Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic Zone Off Alaska; Individual Fishing Quota Program, 8822-8824 [E8-2932]
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8822
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 32 / Friday, February 15, 2008 / Rules and Regulations
from the fishery. The Assistant
Administrator for Fisheries, NOAA
(AA), finds good cause to waive the
requirement to provide prior notice and
opportunity for public comment
pursuant to the authority set forth at 5
U.S.C. 553(b)(B) as such requirement is
impracticable and contrary to the public
interest. This requirement is
impracticable and contrary to the public
interest as it would prevent NMFS from
responding to the most recent fisheries
data in a timely fashion and would
delay the closure of Pacific cod by
catcher vessels < 60 ft (18.3 m) LOA
using jig or hook-and-line gear in the
Bogoslof Pacific cod exemption area.
NMFS was unable to publish a notice
providing time for public comment
because the most recent, relevant data
only became available as of February 11,
2008.
The AA also finds good cause to
waive the 30-day delay in the effective
date of this action under 5 U.S.C.
553(d)(3). This finding is based upon
the reasons provided above for waiver of
prior notice and opportunity for public
comment.
This action is required by § 679.22
and is exempt from review under
Executive Order 12866.
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
Dated: February 11, 2008.
Alan D. Risenhoover,
Director, Office of Sustainable Fisheries,
National Marine Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 08–706 Filed 2–12–08; 2:08 pm]
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Becky Carls, 907–586–7228 or
becky.carls@noaa.gov.
BILLING CODE 3510–22–S
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
50 CFR Part 679
[Docket No. 071029546–7546–02]
RIN 0648–AU85
Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic
Zone Off Alaska; Individual Fishing
Quota Program
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule.
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with RULES
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: NMFS issues a final rule to
modify the Individual Fishing Quota
(IFQ) Program for the fixed-gear
commercial Pacific halibut fishery and
sablefish fishery by revising regulations
governing the use of commercial halibut
quota share (QS) and the processing of
non-IFQ species when processed halibut
16:50 Feb 14, 2008
The
International Pacific Halibut
Commission (IPHC) and NMFS manage
fishing for Pacific halibut (Hippoglossus
stenolepis) through regulations
established under the authority of the
Convention between the United States
and Canada for the Preservation of the
Halibut Fishery of the Northern Pacific
Ocean and Bering Sea (Convention) and
the Northern Pacific Halibut Act of 1982
(Halibut Act). The IPHC promulgates
regulations pursuant to the Convention.
The IPHC’s regulations are subject to
approval by the Secretary of State with
concurrence from the Secretary of
Commerce (Secretary). After approval
by the Secretary of State and the
Secretary, the IPHC regulations are
published in the Federal Register as
annual management measures pursuant
to 50 CFR 300.62 (72 FR 11792; March
14, 2007).
The Halibut Act also authorizes the
North Pacific Fishery Management
Council (Council) to develop and
submit regulations to the Secretary to
allocate harvesting privileges among
U.S. fishermen. Regulations developed
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
VerDate Aug<31>2005
is onboard a vessel. This action amends
current regulations to allow persons
holding category A halibut QS to
process IFQ regardless of whether a QS
holder with unused category B, C, or D
halibut QS is onboard the vessel. This
action also allows catcher/processor
vessels to process non-IFQ species
regardless of whether any processed IFQ
species is onboard the vessel. This
action is necessary to improve the
efficiency of fishermen fishing on
catcher/processor vessels. The action is
intended to allow halibut QS holders
greater flexibility in using their QS,
allow use of crew who hold unused
category B, C, or D halibut QS while
onboard a category A halibut QS vessel,
and increase the product quality of nonIFQ species harvested incidentally to
IFQ halibut.
DATES: Effective March 17, 2008.
ADDRESSES: Copies of the Categorical
Exclusion (CE) and the Regulatory
Impact Review/Final Regulatory
Flexibility Analysis (RIR/FRFA)
prepared for this action are available by
mail from NMFS, Alaska Region, P.O.
Box 21668, Juneau, AK 99802–1668,
Attn: Ellen Sebastian, Records Officer;
in person at NMFS, Alaska Region, 709
West 9th Street, Room 420A, Juneau,
AK; or via the Internet at the NMFS
Alaska Region website at https://
www.fakr.noaa.gov.
