Pacific Halibut Fisheries; Catch Sharing Plan, 140-146 [E7-25535]
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140
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 1 / Wednesday, January 2, 2008 / Proposed Rules
alternatives that are technically and
economically practical or feasible and
that meet the purpose and need of the
proposed action.
(c) Range of alternatives. This term
includes all alternatives that would
reasonably accomplish the purpose of
the proposed action, that will be
rigorously explored and objectively
evaluated as well as other alternatives
that are analyzed in any preliminary
draft or preliminary final EIS.
(d) Proposed action. This term refers
to the agency activity under
consideration. It includes a non-Federal
entity’s planned activity that falls under
a Federal agency’s authority to issue
permits, licenses, grants, rights-of-way,
or other common Federal approvals,
funding, or regulatory instruments. The
proposed action:
(1) Is not necessarily, but may
become, during the NEPA process, a
preferred alternative or an
environmentally preferable alternative;
and
(2) Must be clearly described in order
to proceed with NEPA analysis.
(e) Preferred alternative. This term
refers to the alternative which the
agency believes would best accomplish
the purpose and need of the proposed
action, while fulfilling its statutory
mission and responsibilities, giving
consideration to economic,
environmental, technical, and other
factors. It may or may not be the same
as the agency’s or the non-Federal
entity’s proposed action.
(f) No action alternative. This term
has two interpretations. First ‘‘no
action’’ may mean ‘‘no change’’ from a
current management direction or level
of management intensity. Second ‘‘no
action’’ may mean ‘‘no project’’ in cases
where a new project is proposed for
construction. Regardless of the
interpretation, a ‘‘no action’’ alternative
is required to be analyzed in an EIS.
§ 46.425 Identification of the preferred
alternative in an EIS.
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(a) Unless another law prohibits the
expression of a preference, the draft EIS
should identify the bureau’s preferred
alternative or alternatives, if one or
more exists.
(b) Unless another law prohibits the
expression of a preference, the final EIS
must identify the bureau’s preferred
alternative.
§ 46.430 Environmental review and
consultation requirements.
(a) An EIS that also addresses other
environmental review and consultation
requirements must clearly identify and
discuss all the associated analyses,
studies, and surveys relied upon by the
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agency as a part of that review and
consultation. Also:
(1) The EIS should indicate that the
associated analyses are included;
(2) The EIS must reference or include
as an appendix any supporting analyses
or reports; and
(3) The bureau preparing the EIS must
send copies of all supporting analyses or
reports to reviewing agencies as
appropriate in accordance with
applicable regulations or procedures.
(b) The draft EIS must list all Federal
permits, licenses, or approvals that must
be obtained to implement the proposal.
To the extent possible and authorized
by law, the environmental analyses for
these related permits, licenses, and
approvals should be integrated and
performed concurrently. The bureau
may complete the NEPA analysis before
all approvals are in place.
§ 46.450 Identifying the environmentally
preferable alternative.
§ 46.435
Pacific Halibut Fisheries; Catch
Sharing Plan
Inviting comments.
(a) A bureau must seek comment from
the public as part of the NOI to prepare
an EIS and notice of availability on the
draft EISs;
(b) In addition to paragraph (a) of this
section, a bureau must request
comments from:
(1) Federal agencies;
(2) State agencies through procedures
established by the Governor under E.O.
12372;
(3) Local agencies, to the extent that
they include the affected local
jurisdictions; and
(4) Applicant, if any, and persons or
organizations who may be interested or
affected.
(c) The bureau must request
comments from the tribal government,
unless the tribal government has
designated an alternate review process,
when the proposed action may affect the
environment of either:
(1) Indian trust or restricted land; or
(2) Other Indian trust resources, trust
assets, or tribal health and safety.
(d) A bureau does not need to delay
preparation and issuance of a final EIS
when any Federal, State, and local
agencies, or tribal governments from
which comments must be obtained or
requested do not comment within the
prescribed time period.
§ 46.440 Eliminating duplication with State
and local procedures.
A bureau must incorporate in its
regulations provisions allowing a State
agency to jointly prepare an EIS, to the
extent provided in 40 CFR 1506.2.
§ 46.445
Preparing a legislative EIS.
When required, the Department must
ensure that a legislative EIS is included
as a part of the formal transmittal of a
legislative proposal to the Congress.
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In accordance with the requirements
of 40 CFR 1505.2, a bureau must
identify the environmentally preferable
alternative in the ROD. It is not
necessary that the environmentally
preferable alternative be selected in the
ROD.
[FR Doc. E7–25484 Filed 12–31–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–RG–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
50 CFR Part 300
[Docket No. 071218860–7866–01]
RIN 0648–AW26
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: NMFS proposes to approve
and implement changes to the Pacific
Halibut Catch Sharing Plan (Plan) for
the International Pacific Halibut
Commission’s (IPHC or Commission)
regulatory Area 2A off Washington,
Oregon, and California (Area 2A). NMFS
proposes to implement the portions of
the Plan and management measures that
are not implemented through the IPHC,
which includes the sport fishery
management measures for Area 2A.
These actions are intended to enhance
the conservation of Pacific halibut, to
provide greater angler opportunity
where available, and to protect
yelloweye rockfish and other overfished
groundfish species from incidental
catch in the halibut fisheries.
DATES: Comments on the proposed
changes to the Plan and on the proposed
domestic Area 2A halibut management
measures must be received no later than
5 p.m., local time on February 1, 2008.
ADDRESSES: Copies of the Plan and
Regulatory Impact Review (RIR)/Initial
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (IRFA)
are available from D. Robert Lohn,
Regional Administrator, Northwest
Region, NMFS, 7600 Sand Point Way
NE, Seattle, WA 98115–0070. Electronic
copies of the Plan, including proposed
changes for 2008, and of the draft RIR/
IRFA are also available at the NMFS
Northwest Region website: https://
www.nwr.noaa.gov, click on
‘‘Groundfish & Halibut.’’
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Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 1 / Wednesday, January 2, 2008 / Proposed Rules
You may submit comments, identified
by RIN 0648–AW26, by any one of the
following methods:
• Electronic Submissions: Submit all
electronic public comments via the
Federal eRulemaking Portal https://
www.regulations.gov
• Fax: 206–526–6736, Attn: Jamie
Goen.
• Mail: D. Robert Lohn,
Administrator, Northwest Region,
NMFS, Attn: Jamie Goen, 7600 Sand
Point Way NE, Seattle, WA 98115–0070.
Instructions: All comments received
are a part of the public record and will
generally be posted to https://
www.regulations.gov without change.
All Personal Identifying Information (for
example, name, address, etc.)
voluntarily submitted by the commenter
may be publicly accessible. Do not
submit Confidential Business
Information or otherwise sensitive or
protected information.
NMFS will accept anonymous
comments. Attachments to electronic
comments will be accepted in Microsoft
Word, Excel, WordPerfect, or Adobe
PDF file formats only.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
further information contact Jamie Goen
at 206–526–4646 or
jamie.goen@noaa.gov.
The
Northern Pacific Halibut Act (Halibut
Act) of 1982, at 16 U.S.C. 773c, gives the
Secretary of Commerce (Secretary)
general responsibility for implementing
the provisions of the Halibut
Convention between the United States
and Canada (Halibut Convention). It
requires the Secretary to adopt
regulations as may be necessary to carry
out the purposes and objectives of the
Halibut Convention and the Halibut Act.
Section 773c of the Halibut Act
authorizes the regional fishery
management councils to develop
regulations governing the Pacific halibut
catch in their corresponding U.S.
Convention waters that are in addition
to, but not in conflict with, regulations
of the IPHC. Each year between 1988
and 1995, the Pacific Fishery
Management Council (Pacific Council)
had developed a catch sharing plan in
accordance with the Halibut Act to
allocate the total allowable catch (TAC)
of Pacific halibut between treaty Indian
and non-treaty harvesters and among
non-treaty commercial and sport
fisheries in Area 2A.
In 1995, NMFS implemented the
Pacific Council-recommended long-term
Plan (60 FR 14651, March 20, 1995). In
each of the intervening years between
1995 and the present, minor revisions to
the Plan have been made to adjust for
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SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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the changing needs of the fisheries. The
Plan allocates 35 percent of the Area 2A
TAC to Washington treaty Indian tribes
in Subarea 2A–1 and 65 percent to nonIndian fisheries in Area 2A.
Additionally, as a result of U.S. v.
Washington (U.S., et al. v. State of
Washington, et al. Case No. 9213 Phase
I, Subproceeding No. 92–1, Stipulation
and Order, July 7, 1999), the Plan had
required 25,000 lb (11.3 mt) dressed
weight of halibut to be transferred from
the non-treaty Area 2A halibut
allocation to the treaty allocation in
Area 2A each year for eight years from
2000 through 2007, for a total transfer of
200,000 lb (90.7 mt).
The allocation to non-Indian fisheries
is divided into three shares, with the
Washington sport fishery (north of the
Columbia River) receiving 36.6 percent,
the Oregon/California sport fishery
receiving 31.7 percent, and the
commercial fishery receiving 31.7
percent. The commercial fishery is
further divided into a directed
commercial fishery that is allocated 85
percent of the commercial allocation
and an incidental catch in the salmon
troll fishery that is allocated 15 percent
of the commercial allocation. The
directed commercial fishery in Area 2A
is confined to southern Washington
(south of 46°53.30′ N. lat.), Oregon, and
California. North of 46°53.30′ N. lat. (Pt.
Chehalis), the Plan allows for incidental
halibut retention in the primary limited
entry longline sablefish fishery when
the overall Area 2A TAC is above
900,000 lb (408.2 mt). The Plan also
divides the sport fisheries into six
geographic subareas, each with separate
allocations, seasons, and bag limits.
The Area 2A TAC will be set by the
IPHC at its annual meeting on January
15–18, 2008, in Portland, OR. NMFS
requests public comments on the Pacific
Council’s recommended modifications
to the Plan and the proposed domestic
fishing regulations by February 1, 2008.
This allows the public the opportunity
to consider the final Area 2A TAC
before submitting comments on the
proposed rule. The States of Washington
and Oregon will conduct public
workshops shortly after the IPHC
meeting to obtain input on the sport
season dates. After the Area 2A TAC is
known and after NMFS reviews public
comments and comments from the
states, NMFS will issue a final rule for
the Area 2A Pacific halibut fisheries
concurrent with the IPHC regulations
for the 2008 Pacific halibut fisheries.
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Pacific Council Recommended Changes
to the Plan and Domestic Fishing
Regulations
Each year, the states (Washington
Department of Fish and Wildlife
(WDFW) and Oregon Department of
Fish and Wildlife (ODFW)) and the
tribes with treaty fishing rights for
halibut consider whether changes to the
Plan are needed or desired by their
fishery participants. Fishery managers
from the states hold public meetings
before both the September and
November Pacific Council meetings to
get public input on revisions to the
Plan. At the September 2007 Pacific
Council meeting, NMFS and WDFW
recommended several changes to the
Plan, and ODFW and the tribes
announced that they had no proposals
for revising the Plan in 2008. Following
the meeting, the states again reviewed
their proposals with the public and
drafted their recommended revisions for
review and recommendation by the
Pacific Council.
