallocated and apportioned to specified
gear sectors as follows:
(1) 83.1 percent to the hook-and-line
catcher/processor sector,
(2) 2.6 percent to the pot catcher/
processor sector, and
(3) 14.3 percent to the greater than or
equal to 60 ft (18.3 m) LOA pot catcher
vessel sector.
(C) Pot gear sectors. The Regional
Administrator will reallocate any
projected unharvested amounts of
Pacific cod TAC from the pot catcher/
processor sector to the greater than or
equal to 60 ft (18.3 m) LOA pot catcher
vessel sector, and from the greater than
or equal to 60 ft (18.3 m) LOA pot
catcher vessel sector to the pot catcher/
processor sector before reallocating it to
the hook-and-line catcher/processor
sector.
(iv) Non-CDQ seasonal allowances—
(A) Seasonal allowances by sector. The
BSAI Pacific cod sector allowances are
apportioned by season, as those seasons
are specified at § 679.23(e)(5), as
follows:
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Seasonal Allowances
Sector
A season
B season
C season
(1) Trawl
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50817
Seasonal Allowances
Sector
A season
B season
C season
(i) Trawl CV
74 %
11 %
15 %
(ii) Trawl CP
75 %
25 %
0%
(2) Hook-and-line CP, hook-and-line CV ≥60 ft
(18.3 m) LOA, and pot gear vessels ≥60 ft
(18.3 m) LOA
51 %
49 %
no C season
(3) Jig vessels
60 %
20 %
20 %
no seasonal allowance
no seasonal allowance
no seasonal allowance
(4) All other nontrawl vessels
(B) Unused seasonal allowances. Any
unused portion of a seasonal allowance
of Pacific cod from any sector except the
jig sector will be reallocated to that
sector’s next season during the current
fishing year unless the Regional
Administrator makes a determination
under paragraph (a)(7)(iii) of this section
that the sector will be unable to harvest
its allocation.
(C) Jig sector. The Regional
Administrator will reallocate any
projected unused portion of a seasonal
allowance of Pacific cod for the jig
sector under this section to the less than
60 ft (18.3 m) LOA hook-and-line or pot
catcher vessel sector. The Regional
Administrator will reallocate the
projected unused portion of the jig
sector’s C season allowance on or about
September 1 of each year.
*
*
*
*
*
I 5. In § 679.21, remove paragraph
(e)(1)(i), redesignate paragraphs (e)(1)(ii)
through (e)(1)(ix) as (e)(1)(i) through
(e)(1)(viii), and revise paragraphs (e)(2),
(e)(3)(i), (e)(3)(v), and (e)(4), to read as
follows:
§ 679.21 Prohibited species bycatch
management.
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*
*
*
*
*
(e) * * *
(2) Nontrawl gear, halibut. The PSC
limit of halibut caught while conducting
any nontrawl fishery for groundfish in
the BSAI during any fishing year is the
amount of halibut equivalent to 900 mt
of halibut mortality.
(3) * * *
(i) General. (A) An amount equivalent
to 7.5 percent of each PSC limit set forth
in paragraphs (e)(1)(i) through (iv) and
paragraphs (e)(1)(vi) through (viii) of
this section is allocated to the
groundfish CDQ Program as PSQ
reserve. The PSQ reserve is not
apportioned by gear or fishery.
(B) NMFS, after consultation with the
Council and after subtraction of the PSQ
reserve, will apportion each PSC limit
set forth in paragraphs (e)(1)(i) through
(vii) of this section into bycatch
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Jkt 211001
allowances for the fishery categories
defined in paragraph (e)(3)(iv) of this
section, based on each category’s
proportional share of the anticipated
incidental catch during a fishing year of
prohibited species for which a PSC limit
is specified and the need to optimize the
amount of total groundfish harvested
under established PSC limits.
*
*
*
*
*
(v) AFA prohibited species catch
limitations. Halibut and crab PSC limits
for the AFA trawl catcher/processor
sector and the AFA trawl catcher vessel
sector will be established according to
the procedures and formulas set out in
§ 679.64(a) and (b) and managed
through directed fishing closures for the
AFA trawl catcher/processor sector and
the AFA trawl catcher vessel sector in
the groundfish fisheries for which the
PSC limit applies.
(4) Halibut apportionment to nontrawl
fishery categories—(i) General. (A) An
amount equivalent to 7.5 percent of the
nontrawl gear halibut PSC limit set forth
in paragraph (e)(2) of this section is
allocated to the groundfish CDQ
Program as PSQ reserve. The PSQ
reserve is not apportioned by gear or
fishery.
(B) NMFS, after consultation with the
Council and after subtraction of the PSQ
reserve, will apportion the halibut PSC
limit for nontrawl gear set forth under
paragraph (e)(2) of this section into
bycatch allowances for the nontrawl
fishery categories defined under
paragraph (e)(4)(ii) of this section.
(C) Apportionment of the nontrawl
halibut PSC limit among the nontrawl
fishery categories will be based on each
category’s proportional share of the
anticipated bycatch mortality of halibut
during a fishing year and the need to
optimize the amount of total groundfish
harvested under the nontrawl halibut
PSC limit.
(D) The sum of all bycatch allowances
of any prohibited species will equal its
PSC limit.
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(ii) Nontrawl fishery categories. For
purposes of apportioning the nontrawl
halibut PSC limit among fisheries, the
following fishery categories are
specified and defined in terms of roundweight equivalents of those BSAI
groundfish species for which a TAC has
been specified under § 679.20.
(A) Pacific cod hook-and-line catcher
vessel fishery. Catcher vessels fishing
with hook-and-line gear during any
weekly reporting period that results in
a retained catch of Pacific cod that is
greater than the retained amount of any
other groundfish species.
(B) Pacific cod hook-and-line catcher/
processor fishery. Catcher/processors
fishing with hook-and-line gear during
any weekly reporting period that results
in a retained catch of Pacific cod that is
greater than the retained amount of any
other groundfish species.
(C) Sablefish hook-and-line fishery.
Fishing with hook-and-line gear during
any weekly reporting period that results
in a retained catch of sablefish that is
greater than the retained amount of any
other groundfish species.
(D) Groundfish jig gear fishery.
Fishing with jig gear during any weekly
reporting period that results in a
retained catch of groundfish.
(E) Groundfish pot gear fishery.
Fishing with pot gear under restrictions
set forth in § 679.24(b) during any
weekly reporting period that results in
a retained catch of groundfish.
(F) Other nontrawl fisheries. Fishing
for groundfish with nontrawl gear
during any weekly reporting period that
results in a retained catch of groundfish
and does not qualify as a Pacific cod
hook-and-line catcher vessel fishery, a
Pacific cod hook-and-line catcher/
processor fishery, a sablefish hook-andline fishery, a jig gear fishery, or a
groundfish pot gear fishery as defined
under this paragraph (e)(4)(ii).
*
*
*
*
*
§ 679.23 [Amended]
6. In § 679.23, remove paragraphs
(e)(6) and (e)(7).
I
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Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 170 / Tuesday, September 4, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
7. In § 679.64:
A. Remove paragraph (a)(1)
introductory text.
B. Redesignate paragraph (a)(1)(i) as
paragraph (a)(1) introductory text.
C. Redesignate paragraph (a)(2)
introductory text as paragraph (a)(1)(i).
D. Redesignate paragraphs (a)(2)(i)
and (ii) as paragraphs (a)(1)(i)(A) and(B),
respectively.
E. Redesignate paragraph (a)(3)
introductory text as paragraph (a)(1)(ii).
F. Redesignate paragraphs (a)(3)(i)
through (iii) as paragraphs (a)(1)(ii)(A)
through (C), respectively.
G. Redesignate paragraph (a)(4)
introductory text as paragraph (a)(1)(iii).
H. Redesignate paragraphs (a)(4)(i)
and (ii) as paragraphs (a)(1)(iii)(A) and
(B), respectively.
I. Redesignate paragraph (a)(5) as
paragraph (a)(2).
J. Redesignate paragraph (a)(6) as
paragraph (a)(3), and
I
K. Revise newly redesignated
paragraphs (a)(1) introductory text and
(a)(3).