Jkt 214001
PO 00000
Frm 00036
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
by the Council are implemented only
with the approval of the Secretary. Like
the original Halibut and Sablefish IFQ
Program (IFQ Program) regulations and
subsequent amendments to them, this
action was developed by the Council
under authority of the Halibut Act.
The Council, under the authority of
the Halibut Act (with respect to Pacific
halibut) and the Magnuson-Stevens
Fishery Conservation and Management
Act (with respect to sablefish), adopted
the IFQ Program in 1991. The IFQ
Program established a limited access
system for managing the fixed gear
Pacific halibut fishery in Convention
waters in and off Alaska and sablefish
fisheries in waters of the Exclusive
Economic Zone, located between 3 and
200 miles off Alaska. The IFQ Program
was approved by NMFS in January
1993, and promulgated in Federal
regulation on November 9, 1993 (58 FR
59375). Fishing under the IFQ Program
began on March 15, 1995, ending the
open access fishery which preceded its
implementation. Regulations
implementing the IFQ Program are at 50
CFR part 679. In addition, Federal
regulations at 50 CFR part 300, subpart
E, also govern the halibut IFQ fishery.
Background and Need for Action
The background and need for this
action were described in detail in the
preamble to the proposed rule
published in the Federal Register on
November 14, 2007 (72 FR 64034). In
summary, this final rule will relieve
some of the restrictions affecting holders
of commercial halibut QS.
Under the IFQ Program, QS represents
a harvesting privilege for a person. On
an annual basis, QS holders are
authorized to harvest a specified
poundage which is issued by NMFS as
IFQ. Federal regulations at 50 CFR
679.40(a)(5) divide QS into vessel
categories (A, B, C, and D for halibut)
with unique restrictions designed to
prevent excessive consolidation and
regulate total harvest. With few
exceptions, halibut QS or IFQ assigned
to a vessel category may not be used to
harvest IFQ species on a vessel of a
different category.
The IFQ Program includes an
economic protection measure
prohibiting the processing of non-IFQ
species (e.g., Pacific cod) onboard a
vessel on which a person holds catcher
vessel halibut IFQ. This prohibition
resulted in the unanticipated waste of
species caught incidentally to halibut,
especially rockfish and Pacific cod. In
addition, persons fishing halibut IFQ
derived from category A QS could not
process any species if a person onboard
the vessel held unused halibut IFQ
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15FER1
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 32 / Friday, February 15, 2008 / Rules and Regulations
derived from category B, C, or D QS.
Also, operators of catcher/processor
vessels fishing for Pacific cod, for
example, would have to employ crew
members who did not have unused
catcher vessel IFQ (i.e., IFQ derived
from category B, C, or D halibut QS) for
halibut, or catcher/processor operators
would have to delay fishing for non-IFQ
species until all crew members onboard
had fully used their catcher vessel IFQ
for halibut. Hence, the processing
restriction limited the crew that could
be onboard catcher/processor vessels
and the timing of fishing by catcher/
processor vessels.
This action is intended to increase the
revenue generated from harvested
species by (1) allowing non-IFQ fish
species to be processed on a vessel
otherwise authorized to process fish,
rather than allowing non-IFQ species to
degrade into low value products or be
wasted while IFQ species are sought;
and (2) allowing processed and
unprocessed IFQ species to be onboard
the same vessel during the same fishing
trip.
This action will allow the processing
of non-IFQ and IFQ species on a vessel
that is otherwise authorized to process
non-IFQ species when any amount of
halibut IFQ resulting from QS in
categories B, C, or D are held by persons
onboard the vessel. This action will not
allow the processing of category B, C, or
D halibut IFQ onboard a catcher/
processor vessel. Instead, this action
will allow persons possessing unused
catcher vessel category B, C, or D
halibut QS to be onboard a catcher/
processor vessel when that vessel is
harvesting and processing category A
halibut or sablefish IFQ or is harvesting
and processing non-IFQ species. This
action will relieve a restriction on
catcher/processor vessels which will
increase their efficiency. The regulatory
change will remove regulatory text
currently at § 679.7(f)(13) and (14) and
§ 679.42(k). There is no new regulatory
text.