At its November 5–9, 2007, meeting in
San Diego, CA, the Pacific Council
considered the results of statesponsored workshops on the proposed
changes to the Plan, NMFS-proposed
changes to the Plan, and public
comments, and made final
recommendations for modifications to
the Plan as follows:
(1) Reopen the Washington North
Coast subarea June sport fishery on the
first Tuesday following June 16;
(2) Clarify that the Saturday offshore
opener in the Washington North Coast
subarea June sport fishery is contingent
on available quota;
(3) Provide flexibility in the date that
the entire Washington North Coast
subarea sport fishery reopens for one
day after June 24;
(4) Retain the opening date of May 1
for the Washington South Coast subarea
primary sport fishery in 2008 and,
starting in 2009, revise the opening date
to May 1 if it is a Sunday, otherwise,
open on the first Sunday following May
1;
(5) Set the Washington South Coast
subarea primary sport fishery as a 2-day
per week fishery, open Sunday and
Tuesday;
(6) Set aside 10 percent of the
Washington South Coast subarea quota
for the nearshore sport fishery once the
primary fishery has closed;
(7) Set the Washington South Coast
subarea nearshore sport fishery as a 4day per week fishery, open Friday,
Saturday, Sunday, and Tuesday;
(8) Remove outdated language
referring to the 25,000 lb annual tribal
allocation resulting from the U.S. v.
Washington case;
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(9) Edit language referring to the
number of sport subareas to clarify that
there are six rather than seven; and
(10) Revise the flexible inseason
management provisions for the sport
fisheries to allow modification of
subarea quotas in all subareas.
Proposed Changes to the Plan
NMFS is proposing to approve the
Pacific Council recommendations and to
implement the above-described changes
by making the following changes to the
Plan:
In section (b) of the Plan, Allocations,
revise the first sentence of the first
paragraph to remove the reference to
‘‘(1) Except as provided below under
(b)(2),’’ to read as follows:
This Plan allocates 35 percent of the
Area 2A TAC to U.S. treaty Indian tribes
in the State of Washington in subarea
2A–1, and 65 percent to non-Indian
fisheries in Area 2A.
In section (b) of the Plan, Allocations,
remove paragraph (2).
In section (d) of the Plan, Treaty
Indian Fisheries, revise the first
sentence of the paragraph to read as
follows:
Thirty-five percent of the Area 2A
TAC is allocated to 12 treaty Indian
tribes in subarea 2A–1, which includes
that portion of Area 2A north of Point
Chehalis, WA (46°53.30′ N. lat.) and east
of 125°44.00′ W. long.
In section (f) of the Plan, Sport
Fisheries, revise the last sentence of the
introductory paragraph to read as
follows:
The allocation is further divided as
subquotas among six geographic
subareas.
In section (f) of the Plan, Sport
Fisheries, revise paragraph (1) to read as
follows:
Subarea management. The sport
fishery is divided into six sport fishery
subareas, each having separate
allocations and management measures
as follows.
In section (f) of the Plan, Sport
Fisheries, revise the last sentence of the
first paragraph in (1)(ii) to read as
follows:
The fishery will then reopen for two
days on the first Tuesday and Thursday
following June 16, in the following
nearshore areas only:
In section (f) of the Plan, Sport
Fisheries, revise the first three sentences
of the second paragraph in (1)(ii) to read
as follows:
If there is sufficient quota, the fishery
will reopen for one day on the first
Saturday following June 16 in the entire
north coast subarea. If sufficient quota
remains, the fishery would reopen, as a
first priority, in the entire north coast
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subarea for one day following June 24.
If there is insufficient quota remaining
to reopen the entire north coast subarea
for another day, then the nearshore
areas described above would reopen
following June 24, up to four days per
week (Thursday through Sunday), until
the remaining subarea quota is projected
to be taken.
In section (f) of the Plan, Sport
Fisheries, revise the fourth through
eighth sentences of paragraph (1)(iii) to
read as follows:
The south coast subarea quota will be
allocated as follows: 90 percent for the
primary fishery, and 10 percent for the
nearshore fishery, once the primary
fishery has closed. In 2008, the fishery
will open on May 1. Beginning in 2009,
the fishery will open on May 1, if it is
a Sunday; otherwise, the fishery will
open on the first Sunday following May
1. The primary fishery will be open two
days per week, Sunday and Tuesday, in
all areas, except where prohibited, and
the nearshore fishery will be open four
days per week, Friday through Sunday
and Tuesday, in the area from 47°25.00′
N. lat. south to 46°58.00′ N. lat. and east
of 124°30.00′ W. long. The primary
fishery will continue until September
30, or until 90 percent of the quota is
achieved, whichever is earlier.
In section (f) of the Plan, Sport
Fisheries, revise paragraph (5)(ii)(E) to
read as follows:
Modification of subarea quotas.
Proposed 2008 Sport Fishery
Management Measures
NMFS is proposing sport fishery
management measures that are
necessary to implement the Plan in
2008. The 2008 TAC for Area 2A will
be determined by the IPHC at its annual
meeting on January 15–18, 2008, in
Portland, OR. Because the 2008 TAC has
not yet been determined, these proposed
sport fishery management measures use
the IPHC staff’s preliminary 2008 Area
2A TAC recommendation of 1,000,000
lb (454 mt), which is lower than the
2007 TAC of 1,340,000 lb (608 mt).
Where season dates are not indicated,
those dates will be provided in the final
rule, following determination of the
2008 TAC and consultation with the
states and the public. In Section 25 of
the annual domestic management
measures, ‘‘Sport Fishing for Halibut,’’
paragraph (4)(b) is proposed to read as
follows:
*
*
*
*
*
(4) * * *
(b) The sport fishing subareas,
subquotas, fishing dates, and daily bag
limits are as follows, except as modified
under the inseason actions in
§ 300.63(c). All sport fishing in Area 2A
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is managed on a ‘‘port of landing’’ basis,
whereby any halibut landed into a port
counts toward the quota for the area in
which that port is located, and the
regulations governing the area of
landing apply, regardless of the specific
area of catch.
(i) The area in Puget Sound and the
U.S. waters in the Strait of Juan de Fuca,
east of a line extending from 48°17.30′
N. lat., 124°23.70′ W. long. north to
48°24.10′ N. lat., 124°23.70′ W. long., is
not managed inseason relative to its
quota. This area is managed by setting
a season that is projected to result in a
catch of 42,606 lb (19 mt).
(A) The fishing season in eastern
Puget Sound (east of 123°49.50′ W.
long., Low Point) is (insert season dates)
and the fishing season in western Puget
Sound (west of 123°49.50′ W. long., Low
Point) is (insert season dates), 5 days a
week (Thursday through Monday). (The
final determination of the season dates
will be based on the allowable harvest
level and projected 2008 catch rates
after the final 2008 TAC is set by the
IPHC.)
(B) The daily bag limit is one halibut
of any size per day per person.
(ii) The quota for landings into ports
in the area off the north Washington
coast, west of the line described in
paragraph (4)(b)(i) of this section and
north of the Queets River (47°31.70′ N.
lat.), is 93,243 lb (42 mt).
(A) The fishing seasons are:
(1) Commencing on May 15 and
continuing 3 days a week (Tuesday,
Thursday, and Saturday) until 67,135 lb
(30 mt) are estimated to have been taken
and the season is closed by the
Commission.
(2) On June 17 and 19, the fishery will
open only in the nearshore areas
defined at the end of this paragraph. If
there is sufficient quota, the fishery will
open for one day on June 21 in the
entire north coast subarea. If sufficient
quota remains, the fishery would
reopen, as a first priority, in the entire
north coast subarea for one day
following June 24. If there is insufficient
quota remaining to reopen the entire
north coast subarea for another day,
then the nearshore areas described
below would reopen following June 24,
up to four days per week (ThursdaySunday), until the overall quota of
93,243 lb (42 mt) are estimated to have
been taken and the area is closed by the
Commission, or until September 30,
whichever is earlier. After June 19, any
fishery opening will be announced on
the NMFS hotline at 800–662–9825. No
halibut fishing will be allowed after
June 19 unless the date is announced on
the NMFS hotline. The nearshore areas
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Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 1 / Wednesday, January 2, 2008 / Proposed Rules
for Washington’s North Coast fishery are
defined as follows:
(i) WDFW Marine Catch Area 4B,
which is all waters west of the Sekiu
River mouth, as defined by a line
extending from 48°17.30′ N. lat.,
124°23.70′ W. long. north to 48°24.10′
N. lat., 124°23.70′ W. long., to the
Bonilla-Tatoosh line, as defined by a
line connecting the light on Tatoosh
Island, WA, with the light on Bonilla
Point on Vancouver Island, British
Columbia (at 48°35.73′ N. lat.,
124°43.00′ W. long.) south of the
International Boundary between the
U.S. and Canada (at 48°29.62′ N. lat.,
124°43.55′ W. long.), and north of the
point where that line intersects with the
boundary of the U.S. territorial sea.
(ii) Shoreward of the recreational
halibut 30–fm boundary line, a modified
line approximating the 30–fm depth
contour from the Bonilla-Tatoosh line
south to the Queets River. The
recreational halibut 30–fm boundary
line is defined by the following
coordinates in the order listed:
(1) 48°24.79′ N. lat., 124°44.07′ W.
long.;
(2) 48°24.80′ N. lat., 124°44.74′ W.
long.;
(3) 48°23.94′ N. lat., 124°44.70′ W.
long.;
(4) 48°23.51′ N. lat., 124°45.01′ W.
long.;
(5) 48°22.59′ N. lat., 124°44.97′ W.
long.;
(6) 48°21.75′ N. lat., 124°45.26′ W.
long.;
(7) 48°21.23′ N. lat., 124°47.78′ W.
long.;
(8) 48°20.32′ N. lat., 124°49.53′ W.
long.;
(9) 48°16.72′ N. lat., 124°51.58′ W.
long.;
(10) 48°10.00′ N. lat., 124°52.58′ W.
long.;
(11) 48°05.63′ N. lat., 124°52.91′ W.
long.;
(12) 47°56.25′ N. lat., 124°52.57′ W.
long.;
(13) 47°40.28′ N. lat., 124°40.07′ W.
long.; and
(14) 47°31.70′ N. lat., 124°37.03′ W.
long.
(B) The daily bag limit is one halibut
of any size per day per person.
(C) Recreational fishing for groundfish
and halibut is prohibited within the
North Coast Recreational Yelloweye
Rockfish Conservation Area (YRCA). It
is unlawful for recreational fishing
vessels to take and retain, possess, or
land halibut taken with recreational gear
within the North Coast Recreational
YRCA. A vessel fishing in the North
Coast Recreational YRCA may not be in
possession of any halibut. Recreational
vessels may transit through the North
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Coast Recreational YRCA with or
without halibut on board. The North
Coast Recreational YRCA is a C-shaped
area off the northern Washington coast
intended to protect yelloweye rockfish.
The North Coast Recreational YRCA is
defined by straight lines connecting the
following specific latitude and
longitude coordinates in the order
listed:
(1) 48°18.00′ N. lat.; 125°18.00′ W.
long.;
(2) 48°18.00′ N. lat.; 124°59.00′ W.
long.;
(3) 48°11.00′ N. lat.; 124°59.00′ W.
long.;
(4) 48°11.00′ N. lat.; 125°11.00′ W.
long.;
(5) 48°04.00′ N. lat.; 125°11.00′ W.
long.;
(6) 48°04.00′ N. lat.; 124°59.00′ W.
long.;
(7) 48°00.00′ N. lat.; 124°59.00′ W.
long.;
(8) 48°00.00′ N. lat.; 125°18.00′ W.
long.;
and connecting back to 48°18.00′ N. lat.;
125°18.00′ W. long.
