Fisheries of the Northeastern United States; Recreational Management Measures for the Summer Flounder Fishery; Fishing Year 2008, 65466-65469 [E7-22741]
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TABLE 52.1031.—EPA-APPROVED RULES AND REGULATIONS
State
citation
Title/subject
*
100 .......
Definitions
*
137 .......
Emission
Statements.
*
Date
adopted by
State
Date approved by
EPA
Federal Register
citation
52.1020
*
12/1/2005
*
11/21/07
*
[Insert Federal Register
page number where
the document begins].
*
(c)(62) ......
*
*
Revised to add definitions associated with SIP
submittals made between 7/19/95 and 12/1/
05.
*
12/17/04
*
11/21/07
*
[Insert Federal Register
page number where
the document begins].
*
(c)(62) ......
*
*
Revised to incorporate changes required by
EPA’s consolidated emissions reporting rule.
The entire rule is approved with the exception
of HAP and greenhouse gas reporting requirements which were not included in the state’s
SIP revision request.
*
*
*
*
*
*
Note 1. The regulations are effective statewide unless stated otherwise in comments or title section.
[FR Doc. E7–22596 Filed 11–20–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
50 CFR Part 648
[Docket No. 070827484–7581–02]
RIN 0648–AV99
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Michael P. Ruccio, Fishery Policy
Analyst, (978) 281–9104.
Fisheries of the Northeastern United
States; Recreational Management
Measures for the Summer Flounder
Fishery; Fishing Year 2008
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule.
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SUMMARY: Through this final rule, NMFS
is implementing coastwide summer
flounder recreational management
measures to complete the rulemaking
process initiated in March 2007. This
action is necessary to implement
appropriate coastwide management
measures to be in place on January 1,
2008, following the expiration of the
current state-by-state conservation
equivalency management measures on
December 31, 2007. The intent of these
measures is to prevent overfishing of the
summer flounder resource during the
interim between the aforementioned
expiration of the 2007 recreational
measures and the implementation of
measures for 2008.
DATES: Effective 0001 hours, Eastern
Standard Time (EST), January 1, 2008.
ADDRESSES: Copies of the Supplemental
Environmental Assessment, as well as
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The
summer flounder recreational fishery is
managed cooperatively under the
provisions of the Summer Flounder,
Scup, and Black Sea Bass Fishery
Management Plan (FMP) by the MidAtlantic Fishery Management Council
(Council) and the Atlantic States Marine
Fisheries Commission (Commission), in
consultation with the New England and
South Atlantic Fishery Management
Councils. The Council prepared the
FMP under the authority of the
Magnuson-Stevens Fishery
Conservation and Management Act
(Magnuson-Stevenson Act), 16 U.S.C.
1801 et seq. Regulations implementing
the FMP appear at 50 CFR part 648,
with subparts A (general provisions)
and G (summer flounder) pertaining to
the summer flounder fishery. General
regulations governing U.S. fisheries also
appear at 50 CFR part 600. States
manage summer flounder within 3
nautical miles of their coasts, under the
Commission’s plan for summer
flounder, scup, and black sea bass. The
Federal regulations govern vessels
fishing in the exclusive economic zone
(EEZ), as well as vessels possessing a
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
AGENCY:
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the original Environmental Assessment,
Regulatory Impact Review, and Initial
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (EA/
RIR/IRFA) completed for the 2007
recreational management measures are
available from Patricia A. Kurkul,
Regional Administrator, NMFS
Northeast Region, 1 Blackburn Drive,
Gloucester, MA 01930–2298. The
Supplemental Environmental
Assessment is also accessible via the
Internet at https://www.nero.noaa.gov.
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Federal fisheries permit, regardless of
where they fish.
Under the FMP and regulations, the
Council may recommend and NMFS
may approve one of two approaches for
managing the summer flounder
recreational fishery: Conservation
equivalency (either state-by-state or
regional) with a precautionary default
backstop approved by NMFS; or
coastwide management measures. The
FMP requires that the Council review
updated assessment and fishery
information on an annual basis and
recommend to NMFS both a Total
Allowable Landings (TAL) and
recreational management measures.