The revisions read as follows:
§ 679.64 Harvesting sideboards limits in
other fisheries.
(a) * * *
(1) How will groundfish sideboard
limits for AFA listed catcher/processors
be calculated? Except for Aleutian
Islands pollock and BSAI Pacific cod,
the Regional Administrator will
establish annual AFA catcher/processor
harvest limits for each groundfish
species or species group in which a TAC
is specified for an area or subarea of the
BSAI as follows:
*
*
*
*
*
(3) How will AFA catcher/processor
sideboard limits be managed? The
Regional Administrator will manage
Paragraph(s)
groundfish harvest limits and PSC
bycatch limits for AFA catcher/
processors through directed fishing
closures in fisheries established under
paragraph (a)(1) of this section in
accordance with the procedures set out
in §§ 679.20(d)(1)(iv) and
679.21(e)(3)(v).
*
*
*
*
*
§§ 679.20, 679.21, 679.31, 679.32,
679.50, and 679.64 [Amended]
8. In the table below, for each of the
paragraphs shown under the
‘‘Paragraph’’ column, remove the phrase
indicated under the ‘‘Remove’’ column
and replace it with the phrase indicated
under the ‘‘Add’’ column for the
number of times indicated in the
‘‘Frequency’’ column.
I
Remove
Add
Frequency
§ 679.20(b)(1)(i)
except pollock and the
except pollock, Pacific cod, and
the
2
Newly redesignated § 679.21(e)(1)(i) introductory
text
paragraphs (e)(1)(iii)(A) through
paragraphs (e)(1)(i)(A) through
1
Newly redesignated § 679.21(e)(1)(ii) introductory
text
paragraphs (e)(1)(iii)(A) and
paragraphs (e)(1)(ii)(A) and
1
Paragraph heading of newly redesignated §
679.21(e)(1)(vi)
Chinook salmon
BS Chinook salmon
1
§ 679.21(e)(3)(ii)(B)(2)
paragraph (e)(1)(ii) of
paragraph (e)(1)(i) of
1
§ 679.21(e)(7)(viii) introductory text
paragraphs (e)(1)(vii) and
(e)(1)(ix) of
paragraphs (e)(1)(vi) and
(e)(1)(viii) of
1
§ 679.21(e)(7)(viii)(A) introductory text
paragraph (e)(1)(vii) of
paragraph (e)(1)(vi) of
1
§ 679.21(e)(7)(viii)(B) introductory text
paragraph (e)(1)(ix) of
paragraph (e)(1)(viii) of
1
§ 679.31(c)
(See § 679.20(b)(1)(iii))
(See § 679.20(a)(7)(i) and
(b)(1)(iii).)
1
§ 679.31(e)
(See § 679.21(e)(1)(i) and
(e)(2)(ii)).
(See § 679.21(e)(3)(i)(A) and
(e)(4)(i)(A).)
1
§ 679.32(b)
under § 679.21(e)(5) in
under § 679.21(e)(4) in
1
§ 679.50(c)(1)(iii)
under § 679.21(e)(7)(vi), or
under § 679.21(e)(7)(vii), or
1
Newly redesignated § 679.64(a)(1)(i)(B)
paragraph (a)(2)(i) of
paragraph (a)(1)(i)(A) of
1
Newly redesignated § 679.64(a)(1)(iii)(A)
paragraphs (a)(1)(ii) through (a)(3)
of
paragraphs (a)(1)(i) through
(a)(1)(ii) of
1
Newly redesignated § 679.64(a)(1)(iii)(B)
paragraph (a)(4)(i) of
paragraph (a)(1)(iii)(A) of
1
[FR Doc. E7–17140 Filed 8–31–07; 8:45 am]
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 72, Number 170 (Tuesday, September 4, 2007)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 50788-50818]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E7-17140]
[[Page 50787]]
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Part IV
Department of Commerce
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
50 CFR Part 679
Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic Zone Off Alaska; Pacific Cod
Allocations in the Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands Management Area;
Final Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 170 / Tuesday, September 4, 2007 /
Rules and Regulations
[[Page 50788]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
50 CFR Part 679
[Docket No. 0612242903-7445-03; I.D. 112006I]
RIN 0648-AU48
Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic Zone Off Alaska; Pacific Cod
Allocations in the Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands Management Area
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: NMFS issues a final rule to implement Amendment 85 to the
Fishery Management Plan for Groundfish of the Bering Sea and Aleutian
Islands Management Area (FMP) as partially approved by NMFS, and to
implement recent changes to the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation
and Management Act (Magnuson-Stevens Act). This final rule modifies the
current allocations of Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands management area
(BSAI) Pacific cod total allowable catch (TAC) among various harvest
sectors and seasonal apportionments thereof, establishes a hierarchy
for reallocating projected unharvested amounts of Pacific cod from
certain sectors to other sectors, revises catcher/processor (CP) sector
definitions, modifies the management of Pacific cod incidental catch
that occurs in other groundfish fisheries, eliminates the Pacific cod
nonspecified reserve, subdivides the annual prohibited species catch
(PSC) limits currently apportioned to the Pacific cod hook-and-line
gear fisheries between the catcher vessel (CV) and CP sectors, and
modifies the sideboard restrictions for American Fisheries Act (AFA) CP
vessels. In addition, this final rule increases the percentage of the
BSAI Pacific cod TAC apportioned to the Community Development Quota
(CDQ) Program. The proposed rule for Amendment 85 included regulations
that would have subdivided the annual PSC limits currently apportioned
to the Pacific cod trawl fisheries among trawl sectors. However, NMFS
disapproved these regulations. Therefore, this final rule does not
subdivide the annual PSC limits for Pacific cod trawl fisheries among
trawl sectors. This final rule is necessary to implement Amendment 85
and reduce uncertainty about the availability of yearly harvests within
sectors caused by reallocations and maintain stability among sectors in
the BSAI Pacific cod fishery. This final rule also is necessary to
partially implement recent changes to the Magnuson-Stevens Act that
require a total allocation of 10.7 percent of the TAC of each directed
fishery to the CDQ Program starting January 1, 2008. This final rule is
intended to promote the goals and objectives of the Magnuson-Stevens
Act, the FMP, and other applicable laws.
DATES: Effective January 1, 2008.
ADDRESSES: Copies of Amendment 85 and the Environmental Assessment/
Regulatory Impact Review/Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (EA/RIR/
FRFA) prepared for this action are available by mail from NMFS, Alaska
Region, P. O. Box 21668, Juneau, AK 99802-1668, Attn: Ellen Sebastian,
Records Officer; in person at NMFS, Alaska Region, 709 West 9th Street,
Room 420A, Juneau, AK; or via the Internet at the NMFS Alaska Region
website at https://www.fakr.noaa.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Becky Carls, 907-586-7228 or
becky.carls@noaa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: NMFS manages the groundfish fisheries in the
exclusive economic zone of the BSAI under the FMP. The North Pacific
Fishery Management Council (Council) prepared the FMP under the
authority of the Magnuson-Stevens Act, 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
Regulations governing U.S. fisheries and implementing the FMP appear at
50 CFR parts 600 and 679.
Background
Amendment 85 was adopted by the Council in April 2006 to modify the
current allocations of BSAI Pacific cod among various harvesting
sectors. Currently, the BSAI Pacific cod non-CDQ TAC is fully
distributed among the following eight competing harvest sectors: jig,
fixed gear (pot and hook-and-line gear) CVs less than 60 ft (<18.3 m)
length overall (LOA), hook-and-line CVs greater than or equal to 60 ft
([gteqt]18.3 m) LOA, hook-and-line catcher/processor vessels (CPs), pot
CVs less than 60 ft ([gteqt]18.3 m) LOA, pot CPs, trawl CPs, and trawl
CVs. Several FMP amendments, implemented beginning in 1994, have
allocated Pacific cod among these sectors. Additional background on the
prior history of Pacific cod allocations among different fishery
sectors and the development of Amendment 85 is contained in the
preamble to the proposed rule (72 FR 5654; February 7, 2007).