(iii) The quota for landings into ports
in the area between the Queets River,
WA (47°31.70′ N. lat.) and Leadbetter
Point, WA (46°38.17′ N. lat.), is 27,952
lb (13 mt).
(A) The fishing season commences on
May 1 and continues 2 days a week
(Sunday and Tuesday) in all waters (the
primary fishery), except that in the area
from 47°25.00′ N. lat. south to 46°58.00′
N. lat. and east of 124°30.00′ W. long.
(the Washington South coast, northern
nearshore area), the fishing season
commences on May 1 and continues 4
days a week (Friday, Saturday, Sunday,
and Tuesday). The south coast subarea
quota will be allocated as follows:
25,156 lb (11 mt), 90 percent, for the
primary fishery, and 2,795 lb (1.3 mt),
10 percent, for the northern nearshore
fishery, once the primary fishery has
closed. The primary fishery will
continue from May 1 until 25,156 lb (11
mt) are estimated to have been taken
and the season is closed by the
Commission, or until September 30,
whichever is earlier. Subsequent to this
closure, if there is insufficient quota
remaining to reopen the primary fishery
for another fishing day, then any
remaining quota may be used to
accommodate incidental catch in the
northern nearshore area from 47°25.00′
N. lat. south to 46°58.00′ N. lat. and east
of 124°30.00′ W. long. on Fridays and
Saturdays, until 27,952 lb (13 mt) is
projected to be taken and the fishery is
closed by the Commission. If the fishery
is closed prior to September 30, and
there is insufficient quota remaining to
reopen the northern nearshore area for
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another fishing day, then any remaining
quota may be transferred inseason to
another Washington coastal subarea by
NMFS via an update to the recreational
halibut hotline.
(B) The daily bag limit is one halibut
of any size per day per person.
(C) Recreational fishing for groundfish
and halibut is prohibited within the
South Coast Recreational YRCA. It is
unlawful for recreational fishing vessels
to take and retain, possess, or land
halibut taken with recreational gear
within the South Coast Recreational
YRCA. A vessel fishing in the South
Coast Recreational YRCA may not be in
possession of any halibut. Recreational
vessels may transit through the South
Coast Recreational YRCA with or
without halibut on board. The South
Coast Recreational YRCA is an area off
the southern Washington coast intended
to protect yelloweye rockfish. The South
Coast Recreational YRCA is defined by
straight lines connecting the following
specific latitude and longitude
coordinates in the order listed:
(1) 46°58.00′ N. lat., 124°48.00′ W.
long.;
(2) 46°55.00′ N. lat., 124°48.00′ W.
long.;
(3) 46°55.00′ N. lat., 124°49.00′ W.
long.;
(4) 46°58.00′ N. lat., 124°49.00′ W.
long.;
and connecting back to 46°58.00′ N. lat.,
124°48.00′ W. long.
(iv) The quota for landings into ports
in the area between Leadbetter Point,
WA (46°38.17′ N. lat.) and Cape Falcon,
OR (45°46.00′ N. lat.), is 14,402 lb (6.5
mt).
(A) The fishing season commences on
May 1, and continues 7 days a week
until 10,081 lb (4.6 mt) are estimated to
have been taken and the season is
closed by the Commission or until July
20, whichever is earlier. The fishery will
reopen on August 1 and continue 3 days
a week (Friday through Sunday) until
14,402 lb (6.5 mt) have been taken and
the season is closed by the Commission,
or until September 30, whichever is
earlier. Subsequent to this closure, if
there is insufficient quota remaining in
the Columbia River subarea for another
fishing day, then any remaining quota
may be transferred inseason to another
Washington and/or Oregon subarea by
NMFS via an update to the recreational
halibut hotline. Any remaining quota
would be transferred to each state in
proportion to its contribution.
(B) The daily bag limit is one halibut
of any size per day per person.
(C) Pacific Coast groundfish may not
be taken and retained, possessed or
landed, except sablefish and Pacific cod
when allowed by Pacific Coast
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groundfish regulations, if halibut are on
board the vessel.
(v) The quota for landings into ports
in the area off Oregon between Cape
Falcon (45°46.00′ N. lat.) and Humbug
Mountain (42°40.50′ N. lat.), is 189,566
lb (86 mt).
(A) The fishing seasons are:
(1) The first season (the ‘‘inside 40–
fm’’ fishery) commences May 1 and
continues 7 days a week through
October 31, in the area shoreward of a
boundary line approximating the 40–fm
(73–m) depth contour, or until the subquota for the central Oregon ‘‘inside 40–
fm’’ fishery (15,165 lb (6.9 mt)) or any
inseason revised subquota is estimated
to have been taken and the season is
closed by the Commission, whichever is
earlier. The boundary line
approximating the 40–fm (73–m) depth
contour between 45°46.00′ N. lat. and
42°40.50′ N. lat. is defined by straight
lines connecting all of the following
points in the order stated:
(1) 45°46.00′ N. lat., 124°04.49′ W.
long.;
(2) 45°44.34′ N. lat., 124°05.09′ W.
long.;
(3) 45°40.64′ N. lat., 124°04.90′ W.
long.;
(4) 45°33.00′ N. lat., 124°04.46′ W.
long.;
(5) 45°32.27′ N. lat., 124°04.74′ W.
long.;
(6) 45°29.26′ N. lat., 124°04.22′ W.
long.;
(7) 45°20.25′ N. lat., 124°04.67′ W.
long.;
(8) 45°19.99′ N. lat., 124°04.62′ W.
long.;
(9) 45°17.50′ N. lat., 124°04.91′ W.
long.;
(10) 45°11.29′ N. lat., 124°05.19′ W.
long.;
(11) 45°05.79′ N. lat., 124°05.40′ W.
long.;
(12) 45°05.07′ N. lat., 124°05.93′ W.
long.;
(13) 45°03.83′ N. lat., 124°06.47′ W.
long.;
(14) 45°01.70′ N. lat., 124°06.53′ W.
long.;
(15) 44°58.75′ N. lat., 124°07.14′ W.
long.;
(16) 44°51.28′ N. lat., 124°10.21′ W.
long.;
(17) 44°49.49′ N. lat., 124°10.89′ W.
long.;
(18) 44°44.96′ N. lat., 124°14.39′ W.
long.;
(19) 44°43.44′ N. lat., 124°14.78′ W.
long.;
(20) 44°42.27′ N. lat., 124°13.81′ W.
long.;
(21) 44°41.68′ N. lat., 124°15.38′ W.
long.;
(22) 44°34.87′ N. lat., 124°15.80′ W.
long.;
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Jkt 214001
(23) 44°33.74′ N. lat., 124°14.43′ W.
long.;
(24) 44°27.66′ N. lat., 124°16.99′ W.
long.;
(25) 44°19.13′ N. lat., 124°19.22′ W.
long.;
(26) 44°15.35′ N. lat., 124°17.37′ W.
long.;
(27) 44°14.38′ N. lat., 124°17.78′ W.
long.;
(28) 44°12.80′ N. lat., 124°17.18′ W.
long.;
(29) 44°09.23′ N. lat., 124°15.96′ W.
long.;
(30) 44°08.38′ N. lat., 124°16.80′ W.
long.;
(31) 44°08.30′ N. lat., 124°16.75′ W.
long.;
(32) 44°01.18′ N. lat., 124°15.42′ W.
long.;
(33) 43°51.60′ N. lat., 124°14.68′ W.
long.;
(34) 43°42.66′ N. lat., 124°15.46′ W.
long.;
(35) 43°40.49′ N. lat., 124°15.74′ W.
long.;
(36) 43°38.77′ N. lat., 124°15.64′ W.
long.;
(37) 43°34.52′ N. lat., 124°16.73′ W.
long.;
(38) 43°28.82′ N. lat., 124°19.52′ W.
long.;
(39) 43°23.91′ N. lat., 124°24.28′ W.
long.;
(40) 43°20.83′ N. lat., 124°26.63′ W.
long.;
(41) 43°17.96′ N. lat., 124°28.81′ W.
long.;
(42) 43°16.75′ N. lat., 124°28.42′ W.
long.;
(43) 43°13.98′ N. lat., 124°31.99′ W.
long.;
(44) 43°13.71′ N. lat., 124°33.25′ W.
long.;
(45) 43°12.26′ N. lat., 124°34.16′ W.
long.;
(46) 43°10.96′ N. lat., 124°32.34′ W.
long.;
(47) 43°05.65′ N. lat., 124°31.52′ W.
long.;
(48) 42°59.66′ N. lat., 124°32.58′ W.
long.;
(49) 42°54.97′ N. lat., 124°36.99′ W.
long.;
(50) 42°53.81′ N. lat., 124°38.58′ W.
long.;
(51) 42°50.00′ N. lat., 124°39.68′ W.
long.;
(52) 42°49.14′ N. lat., 124°39.92′ W.
long.;
(53) 42°46.47′ N. lat., 124°38.65′ W.
long.;
(54) 42°45.60′ N. lat., 124°39.04′ W.
long.;
(55) 42°44.79′ N. lat., 124°37.96′ W.
long.;
(56) 42°45.00′ N. lat., 124°36.39′ W.
long.;
(57) 42°44.14′ N. lat., 124°35.16′ W.
long.;
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(58) 42°42.15′ N. lat., 124°32.82′ W.
long.; and
(59) 42°40.50′ N. lat., 124°31.98′ W.
long.;
(2) The second season (spring season),
which is for the ‘‘all-depth’’ fishery, is
open on (insert dates beginning with
May 8 or 9). The projected catch for this
season is 130,801 lb (59 mt). If sufficient
unharvested catch remains for
additional fishing days, the season will
re-open. Dependent on the amount of
unharvested catch available, the
potential season re-opening dates will
be: (insert dates, no later than July 31).
If NMFS decides inseason to allow
fishing on any of these re-opening dates,
notice of the re-opening will be
announced on the NMFS hotline (206)
526–6667 or (800) 662–9825. No halibut
fishing will be allowed on the reopening dates unless the date is
announced on the NMFS hotline. (The
final determination of the season dates
will be based on the allowable harvest
level and projected 2008 catch rates and
on input from a public meeting held by
ODFW after the 2008 TAC is set by the
IPHC.)
(3) If sufficient unharvested catch
remains, the third season (summer
season), which is for the ‘‘all-depth’’
fishery, will be open on (insert dates
beginning with August 1), or until the
combined spring season and summer
season quotas in the area between Cape
Falcon and Humbug Mountain, OR,
totaling 174,401 lb (79 mt), are
estimated to have been taken and the
area is closed by the Commission, or
October 31, whichever is earlier. NMFS
will announce on the NMFS hotline in
July whether the fishery will re-open for
the summer season in August. No
halibut fishing will be allowed in the
summer season fishery unless the dates
are announced on the NMFS hotline.
Additional fishing days may be opened
if a certain amount of quota remains
after August 3 and August 31. If after
August 3, greater than or equal to 60,000
lb (27.2 mt) remains in the combined
all-depth and inside 40–fm (73–m)
quota, the fishery may re-open every
Friday through Sunday, beginning
August 8 - 10, and ending October 31.