For the 2007 recreational fishery, the
Council recommended and NMFS
approved state-by-state conservation
equivalency. When the conservation
equivalency measures expire at the end
of a fishing year, coastwide measures
found at §§ 648.103(a) and 648.105(a)
become effective. Typically, the
coastwide measures are adjusted during
the annual rulemaking process that
establishes recreational management
measures to ensure that the coastwide
measures are sufficient to constrain
recreational landings to the established
harvest limit. This is done even if
conservation equivalency is
implemented, as was done for 2007,
because the coastwide measures serve as
the interim measures in place in the
following year (i.e., 2008) until new
measures are put in place. This is
typically completed by late spring or
early summer. However, because of
timing issues that arose from the
reauthorization of the MagnusonStevens Act that granted authority to
extend the summer flounder rebuilding
period, and a subsequent increase to the
2007 TAL, NMFS did not implement
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Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 224 / Wednesday, November 21, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
any revised 2007 coastwide measures to
serve as the 2008 regulatory backstop
after conservation equivalency expires.
Prior to this rule, the coastwide
measures in the regulations were a 4–
fish possession limit, a 17–inch (43.18–
cm) minimum fish size, and no closed
season. These measures were
determined to be insufficient to ensure
that the 2007 recreational harvest limit
would not be exceeded. Additional
detail on the background and
development of the 2007 recreational
management measures and the 2008
coastwide interim management
measures are contained in the preamble
of the respective proposed rules (72 FR
12158; March 15, 2007, and 72
FR55166; September 28, 2007) and are
not repeated here.
This action is necessary to complete
the final detail of the 2007 summer
flounder recreational management
measures rulemaking and should not be
confused with the upcoming process to
develop the 2008 recreational
management measures. The Council
will begin development of the 2008
recreational management measures,
based on updated assessment
information and 2007 fishery
information, through its Monitoring
Committee meeting in November 2007.
The Council will consider the
Monitoring Committee’s
recommendations for 2008 management
measures during its December 2007
meeting in Secaucus, NJ.
A proposed rule to implement
summer flounder coastwide recreational
interim management measures of an
18.5–inch (46.99–cm) minimum fish
size, a 4–fish possession limit, and a
year-round season was published in the
Federal Register on September 28, 2007
(72 FR 55166), with public comment
accepted through October 15, 2007. This
final rule implements the interim
summer flounder coastwide
management measures proposed by
NMFS, as presented in the proposed
rule and outlined as follows.
The Commission’s Technical
Committee (TC) conducted analysis that
indicated an 18.5–inch (46.99–cm)
minimum fish size with a 4–fish
possession limit and a year-round
season would constrain landings to 90
percent of the emergency rule increased
harvest limit (2,181,735 fish). By
implementing these measures, the
normal regulatory process that occurs
when conservation equivalency is
utilized to manage the summer flounder
recreational fishery will be completed.
These measures will replace the existing
coastwide measures regulatory language
of a 17–inch (43.18–cm) minimum fish
size, a 4–fish possession limit, and no
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15:23 Nov 20, 2007
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closed season, and serve as the default
management measures in place on
January 1, 2008, after conservation
equivalent measures have expired.
These new coastwide measures will
remain effective until they are either
superceded by conservation equivalency
measures or revised, as needed, to
ensure that the 2008 recreational harvest
limit will not be exceeded.
These measures are sufficiently risk
averse as interim measures to ensure
that overfishing will not occur while
new measures, based on the updated
2007 stock assessment, are developed
for implementation in mid–2008.
Summer flounder are typically found
offshore during colder winter months
and only limited recreational fisheries
occur in the southern range of the stock
during spring. Marine Recreational
Fisheries Statistical Survey (MRFSS)
data from 2001–2006 show that less
than 2 percent of the annual harvest
occurs in the first two MRFSS data
collection periods (called waves) of the
year (January-April). Approximately 31
percent of the coastwide summer
flounder harvest occurs in Wave 3 (MayJune).