Amendment 85 modifies the non-CDQ sector allocations currently in
place to better reflect historical dependency and use by sector of the
Pacific cod resource. The allocations were based in part on each
sector's historical retained catch in addition to socioeconomic and
community concerns. One of the fundamental issues identified in the
Council's problem statement was the need to revise the existing
allocations to better reflect historical retained catch by sector, thus
reducing the need for frequent and significant reallocations of quota
toward the end of the year from sectors that are unable or otherwise do
not intend to harvest their entire allocation. However, the allocations
to the small boat sectors are intended to expand entry-level, local
opportunities in the BSAI Pacific cod fishery. Other than providing for
this expansion, the allocations of Pacific cod non-CDQ TAC are intended
to formally institutionalize the historical pattern of utilization of
this resource.
Amendment 85 and the proposed rule to implement Amendment 85 as
originally submitted by the Council included provisions for the CDQ
Program that allocated 10 percent of the Pacific cod TAC to the CDQ
Program as a directed fishing allocation, created an incidental catch
allowance of Pacific cod for the CDQ Program, and referred to the Coast
Guard and Maritime Transportation Act of 2006, Public Law 109-241
(Coast Guard Act) as the basis for changes to the CDQ Program Pacific
cod allocation. These provisions were consistent with requirements set
forth in the Magnuson-Stevens Act, as amended by the Coast Guard Act,
at the time Amendment 85 was submitted by the Council for Secretarial
review. The Notice of Availability (NOA) for Amendment 85 was published
in the Federal Register on December 7, 2006 (71 FR 70943), with a 60-
day comment period that ended February 5, 2007.
During review by the Secretary of Commerce (Secretary) of Amendment
85, the CDQ provisions in the Magnuson-Stevens Act were amended once
again by the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management
Reauthorization Act, Public Law 109-479 (Magnuson-Stevens
Reauthorization Act), enacted on January 11, 2007. The Magnuson-Stevens
Act now requires that allocations to the CDQ Program, including Pacific
cod, increase to ``a total allocation (directed and nontarget combined)
of 10.7 percent effective January 1, 2008,'' and that the total
allocation may not be exceeded. As a result of the Magnuson-Stevens
Reauthorization Act, the portions of Amendment 85 to the FMP that
addressed the CDQ Program provisions were no longer consistent with the
[[Page 50789]]
Magnuson-Stevens Act. On March 7, 2007, the Secretary partially
approved Amendment 85, disapproving the CDQ Program provisions as
inconsistent with the Magnuson-Stevens Act. As approved, Amendment 85
revised the current BSAI Pacific cod allocations of TAC among various
non-CDQ harvest sectors (Table 1), changed incidental catch allowances,
removed the groundfish reserve for Pacific cod, and added a new
appendix to the FMP.
Shortly after enactment of the Magnuson-Stevens Reauthorization
Act, NMFS determined that the CDQ portions of the proposed rule as
submitted by the Council were inconsistent with the newly amended
Magnuson-Stevens Act, and returned the rule to the Council for revision
pursuant to section 304(b) of the Magnuson-Stevens Act. The Council
revised the CDQ portions of the proposed rule for Amendment 85 to
incorporate the changes brought about by the Magnuson-Stevens
Reauthorization Act, including a 10.7-percent allocation of Pacific cod
to the CDQ Program. The Council submitted the revised proposed rule to
NMFS, and it was published in the Federal Register on February 7, 2007
(72 FR 5654). The 45-day comment period on the proposed rule ended
March 26, 2007. NMFS received a total of 16 letters on Amendment 85 and
the proposed rule that contained 79 unique comments. A summary of these
comments and the responses by NMFS are provided under Response to
Comments below.
Elements of the Final Rule
A detailed review of the provisions of Amendment 85 and its
implementing rule is provided in the preamble to the proposed rule (72
FR 5654; February 7, 2007), and is not repeated here. The proposed rule
is available via the Internet and from NMFS (see ADDRESSES). The
following provides a list and brief review of the regulatory changes
made by this final rule to the management of the BSAI Pacific cod
fishery. NMFS' rationale for approving portions of Amendment 85 and the
regulatory provisions in this final rule is contained in the agency's
response to comments.
Increase the percentage of the BSAI Pacific cod TAC
apportioned to the CDQ Program to 10.7 percent;
Revise the allocations of BSAI Pacific cod non-CDQ TAC
among various gear sectors;
Modify the management of Pacific cod incidental catch that
occurs in other groundfish fisheries;
Eliminate the Pacific cod nonspecified reserve;
Establish a hierarchy for the reallocation of projected
unused sector allocations to other ectors;
Adjust the seasonal allowances of Pacific cod to various
sectors;
Subdivide among sectors the annual PSC limits apportioned
to the Pacific cod hook-and-line gear fisheries;
Modify the sideboard restrictions for Pacific cod that are
applied to the CP vessels listed as eligible under the AFA; and
Revise the definition for AFA trawl CP and add definitions
for hook-and-line CP, non-AFA trawl CP, and pot CP.
As described above, the Magnuson-Stevens Act now requires that 10.7
percent of the annual Pacific cod TAC be allocated to the CDQ reserve
for directed and nontarget fishing combined, effective January 1, 2008.
The 10.7 percent Pacific cod allocation to the CDQ reserve will be
established annually in the harvest specifications process required
under Sec. 79.20(c). The CDQ reserve will continue to be deducted from
the Pacific cod TAC before the remaining Pacific cod TAC is allocated
to the other fishing sectors. All catch of Pacific cod by any vessel
that is groundfish CDQ fishing, and by any vessel [gteqt]60 ft (18.3 m)
LOA that is halibut CDQ fishing, will continue to accrue against the
CDQ group's annual allocation of Pacific cod and the CDQ groups will
continue to be prohibited from exceeding their annual allocations of
Pacific cod.
Nine individual non-CDQ sectors will receive separate BSAI Pacific
cod allocations. The allocations to the identified sectors were
selected using retained legal catch history, including fishmeal, from
1995 through 2003, and other socioeconomic and community
considerations. The allocations better reflect historical dependency
and use by each sector, with specific consideration to allow for
additional growth in the small boat, entry-level sectors. These
allocations are listed in Table 1. Because Pacific cod has been
harvested by the current sectors since the beginning of 2007 under the
current allocation scheme, and the number of sectors and the overall
amount of Pacific cod available to those sectors as an allocation and
by season will change with this amendment, the Amendment 85 sector
allocations cannot be implemented mid-year. Therefore, the allocations,
and the final rule implementing Amendment 85, will be effective January
1, 2008. NMFS will amend the 2007-2008 harvest specifications to
reflect the changes to the Pacific cod TAC allocations.
Table 1. Percent sector allocations of Pacific cod non-CDQ TAC
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sector % Allocation
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Jig vessels 1.4
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hook-and-line/pot CV <60 ft (18.3 m) LOA 2.0
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hook-and-line CV [gteqt]60 ft (18.3 m) LOA 0.2
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hook-and-line CP 48.7
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Pot CV [gteqt]60 ft (18.3 m) LOA 8.4
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Pot CP 1.5
------------------------------------------------------------------------
AFA trawl CP 2.3
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(8) Non AFA trawl CP 13.4
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Trawl CV 22.1
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Currently, NMFS sets aside an amount of Pacific cod from some
sectors' allocations as an incidental catch allowance for use by those
sectors when they are directed fishing for groundfish other than
Pacific cod. NMFS establishes an incidental catch allowance either
through the annual harvest specifications process or inseason. Under
this final rule, an incidental catch allowance for the fixed gear
sectors will continue to be established at the beginning of the fishing
year by the Regional Administrator during the annual harvest
specifications process. The incidental catch allowance for the fixed
gear sectors typically has been set at 500 mt. The trawl sectors
currently do not have an incidental catch allowance established at the
beginning of the fishing year. NMFS has not specified an incidental
catch allowance for Pacific cod in the trawl fisheries in the recent
past because the trawl sectors typically do not catch an amount of
Pacific cod that would necessitate a directed fishing prohibition.
Also, the seasonal apportionments to the trawl sectors have ensured
that a sufficient amount of Pacific cod is left for incidental catch in
groundfish trawl fisheries other than Pacific cod later in the year.