If after August 31, greater than or equal
to 30,000 lb (13.6 mt) remains in the
combined all-depth and inside 40–fm
(73–m) quota, and the fishery is not
already open every Friday through
Sunday, the fishery may re-open every
Friday through Sunday, beginning
September 5 - 7, and ending October 31.
After August 31, the bag limit may be
increased to two fish of any size per
person, per day. NMFS will announce
on the NMFS hotline whether the
summer all-depth fishery will be open
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on such additional fishing days, what
days the fishery will be open and what
the bag limit is.
(B) The daily bag limit is one halibut
of any size per day per person, unless
otherwise specified. NMFS will
announce on the NMFS hotline any bag
limit changes.
(C) During days open to all-depth
halibut fishing, no Pacific Coast
groundfish may be taken and retained,
possessed or landed, except sablefish
when allowed by Pacific Coast
groundfish regulations, if halibut are on
board the vessel.
(D) When the all-depth halibut fishery
is closed and halibut fishing is
permitted only shoreward of a boundary
line approximating the 40–fm (73–m)
depth contour, halibut possession and
retention by vessels operating seaward
of a boundary line approximating the
40–fm (73–m) depth contour is
prohibited.
(E) Recreational fishing for groundfish
and halibut is prohibited within the
Stonewall Bank YRCA. It is unlawful for
recreational fishing vessels to take and
retain, possess, or land halibut taken
with recreational gear within the
Stonewall Bank YRCA. A vessel fishing
in the Stonewall Bank YRCA may not be
in possession of any halibut.
Recreational vessels may transit through
the Stonewall Bank YRCA with or
without halibut on board. The
Stonewall Bank YRCA is an area off
central Oregon, near Stonewall Bank,
intended to protect yelloweye rockfish.
The Stonewall Bank YRCA is defined by
straight lines connecting the following
specific latitude and longitude
coordinates in the order listed:
(1) 44°37.46 N. lat.; 124°24.92 W.
long.;
(2) 44°37.46 N. lat.; 124°23.63 W.
long.;
(3) 44°28.71 N. lat.; 124°21.80 W.
long.;
(4) 44°28.71 N. lat.; 124°24.10 W.
long.;
(5) 44°31.42 N. lat.; 124°25.47 W.
long.;
and connecting back to 44°37.46 N. lat.;
124°24.92 W. long.
(vi) The area south of Humbug
Mountain, Oregon (42°40.50′ N. lat.) and
off the California coast is not managed
inseason relative to its quota. This area
is managed on a season that is projected
to result in a catch of 6,182 lb (2.8 mt).
(A) The fishing season will commence
on May 1 and continue 7 days a week
until October 31.
(B) The daily bag limit is one halibut
of any size per day per person.
Flexible Inseason Management for
Sport Fisheries
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:49 Dec 31, 2007
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Language on flexible inseason
management for sport fisheries at 50
CFR 300.63 (c)(2)(v) is proposed to be
revised in the same manner as language
being revised in section (f)(5)(ii)(E) of
the Plan. More specifically, the phrase
‘‘north of Cape Falcon, OR’’ is removed
from the sentence so that it reads,
‘‘modification of subarea quotas.’’ As
mentioned in paragraphs (c)(1)(iii) and
(iv) of 50 CFR 300.63, unused quota can
be moved inseason both north of Cape
Falcon, OR, and south of Leadbetter
Point, WA, to modify quota in Area 2A
sport fisheries if sport fishery subareas
are not projected to utilize their
respective quotas. Therefore, this
revision clarifies the flexible inseason
management provisions so that all
subarea quotas may be modified
inseason, not just subarea quotas north
of Cape Falcon.
Classification
This action has been determined to be
not significant for purposes of Executive
Order 12866.
NMFS has prepared an RIR/IRFA on
the proposed changes to the Plan and
annual domestic Area 2A halibut
management measures. Copies of these
documents are available from NMFS
(see ADDRESSES).
NMFS prepared an IRFA that
describes the economic impact this
proposed rule, if adopted, would have
on small entities. A description of the
action, why it is being considered, and
the legal basis for this action are
contained at the beginning of this
section in the preamble and in the
SUMMARY section of the preamble. The
IRFA is available from NMFS (see
ADDRESSES). A summary of the IRFA
follows:
A fish-harvesting business is
considered a ‘‘small’’ business by the
Small Business Administration (SBA) if
it has annual receipts not in excess of
$4.0 million. For related fish-processing
businesses, a small business is one that
employs 500 or fewer persons. For
wholesale businesses, a small business
is one that employs not more than 100
people. For marinas and charter/party
boats, a small business is one with
annual receipts not in excess of $6.5
million. All of the businesses that
would be affected by this action are
considered small businesses under
Small Business Administration
guidance.
The proposed changes to the Plan,
which allocates the catch of Pacific
halibut among users in Washington,
Oregon and California, would: (1)
reopen the Washington North Coast
subarea June sport fishery on the first
Tuesday following June 16; (2) clarify
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Sfmt 4702
145
that the Saturday offshore opener in the
Washington North Coast subarea June
sport fishery is contingent on available
quota; (3) provide flexibility in the date
that the entire Washington North Coast
subarea sport fishery reopens for one
day after June 24; (4) retain the opening
date of May 1 for the Washington South
Coast subarea primary sport fishery in
2008 and, starting in 2009, revise the
opening date to May 1 if it is a Sunday,
otherwise, open on the first Sunday
following May 1; (5) set the Washington
South Coast subarea primary sport
fishery as a 2-day per week fishery,
open Sunday and Tuesday; (6) set aside
10 percent of the Washington South
Coast subarea quota for the nearshore
sport fishery once the primary fishery
has closed; (7) set the Washington South
Coast subarea nearshore sport fishery as
a 4-day per week fishery, open Friday,
Saturday, Sunday, and Tuesday; (8)
remove outdated language referring to
the 25,000 lb annual tribal allocation
resulting from the U.S. v. Washington
case; (9) edit language referring to the
number of sport subareas to clarify that
there are six rather than seven; and (10)
revise the flexible inseason management
provisions for the sport fisheries to
allow modification of subarea quotas in
all subareas. NMFS also proposes to
implement the portions of the Plan and
management measures that are not
implemented through the IPHC, which
includes the sport fishery management
measures for Area 2A. These actions are
intended to enhance the conservation of
Pacific halibut, to provide greater angler
opportunity where available, and to
protect yelloweye rockfish and other
overfished groundfish species from
incidental catch in the halibut fisheries.
As mentioned in the preamble,
WDFW held state meetings and crafted
alternatives to adjust management of the
sport halibut fisheries in their state.
These alternatives were then narrowed
by the state and brought to the Council
at the Council’s September and
November 2007 meetings. Generally, by
the time the alternatives reach the
Council, and because they have been
through the state public review process,
they are narrowed down into the
proposed action and status quo. There
were no alternatives that could have
similarly improved angler enjoyment of
and participation in the fisheries while
simultaneously protecting halibut and
co-occurring groundfish species from
overharvest.
In 1995, NMFS implemented the Plan,
when the TAC was 520,000 pounds (236
mt). In each of the intervening years
between 1995 and the present, minor
revisions to the Plan have been made to
adjust for the changing needs of the
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Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 1 / Wednesday, January 2, 2008 / Proposed Rules
fisheries, even though the TAC reached
levels of over 1,000,000 pounds (454
mt), with a peak of 1,480,000 pounds
(671 mt) in 2004. Since 2004, there has
been very little change in the total
allowable catch and sector allocations.
In 2006, the Area 2A Halibut TAC set
by the IPHC was 1.38 million pounds
(626 mt) and for 2007 it was 1.34
million pounds (608 mt). However,
preliminary IPHC staff
recommendations for the 2008 TAC are
lower than the TAC levels since 2001.
The preliminary 2008 Area 2A TAC of
1.00 million pounds (454 mt) is lower
than previous years due to the IPHC’s
new stock assessment information,
revised selectivity assumptions and
revised harvest policy. This is a 25–
percent decline from the 2007 TAC. As
this is a sizable decline, there may be
changes to the regulations described in
this proposed rule resulting from IPHC
recommendations at their annual
meeting in January 2008, or as an
outcome of the state public workshops
held after the IPHC meeting.
Expectations are that any proposed
changes in the regulations will be ones
that, in implementing the amended
Plan, seek to mitigate the adverse
impacts of the decline of the TAC in
order to maximize available fishing
opportunities and benefits to fishing
communities.
Six hundred fifty-nine vessels were
issued IPHC licenses to retain halibut in
2007. IPHC issues licenses for: the
directed commercial fishery in Area 2A,
including licenses issued to retain
halibut caught incidentally in the
primary sablefish fishery (225 licenses
in 2007); incidental halibut caught in
the salmon troll fishery (292 licenses in
2007); and the charterboat fleet (142
licenses in 2007). No vessel may
participate in more than one of these
three fisheries per year. Individual
recreational anglers and private boats
are the only sectors that are not required
to have an IPHC license to retain
halibut.
Specific data on the economics of
halibut charter operations is
unavailable. However, in January 2004,
the Pacific States Marine Fisheries
Commission (PSMFC) completed a
report on the overall West Coast
charterboat fleet. In surveying
charterboat vessels concerning their
operations in 2000, the PSMFC
estimated that there were about 315
charterboat vessels in operation off
Washington and Oregon. In 2000, IPHC
licensed 130 vessels to fish in the
halibut sport charter fishery. Comparing
the total charterboat fleet to the 130 and
142 IPHC licenses in 2000 and 2007,
respectively, approximately 41 to 45
VerDate Aug<31>2005
17:54 Dec 31, 2007
Jkt 214001
percent of the charterboat fleet could
participate in the halibut fishery. The
PSMFC has developed preliminary
estimates of the annual revenues earned
by this fleet and they vary by size class
of the vessels and home state. Small
charterboat vessels range from 15 to 30
ft (4.572 to 9.144 m), and typically carry
5 to 6 passengers. Medium charterboat
vessels range from 31 to 49 ft (9.44 to
14.93 m) in length and typically carry
19 to 20 passengers. (Neither state has
large vessels of greater than 49 ft (14.93
m) in their fleet.) Average annual
revenues from all types of recreational
fishing, whalewatching and other
activities ranged from $7,000 for small
Oregon vessels to $131,000 for medium
Washington vessels. Estimates from the
RIR show the recreational halibut
fishery generated approximately $2.5
million in personal income to West
Coast communities, while the non-tribal
commercial halibut fishery generated
approximately $2.2 million in income
impacts. Because these estimated
impacts for the entire halibut fishery
overall are less than the SBA criteria for
individual businesses, these data
confirm that charterboat and
commercial halibut vessels qualify as
small entities under the Regulatory
Flexibility Act (RFA).
These changes are authorized under
the Pacific Halibut Act, implementing
regulations at 50 CFR 300.60 through
300.65, and the Pacific Council process
of annually evaluating the utility and
effectiveness of Area 2A Pacific halibut
management under the Plan. Given the
TAC, the proposed sport management
measures implement the Plan by
managing the recreational fishery to
meet the differing fishery needs of the
various areas along the coast according
to the Plan’s objectives. The measures
will be very similar to last year’s
management measures. The changes to
the Plan and domestic management
measures are minor changes and are
intended to help prolong the halibut
season, provide increased recreational
harvest opportunities, or clarify sport
fishery management for fishermen and
managers. There are no large entities
involved in the halibut fisheries;
therefore, none of these changes to the
Plan and domestic management
measures will have a disproportionate
negative effect on small entities versus
large entities.