Based on recent years’ development
and rulemaking schedules when
conservation equivalency has been
utilized for summer flounder
recreational management measures, it is
expected that updated measures, based
on 2007 recreational landings and
adjusted for any quota overages, would
be in place before Wave 4 (July-August)
and the bulk of summer flounder
recreational fisheries begin in 2008. If
different coastwide measures are
recommended by the Council and
Commission and implemented by
NMFS for 2008 management, it is
expected that those measures would be
in place during Wave 2 (March-April
2008).
Comments and Responses
Three comments were received
regarding the proposed 2008 interim
coastwide recreational management
measures. Two of the comments
received did not address any aspect of
the proposed 2008 interim coastwide
recreational management measures: One
stated that summer flounder quotas
should be reduced in 2008, and the
other expressed general displeasure
with recreational fishing opportunities.
NMFS anticipates publishing a
proposed rule for the 2008 summer
flounder TAL before December 2007.
That proposed rule, when published,
would be the appropriate rule to address
comments on quota reductions,
therefore those two comments are not
addressed here.
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Comment 1: The commenter inquired
why a coastwide measure would be
implemented that may penalize states
that have used conservation equivalency
measures as an effective means of
constraining recreational harvests to or
below the state’s respective target.
Response: This commenter appears to
have confused the 2008 interim
coastwide management measures with
the yet to be developed 2008
management measures. As previously
stated in the preamble to this final rule,
the measures implemented by this rule
will remain effective until replaced, by
either conservation equivalency or
updated coastwide measures, sometime
in late spring or early summer of 2008.
Coastwide measures have always
become the management measures in
place in the interim between the
expiration of conservation equivalency
and the implementation of new
measures that are based on updated
assessment and fishery information. The
measures of this rule are necessary to
ensure that the relatively minor amount
of summer flounder recreational harvest
that occurs in late winter will be
adequately constrained by appropriate
measures. The Council has not yet
initiated the process that will develop
the measures that will be utilized to
manage the bulk of the 2008 recreational
fisheries that occur during summer and
fall. The Council may consider both
state-by-state or regional conservation
equivalency or modification of the
coastwide measures to manage the 2008
summer flounder recreational fishery.
Classification
The Administrator, Northeast Region,
NMFS, determined that this final rule is
necessary for the conservation and
management of the summer flounder
fishery and that it is consistent with the
Magnuson-Stevens Fishery
Conservation and Management Act and
other applicable law.
This final rule has been determined to
be not significant for purposes of
Executive Order 12866.
A final regulatory flexibility analysis
(FRFA) was prepared. The FRFA
incorporates the IRFA, a summary of the
significant issues raised by the public
comments in response to the IRFA, and
NMFS responses to those comments,
and a summary of the analyses
completed to support the action. A copy
of this analysis is available from the
NMFS (see ADDRESSES).
Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
Statement of Objective and Need
A description of the reasons why this
action is being taken, and the objectives
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Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 224 / Wednesday, November 21, 2007 / Rules and Regulations
of and legal basis for this final rule are
explained in the preambles to the
proposed rule and this final rule and are
not repeated here.
Summary of Significant Issues Raised in
Public Comments
A summary of the comments received,
and the responses thereto, are contained
in the ‘‘Comments and Responses’’
section of this preamble. No significant
issues were raised by those submitting
comments, therefore; no changes to the
proposed rule were required to be made
as a result of the public comments.
Description and Estimate of Number of
Small Entities to Which This Rule Will
Apply
The proposed measures could affect
any of the 967 vessels possessing a
Federal charter/party permit for summer
flounder in 2006, the most recent year
for which complete permit data are
available. However, only 331 of these
vessels reported active participation in
the recreational summer flounder
fishery in 2006.
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Description of Projected Reporting,
Recordkeeping, and Other Compliance
Requirements
No additional reporting,
recordkeeping, or other compliance
requirements are included in this final
rule.