Response to Comments
The proposed rule for this action was
published in the Federal Register on
November 14, 2007 (72 FR 64034). One
commenter submitted a comment to
NMFS in support of the rule.
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with RULES
Changes From the Proposed Rule
No changes are made in this final rule
from the proposed rule.
Classification
The Administrator, Alaska Region,
NMFS, determined that this amendment
is necessary for the conservation and
management of the halibut fishery and
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:50 Feb 14, 2008
Jkt 214001
that it is consistent with the Halibut Act
and other applicable laws.
This final rule has been determined to
be not significant for purposes of
Executive Order 12866. This final rule
also complies with the Secretary’s
authority under the Halibut Act to
implement management measures for
the halibut fishery.
A final regulatory flexibility analysis
(FRFA) was prepared. The FRFA
incorporates the initial regulatory
flexibility analysis (IRFA), a summary of
the significant issues raised by the
public comments in response to the
IRFA, NMFS’s responses to those
comments, and a summary of the
analyses completed to support the
action. A copy of this analysis is
available from NMFS (see ADDRESSES).
A description of this action, why it is
being considered, and the legal basis for
this action are presented above in the
preamble to this rule. NMFS received
one public comment, and that was in
support of the proposed rule. No
comments were received in response to
the IRFA or on the economic impacts of
the rule and no changes were made in
the proposed rule. A summary of the
FRFA follows.
This action will directly regulate
approximately 3,233 persons holding
category B, C, or D halibut QS, 33
catcher/processor vessels, and 1,312
vessels that hold catcher vessel
endorsements for vessels less than 60 ft
(18.6 m) length overall on their license
limitation program permits. NMFS does
not possess sufficient ownership and
affiliation information to determine the
precise number of quota share holders
considered small entities in the IFQ
Program or the number of small entities
that will be adversely impacted by this
action. NMFS assumes that all directly
regulated entities have gross revenues
less than $4 million, and that they are
thus small entities for the purposes of
the Regulatory Flexibility Act. In 2004,
1,335 unique IFQ vessels made IFQ
landings.
Compared with status quo, this action
may increase the revenue generated
from non-IFQ species harvested by
increasing the quality of offloaded
product. This action will allow QS
holders already authorized to process
fish at-sea to optimize the revenue
generated from harvested non-IFQ
groundfish. Processing capacity is not
expected to increase because the
number of vessels currently authorized
to process groundfish catch onboard
while harvesting IFQ derived from
category A quota share will not change.
This action also may increase benefits to
persons holding QS because it allows
IFQ to be processed regardless of
PO 00000
Frm 00037
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
8823
whether another quota share holder is
onboard, including crew holding
catcher vessel category B, C, or D QS
who are working onboard vessels with
category A QS.
The purpose of this action is to relieve
a restriction on small entities. NMFS is
not aware of any additional alternatives
to those considered that would
accomplish the objectives of this action,
the Halibut Act, and other applicable
statutes and that would minimize the
economic impact of the action on small
entities. The Council received two
proposals on this issue, incorporated
them into what became this final action,
and evaluated them jointly after a
preliminary review found that they were
functionally the same. This action will
completely repeal the subject
requirements. Repeal will remove a
restriction from directly regulated
entities and potentially lead to
increased profits. Other alternatives
might have been designed to limit the
ability of this action to accomplish the
objectives, by limiting the scope of the
repeal to particular species or halibut
QS classes, or by providing for a
delayed effective date. However, these
alternatives would not have been
significantly different from this action.
They would not have involved
substantively different approaches to
addressing the problem that had been
identified. Moreover, because this
action relaxes a restriction on directly
regulated small entities, these
alternatives would have reduced the
potential benefits of this action for these
small entities or the classes of entities
that might benefit from them.