These changes do not include any
reporting or recordkeeping
requirements. These changes will also
not duplicate, overlap or conflict with
other laws or regulations. Consequently,
these changes to the Plan and annual
domestic Area 2A halibut management
measures are not expected to meet any
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Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
of the RFA tests of having a
‘‘significant’’ economic impact on a
‘‘substantial number’’ of small entities.
Nonetheless, NMFS has prepared an
IRFA. Through this proposed rule,
NMFS is requesting comments on these
conclusions.
Pursuant to Executive Order 13175,
the Secretary recognizes the sovereign
status and co-manager role of Indian
tribes over shared Federal and tribal
fishery resources. At section 302(b)(5),
the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery
Conservation and Management Act
establishes a seat on the Pacific Council
for a representative of an Indian tribe
with federally recognized fishing rights
from California, Oregon, Washington, or
Idaho.
The U.S. Government formally
recognizes that the 12 Washington
Tribes have treaty rights to fish for
Pacific halibut. In general terms, the
quantification of those rights is 50
percent of the harvestable surplus of
Pacific halibut available in the tribes’
usual and accustomed (U and A) fishing
areas (described at 50 CFR 300.64). Each
of the treaty tribes has the discretion to
administer their fisheries and to
establish their own policies to achieve
program objectives. Accordingly, tribal
allocations and regulations, including
the proposed changes to
the Plan, have been developed in
consultation with the affected tribe(s)
and, insofar as possible, with tribal
consensus.
List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 300
Fishing, Fisheries, and Indian
fisheries.
Dated: December 27, 2007
John Oliver,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for
Operations, National Marine Fisheries
Service.
For the reasons set out in the
preamble, 50 CFR part 300 is proposed
to be amended as follows:
PART 300—INTERNATIONAL
FISHERIES REGULATIONS
1. The authority citation for part 300
continues to read as follows:
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 773 et seq.
2. In § 300.63, paragraph (c)(2)(v) is
revised to read as follows:
§ 300.63 Catch sharing plan and domestic
management measures in Area 2A.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(2) * * *
(v) Modification of subarea quotas.
*
*
*
*
*
[FR Doc. E7–25535 Filed 12–31–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–S
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 73, Number 1 (Wednesday, January 2, 2008)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 140-146]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E7-25535]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
50 CFR Part 300
[Docket No. 071218860-7866-01]
RIN 0648-AW26
Pacific Halibut Fisheries; Catch Sharing Plan
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: NMFS proposes to approve and implement changes to the Pacific
Halibut Catch Sharing Plan (Plan) for the International Pacific Halibut
Commission's (IPHC or Commission) regulatory Area 2A off Washington,
Oregon, and California (Area 2A). NMFS proposes to implement the
portions of the Plan and management measures that are not implemented
through the IPHC, which includes the sport fishery management measures
for Area 2A. These actions are intended to enhance the conservation of
Pacific halibut, to provide greater angler opportunity where available,
and to protect yelloweye rockfish and other overfished groundfish
species from incidental catch in the halibut fisheries.
DATES: Comments on the proposed changes to the Plan and on the proposed
domestic Area 2A halibut management measures must be received no later
than 5 p.m., local time on February 1, 2008.
ADDRESSES: Copies of the Plan and Regulatory Impact Review (RIR)/
Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (IRFA) are available from D.
Robert Lohn, Regional Administrator, Northwest Region, NMFS, 7600 Sand
Point Way NE, Seattle, WA 98115-0070. Electronic copies of the Plan,
including proposed changes for 2008, and of the draft RIR/IRFA are also
available at the NMFS Northwest Region website: https://
www.nwr.noaa.gov, click on ``Groundfish & Halibut.''
[[Page 141]]
You may submit comments, identified by RIN 0648-AW26, by any one of
the following methods:
Electronic Submissions: Submit all electronic public
comments via the Federal eRulemaking Portal https://www.regulations.gov
Fax: 206-526-6736, Attn: Jamie Goen.
Mail: D. Robert Lohn, Administrator, Northwest Region,
NMFS, Attn: Jamie Goen, 7600 Sand Point Way NE, Seattle, WA 98115-0070.
Instructions: All comments received are a part of the public record
and will generally be posted to https://www.regulations.gov without
change. All Personal Identifying Information (for example, name,
address, etc.) voluntarily submitted by the commenter may be publicly
accessible. Do not submit Confidential Business Information or
otherwise sensitive or protected information.
NMFS will accept anonymous comments. Attachments to electronic
comments will be accepted in Microsoft Word, Excel, WordPerfect, or
Adobe PDF file formats only.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For further information contact Jamie
Goen at 206-526-4646 or jamie.goen@noaa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Northern Pacific Halibut Act (Halibut
Act) of 1982, at 16 U.S.C. 773c, gives the Secretary of Commerce
(Secretary) general responsibility for implementing the provisions of
the Halibut Convention between the United States and Canada (Halibut
Convention). It requires the Secretary to adopt regulations as may be
necessary to carry out the purposes and objectives of the Halibut
Convention and the Halibut Act. Section 773c of the Halibut Act
authorizes the regional fishery management councils to develop
regulations governing the Pacific halibut catch in their corresponding
U.S. Convention waters that are in addition to, but not in conflict
with, regulations of the IPHC. Each year between 1988 and 1995, the
Pacific Fishery Management Council (Pacific Council) had developed a
catch sharing plan in accordance with the Halibut Act to allocate the
total allowable catch (TAC) of Pacific halibut between treaty Indian
and non-treaty harvesters and among non-treaty commercial and sport
fisheries in Area 2A.
In 1995, NMFS implemented the Pacific Council-recommended long-term
Plan (60 FR 14651, March 20, 1995). In each of the intervening years
between 1995 and the present, minor revisions to the Plan have been
made to adjust for the changing needs of the fisheries. The Plan
allocates 35 percent of the Area 2A TAC to Washington treaty Indian
tribes in Subarea 2A-1 and 65 percent to non-Indian fisheries in Area
2A. Additionally, as a result of U.S. v. Washington (U.S., et al. v.
State of Washington, et al. Case No. 9213 Phase I, Subproceeding No.
92-1, Stipulation and Order, July 7, 1999), the Plan had required
25,000 lb (11.3 mt) dressed weight of halibut to be transferred from
the non-treaty Area 2A halibut allocation to the treaty allocation in
Area 2A each year for eight years from 2000 through 2007, for a total
transfer of 200,000 lb (90.7 mt).
The allocation to non-Indian fisheries is divided into three
shares, with the Washington sport fishery (north of the Columbia River)
receiving 36.6 percent, the Oregon/California sport fishery receiving
31.7 percent, and the commercial fishery receiving 31.7 percent. The
commercial fishery is further divided into a directed commercial
fishery that is allocated 85 percent of the commercial allocation and
an incidental catch in the salmon troll fishery that is allocated 15
percent of the commercial allocation. The directed commercial fishery
in Area 2A is confined to southern Washington (south of 46[deg]53.30'
N. lat.), Oregon, and California. North of 46[deg]53.30' N. lat. (Pt.
Chehalis), the Plan allows for incidental halibut retention in the
primary limited entry longline sablefish fishery when the overall Area
2A TAC is above 900,000 lb (408.2 mt). The Plan also divides the sport
fisheries into six geographic subareas, each with separate allocations,
seasons, and bag limits.
The Area 2A TAC will be set by the IPHC at its annual meeting on
January 15-18, 2008, in Portland, OR. NMFS requests public comments on
the Pacific Council's recommended modifications to the Plan and the
proposed domestic fishing regulations by February 1, 2008. This allows
the public the opportunity to consider the final Area 2A TAC before
submitting comments on the proposed rule. The States of Washington and
Oregon will conduct public workshops shortly after the IPHC meeting to
obtain input on the sport season dates. After the Area 2A TAC is known
and after NMFS reviews public comments and comments from the states,
NMFS will issue a final rule for the Area 2A Pacific halibut fisheries
concurrent with the IPHC regulations for the 2008 Pacific halibut
fisheries.
Pacific Council Recommended Changes to the Plan and Domestic Fishing
Regulations
Each year, the states (Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife
(WDFW) and Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife (ODFW)) and the
tribes with treaty fishing rights for halibut consider whether changes
to the Plan are needed or desired by their fishery participants.
Fishery managers from the states hold public meetings before both the
September and November Pacific Council meetings to get public input on
revisions to the Plan. At the September 2007 Pacific Council meeting,
NMFS and WDFW recommended several changes to the Plan, and ODFW and the
tribes announced that they had no proposals for revising the Plan in
2008. Following the meeting, the states again reviewed their proposals
with the public and drafted their recommended revisions for review and
recommendation by the Pacific Council.
At its November 5-9, 2007, meeting in San Diego, CA, the Pacific
Council considered the results of state-sponsored workshops on the
proposed changes to the Plan, NMFS-proposed changes to the Plan, and
public comments, and made final recommendations for modifications to
the Plan as follows:
(1) Reopen the Washington North Coast subarea June sport fishery on
the first Tuesday following June 16;
(2) Clarify that the Saturday offshore opener in the Washington
North Coast subarea June sport fishery is contingent on available
quota;
(3) Provide flexibility in the date that the entire Washington
North Coast subarea sport fishery reopens for one day after June 24;
(4) Retain the opening date of May 1 for the Washington South Coast
subarea primary sport fishery in 2008 and, starting in 2009, revise the
opening date to May 1 if it is a Sunday, otherwise, open on the first
Sunday following May 1;
(5) Set the Washington South Coast subarea primary sport fishery as
a 2-day per week fishery, open Sunday and Tuesday;
(6) Set aside 10 percent of the Washington South Coast subarea
quota for the nearshore sport fishery once the primary fishery has
closed;
(7) Set the Washington South Coast subarea nearshore sport fishery
as a 4-day per week fishery, open Friday, Saturday, Sunday, and
Tuesday;
(8) Remove outdated language referring to the 25,000 lb annual
tribal allocation resulting from the U.S. v. Washington case;
[[Page 142]]
(9) Edit language referring to the number of sport subareas to
clarify that there are six rather than seven; and
(10) Revise the flexible inseason management provisions for the
sport fisheries to allow modification of subarea quotas in all
subareas.
Proposed Changes to the Plan
NMFS is proposing to approve the Pacific Council recommendations
and to implement the above-described changes by making the following
changes to the Plan:
In section (b) of the Plan, Allocations, revise the first sentence
of the first paragraph to remove the reference to ``(1) Except as
provided below under (b)(2),'' to read as follows:
This Plan allocates 35 percent of the Area 2A TAC to U.S. treaty
Indian tribes in the State of Washington in subarea 2A-1, and 65
percent to non-Indian fisheries in Area 2A.
In section (b) of the Plan, Allocations, remove paragraph (2).