Description of the Steps Taken to
Minimize Economic Impact on Small
Entities
NMFS undertook this additional
recreational management measure
rulemaking to implement interim
coastwide measures that are designed to
constrain recreational harvest to the
2007 recreational harvest limit as
increased by emergency rule on January
19, 2007 (72 FR 2458), and extended for
the remainder of 2007 (72 FR 40077;
July 23, 2007). The need to develop and
implement these measures resulted from
public comments received on the 2007
recreational management measures
proposed rule (72 FR 12158; March 15,
2007) that indicated the originally
proposed measures (Alternative 2) for a
1–fish possession limit, a 19–inch
(48.26–cm) minimum fish size, and no
closed season would be severely
restrictive following the implementation
of the increased 2007 TAL.
During the 2007 recreational
management measures rulemaking,
NMFS ultimately implemented a final
rule (72 FR 30492; June 1, 2007) to
implement state-by-state conservation
equivalency to manage the 2007
summer flounder recreational fishery.
This rendered the coastwide measures
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15:23 Nov 20, 2007
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moot for 2007; however, the coastwide
measures are necessary as the interim
management measures for the first third
of 2008, after conservation equivalency
has expired but before updated
measures are developed and
recommended for implementation by
the Council. Recreational harvest data
indicate that only a small percentage of
the summer flounder fishery is likely to
occur during the interim recreational
management measures effective period.
However, the Alternative 2 coastwide
measure available to NMFS during the
recreational management measure
rulemaking development was, as the
public indicated, highly restrictive
under the higher 17.112–million-lb
(7,762–mt) TAL implemented and
extended by emergency rule. Alternative
2 had been developed and analyzed to
constrain landings to the recreational
harvest limit resulting from the lower,
pre-emergency TAL of 12.983 million lb
(5,889 mt). NMFS indicated in the 2007
recreational management measures final
rule that it would undertake separate
notice-and-comment rulemaking to
propose and implement coastwide
measures for the interim period of 2008
that were analyzed for effectiveness
relative to the final, higher 2007 TAL.
The 18.5–inch (46.99–cm) minimum
fish size with a 4–fish possession limit
and a year-round season (Alternative 3)
implemented by this rule minimizes, to
the extent possible, the economic
impact on small entities while ensuring
that the mortality objectives of the FMP
and summer flounder rebuilding
program will be met in the first third of
2008. The Council-proposed coastwide
management measures of Alternative 2
(a 1–fish possession limit, a 19–inch
(48.26–cm) minimum fish size, and no
closed season) would have been unduly
restrictive, constraining recreational
harvest to an estimated 55 percent of the
2007 recreational harvest limit resulting
from the emergency rule increased TAL.
By contrast, the measures implemented
by this rule are projected to constrain
the recreational harvest to 90 percent of
the increased TAL. The increased
number of fish available for landing
under Alternative 3 results in a lower
impact to small entities that participate
in the early season fishery by allowing
slightly larger fish to be retained. The
previous coastwide management
measures in regulation (Alternative 1)
for a 4–fish possession limit, a 17–inch
(43.18–cm) minimum fish size, and no
closed season was projected not to
constrain recreational harvest to the
2007 recreational harvest limit.
Therefore, the measures implemented
by this rule are the only alternative that
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minimizes economic impacts by
allowing the maximum potential
harvest, to the extent practicable, yet
achieves the biological objectives of the
FMP.
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. As part of this
rulemaking process, a letter to permit
holders that also serves as the small
entity compliance guide was prepared
and will be sent to all holders of Federal
party/charter permits issued for the
summer flounder, scup, and black sea
bass fisheries. In addition, copies of this
final rule and the small entity
compliance guide are available from
NMFS (see ADDRESSES) and at the
following Web site: https://
www.nero.noaa.gov.
Dated: November 14, 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 648 is amended
as follows:
I
PART 648—FISHERIES OF THE
NORTHEASTERN UNITED STATES
1. The authority citation for part 648
continues to read as follows:
I
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
2. In § 648.103, paragraph (b) is
revised to read as follows:
I
§ 648.103
Minimum fish sizes.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) Unless otherwise specified
pursuant to § 648.107, the minimum
size for summer flounder is 18.5 inches
(46.99 cm) TL for all vessels that do not
qualify for a moratorium permit, and
charter boats holding a moratorium
permit if fishing with more than three
crew members, or party boats holding a
moratorium permit if fishing with
passengers for hire or carrying more
than five crew members.