According to NOAA Administrative
Order (NAO) 216–6, including the
criteria used to determine significance,
this rule will not have a significant
effect, individually or cumulatively, on
the human environment beyond those
effects identified in the previous
National Environmental Policy Act
(NEPA) analysis. An environmental
impact statement (EIS; dated December
1992) was prepared for the final rule
implementing the original halibut and
sablefish IFQ and Community
Development Quota Programs (58 FR
59375; November 9, 1993). The scope of
the EIS includes the potential
environmental impacts of this proposed
rule because the EIS analyzed the
original IFQ Program, which included
analyses of biological and
socioeconomic impacts on the
environment, affected fishermen, and
affected communities. Based on the
nature of the proposed rule and the
previous environmental analysis, this
proposed rule is categorically excluded
from the requirement to prepare either
E:\FR\FM\15FER1.SGM
15FER1
8824
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 32 / Friday, February 15, 2008 / Rules and Regulations
an EIS or an environmental assessment,
in accordance with Section 5.05b of
NAO 216–6. Copies of the EIS for the
original halibut and sablefish IFQ and
Community Development Quota
Programs and the categorical exclusion
for this action are available from NMFS
(see ADDRESSES).
rwilkins on PROD1PC63 with RULES
Small Entity Compliance Guide
Section 212 of the Small Business
Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of
1996 states that, for each rule or group
of related rules for which an agency is
required to prepare a FRFA, the agency
shall publish one or more guides to
assist small entities in complying with
the rule, and shall designate such
publications as ‘‘small entity
compliance guides.’’ The agency shall
explain the actions a small entity is
required to take to comply with a rule
or group of rules.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:50 Feb 14, 2008
Jkt 214001
The preamble to this final rule serves
as the small entity compliance guide.
This action does not require any
additional compliance from small
entities that is not described in the
preamble. Copies of this final rule are
available from NMFS (see ADDRESSES)
and at the following website: https://
www.fakr.noaa.gov.
List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 679
PART 679—FISHERIES OF THE
EXCLUSIVE ECONOMIC ZONE OFF
ALASKA
1. The authority citation for part 679
continues to read as follows:
I
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 773 et seq., 1801 et
seq., 3631 et seq.; Pub. L. 108 447.
§ 679.7
[Amended]
Alaska, Fisheries, Recordkeeping and
reporting requirements.
Dated: February 11, 2008.
Samuel D. Rauch III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for
Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
2. In § 679.7, paragraph (f)(13) is
removed and reserved, paragraph (f)(15)
is removed, and paragraphs (f)(16) and
(f)(17) are redesignated as paragraphs
(f)(15) and (f)(16), respectively.
§ 679.42
For the reasons set out in the
preamble, 50 CFR part 679 is amended
as follows:
[FR Doc. E8–2932 Filed 2–14–08; 8:45 am]
I
PO 00000
Frm 00038
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
I
[Amended]
3. In § 679.42, paragraph (k) is
removed and paragraph (l) is
redesignated as paragraph (k).
I
BILLING CODE 3510–22–S
E:\FR\FM\15FER1.SGM
15FER1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 73, Number 32 (Friday, February 15, 2008)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 8822-8824]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E8-2932]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
50 CFR Part 679
[Docket No. 071029546-7546-02]
RIN 0648-AU85
Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic Zone Off Alaska; Individual
Fishing Quota Program
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: NMFS issues a final rule to modify the Individual Fishing
Quota (IFQ) Program for the fixed-gear commercial Pacific halibut
fishery and sablefish fishery by revising regulations governing the use
of commercial halibut quota share (QS) and the processing of non-IFQ
species when processed halibut is onboard a vessel. This action amends
current regulations to allow persons holding category A halibut QS to
process IFQ regardless of whether a QS holder with unused category B,
C, or D halibut QS is onboard the vessel. This action also allows
catcher/processor vessels to process non-IFQ species regardless of
whether any processed IFQ species is onboard the vessel. This action is
necessary to improve the efficiency of fishermen fishing on catcher/
processor vessels. The action is intended to allow halibut QS holders
greater flexibility in using their QS, allow use of crew who hold
unused category B, C, or D halibut QS while onboard a category A
halibut QS vessel, and increase the product quality of non-IFQ species
harvested incidentally to IFQ halibut.
DATES: Effective March 17, 2008.
ADDRESSES: Copies of the Categorical Exclusion (CE) and the Regulatory
Impact Review/Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (RIR/FRFA) prepared
for this action are available by mail from NMFS, Alaska Region, P.O.