In section (d) of the Plan, Treaty Indian Fisheries, revise the
first sentence of the paragraph to read as follows:
Thirty-five percent of the Area 2A TAC is allocated to 12 treaty
Indian tribes in subarea 2A-1, which includes that portion of Area 2A
north of Point Chehalis, WA (46[deg]53.30' N. lat.) and east of
125[deg]44.00' W. long.
In section (f) of the Plan, Sport Fisheries, revise the last
sentence of the introductory paragraph to read as follows:
The allocation is further divided as subquotas among six geographic
subareas.
In section (f) of the Plan, Sport Fisheries, revise paragraph (1)
to read as follows:
Subarea management. The sport fishery is divided into six sport
fishery subareas, each having separate allocations and management
measures as follows.
In section (f) of the Plan, Sport Fisheries, revise the last
sentence of the first paragraph in (1)(ii) to read as follows:
The fishery will then reopen for two days on the first Tuesday and
Thursday following June 16, in the following nearshore areas only:
In section (f) of the Plan, Sport Fisheries, revise the first three
sentences of the second paragraph in (1)(ii) to read as follows:
If there is sufficient quota, the fishery will reopen for one day
on the first Saturday following June 16 in the entire north coast
subarea. If sufficient quota remains, the fishery would reopen, as a
first priority, in the entire north coast subarea for one day following
June 24. If there is insufficient quota remaining to reopen the entire
north coast subarea for another day, then the nearshore areas described
above would reopen following June 24, up to four days per week
(Thursday through Sunday), until the remaining subarea quota is
projected to be taken.
In section (f) of the Plan, Sport Fisheries, revise the fourth
through eighth sentences of paragraph (1)(iii) to read as follows:
The south coast subarea quota will be allocated as follows: 90
percent for the primary fishery, and 10 percent for the nearshore
fishery, once the primary fishery has closed. In 2008, the fishery will
open on May 1. Beginning in 2009, the fishery will open on May 1, if it
is a Sunday; otherwise, the fishery will open on the first Sunday
following May 1. The primary fishery will be open two days per week,
Sunday and Tuesday, in all areas, except where prohibited, and the
nearshore fishery will be open four days per week, Friday through
Sunday and Tuesday, in the area from 47[deg]25.00' N. lat. south to
46[deg]58.00' N. lat. and east of 124[deg]30.00' W. long. The primary
fishery will continue until September 30, or until 90 percent of the
quota is achieved, whichever is earlier.
In section (f) of the Plan, Sport Fisheries, revise paragraph
(5)(ii)(E) to read as follows:
Modification of subarea quotas.
Proposed 2008 Sport Fishery Management Measures
NMFS is proposing sport fishery management measures that are
necessary to implement the Plan in 2008. The 2008 TAC for Area 2A will
be determined by the IPHC at its annual meeting on January 15-18, 2008,
in Portland, OR. Because the 2008 TAC has not yet been determined,
these proposed sport fishery management measures use the IPHC staff's
preliminary 2008 Area 2A TAC recommendation of 1,000,000 lb (454 mt),
which is lower than the 2007 TAC of 1,340,000 lb (608 mt). Where season
dates are not indicated, those dates will be provided in the final
rule, following determination of the 2008 TAC and consultation with the
states and the public. In Section 25 of the annual domestic management
measures, ``Sport Fishing for Halibut,'' paragraph (4)(b) is proposed
to read as follows:
* * * * *
(4) * * *
(b) The sport fishing subareas, subquotas, fishing dates, and daily
bag limits are as follows, except as modified under the inseason
actions in Sec. 300.63(c). All sport fishing in Area 2A is managed on
a ``port of landing'' basis, whereby any halibut landed into a port
counts toward the quota for the area in which that port is located, and
the regulations governing the area of landing apply, regardless of the
specific area of catch.
(i) The area in Puget Sound and the U.S. waters in the Strait of
Juan de Fuca, east of a line extending from 48[deg]17.30' N. lat.,
124[deg]23.70' W. long. north to 48[deg]24.10' N. lat., 124[deg]23.70'
W. long., is not managed inseason relative to its quota. This area is
managed by setting a season that is projected to result in a catch of
42,606 lb (19 mt).
(A) The fishing season in eastern Puget Sound (east of
123[deg]49.50' W. long., Low Point) is (insert season dates) and the
fishing season in western Puget Sound (west of 123[deg]49.50' W. long.,
Low Point) is (insert season dates), 5 days a week (Thursday through
Monday). (The final determination of the season dates will be based on
the allowable harvest level and projected 2008 catch rates after the
final 2008 TAC is set by the IPHC.)
(B) The daily bag limit is one halibut of any size per day per
person.
(ii) The quota for landings into ports in the area off the north
Washington coast, west of the line described in paragraph (4)(b)(i) of
this section and north of the Queets River (47[deg]31.70' N. lat.), is
93,243 lb (42 mt).
(A) The fishing seasons are:
(1) Commencing on May 15 and continuing 3 days a week (Tuesday,
Thursday, and Saturday) until 67,135 lb (30 mt) are estimated to have
been taken and the season is closed by the Commission.
(2) On June 17 and 19, the fishery will open only in the nearshore
areas defined at the end of this paragraph. If there is sufficient
quota, the fishery will open for one day on June 21 in the entire north
coast subarea. If sufficient quota remains, the fishery would reopen,
as a first priority, in the entire north coast subarea for one day
following June 24. If there is insufficient quota remaining to reopen
the entire north coast subarea for another day, then the nearshore
areas described below would reopen following June 24, up to four days
per week (Thursday-Sunday), until the overall quota of 93,243 lb (42
mt) are estimated to have been taken and the area is closed by the
Commission, or until September 30, whichever is earlier. After June 19,
any fishery opening will be announced on the NMFS hotline at 800-662-
9825. No halibut fishing will be allowed after June 19 unless the date
is announced on the NMFS hotline. The nearshore areas
[[Page 143]]
for Washington's North Coast fishery are defined as follows:
(i) WDFW Marine Catch Area 4B, which is all waters west of the
Sekiu River mouth, as defined by a line extending from 48[deg]17.30' N.
lat., 124[deg]23.70' W. long. north to 48[deg]24.10' N. lat.,
124[deg]23.70' W. long., to the Bonilla-Tatoosh line, as defined by a
line connecting the light on Tatoosh Island, WA, with the light on
Bonilla Point on Vancouver Island, British Columbia (at 48[deg]35.73'
N. lat., 124[deg]43.00' W. long.) south of the International Boundary
between the U.S. and Canada (at 48[deg]29.62' N. lat., 124[deg]43.55'
W. long.), and north of the point where that line intersects with the
boundary of the U.S. territorial sea.
(ii) Shoreward of the recreational halibut 30-fm boundary line, a
modified line approximating the 30-fm depth contour from the Bonilla-
Tatoosh line south to the Queets River. The recreational halibut 30-fm
boundary line is defined by the following coordinates in the order
listed:
(1) 48[deg]24.79' N. lat., 124[deg]44.07' W. long.;
(2) 48[deg]24.80' N. lat., 124[deg]44.74' W. long.;
(3) 48[deg]23.94' N. lat., 124[deg]44.70' W. long.;
(4) 48[deg]23.51' N. lat., 124[deg]45.01' W. long.;
(5) 48[deg]22.59' N. lat., 124[deg]44.97' W. long.;
(6) 48[deg]21.75' N. lat., 124[deg]45.26' W. long.;
(7) 48[deg]21.23' N. lat., 124[deg]47.78' W. long.;
(8) 48[deg]20.32' N. lat., 124[deg]49.53' W. long.;
(9) 48[deg]16.72' N. lat., 124[deg]51.58' W. long.;
(10) 48[deg]10.00' N. lat., 124[deg]52.58' W. long.;
(11) 48[deg]05.63' N. lat., 124[deg]52.91' W. long.;
(12) 47[deg]56.25' N. lat., 124[deg]52.57' W. long.;
(13) 47[deg]40.28' N. lat., 124[deg]40.07' W. long.; and
(14) 47[deg]31.70' N. lat., 124[deg]37.03' W. long.
(B) The daily bag limit is one halibut of any size per day per
person.
(C) Recreational fishing for groundfish and halibut is prohibited
within the North Coast Recreational Yelloweye Rockfish Conservation
Area (YRCA). It is unlawful for recreational fishing vessels to take
and retain, possess, or land halibut taken with recreational gear
within the North Coast Recreational YRCA. A vessel fishing in the North
Coast Recreational YRCA may not be in possession of any halibut.
Recreational vessels may transit through the North Coast Recreational
YRCA with or without halibut on board. The North Coast Recreational
YRCA is a C-shaped area off the northern Washington coast intended to
protect yelloweye rockfish. The North Coast Recreational YRCA is
defined by straight lines connecting the following specific latitude
and longitude coordinates in the order listed:
(1) 48[deg]18.00' N. lat.; 125[deg]18.00' W. long.;
(2) 48[deg]18.00' N. lat.; 124[deg]59.00' W. long.;
(3) 48[deg]11.00' N. lat.; 124[deg]59.00' W. long.;
(4) 48[deg]11.00' N. lat.; 125[deg]11.00' W. long.;
(5) 48[deg]04.00' N. lat.; 125[deg]11.00' W. long.;
(6) 48[deg]04.00' N. lat.; 124[deg]59.00' W. long.;
(7) 48[deg]00.00' N. lat.; 124[deg]59.00' W. long.;
(8) 48[deg]00.00' N. lat.; 125[deg]18.00' W. long.;
and connecting back to 48[deg]18.00' N. lat.; 125[deg]18.00' W. long.
(iii) The quota for landings into ports in the area between the
Queets River, WA (47[deg]31.70' N. lat.) and Leadbetter Point, WA
(46[deg]38.17' N. lat.), is 27,952 lb (13 mt).
(A) The fishing season commences on May 1 and continues 2 days a
week (Sunday and Tuesday) in all waters (the primary fishery), except
that in the area from 47[deg]25.00' N. lat. south to 46[deg]58.00' N.
lat. and east of 124[deg]30.00' W. long. (the Washington South coast,
northern nearshore area), the fishing season commences on May 1 and
continues 4 days a week (Friday, Saturday, Sunday, and Tuesday). The
south coast subarea quota will be allocated as follows: 25,156 lb (11
mt), 90 percent, for the primary fishery, and 2,795 lb (1.3 mt), 10
percent, for the northern nearshore fishery, once the primary fishery
has closed. The primary fishery will continue from May 1 until 25,156
lb (11 mt) are estimated to have been taken and the season is closed by
the Commission, or until September 30, whichever is earlier. Subsequent
to this closure, if there is insufficient quota remaining to reopen the
primary fishery for another fishing day, then any remaining quota may
be used to accommodate incidental catch in the northern nearshore area
from 47[deg]25.00' N. lat. south to 46[deg]58.00' N. lat. and east of
124[deg]30.00' W. long. on Fridays and Saturdays, until 27,952 lb (13
mt) is projected to be taken and the fishery is closed by the
Commission. If the fishery is closed prior to September 30, and there
is insufficient quota remaining to reopen the northern nearshore area
for another fishing day, then any remaining quota may be transferred
inseason to another Washington coastal subarea by NMFS via an update to
the recreational halibut hotline.
(B) The daily bag limit is one halibut of any size per day per
person.