*
*
*
*
*
I 3. In § 648.105, the first sentence of
paragraph (a) is revised to read as
follows:
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§ 648.105
Possession restrictions.
*
*
*
*
(a) Unless otherwise specified
pursuant to § 648.107, no person shall
possess more than four summer
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*
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15:23 Nov 20, 2007
Jkt 214001
flounder in, or harvested from, the EEZ,
unless that person is the owner or
operator of a fishing vessel issued a
summer flounder moratorium permit, or
is issued a summer flounder dealer
permit. * * *
*
*
*
*
*
[FR Doc. E7–22741 Filed 11–20–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–S
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 72, Number 224 (Wednesday, November 21, 2007)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 65466-65469]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E7-22741]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
50 CFR Part 648
[Docket No. 070827484-7581-02]
RIN 0648-AV99
Fisheries of the Northeastern United States; Recreational
Management Measures for the Summer Flounder Fishery; Fishing Year 2008
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: Through this final rule, NMFS is implementing coastwide summer
flounder recreational management measures to complete the rulemaking
process initiated in March 2007. This action is necessary to implement
appropriate coastwide management measures to be in place on January 1,
2008, following the expiration of the current state-by-state
conservation equivalency management measures on December 31, 2007. The
intent of these measures is to prevent overfishing of the summer
flounder resource during the interim between the aforementioned
expiration of the 2007 recreational measures and the implementation of
measures for 2008.
DATES: Effective 0001 hours, Eastern Standard Time (EST), January 1,
2008.
ADDRESSES: Copies of the Supplemental Environmental Assessment, as well
as the original Environmental Assessment, Regulatory Impact Review, and
Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (EA/RIR/IRFA) completed for the
2007 recreational management measures are available from Patricia A.
Kurkul, Regional Administrator, NMFS Northeast Region, 1 Blackburn
Drive, Gloucester, MA 01930-2298. The Supplemental Environmental
Assessment is also accessible via the Internet at https://
www.nero.noaa.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Michael P. Ruccio, Fishery Policy
Analyst, (978) 281-9104.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The summer flounder recreational fishery is
managed cooperatively under the provisions of the Summer Flounder,
Scup, and Black Sea Bass Fishery Management Plan (FMP) by the Mid-
Atlantic Fishery Management Council (Council) and the Atlantic States
Marine Fisheries Commission (Commission), in consultation with the New
England and South Atlantic Fishery Management Councils. The Council
prepared the FMP under the authority of the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery
Conservation and Management Act (Magnuson-Stevenson Act), 16 U.S.C.
1801 et seq. Regulations implementing the FMP appear at 50 CFR part
648, with subparts A (general provisions) and G (summer flounder)
pertaining to the summer flounder fishery. General regulations
governing U.S. fisheries also appear at 50 CFR part 600. States manage
summer flounder within 3 nautical miles of their coasts, under the
Commission's plan for summer flounder, scup, and black sea bass. The
Federal regulations govern vessels fishing in the exclusive economic
zone (EEZ), as well as vessels possessing a Federal fisheries permit,
regardless of where they fish.
Under the FMP and regulations, the Council may recommend and NMFS
may approve one of two approaches for managing the summer flounder
recreational fishery: Conservation equivalency (either state-by-state
or regional) with a precautionary default backstop approved by NMFS; or
coastwide management measures. The FMP requires that the Council review
updated assessment and fishery information on an annual basis and
recommend to NMFS both a Total Allowable Landings (TAL) and
recreational management measures.