However, because NMFS anticipates that the trawl sectors will fully
harvest the Pacific cod allocations under Amendment 85, NMFS also
anticipates it will need to establish an incidental catch allowance for
each trawl sector. Under this final rule, each trawl sector will have a
separate incidental catch allowance so that no trawl sector can erode
another trawl sector's total allocation and NMFS will develop
incidental catch
[[Page 50790]]
allowances for the trawl sectors on an inseason basis, rather than
through the annual harvest specification process. Determining
incidental catch needs inseason as fisheries progress will provide NMFS
with more flexibility to adjust incidental catch needs for each trawl
sector as a trawl sector's needs change.
Current regulations for the annual harvest specifications process
require that 15 percent of the BSAI TAC for Pacific cod be placed in
the nonspecified reserve. Half of the nonspecified reserve, or 7.5
percent of TAC, is apportioned to the groundfish CDQ reserve. NMFS
typically apportions the remainder of the Pacific cod reserve back to
the non-CDQ Pacific cod TAC because U.S. fishing vessels have
demonstrated the capacity to catch the full TAC allocation. The Council
and NMFS determined that the Pacific cod reserve is no longer needed
because a direct allocation to the CDQ reserve is specified, and
because the Pacific cod TAC is fully allocated among CDQ and non-CDQ
harvesting sectors and is fully harvested. Therefore, this final rule
removes regulations requiring that 15 percent of the Pacific cod TAC be
placed in the nonspecified reserve during a fishing year.
Under current regulations, if the Regional Administrator determines
that a sector will be unable to harvest the entire amount of Pacific
cod allocated to that sector, NMFS reallocates the projected unused
amount of Pacific cod to other sectors to obtain optimum yield from the
BSAI Pacific cod fishery. This procedure will continue under this final
rule, but reallocation decisions will be based in part on the new
reallocation hierarchy established in this final rule, and also will
take into account the capability of a sector to harvest an additional
amount of Pacific cod. The reallocation hierarchy is fully described in
the proposed rule and in the regulatory text below; therefore, that
description is not repeated here. In general, NMFS will reallocate
projected unused allocations in any inshore sector (i.e., CV sectors)
primarily to other inshore sectors before reallocating that amount to
any offshore sector (i.e., CP sectors) and, secondarily, within a gear
type before reallocating that amount to another gear type. This
reallocation hierarchy is consistent with the Council's decision to
increase harvest opportunities for fleets delivering shoreside and
represents a reasonable balance of National Standard 4, that
allocations should be fair and equitable to all fishermen, and National
Standard 8, to consider the importance of fishery resources to fishing
communities. Although the intent of Amendment 85 is to revise sector
allocations to better reflect historic dependence and use by sector and
thus reduce the frequency and amount of inseason reallocations, the
Council and the public noted that some reallocations are likely to
continue.
Under existing regulations, Pacific cod allocations are further
apportioned by season for most gear sectors to protect prey
availability for Steller sea lions (SSLs). The overall BSAI Pacific cod
fishery is limited to seasonal percentages of TAC of no more than 70
percent between January 1 and June 10, and 30 percent between June 10
and December 31. Because this final rule modifies non-CDQ sector
allocations, this final rule also modifies the seasonal allowances
applicable to these sectors to maintain the overall 70/30 seasonal
split for all gear types combined and to maintain, to the extent
possible, the current percentage of the Pacific cod TAC harvested in
the first half of the year by the non-CDQ sectors. Therefore, this
final rule adjusts the seasonal allowances for each sector in response
to the changes in sector allocations. This final rule also changes the
jig sector seasonal allowances from 40-20-40 to 60-20-20. For the
Pacific cod allocation to the CDQ Program, this final rule adds a
prohibition to Sec. 679.7(d) to clarify the current management measure
that the CDQ groups are prohibited from exceeding the seasonal
allowances of Pacific cod that are appropriate for the gear types that
they use to catch Pacific cod CDQ. Also, the regulations regarding CDQ
trawl seasonal allowances are revised to maintain the division between
trawl CP and trawl CV that exists in the current regulations. The BSAI
Pacific cod sector allowances for each sector, including CDQ, by
season, as those seasons are specified under Sec. 679.23(e)(5), are
listed in Table 2.
Table 2. Seasonal allowances of BSAI Pacific cod expressed as a
percentage of each sector=s total allocation
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Gear Type A season B season C season
------------------------------------------------------------------------
CDQ Trawl 60% 20% 20%
------------------------------------------------------------------------
CDQ Trawl CV 70% 10% 20%
------------------------------------------------------------------------
CDQ Trawl CP 50% 30% 20%
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Non-CDQ trawl CV 74% 11% 15%
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Non-CDQ trawl CP 75% 25% 0%
------------------------------------------------------------------------
CDQ Hook-and-line CP, and 60% 40% no C season
hook-and-line CV [gteqt]60
ft (18.3 m) LOA
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Non-CDQ hook-and-line CP, 51% 49% no C season
hook-and-line CV [gteqt]60
ft (18.3 m) LOA, pot CP, and
pot CV [gteqt]60 ft (18.3 m)
LOA
------------------------------------------------------------------------
CDQ jig vessels 40% 20% 40%
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Non-CDQ jig vessels 60% 20% 20%
------------------------------------------------------------------------
All other nontrawl vessels no seasonal no seasonal no seasonal
allowance allowance allowance
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total non-CDQ percentage 1/1 - 6/10 = 68% 6/10 - 12/31 = 32%
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total CDQ and non-CDQ 1/1 - 6/10 = 67% 6/10 - 12/31 = 33%
percentage
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 50791]]
Any unused portion of a seasonal allowance of Pacific cod from any
sector other than the jig sector will continue to be reallocated to
that sector's remaining seasons during the current fishing year. The
Regional Administrator will continue to reallocate any projected unused
portion of a seasonal allowance of Pacific cod from the jig sector to
the <60 ft (18.3 m) LOA fixed gear CV sector. Under this final rule,
NMFS will reallocate a projected unused portion of the seasonal
allowance for the jig sector C season on or about September 1 of each
year, if possible, to provide the last rollover from the jig sector
when the <60 ft (18.3 m) LOA fixed gear CV sector may still be on the
fishing grounds.
The total amount of nontrawl halibut PSC for the non-CDQ fisheries
currently is 833 mt of mortality. Typically, 775 mt is apportioned to
the hook-and-line Pacific cod fishery and 58 mt to other nontrawl
groundfish fisheries. This final rule does not change the total amount
of nontrawl halibut PSC mortality allocated to the hook-and-line
Pacific cod sectors or to the other nontrawl groundfish fisheries.
Currently, the annual Pacific cod hook-and-line halibut PSC
allowance is apportioned among three seasons. A seasonal halibut PSC
allowance in the second season has not been specified in recent years;
thus, a hook-and-line directed fishery for Pacific cod has not operated
in the summer months. Halibut bycatch rates are typically high during
the second season. The hook-and-line CP sector generally supports not
providing a halibut PSC limit in the second season because the high
halibut bycatch rates could close the directed Pacific cod fishery
prior to the allocation being fully harvested. However, the hook-and-
line CV sector, which is constrained by the same PSC limit, is
comprised of smaller vessels with slower catch rates and a relatively
small Pacific cod allocation compared to the hook-and-line CP sector.
To enable the hook-and-line CVs to fish for Pacific cod in the summer
months when the weather is more favorable for these smaller vessels,
this final rule divides the halibut PSC allowance annually specified
for the hook-and-line Pacific cod fishery between two fishery sectors:
the hook-and-line CP sector and the hook-and-line CV sector (CVs
[gteqt]60 ft (18.3 m) LOA and CVs <60 ft (18.3 m) LOA combined). NMFS
can provide varying amounts of halibut PSC by season to each sector,
tailoring PSC limits to suit the needs and timing of each sector. NMFS
decision to disapprove the proposed subdivision of annual PSC limits
apportioned to the Pacific cod trawl gear fisheries is explained below.