(C) Recreational fishing for groundfish and halibut is prohibited
within the South Coast Recreational YRCA. It is unlawful for
recreational fishing vessels to take and retain, possess, or land
halibut taken with recreational gear within the South Coast
Recreational YRCA. A vessel fishing in the South Coast Recreational
YRCA may not be in possession of any halibut. Recreational vessels may
transit through the South Coast Recreational YRCA with or without
halibut on board. The South Coast Recreational YRCA is an area off the
southern Washington coast intended to protect yelloweye rockfish. The
South Coast Recreational YRCA is defined by straight lines connecting
the following specific latitude and longitude coordinates in the order
listed:
(1) 46[deg]58.00' N. lat., 124[deg]48.00' W. long.;
(2) 46[deg]55.00' N. lat., 124[deg]48.00' W. long.;
(3) 46[deg]55.00' N. lat., 124[deg]49.00' W. long.;
(4) 46[deg]58.00' N. lat., 124[deg]49.00' W. long.;
and connecting back to 46[deg]58.00' N. lat., 124[deg]48.00' W. long.
(iv) The quota for landings into ports in the area between
Leadbetter Point, WA (46[deg]38.17' N. lat.) and Cape Falcon, OR
(45[deg]46.00' N. lat.), is 14,402 lb (6.5 mt).
(A) The fishing season commences on May 1, and continues 7 days a
week until 10,081 lb (4.6 mt) are estimated to have been taken and the
season is closed by the Commission or until July 20, whichever is
earlier. The fishery will reopen on August 1 and continue 3 days a week
(Friday through Sunday) until 14,402 lb (6.5 mt) have been taken and
the season is closed by the Commission, or until September 30,
whichever is earlier. Subsequent to this closure, if there is
insufficient quota remaining in the Columbia River subarea for another
fishing day, then any remaining quota may be transferred inseason to
another Washington and/or Oregon subarea by NMFS via an update to the
recreational halibut hotline. Any remaining quota would be transferred
to each state in proportion to its contribution.
(B) The daily bag limit is one halibut of any size per day per
person.
(C) Pacific Coast groundfish may not be taken and retained,
possessed or landed, except sablefish and Pacific cod when allowed by
Pacific Coast
[[Page 144]]
groundfish regulations, if halibut are on board the vessel.
(v) The quota for landings into ports in the area off Oregon
between Cape Falcon (45[deg]46.00' N. lat.) and Humbug Mountain
(42[deg]40.50' N. lat.), is 189,566 lb (86 mt).
(A) The fishing seasons are:
(1) The first season (the ``inside 40-fm'' fishery) commences May 1
and continues 7 days a week through October 31, in the area shoreward
of a boundary line approximating the 40-fm (73-m) depth contour, or
until the sub-quota for the central Oregon ``inside 40-fm'' fishery
(15,165 lb (6.9 mt)) or any inseason revised subquota is estimated to
have been taken and the season is closed by the Commission, whichever
is earlier. The boundary line approximating the 40-fm (73-m) depth
contour between 45[deg]46.00' N. lat. and 42[deg]40.50' N. lat. is
defined by straight lines connecting all of the following points in the
order stated:
(1) 45[deg]46.00' N. lat., 124[deg]04.49' W. long.;
(2) 45[deg]44.34' N. lat., 124[deg]05.09' W. long.;
(3) 45[deg]40.64' N. lat., 124[deg]04.90' W. long.;
(4) 45[deg]33.00' N. lat., 124[deg]04.46' W. long.;
(5) 45[deg]32.27' N. lat., 124[deg]04.74' W. long.;
(6) 45[deg]29.26' N. lat., 124[deg]04.22' W. long.;
(7) 45[deg]20.25' N. lat., 124[deg]04.67' W. long.;
(8) 45[deg]19.99' N. lat., 124[deg]04.62' W. long.;
(9) 45[deg]17.50' N. lat., 124[deg]04.91' W. long.;
(10) 45[deg]11.29' N. lat., 124[deg]05.19' W. long.;
(11) 45[deg]05.79' N. lat., 124[deg]05.40' W. long.;
(12) 45[deg]05.07' N. lat., 124[deg]05.93' W. long.;
(13) 45[deg]03.83' N. lat., 124[deg]06.47' W. long.;
(14) 45[deg]01.70' N. lat., 124[deg]06.53' W. long.;
(15) 44[deg]58.75' N. lat., 124[deg]07.14' W. long.;
(16) 44[deg]51.28' N. lat., 124[deg]10.21' W. long.;
(17) 44[deg]49.49' N. lat., 124[deg]10.89' W. long.;
(18) 44[deg]44.96' N. lat., 124[deg]14.39' W. long.;
(19) 44[deg]43.44' N. lat., 124[deg]14.78' W. long.;
(20) 44[deg]42.27' N. lat., 124[deg]13.81' W. long.;
(21) 44[deg]41.68' N. lat., 124[deg]15.38' W. long.;
(22) 44[deg]34.87' N. lat., 124[deg]15.80' W. long.;
(23) 44[deg]33.74' N. lat., 124[deg]14.43' W. long.;
(24) 44[deg]27.66' N. lat., 124[deg]16.99' W. long.;
(25) 44[deg]19.13' N. lat., 124[deg]19.22' W. long.;
(26) 44[deg]15.35' N. lat., 124[deg]17.37' W. long.;
(27) 44[deg]14.38' N. lat., 124[deg]17.78' W. long.;
(28) 44[deg]12.80' N. lat., 124[deg]17.18' W. long.;
(29) 44[deg]09.23' N. lat., 124[deg]15.96' W. long.;
(30) 44[deg]08.38' N. lat., 124[deg]16.80' W. long.;
(31) 44[deg]08.30' N. lat., 124[deg]16.75' W. long.;
(32) 44[deg]01.18' N. lat., 124[deg]15.42' W. long.;
(33) 43[deg]51.60' N. lat., 124[deg]14.68' W. long.;
(34) 43[deg]42.66' N. lat., 124[deg]15.46' W. long.;
(35) 43[deg]40.49' N. lat., 124[deg]15.74' W. long.;
(36) 43[deg]38.77' N. lat., 124[deg]15.64' W. long.;
(37) 43[deg]34.52' N. lat., 124[deg]16.73' W. long.;
(38) 43[deg]28.82' N. lat., 124[deg]19.52' W. long.;
(39) 43[deg]23.91' N. lat., 124[deg]24.28' W. long.;
(40) 43[deg]20.83' N. lat., 124[deg]26.63' W. long.;
(41) 43[deg]17.96' N. lat., 124[deg]28.81' W. long.;
(42) 43[deg]16.75' N. lat., 124[deg]28.42' W. long.;
(43) 43[deg]13.98' N. lat., 124[deg]31.99' W. long.;
(44) 43[deg]13.71' N. lat., 124[deg]33.25' W. long.;
(45) 43[deg]12.26' N. lat., 124[deg]34.16' W. long.;
(46) 43[deg]10.96' N. lat., 124[deg]32.34' W. long.;
(47) 43[deg]05.65' N. lat., 124[deg]31.52' W. long.;
(48) 42[deg]59.66' N. lat., 124[deg]32.58' W. long.;
(49) 42[deg]54.97' N. lat., 124[deg]36.99' W. long.;
(50) 42[deg]53.81' N. lat., 124[deg]38.58' W. long.;
(51) 42[deg]50.00' N. lat., 124[deg]39.68' W. long.;
(52) 42[deg]49.14' N. lat., 124[deg]39.92' W. long.;
(53) 42[deg]46.47' N. lat., 124[deg]38.65' W. long.;
(54) 42[deg]45.60' N. lat., 124[deg]39.04' W. long.;
(55) 42[deg]44.79' N. lat., 124[deg]37.96' W. long.;
(56) 42[deg]45.00' N. lat., 124[deg]36.39' W. long.;
(57) 42[deg]44.14' N. lat., 124[deg]35.16' W. long.;
(58) 42[deg]42.15' N. lat., 124[deg]32.82' W. long.; and
(59) 42[deg]40.50' N. lat., 124[deg]31.98' W. long.;
(2) The second season (spring season), which is for the ``all-
depth'' fishery, is open on (insert dates beginning with May 8 or 9).
The projected catch for this season is 130,801 lb (59 mt). If
sufficient unharvested catch remains for additional fishing days, the
season will re-open. Dependent on the amount of unharvested catch
available, the potential season re-opening dates will be: (insert
dates, no later than July 31). If NMFS decides inseason to allow
fishing on any of these re-opening dates, notice of the re-opening will
be announced on the NMFS hotline (206) 526-6667 or (800) 662-9825. No
halibut fishing will be allowed on the re-opening dates unless the date
is announced on the NMFS hotline. (The final determination of the
season dates will be based on the allowable harvest level and projected
2008 catch rates and on input from a public meeting held by ODFW after
the 2008 TAC is set by the IPHC.)
(3) If sufficient unharvested catch remains, the third season
(summer season), which is for the ``all-depth'' fishery, will be open
on (insert dates beginning with August 1), or until the combined spring
season and summer season quotas in the area between Cape Falcon and
Humbug Mountain, OR, totaling 174,401 lb (79 mt), are estimated to have
been taken and the area is closed by the Commission, or October 31,
whichever is earlier. NMFS will announce on the NMFS hotline in July
whether the fishery will re-open for the summer season in August. No
halibut fishing will be allowed in the summer season fishery unless the
dates are announced on the NMFS hotline. Additional fishing days may be
opened if a certain amount of quota remains after August 3 and August
31. If after August 3, greater than or equal to 60,000 lb (27.2 mt)
remains in the combined all-depth and inside 40-fm (73-m) quota, the
fishery may re-open every Friday through Sunday, beginning August 8 -
10, and ending October 31. If after August 31, greater than or equal to
30,000 lb (13.6 mt) remains in the combined all-depth and inside 40-fm
(73-m) quota, and the fishery is not already open every Friday through
Sunday, the fishery may re-open every Friday through Sunday, beginning
September 5 - 7, and ending October 31. After August 31, the bag limit
may be increased to two fish of any size per person, per day. NMFS will
announce on the NMFS hotline whether the summer all-depth fishery will
be open
[[Page 145]]
on such additional fishing days, what days the fishery will be open and
what the bag limit is.
(B) The daily bag limit is one halibut of any size per day per
person, unless otherwise specified. NMFS will announce on the NMFS
hotline any bag limit changes.
(C) During days open to all-depth halibut fishing, no Pacific Coast
groundfish may be taken and retained, possessed or landed, except
sablefish when allowed by Pacific Coast groundfish regulations, if
halibut are on board the vessel.
(D) When the all-depth halibut fishery is closed and halibut
fishing is permitted only shoreward of a boundary line approximating
the 40-fm (73-m) depth contour, halibut possession and retention by
vessels operating seaward of a boundary line approximating the 40-fm
(73-m) depth contour is prohibited.
(E) Recreational fishing for groundfish and halibut is prohibited
within the Stonewall Bank YRCA. It is unlawful for recreational fishing
vessels to take and retain, possess, or land halibut taken with
recreational gear within the Stonewall Bank YRCA. A vessel fishing in
the Stonewall Bank YRCA may not be in possession of any halibut.