For the 2007 recreational fishery, the Council recommended and NMFS
approved state-by-state conservation equivalency. When the conservation
equivalency measures expire at the end of a fishing year, coastwide
measures found at Sec. Sec. 648.103(a) and 648.105(a) become
effective. Typically, the coastwide measures are adjusted during the
annual rulemaking process that establishes recreational management
measures to ensure that the coastwide measures are sufficient to
constrain recreational landings to the established harvest limit. This
is done even if conservation equivalency is implemented, as was done
for 2007, because the coastwide measures serve as the interim measures
in place in the following year (i.e., 2008) until new measures are put
in place. This is typically completed by late spring or early summer.
However, because of timing issues that arose from the reauthorization
of the Magnuson-Stevens Act that granted authority to extend the summer
flounder rebuilding period, and a subsequent increase to the 2007 TAL,
NMFS did not implement
[[Page 65467]]
any revised 2007 coastwide measures to serve as the 2008 regulatory
backstop after conservation equivalency expires. Prior to this rule,
the coastwide measures in the regulations were a 4-fish possession
limit, a 17-inch (43.18-cm) minimum fish size, and no closed season.
These measures were determined to be insufficient to ensure that the
2007 recreational harvest limit would not be exceeded. Additional
detail on the background and development of the 2007 recreational
management measures and the 2008 coastwide interim management measures
are contained in the preamble of the respective proposed rules (72 FR
12158; March 15, 2007, and 72 FR55166; September 28, 2007) and are not
repeated here.
This action is necessary to complete the final detail of the 2007
summer flounder recreational management measures rulemaking and should
not be confused with the upcoming process to develop the 2008
recreational management measures. The Council will begin development of
the 2008 recreational management measures, based on updated assessment
information and 2007 fishery information, through its Monitoring
Committee meeting in November 2007. The Council will consider the
Monitoring Committee's recommendations for 2008 management measures
during its December 2007 meeting in Secaucus, NJ.
A proposed rule to implement summer flounder coastwide recreational
interim management measures of an 18.5-inch (46.99-cm) minimum fish
size, a 4-fish possession limit, and a year-round season was published
in the Federal Register on September 28, 2007 (72 FR 55166), with
public comment accepted through October 15, 2007. This final rule
implements the interim summer flounder coastwide management measures
proposed by NMFS, as presented in the proposed rule and outlined as
follows.
The Commission's Technical Committee (TC) conducted analysis that
indicated an 18.5-inch (46.99-cm) minimum fish size with a 4-fish
possession limit and a year-round season would constrain landings to 90
percent of the emergency rule increased harvest limit (2,181,735 fish).
By implementing these measures, the normal regulatory process that
occurs when conservation equivalency is utilized to manage the summer
flounder recreational fishery will be completed. These measures will
replace the existing coastwide measures regulatory language of a 17-
inch (43.18-cm) minimum fish size, a 4-fish possession limit, and no
closed season, and serve as the default management measures in place on
January 1, 2008, after conservation equivalent measures have expired.
These new coastwide measures will remain effective until they are
either superceded by conservation equivalency measures or revised, as
needed, to ensure that the 2008 recreational harvest limit will not be
exceeded.
These measures are sufficiently risk averse as interim measures to
ensure that overfishing will not occur while new measures, based on the
updated 2007 stock assessment, are developed for implementation in mid-
2008. Summer flounder are typically found offshore during colder winter
months and only limited recreational fisheries occur in the southern
range of the stock during spring. Marine Recreational Fisheries
Statistical Survey (MRFSS) data from 2001-2006 show that less than 2
percent of the annual harvest occurs in the first two MRFSS data
collection periods (called waves) of the year (January-April).
Approximately 31 percent of the coastwide summer flounder harvest
occurs in Wave 3 (May-June).
Based on recent years' development and rulemaking schedules when
conservation equivalency has been utilized for summer flounder
recreational management measures, it is expected that updated measures,
based on 2007 recreational landings and adjusted for any quota
overages, would be in place before Wave 4 (July-August) and the bulk of
summer flounder recreational fisheries begin in 2008. If different
coastwide measures are recommended by the Council and Commission and
implemented by NMFS for 2008 management, it is expected that those
measures would be in place during Wave 2 (March-April 2008).