Sideboards are harvesting and processing restrictions that were
placed on AFA trawl CVs and AFA trawl CPs operating in the BSAI pollock
fishery to protect the interests of other fishermen and processors that
did not benefit directly from the AFA. This final rule removes the
sideboard limits of BSAI Pacific cod for the AFA trawl CPs. The
establishment of a separate Pacific cod allocation to this sector
negates the need for the BSAI Pacific cod sideboard which protects the
historic share of the non-AFA trawl CP sector from being eroded by the
AFA trawl CP vessels. For the same reason, BSAI Pacific cod is added to
the list of exceptions to the groundfish species or species groups for
which sideboard harvest limits are calculated for the listed AFA trawl
CPs. The halibut and crab PSC sideboard limits for both AFA sectors are
maintained as currently specified in regulations.
This final rule modifies or adds definitions for CPs in accordance
with the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2005 (Public Law 108-447).
This final rule revises the definition for AFA trawl CP and adds new
definitions for hook-and-line CP, non-AFA trawl CP (also known as the
head-and-gut sector), and pot CP. The new definition for hook-and-line
CP is substantively consistent with the Consolidated Appropriations
Act's definition for the longline CP subsector. Also, the definition
for ``CDQ reserve'' is revised to change and update terms and to
generalize the cross reference. All of the various housekeeping
revisions described in the proposed rule also are made by this final
rule.
Element of the Proposed Rule Not Approved
NMFS did not approve one regulatory change recommended by the
Council and included in the proposed rule. For reasons explained below,
NMFS did not approve the Council's recommendation to further apportion
the Pacific cod trawl fishery crab and halibut PSC allowances among the
trawl sectors.
PSC regulations pertain to certain species caught in the process of
fishing for groundfish that must be accounted for, but cannot be
retained unless the vessel participates in the halibut and salmon
donation program at Sec. 679.26. Regulations at Sec. 679.21 establish
PSC limits for Pacific halibut, three species of crab, salmon, and
herring in the BSAI trawl groundfish fisheries, and a separate Pacific
halibut PSC limit for nontrawl gear. These regulations also establish
allocations of each PSC limit between the CDQ and non-CDQ fisheries and
a process for apportioning PSC among non-CDQ fisheries.
Currently, the total amount of halibut PSC mortality for trawl gear
in the non-CDQ fisheries is apportioned in the annual harvest
specifications process among four fisheries, including the Pacific cod
fishery. The current process of fishery apportionment will continue
under this final rule. Generally, about 1,400 mt of halibut PSC
mortality is apportioned annually to the BSAI Pacific cod trawl
fishery, but this amount and actual use can vary from year to year.
Crab PSC limits fluctuate as resource abundance fluctuates.
In recent years, the trawl CV and trawl CP sectors' directed
Pacific cod fisheries have closed most often (1) due to reaching the
seasonal TAC, (2) to avoid exceeding specified halibut PSC allowances,
or (3) because a fishing season has ended. Reaching a crab PSC limit
results in closure of a specific area to directed fishing. Unlike
reaching a halibut PSC limit, reaching a crab PSC limit typically does
not close BSAI Pacific cod trawl fisheries, although occasional crab
PSC closures have occurred in the past.
The Council recommended that the amount of halibut and crab PSC
that would be apportioned to each trawl sector for the Pacific cod
trawl fishery under this action be proportional to each sector's
percentage of Pacific cod harvested in the Pacific cod target fishery
from 1999 through 2003, including Pacific cod retained for meal
production. Accordingly, the proposed rule divided the annual PSC
allowance of halibut and crab specified for the Pacific cod trawl
fishery category among the trawl sectors as follows: 70.7 percent for
trawl CVs; 4.4 percent for AFA trawl CPs; and 24.9 percent for non-AFA
trawl CPs. Because the AFA and non-AFA trawl CVs would share a Pacific
cod allocation, the Council decided that this sector also should
receive combined halibut and crab PSC allowances.
The Council intended the apportionment of halibut and crab PSC
among the trawl gear sectors that target Pacific cod to allow each
sector to better plan its operations by being able to manage its PSC
use during the fishing year without its PSC being eroded by another
sector. Because the Council's apportionment of halibut and crab PSC was
proportional to a trawl sector's harvest of Pacific cod in a target
fishery, those sectors that harvested Pacific cod primarily as a target
species, rather than as a species caught incidentally in other
groundfish fisheries, would have received proportionally higher PSC
allowances. Under this apportionment,
[[Page 50792]]
the trawl CV and AFA trawl CP sectors would have received higher PSC
allowances than they have historically used or needed, and the non-AFA
trawl CP sector would have received significantly less PSC than it has
historically used or needed to optimize groundfish harvest under
current PSC limits.
During its deliberation on adoption of Amendment 85, the Council
understood and acknowledged that the percentage of halibut and crab PSC
apportioned to the non-AFA trawl CP sector could be constraining
compared to average historic use, but chose not to modify its decision.
The Council determined that the amount of PSC that would be apportioned
to the non-AFA trawl CP sector would fall within the range of what this
sector has caught historically.
Under the Council's recommendation and the proposed rule, the non-
AFA trawl CP sector would have received 22 percent less halibut PSC and
37 percent less Zone 1 bairdi (Chionoecetes bairdi) crab PSC than it
has used historically to prosecute its directed Pacific cod fishery and
only about the average amount of opilio (Chionoecetes opilio) crab PSC.
Conversely, the AFA trawl CP and the trawl CV sectors would have
received about 200 percent and 40 percent more halibut PSC, 19 percent
and 116 percent more bairdi crab PSC, and 3,144 percent and 20,904
percent more opilio crab PSC, respectively, than these sectors have
used historically.
Regulations implementing the FMP must be consistent with the
Magnuson-Stevens Act, including the national standards, and other
applicable law. NMFS determined that further apportionment of halibut
and crab PSC among Pacific cod trawl sectors as proposed by the Council
is inconsistent with National Standards 1, 4, and 9 of the Magnuson-
Stevens Act. National Standard 1 requires that fishery management
measures prevent overfishing while maintaining optimum yield from each
fishery, National Standard 4 requires allocations to be fair and
equitable among affected fishermen, and National Standard 9 requires
that bycatch and the mortality of any bycatch be minimized to the
extent practicable. Under the existing open access management of the
non-AFA Pacific cod trawl fishery, NMFS determined that the non-AFA
trawl CP sector is unlikely to be able to harvest its entire allocation
of Pacific cod with the significant reductions in the proposed amount
of halibut and crab PSC as detailed above. This would result in a de
facto reduction in the non-AFA trawl CP Pacific cod allocation and
would likely reduce this sector's ability to harvest other targeted
species. The Council did not provide any explanation as to why an
additional reduction in this sector's harvest of Pacific cod and other
target species not the subject of this final rule is appropriate or
consistent with National Standard 4 or other applicable law.
Additionally, because the amount of PSC allocated to the AFA trawl CP
and the trawl CV sectors is so much greater than their historical
needs, the proposed PSC allocations to these sectors may create a
disincentive for these sectors to minimize their bycatch of prohibited
species, which is not consistent with National Standard 9. Finally,
because the non-AFA trawl CP sector harvests a significant majority of
species other than pollock and Pacific cod, an inconsistency with
National Standard 1 exists. The non-AFA trawl CP sector would likely
not have PSC remaining from its Pacific cod fishery that could then be
used to achieve optimum yield from its other BSAI groundfish fisheries.
Based on the reasons discussed above, therefore, NMFS disapproved
the apportionment of the annual PSC allowances of halibut and crab
mortality among the Pacific cod trawl gear sectors. Regulations
pertaining to this element are not included in this final rule. These
apportionments will continue to be specified during the annual harvest
specifications process.
NMFS notes that a separate amendment to the FMP, Amendment 80, was
approved by the Secretary on July 26, 2007. Amendment 80 primarily
allocates several BSAI non-pollock trawl groundfish fisheries, halibut
PSC, and crab PSC among fishing sectors, and facilitates the formation
of harvesting cooperatives in the non-AFA trawl CP sector. The proposed
rule to implement Amendment 80 was published in the Federal Register on
May 30, 2007 (72 FR 30052) and was available for public comment until
June 29, 2007.