Recreational vessels may transit through the Stonewall Bank YRCA with
or without halibut on board. The Stonewall Bank YRCA is an area off
central Oregon, near Stonewall Bank, intended to protect yelloweye
rockfish. The Stonewall Bank YRCA is defined by straight lines
connecting the following specific latitude and longitude coordinates in
the order listed:
(1) 44[deg]37.46 N. lat.; 124[deg]24.92 W. long.;
(2) 44[deg]37.46 N. lat.; 124[deg]23.63 W. long.;
(3) 44[deg]28.71 N. lat.; 124[deg]21.80 W. long.;
(4) 44[deg]28.71 N. lat.; 124[deg]24.10 W. long.;
(5) 44[deg]31.42 N. lat.; 124[deg]25.47 W. long.;
and connecting back to 44[deg]37.46 N. lat.; 124[deg]24.92 W. long.
(vi) The area south of Humbug Mountain, Oregon (42[deg]40.50' N.
lat.) and off the California coast is not managed inseason relative to
its quota. This area is managed on a season that is projected to result
in a catch of 6,182 lb (2.8 mt).
(A) The fishing season will commence on May 1 and continue 7 days a
week until October 31.
(B) The daily bag limit is one halibut of any size per day per
person.
Flexible Inseason Management for Sport Fisheries
Language on flexible inseason management for sport fisheries at 50
CFR 300.63 (c)(2)(v) is proposed to be revised in the same manner as
language being revised in section (f)(5)(ii)(E) of the Plan. More
specifically, the phrase ``north of Cape Falcon, OR'' is removed from
the sentence so that it reads, ``modification of subarea quotas.'' As
mentioned in paragraphs (c)(1)(iii) and (iv) of 50 CFR 300.63, unused
quota can be moved inseason both north of Cape Falcon, OR, and south of
Leadbetter Point, WA, to modify quota in Area 2A sport fisheries if
sport fishery subareas are not projected to utilize their respective
quotas. Therefore, this revision clarifies the flexible inseason
management provisions so that all subarea quotas may be modified
inseason, not just subarea quotas north of Cape Falcon.
Classification
This action has been determined to be not significant for purposes
of Executive Order 12866.
NMFS has prepared an RIR/IRFA on the proposed changes to the Plan
and annual domestic Area 2A halibut management measures. Copies of
these documents are available from NMFS (see ADDRESSES).
NMFS prepared an IRFA that describes the economic impact this
proposed rule, if adopted, would have on small entities. A description
of the action, why it is being considered, and the legal basis for this
action are contained at the beginning of this section in the preamble
and in the SUMMARY section of the preamble. The IRFA is available from
NMFS (see ADDRESSES). A summary of the IRFA follows:
A fish-harvesting business is considered a ``small'' business by
the Small Business Administration (SBA) if it has annual receipts not
in excess of $4.0 million. For related fish-processing businesses, a
small business is one that employs 500 or fewer persons. For wholesale
businesses, a small business is one that employs not more than 100
people. For marinas and charter/party boats, a small business is one
with annual receipts not in excess of $6.5 million. All of the
businesses that would be affected by this action are considered small
businesses under Small Business Administration guidance.
The proposed changes to the Plan, which allocates the catch of
Pacific halibut among users in Washington, Oregon and California,
would: (1) reopen the Washington North Coast subarea June sport fishery
on the first Tuesday following June 16; (2) clarify that the Saturday
offshore opener in the Washington North Coast subarea June sport
fishery is contingent on available quota; (3) provide flexibility in
the date that the entire Washington North Coast subarea sport fishery
reopens for one day after June 24; (4) retain the opening date of May 1
for the Washington South Coast subarea primary sport fishery in 2008
and, starting in 2009, revise the opening date to May 1 if it is a
Sunday, otherwise, open on the first Sunday following May 1; (5) set
the Washington South Coast subarea primary sport fishery as a 2-day per
week fishery, open Sunday and Tuesday; (6) set aside 10 percent of the
Washington South Coast subarea quota for the nearshore sport fishery
once the primary fishery has closed; (7) set the Washington South Coast
subarea nearshore sport fishery as a 4-day per week fishery, open
Friday, Saturday, Sunday, and Tuesday; (8) remove outdated language
referring to the 25,000 lb annual tribal allocation resulting from the
U.S. v. Washington case; (9) edit language referring to the number of
sport subareas to clarify that there are six rather than seven; and
(10) revise the flexible inseason management provisions for the sport
fisheries to allow modification of subarea quotas in all subareas. NMFS
also proposes to implement the portions of the Plan and management
measures that are not implemented through the IPHC, which includes the
sport fishery management measures for Area 2A. These actions are
intended to enhance the conservation of Pacific halibut, to provide
greater angler opportunity where available, and to protect yelloweye
rockfish and other overfished groundfish species from incidental catch
in the halibut fisheries.
As mentioned in the preamble, WDFW held state meetings and crafted
alternatives to adjust management of the sport halibut fisheries in
their state. These alternatives were then narrowed by the state and
brought to the Council at the Council's September and November 2007
meetings. Generally, by the time the alternatives reach the Council,
and because they have been through the state public review process,
they are narrowed down into the proposed action and status quo. There
were no alternatives that could have similarly improved angler
enjoyment of and participation in the fisheries while simultaneously
protecting halibut and co-occurring groundfish species from
overharvest.
In 1995, NMFS implemented the Plan, when the TAC was 520,000 pounds
(236 mt). In each of the intervening years between 1995 and the
present, minor revisions to the Plan have been made to adjust for the
changing needs of the
[[Page 146]]
fisheries, even though the TAC reached levels of over 1,000,000 pounds
(454 mt), with a peak of 1,480,000 pounds (671 mt) in 2004. Since 2004,
there has been very little change in the total allowable catch and
sector allocations. In 2006, the Area 2A Halibut TAC set by the IPHC
was 1.38 million pounds (626 mt) and for 2007 it was 1.34 million
pounds (608 mt). However, preliminary IPHC staff recommendations for
the 2008 TAC are lower than the TAC levels since 2001. The preliminary
2008 Area 2A TAC of 1.00 million pounds (454 mt) is lower than previous
years due to the IPHC's new stock assessment information, revised
selectivity assumptions and revised harvest policy. This is a 25-
percent decline from the 2007 TAC. As this is a sizable decline, there
may be changes to the regulations described in this proposed rule
resulting from IPHC recommendations at their annual meeting in January
2008, or as an outcome of the state public workshops held after the
IPHC meeting. Expectations are that any proposed changes in the
regulations will be ones that, in implementing the amended Plan, seek
to mitigate the adverse impacts of the decline of the TAC in order to
maximize available fishing opportunities and benefits to fishing
communities.
Six hundred fifty-nine vessels were issued IPHC licenses to retain
halibut in 2007. IPHC issues licenses for: the directed commercial
fishery in Area 2A, including licenses issued to retain halibut caught
incidentally in the primary sablefish fishery (225 licenses in 2007);
incidental halibut caught in the salmon troll fishery (292 licenses in
2007); and the charterboat fleet (142 licenses in 2007). No vessel may
participate in more than one of these three fisheries per year.
Individual recreational anglers and private boats are the only sectors
that are not required to have an IPHC license to retain halibut.
Specific data on the economics of halibut charter operations is
unavailable. However, in January 2004, the Pacific States Marine
Fisheries Commission (PSMFC) completed a report on the overall West
Coast charterboat fleet. In surveying charterboat vessels concerning
their operations in 2000, the PSMFC estimated that there were about 315
charterboat vessels in operation off Washington and Oregon. In 2000,
IPHC licensed 130 vessels to fish in the halibut sport charter fishery.
Comparing the total charterboat fleet to the 130 and 142 IPHC licenses
in 2000 and 2007, respectively, approximately 41 to 45 percent of the
charterboat fleet could participate in the halibut fishery. The PSMFC
has developed preliminary estimates of the annual revenues earned by
this fleet and they vary by size class of the vessels and home state.
Small charterboat vessels range from 15 to 30 ft (4.572 to 9.144 m),
and typically carry 5 to 6 passengers. Medium charterboat vessels range
from 31 to 49 ft (9.44 to 14.93 m) in length and typically carry 19 to
20 passengers. (Neither state has large vessels of greater than 49 ft
(14.93 m) in their fleet.) Average annual revenues from all types of
recreational fishing, whalewatching and other activities ranged from
$7,000 for small Oregon vessels to $131,000 for medium Washington
vessels. Estimates from the RIR show the recreational halibut fishery
generated approximately $2.5 million in personal income to West Coast
communities, while the non-tribal commercial halibut fishery generated
approximately $2.2 million in income impacts. Because these estimated
impacts for the entire halibut fishery overall are less than the SBA
criteria for individual businesses, these data confirm that charterboat
and commercial halibut vessels qualify as small entities under the
Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA).
These changes are authorized under the Pacific Halibut Act,
implementing regulations at 50 CFR 300.60 through 300.65, and the
Pacific Council process of annually evaluating the utility and
effectiveness of Area 2A Pacific halibut management under the Plan.
Given the TAC, the proposed sport management measures implement the
Plan by managing the recreational fishery to meet the differing fishery
needs of the various areas along the coast according to the Plan's
objectives. The measures will be very similar to last year's management
measures. The changes to the Plan and domestic management measures are
minor changes and are intended to help prolong the halibut season,
provide increased recreational harvest opportunities, or clarify sport
fishery management for fishermen and managers. There are no large
entities involved in the halibut fisheries; therefore, none of these
changes to the Plan and domestic management measures will have a
disproportionate negative effect on small entities versus large
entities.
These changes do not include any reporting or recordkeeping
requirements. These changes will also not duplicate, overlap or
conflict with other laws or regulations. Consequently, these changes to
the Plan and annual domestic Area 2A halibut management measures are
not expected to meet any of the RFA tests of having a ``significant''
economic impact on a ``substantial number'' of small entities.
Nonetheless, NMFS has prepared an IRFA. Through this proposed rule,
NMFS is requesting comments on these conclusions.
Pursuant to Executive Order 13175, the Secretary recognizes the
sovereign status and co-manager role of Indian tribes over shared
Federal and tribal fishery resources. At section 302(b)(5), the
Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act establishes a
seat on the Pacific Council for a representative of an Indian tribe
with federally recognized fishing rights from California, Oregon,
Washington, or Idaho.
The U.S. Government formally recognizes that the 12 Washington
Tribes have treaty rights to fish for Pacific halibut. In general
terms, the quantification of those rights is 50 percent of the
harvestable surplus of Pacific halibut available in the tribes' usual
and accustomed (U and A) fishing areas (described at 50 CFR 300.64).
Each of the treaty tribes has the discretion to administer their
fisheries and to establish their own policies to achieve program
objectives. Accordingly, tribal allocations and regulations, including
the proposed changes to
the Plan, have been developed in consultation with the affected
tribe(s) and, insofar as possible, with tribal consensus.
List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 300
Fishing, Fisheries, and Indian fisheries.
Dated: December 27, 2007
John Oliver,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for Operations, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
For the reasons set out in the preamble, 50 CFR part 300 is
proposed to be amended as follows:
PART 300--INTERNATIONAL FISHERIES REGULATIONS
1. The authority citation for part 300 continues to read as
follows:
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 773 et seq.
2. In Sec. 300.63, paragraph (c)(2)(v) is revised to read as
follows:
Sec. 300.63 Catch sharing plan and domestic management measures in
Area 2A.
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(2) * * *
(v) Modification of subarea quotas.
* * * * *
[FR Doc. E7-25535 Filed 12-31-07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-22-S