Comments and Responses
Three comments were received regarding the proposed 2008 interim
coastwide recreational management measures. Two of the comments
received did not address any aspect of the proposed 2008 interim
coastwide recreational management measures: One stated that summer
flounder quotas should be reduced in 2008, and the other expressed
general displeasure with recreational fishing opportunities. NMFS
anticipates publishing a proposed rule for the 2008 summer flounder TAL
before December 2007. That proposed rule, when published, would be the
appropriate rule to address comments on quota reductions, therefore
those two comments are not addressed here.
Comment 1: The commenter inquired why a coastwide measure would be
implemented that may penalize states that have used conservation
equivalency measures as an effective means of constraining recreational
harvests to or below the state's respective target.
Response: This commenter appears to have confused the 2008 interim
coastwide management measures with the yet to be developed 2008
management measures. As previously stated in the preamble to this final
rule, the measures implemented by this rule will remain effective until
replaced, by either conservation equivalency or updated coastwide
measures, sometime in late spring or early summer of 2008. Coastwide
measures have always become the management measures in place in the
interim between the expiration of conservation equivalency and the
implementation of new measures that are based on updated assessment and
fishery information. The measures of this rule are necessary to ensure
that the relatively minor amount of summer flounder recreational
harvest that occurs in late winter will be adequately constrained by
appropriate measures. The Council has not yet initiated the process
that will develop the measures that will be utilized to manage the bulk
of the 2008 recreational fisheries that occur during summer and fall.
The Council may consider both state-by-state or regional conservation
equivalency or modification of the coastwide measures to manage the
2008 summer flounder recreational fishery.
Classification
The Administrator, Northeast Region, NMFS, determined that this
final rule is necessary for the conservation and management of the
summer flounder fishery and that it is consistent with the Magnuson-
Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act and other applicable
law.
This final rule has been determined to be not significant for
purposes of Executive Order 12866.
A final regulatory flexibility analysis (FRFA) was prepared. The
FRFA incorporates the IRFA, a summary of the significant issues raised
by the public comments in response to the IRFA, and NMFS responses to
those comments, and a summary of the analyses completed to support the
action. A copy of this analysis is available from the NMFS (see
ADDRESSES).
Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
Statement of Objective and Need
A description of the reasons why this action is being taken, and
the objectives
[[Page 65468]]
of and legal basis for this final rule are explained in the preambles
to the proposed rule and this final rule and are not repeated here.
Summary of Significant Issues Raised in Public Comments
A summary of the comments received, and the responses thereto, are
contained in the ``Comments and Responses'' section of this preamble.
No significant issues were raised by those submitting comments,
therefore; no changes to the proposed rule were required to be made as
a result of the public comments.
Description and Estimate of Number of Small Entities to Which This Rule
Will Apply
The proposed measures could affect any of the 967 vessels
possessing a Federal charter/party permit for summer flounder in 2006,
the most recent year for which complete permit data are available.
However, only 331 of these vessels reported active participation in the
recreational summer flounder fishery in 2006.
Description of Projected Reporting, Recordkeeping, and Other Compliance
Requirements
No additional reporting, recordkeeping, or other compliance
requirements are included in this final rule.
Description of the Steps Taken to Minimize Economic Impact on Small
Entities
NMFS undertook this additional recreational management measure
rulemaking to implement interim coastwide measures that are designed to
constrain recreational harvest to the 2007 recreational harvest limit
as increased by emergency rule on January 19, 2007 (72 FR 2458), and
extended for the remainder of 2007 (72 FR 40077; July 23, 2007). The
need to develop and implement these measures resulted from public
comments received on the 2007 recreational management measures proposed
rule (72 FR 12158; March 15, 2007) that indicated the originally
proposed measures (Alternative 2) for a 1-fish possession limit, a 19-
inch (48.26-cm) minimum fish size, and no closed season would be
severely restrictive following the implementation of the increased 2007
TAL.