Changes in Regulations from the Proposed Rule to the Final Rule
NMFS made several changes to the proposed regulatory text in this
final rule. First, NMFS has removed proposed Sec. 679.21(e)(3)(v) from
the final rule. Proposed Sec. 679.21(e)(3)(v) included the proposed
PSC allowances for the trawl sector which NMFS disapproved for the
reasons explained above. Proposed Sec. 679.21(e)(3)(vi) reverts back
to Sec. 679.21(e)(3)(v) in this final rule as a result of removing
proposed Sec. 679.21(e)(3)(v). NMFS also has removed references to
proposed Sec. 679.21(e)(3)(v) from the final rule.
Second, the proposed regulatory text at Sec. 679.20(a)(7)(i)(B)(1)
regarding CDQ seasonal allowances combined all CDQ trawl vessels into
one group. This final rule revises the proposed regulatory text to
maintain the division between trawl CP and trawl CV that exists in the
current regulations. No changes to the CDQ Program seasonal allowances
were intended by the Council.
Last, the proposed regulatory text at Sec. 679.20(a)(7)(iii)(B)
inadvertently included the heading ``trawl catcher/processor sectors.''
This heading is changed in this final rule to ``trawl gear sectors''
because this part of the reallocation hierarchy applies to all trawl
gear sectors, not just the trawl CP sectors.
Response to Comments
As mentioned above, NMFS received 16 letters containing 79 unique
comments during the public comment periods. Two non-industry letters
were received and 14 letters were received from the fishing industry. A
summary of those comments, grouped by subject matter, and NMFS'
responses follow.
Comment on the Intent of Amendment 85
Comment 1: One commenter supports the intent of Amendment 85 to
modify the allocations of Pacific cod by codifying the fishery as it is
actually occurring with the goal of reducing inseason adjustments
(reallocations) from the trawl sectors to the hook-and-line sectors.
Another commenter supports the intent of Amendment 85 to modify the
allocations of Pacific cod to various sectors to better reflect
historic usage.
Response: NMFS notes the support for Amendment 85 and clarifies
that one intention of this action is to better reflect historic use,
not current use, as noted in this excerpt from the Council's problem
statement: ``To reduce uncertainty and provide stability, allocations
should be adjusted to better reflect historic use by sector. The basis
for determining sector allocations will be catch history as well as
consideration of socio-economic and community factors.''
Comments on Data Used
Comment 2: The catch history information used in Amendment 85 was
based on the best scientific information available (1995-2003 WPR
(Weekly Production Report) and fish ticket data for retained catch).
Preliminary data from 2004 and 2005 were also considered. It is
appropriate to use WPR data to calculate catch history by sector for
the CPs because it is the only data set common to all CP vessels. The
use of WPR data was well noticed to the
[[Page 50793]]
public. The non-inclusion of fishmeal was consistent with all previous
Council actions involving allocation.
Response: NMFS agrees that the catch history information used to
develop Amendment 85 and presented in the proposed rule was based on
the best scientific information available, consistent with National
Standard 2 of the Magnuson-Stevens Act. Only legally retained catch was
used in determining harvest history to avoid rewarding sectors with a
high discard rate of Pacific cod. However, data presented in the EA/
RIR/initial regulatory flexibility analysis (IRFA) and considered by
NMFS in its decision to approve the non-CDQ allocations in Amendment 85
did include cod destined for fishmeal production because it is legally
retained catch. The analysis used data from Federal WPRs, which include
fishmeal data, and the Alaska Department of Fish and Game (ADF&G) fish
tickets to calculate sector specific harvest history. These databases
were used because they are consistent across all sectors and every
sector's production of Pacific cod is weighed and reported on WPRs and/
or fish tickets.
Total harvest was calculated based on retained legal harvest
(including Pacific cod that was turned into fishmeal as the primary
product) from WPRs and ADF&G fish tickets. In addition, total harvest
(retained and discarded cod, including fishmeal) from NMFS blend data,
and the catch accounting database was provided in Section 3.3.5 (Table
3-24) of the analysis. The NMFS blend data and data from the catch
accounting database (used since 2003) utilize observer data, shoreside
processor landings data, and fish tickets. In the cod target fishery,
blend data are calculated from partial haul samples, including
discards. Observer estimates are extrapolated for some sectors because
of varying levels of observer coverage. Because the AFA trawl CP sector
is 100 percent observed, the best information available for that sector
would be the blend data. However, not all sectors would be treated
equally if blend data were used because not all sectors are 100 percent
observed. Therefore, the decision by NMFS to use WPR data and ADF&G
fish tickets, and to include cod destined for fishmeal in the
determination of harvest history is fair and equitable, and is
consistent with National Standards 2 and 4 of the Magnuson-Stevens Act.
Comment 3: The range of dates selected seriously over-weighted the
pre-Amendment 46 period, an inept historical analogue to the current
fishery and a period of time for which Amendment 85 was explicitly
designed to supersede in order to better reflect current use and
dependence. The express purpose of Amendment 85 is to conform
allocations to existing realities. The years most relevant to existing
realities are the most recent years and the Council failed to consider
those years.
Current allocations are based on historical usage prior to 1997,
and the Council's problem statement seeks to address the fact that
``the current allocations do not correspond with actual dependency and
use by sectors.'' Allocations set in 1997 closely tracked actual usage
at that time to determine what are now the current allocations.
Therefore, any history prior to 1997 should not be used because it is
different from the ``actual use'' which Amendment 85 is intended to
reflect.
Beginning in 1998, Pacific cod had to be retained by all vessels as
long as directed fishing was open; no sector should be penalized for
discarded fish that were legally discarded prior to that. Comparing
sectors that only target cod with sectors that both target and have
incidental catches of cod is not comparing apples to apples. The
Council considered data that contained only retained catch, so they
understate the amount of Pacific cod the non-AFA trawl CPs needed to
prosecute other fisheries in the years prior to 1998. Under the current
regulatory scheme that fish would be retained and counted.
In 1999, the AFA identified a number of AFA vessels and granted
them exclusive access to BSAI pollock. The non-AFA trawl CPs were
excluded from targeting pollock and increased their harvest share of
Pacific cod. All but one of the AFA trawl CPs ceased to target Pacific
cod.
Rewarding one sector over the other for legal discard activity from
10 years prior to final Council action does not correspond to
dependencies developed in light of the current management era, which
began with a new cod allocation in 1997, 100 percent mandatory
retention in 1998, and the AFA in 1999 which preempted the head-and-gut
(H&G) fleet from the largest groundfish fishery in North America.
Therefore, earlier years do not indicate ``present participation'' or
``actual use.''
Response: As stated in the response to Comment 1, the allocations
established by Amendment 85 and this final rule are intended to better
reflect a sector's historic use, not current use. In referencing the
Council's problem statement, the commenter appears to equate ``actual''
with current, but this is not what the Council meant by ``actual.'' The
problem statement also states, ``The basis for determining sector
allocations will be catch history as well as consideration of socio-
economic and community factors.'' One year or just a few recent years
is not reflective of catch history and dependence over time. No one
year in the history from 1995 to 2003 was given more weight than any
other.
The Council had several options available in setting the allocation
percentages, including the harvest histories from several specific set
of years, and an option to select direct allocation percentages from
within the range of analyzed percentages. The Council chose to select
allocations for the non-CDQ sectors that were within the range of
analyzed percentages, and that more closely represent an average of
retained catch for most sectors from 1995 through 2003.
Harvest history for each sector was based on annual retained catch.
The data presented in the EA/RIR/FRFA include historic harvest from
1995 through 2003 as the primary basis for determining historic use of
Pacific cod by sector, although data from 2004 to 2005 are provided as
well. The starting year of 1995 was chosen because it includes data
from the early years of sector allocations of Pacific cod TAC that
began in 1994 with the implementation of BSAI Amendment 24 to the FMP
(59 FR 4009, January 28, 1994). This set of years also includes changes
in Pacific cod harvest due to impacts beginning in 1998 from
implementation of improved retention/improved utilization measures to
reduce discards, from AFA legislation in 1999, and from Steller sea
lion protection measures beginning in 2001, all of which had impacts on
all sectors to varying degrees. Pacific cod has been a valuable species
for a long time, therefore, it is important to also consider the time
period before these major legislative and regulatory programs to
determine historic dependence and use. Also, consideration of just
three or four recent years does not show dependency by the sectors over
time and may be unduly biased because of increased market demand for
Pacific cod in recent years for some products, potential decreased
participation due to BSAI crab rationalization, and the likelihood of
competition for Pacific cod among sectors in anticipation of this
action.
At the time the Amendment 85 analysis was initiated by the Council
in late 2004, the data from 2003 were the most recent available. Rather
than continually adding years as the action progressed, the data
analyzed for the allocation options stopped with the data from 2003.
The Council and NMFS
[[Page 50794]]
considered more recent (2004 and 2005) harvest data from the NMFS catch
accounting database in reviewing harvest history to illustrate recent
harvest trends as that information became available, but it was not
available in the same format as the data from 1995 through 2003.
However, for the reasons stated above, this two-year data set was not
used as the sole basis for the allocations. Additionally, the data
showed that some sectors increased their harvest of Pacific cod during
the recent past, compared to their 1995 through 2003 harvest, and were
not constrained by their allocation in doing so because they did not
harvest their entire allocation. Not all sectors had the advantage of
such flexibility. Therefore, based upon all these reasons, focusing on
more recent years does not provide an equitable standard upon which to
assess the dependence of Pacific cod by all sectors. The use of data
from 1995 through 2003 provides a more appropriate basis to determine
historic harvest share.
In 1994 under Amendment 24, the trawl sectors were allocated 54
percent of the Pacific cod TAC, the fixed gear sectors received 44
percent, and the jig gear sector received 2 percent. This allocation
was approximately equal to the average percent of Pacific cod taken
with trawl gear or fixed gear between 1991 and 1993. In 1997 under
Amendment 46, the allocation to the trawl sector was reduced to 47
percent and then equally divided between trawl CPs and trawl CVs. The
reduced allocation to the trawl sector was determined by an industry
negotiating committee and closely represented the harvest percentages
taken by trawl and fixed gear at that time while retaining the 2-
percent allocation for jig gear. The split between trawl CVs and trawl
CPs was agreed upon by a separate negotiation between representatives
of the trawl sectors to maintain a directed fishery for trawl CVs which
were more dependent on directed fishing for Pacific cod. These basic
trawl and fixed gear percentage allocations of Pacific cod TAC have
remained unchanged since 1997. The fixed gear sectors were divided in
2000 and the pot sectors in 2004, but the overall split between trawl
and fixed gear sectors and between trawl CPs and trawl CVs did not
change.
The high discard rates of Pacific cod is an issue that the Council
has been addressing for some time. The problem statement for Amendment
46 states: ``Management measures are needed to ensure that the Pacific
cod TAC is harvested in a manner which reduces discards in the target
fisheries, reduces PSC mortality, reduces nontarget bycatch of Pacific
cod and other groundfish species, takes into account the social and
economic aspects of variable allocations and addresses impacts of the
fishery on habitat.''
The Council's intent under Amendment 85 was to calculate historic
catch by using retained harvest of Pacific cod, because Pacific cod is
required to be retained (in both the directed fishery, and up to the
maximum retainable allowance when the directed Pacific cod fishery is
closed) and it was not the intent to ``reward'' sectors that have
higher discards of Pacific cod. This is why discarded Pacific cod was
not included in the harvest history data. All of the harvest data
provided were considered in the allocation decision by the Council and
by NMFS. Most sectors have incidental catch of Pacific cod in their
fisheries. The exceptions are the jig and pot gear sectors. By using
historic catch over the same set of years and using the same data set
for all sectors (see response to Comment 2), all sectors were treated
fairly and equitably, consistent with National Standard 4 of the
Magnuson-Stevens Act.
Comment 4: The use of WPRs to calculate the round weight of cod
harvested by the AFA trawl CP sector for the years after 1998 is a
significant source of error in the catch history tables set forth in
the draft analysis. The use of observer reports and scale weights is
universally recognized as a more accurate way of calculating a vessel's
total catch than the somewhat antiquated WPR approach. The use of WPR
data as a basis for the AFA trawl CP catch history is inconsistent with
the requirement that management measures be based on ``the best
scientific evidence available.'' The draft analysis should be revised
to clarify that observer data (not WPRs) represent the best available
data for the post-1998 catch history of the AFA trawl CP sector.
Response: The Council's and NMFS' use of WPR data rather than NMFS
blend data and the catch accounting database, which both use observer
data as one component, is explained in the response to Comment 2. WPR
data and blend data estimate catch using different methods. WPR data
represents a consistent database across all sectors; every sector's
product is weighed, and landed weights are converted to round weights.
The blend data estimate catch based on vessel catch reports augmented
by observer data, and are used for in-season management. The blend data
use observer estimates of discards, which affect the total catch
estimates. In the cod target fishery, observer estimates are based
primarily on partial haul sampling. In general, CPs <125 ft (38.1 m)
LOA are observed 30 percent of the time, and blend data use WPR data
when there are no observer data available. Finally, during the years
considered to establish allocations (1995 2003), the more accurate flow
scales were used more extensively in the AFA CP sector than in other
sectors. Because the AFA trawl CP sector is 100 percent observed, the
best information available for that sector would be the blend data.
However, blend data are not available by vessel length for the CV
sectors, which primarily affects the <60 ft (18.3 m) fixed gear CVs.
Also, the non-AFA trawl CPs <125 ft (38.1 m) LOA are observed 30
percent of the time, so WPR data are used when there are no observer
data available. These two datasets rely on different estimation methods
and do not provide identical estimates of catch by sector. Use of blend
data for some sectors and WPR data for other sectors would be
problematic because any estimation error among sectors could be
exacerbated if different datasets are used to determine sector specific
allocations. Therefore, the best available data when comparing Pacific
cod harvests among all sectors for the determination of harvest history
is WPR data and ADF&G fish tickets (see response to Comment 2).
Acknowledging that observer data are used to monitor catch for this one
sector because it is 100 percent observed would not change the decision
on the amendment. Therefore, no changes will be made to the analysis
concerning this subject.
Comment 5: The data used in the draft analysis excludes Pacific cod
utilized in the production of meal from the AFA trawl CP's catch
history. It is inappropriate for the draft analysis to exclude or
otherwise discount Pacific cod used for meal production from any of the
tables used to depict catch history for the AFA trawl CP sector. There
is no justification for excluding the official catch data from an
analysis that purportedly reflects the catch history of this sector.
The combined effect of using WPR-based catch accounting to calculate
the AFA trawl CP catch history and excluding the catch used to make
meal results in an inaccurate estimate of the sector's catch history
that understates the AFA trawl CP sector's historic use and dependency
on cod. The draft analysis should be revised to clarify that meal is a
``legally retainable product'' insofar as that term is used in
connection with Amendment 85 and other regulations governing the BSAI
groundfish fishery; and that all legally retained cod taken as bycatch
in
[[Page 50795]]
the directed pollock fishery will be included in the AFA trawl CP
sector's catch history for purposes of Amendment 85.
Response: The concern about fishmeal not being included in
calculations of harvest history was a result of some commenters relying
on a draft analysis distributed prior to the April 2006 Council
meeting. As explained in the response to Comment 2, WPR data represent
the best available information for comparing Pacific cod catch across
and among sectors. WPR data include Pacific cod destined for fishmeal.
However, in the early development of the Amendment 85 analysis, data
for Pacific cod destined for fishmeal were removed from the WPR data
and Council analytical documents up to the April 2006 Council meeting
continued to exclude fishmeal data. At the April 2006 Council meeting,
in light of public comment, WPR data that included fishmeal data was
provided for Council consideration. As explained in response to Comment
2, the history considered in setting non-CDQ allocation percentages in
Amendment 85 included Pacific cod that was turned into fishmeal as the
primary product. Several tables that incorporated fishmeal in the
harvest history were presented to the Council in April 2006 for its
consideration and similar tables were included in the Secretarial
review draft analysis issued in January 2007. The analysis was not
revised in light of this comment because the data on fishmeal were
considered and included in setting the Pacific cod allocation to the
AFA trawl CP sector and the historic catch data including fishmeal are
presented in the analysis.