During the 2007 recreational management measures rulemaking, NMFS
ultimately implemented a final rule (72 FR 30492; June 1, 2007) to
implement state-by-state conservation equivalency to manage the 2007
summer flounder recreational fishery. This rendered the coastwide
measures moot for 2007; however, the coastwide measures are necessary
as the interim management measures for the first third of 2008, after
conservation equivalency has expired but before updated measures are
developed and recommended for implementation by the Council.
Recreational harvest data indicate that only a small percentage of the
summer flounder fishery is likely to occur during the interim
recreational management measures effective period. However, the
Alternative 2 coastwide measure available to NMFS during the
recreational management measure rulemaking development was, as the
public indicated, highly restrictive under the higher 17.112-million-lb
(7,762-mt) TAL implemented and extended by emergency rule. Alternative
2 had been developed and analyzed to constrain landings to the
recreational harvest limit resulting from the lower, pre-emergency TAL
of 12.983 million lb (5,889 mt). NMFS indicated in the 2007
recreational management measures final rule that it would undertake
separate notice-and-comment rulemaking to propose and implement
coastwide measures for the interim period of 2008 that were analyzed
for effectiveness relative to the final, higher 2007 TAL.
The 18.5-inch (46.99-cm) minimum fish size with a 4-fish possession
limit and a year-round season (Alternative 3) implemented by this rule
minimizes, to the extent possible, the economic impact on small
entities while ensuring that the mortality objectives of the FMP and
summer flounder rebuilding program will be met in the first third of
2008. The Council-proposed coastwide management measures of Alternative
2 (a 1-fish possession limit, a 19-inch (48.26-cm) minimum fish size,
and no closed season) would have been unduly restrictive, constraining
recreational harvest to an estimated 55 percent of the 2007
recreational harvest limit resulting from the emergency rule increased
TAL. By contrast, the measures implemented by this rule are projected
to constrain the recreational harvest to 90 percent of the increased
TAL. The increased number of fish available for landing under
Alternative 3 results in a lower impact to small entities that
participate in the early season fishery by allowing slightly larger
fish to be retained. The previous coastwide management measures in
regulation (Alternative 1) for a 4-fish possession limit, a 17-inch
(43.18-cm) minimum fish size, and no closed season was projected not to
constrain recreational harvest to the 2007 recreational harvest limit.
Therefore, the measures implemented by this rule are the only
alternative that minimizes economic impacts by allowing the maximum
potential harvest, to the extent practicable, yet achieves the
biological objectives of the FMP.
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. As part of
this rulemaking process, a letter to permit holders that also serves as
the small entity compliance guide was prepared and will be sent to all
holders of Federal party/charter permits issued for the summer
flounder, scup, and black sea bass fisheries. In addition, copies of
this final rule and the small entity compliance guide are available
from NMFS (see ADDRESSES) and at the following Web site: https://
www.nero.noaa.gov.
Dated: November 14, 2007.
Samuel D. Rauch III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for Regulatory Programs,National Marine
Fisheries Service.
0
For the reasons set out in the preamble, 50 CFR part 648 is amended as
follows:
PART 648--FISHERIES OF THE NORTHEASTERN UNITED STATES
0
1. The authority citation for part 648 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
0
2. In Sec. 648.103, paragraph (b) is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 648.103 Minimum fish sizes.
* * * * *
(b) Unless otherwise specified pursuant to Sec. 648.107, the
minimum size for summer flounder is 18.5 inches (46.99 cm) TL for all
vessels that do not qualify for a moratorium permit, and charter boats
holding a moratorium permit if fishing with more than three crew
members, or party boats holding a moratorium permit if fishing with
passengers for hire or carrying more than five crew members.
* * * * *
0
3. In Sec. 648.105, the first sentence of paragraph (a) is revised to
read as follows:
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Sec. 648.105 Possession restrictions.
* * * * *
(a) Unless otherwise specified pursuant to Sec. 648.107, no person
shall possess more than four summer flounder in, or harvested from, the
EEZ, unless that person is the owner or operator of a fishing vessel
issued a summer flounder moratorium permit, or is issued a summer
flounder dealer permit. * * *
* * * * *
[FR Doc. E7-22741 Filed 11-20-07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-22-S