Comment 6: The H&G sector allocation of 13.4 percent is 0.2 percent
less than the sector's straight 95-03 average. The action was taken in
2006, however the last year considered was 2003. This sector's
``historic use'' and ``actual dependency'' are not adequately reflected
if 2004 and 2005 are not taken into consideration for a final action
taken in 2006. The Magnuson-Stevens Act instructs that recency must be
considered as well. By allocating the H&G sector an amount of cod less
than its average harvest for the historical period of 1995 to 2003, the
Council simply ignored the present participation consideration.
Response: NMFS disagrees that the non-AFA trawl CP sector was
allocated an amount of Pacific cod that is less than its average
historic harvest for the period 1995 to 2003 (average historic
harvest). NMFS believes that the commenter's reference to 13.6 percent
is likely based on data in the analysis that excludes fishmeal in the
calculation of average sector harvest share (see Table 3-11 in the EA/
RIR/FRFA). The Council and NMFS included fishmeal in determining
historic harvest. When fishmeal is included in the calculation, the
head-and-gut (non-AFA trawl CP) sector average historic harvest from
1995 to 2003 is 13.4 percent. The non-AFA trawl CP sector received
exactly its 1995 to 2003 average historic harvest as its allocation
under Amendment 85. The Council and NMFS also considered more recent
participation in 2004 and 2005, but for reasons provided in the
response to Comment 3, chose not to include more recent participation
in determining historic use and dependence.
Comment 7: The draft analysis should be revised to include at least
one table (based on official catch data and including fish utilized in
meal production) that clearly shows the total retained catch of cod by
the AFA trawl CP sector during the period following adoption of the AFA
(e.g., the years 1999-2003).
Response: Appendix G of the analysis prepared for Amendment 85 and
this rulemaking (see ADDRESSES) includes Pacific cod catch data,
including fishmeal, for the AFA trawl CP sector for the years 1995
through 2003. Therefore, NMFS does not need to revise the analysis to
include this table.
Comment 8: Neither the EA/RIR/IRFA before the Council nor the
Secretarial draft had simply one table which showed the complete
picture of each sectors' history. It takes three tables to complete the
1995-2005 picture.
Response: Table 3-24 in the Secretarial review draft of the EA/RIR/
IRFA gives the data for BSAI Pacific cod non-CDQ allocations, catch and
reallocations by sector from 1995 through 2005. The proposed rule
purposely used two tables and the Secretarial review draft analysis
used three to present the historical catch data as the average share of
the retained Pacific cod harvest over various time periods. Table 3-9
in the EA/RIR/IRFA was used to show the complete picture of each
sector's history for the years under consideration for allocations
(1995 - 2003), and Table 3-12 shows the catch history for 2004 and 2005
in a two-part table. The data from 1995 through 2003 used in Table 3 in
the proposed rule were from a different source than the data for 2004
and 2005 used in Table 4. Separate tables were used to help draw
attention to this fact in the proposed rule and for the same reason in
the EA/RIR/FRFA.
Comment 9: The proposed allocation to the H&G sector cannot be
justified by the fact that the H&G sector had a lower harvest share in
1995-1998, nine to twelve years ago and prior to the implementation of
several significant regulatory changes culminating in the AFA that
fundamentally changed the dynamics of the fishery, and that as a result
its ``average historical'' retained catch was 13.4 percent. The
sector's performance in those earlier years is of no relevance to the
goal that the Council was seeking to achieve.
Response: NMFS disagrees. The reasons why data from 1995 through
1998 are included in the calculation of average historic harvest are
explained in the response to Comment 3. While the data may represent a
period of time when the non-AFA trawl CP sector was not maximizing its
retained harvest of Pacific cod, it does represent a period of time
when other sectors were maximizing their harvest. The Council's goal
was to adjust allocations ``to better reflect historic use by sector.''
NMFS determined that the years selected by the Council are consistent
with that goal.
Comment 10: The Council was not required to use one particular set
of ``correct'' years in conforming the allocations to existing reality,
but the allocation to the non-AFA trawl CP sector was clearly beyond
any rational assessment of ``actual use.'' Within the range of options
presented to the Council in the Amendment 85 document (April draft),
the period from 2000 to 2003 clearly was most reflective of actual
current participation in the fishery. Under that approach, the non-AFA
trawl CP sector averaged 16.2 percent. At the other extreme, under the
option least reflective of actual current participation, from 1995 to
2002, the non-AFA trawl CP sector average 13.2 percent. Incredibly, the
Council chose to allocate an even smaller share to the non-AFA trawl CP
sector than the 1995-2003 average of 13.6 percent. The Council's
proposal of 13.4 percent does not reflect the non-AFA trawl CP sector's
current or even its relevant recent participation in this fishery. This
reduction was not part of an across-the-board cut that treated all
sectors equitably. Some sectors received an increase above their actual
use and the non-AFA trawl CP sector received the largest decrease.
Response: See the response to Comment 3 for a discussion of the
years considered to determine average historic harvest. The non-AFA
trawl CP sector catch history from 1995 through 2003 is 13.6 percent
only if fishmeal is not included. However, the Council's allocation
recommendation included Pacific cod that was turned into fishmeal as
the primary product when
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developing the Pacific cod sector allocations because Pacific cod
destined for fishmeal production is legally retained catch (see
response to Comment 2). Table 3-119 of the EA/RIR/FRFA shows that when
fishmeal is included in the calculation, which the Council did in
taking final action, the non-AFA trawl CP sector's average from 1995
through 2003 matches exactly the new allocation: 13.4 percent of the
non-CDQ Pacific cod TAC. Some sectors received allocations that are
greater than their historic harvest during 1995 through 2003 and others
less, but the non-AFA trawl CP sector was the only sector to receive
exactly its average share of the retained harvest from 1995 through
2003.
Comment 11: Comparing the harvest information from 2004 and 2005
with the Amendment 85 allocations reveals that the non-AFA trawl CP
sector suffered nearly an order of magnitude loss greater than any
other sector (most of which received allocations at or above their
2004-2005 average). Comparing the Amendment 85 allocation to the
average of 1998-2003 (a range from when cod became a 100-percent
retention species to the last year of data the Council had when making
their decision), the non-AFA trawl CP fleet still lost far more than
any other sector going from an average of 15.7 percent to 13.4 percent
(relative loss of 14.5 percent).
Response: The Council had harvest data from 2004 and 2005 available
when it took final action on Amendment 85. It was not available in the
same format as the years from 1995 through 2003, but it was considered
by the Council. The non-AFA trawl CP sector allocation is exactly its
catch history from 1995 through 2003. As stated previously (see
responses to Comments 2 and 3), the Council chose to look at history
and dependency over a number of years, not just one or two recent
years. Although the non-AFA trawl CP sector's retention of Pacific cod
has increased over the last several years, that sector always had the
opportunity to retain Pacific cod in higher amounts than they
historically did. For various reasons, the sector chose to focus on
other species as a business decision. The Council determined that the
new allocations were needed to better reflect historic use and chose
not to define historic use as just the last two or three years.
Comments on Allocation Issues
Comment 12: The increase in allocation percentage to fixed gear
from trawl gear is consistent with the historic trend in the way the
BSAI cod fishery is prosecuted as well as with previous Council actions
regarding BSAI cod allocations in Amendments 24 and 46. Stabilizing the
increased historic proportion of fixed gear harvest via allocation of
BSAI Pacific cod in Amendment 85 will ensure the continued experience
of reduced halibut and crab bycatch, improved product quality, and
reduced benthic impacts associated with fixed gear cod fisheries as
compared to trawl cod fisheries.
Response: Amendment 85 is intended to better reflect historic usage
by the various harvest sectors while addressing coastal community
needs. The Pacific cod allocations to the trawl and fixed gear sectors
set in 1994 under Amendment 24 (54 percent and 44 percent,
respectively), were approximately equal to the average percentage of
Pacific cod taken with these gear types during 1991 through 1993, with
a 2-percent allocation for jig gear. The Pacific cod allocations set in
1996 under Amendment 46 were arrived at by industry negotiation and
were chosen to represent more closely the harvest percentage taken by
trawl and fixed gear sectors at that time (47 percent and 51 percent,
respectively), while maintaining the 2-percent allocation for jig gear.
Under Am