Box 21668, Juneau, AK 99802-1668, Attn: Ellen Sebastian, Records
Officer; in person at NMFS, Alaska Region, 709 West 9th Street, Room
420A, Juneau, AK; or via the Internet at the NMFS Alaska Region website
at https://www.fakr.noaa.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Becky Carls, 907-586-7228 or
becky.carls@noaa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The International Pacific Halibut Commission
(IPHC) and NMFS manage fishing for Pacific halibut (Hippoglossus
stenolepis) through regulations established under the authority of the
Convention between the United States and Canada for the Preservation of
the Halibut Fishery of the Northern Pacific Ocean and Bering Sea
(Convention) and the Northern Pacific Halibut Act of 1982 (Halibut
Act). The IPHC promulgates regulations pursuant to the Convention. The
IPHC's regulations are subject to approval by the Secretary of State
with concurrence from the Secretary of Commerce (Secretary). After
approval by the Secretary of State and the Secretary, the IPHC
regulations are published in the Federal Register as annual management
measures pursuant to 50 CFR 300.62 (72 FR 11792; March 14, 2007).
The Halibut Act also authorizes the North Pacific Fishery
Management Council (Council) to develop and submit regulations to the
Secretary to allocate harvesting privileges among U.S. fishermen.
Regulations developed by the Council are implemented only with the
approval of the Secretary. Like the original Halibut and Sablefish IFQ
Program (IFQ Program) regulations and subsequent amendments to them,
this action was developed by the Council under authority of the Halibut
Act.
The Council, under the authority of the Halibut Act (with respect
to Pacific halibut) and the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and
Management Act (with respect to sablefish), adopted the IFQ Program in
1991. The IFQ Program established a limited access system for managing
the fixed gear Pacific halibut fishery in Convention waters in and off
Alaska and sablefish fisheries in waters of the Exclusive Economic
Zone, located between 3 and 200 miles off Alaska. The IFQ Program was
approved by NMFS in January 1993, and promulgated in Federal regulation
on November 9, 1993 (58 FR 59375). Fishing under the IFQ Program began
on March 15, 1995, ending the open access fishery which preceded its
implementation. Regulations implementing the IFQ Program are at 50 CFR
part 679. In addition, Federal regulations at 50 CFR part 300, subpart
E, also govern the halibut IFQ fishery.
Background and Need for Action
The background and need for this action were described in detail in
the preamble to the proposed rule published in the Federal Register on
November 14, 2007 (72 FR 64034). In summary, this final rule will
relieve some of the restrictions affecting holders of commercial
halibut QS.
Under the IFQ Program, QS represents a harvesting privilege for a
person. On an annual basis, QS holders are authorized to harvest a
specified poundage which is issued by NMFS as IFQ. Federal regulations
at 50 CFR 679.40(a)(5) divide QS into vessel categories (A, B, C, and D
for halibut) with unique restrictions designed to prevent excessive
consolidation and regulate total harvest. With few exceptions, halibut
QS or IFQ assigned to a vessel category may not be used to harvest IFQ
species on a vessel of a different category.
The IFQ Program includes an economic protection measure prohibiting
the processing of non-IFQ species (e.g., Pacific cod) onboard a vessel
on which a person holds catcher vessel halibut IFQ. This prohibition
resulted in the unanticipated waste of species caught incidentally to
halibut, especially rockfish and Pacific cod. In addition, persons
fishing halibut IFQ derived from category A QS could not process any
species if a person onboard the vessel held unused halibut IFQ
[[Page 8823]]
derived from category B, C, or D QS. Also, operators of catcher/
processor vessels fishing for Pacific cod, for example, would have to
employ crew members who did not have unused catcher vessel IFQ (i.e.,
IFQ derived from category B, C, or D halibut QS) for halibut, or
catcher/processor operators would have to delay fishing for non-IFQ
species until all crew members onboard had fully used their catcher
vessel IFQ for halibut. Hence, the processing restriction limited the
crew that could be onboard catcher/processor vessels and the timing of
fishing by catcher/processor vessels.
This action is intended to increase the revenue generated from
harvested species by (1) allowing non-IFQ fish species to be processed
on a vessel otherwise authorized to process fish, rather than allowing
non-IFQ species to degrade into low value products or be wasted while
IFQ species are sought; and (2) allowing processed and unprocessed IFQ
species to be onboard the same vessel during the same fishing trip.
This action will allow the processing of non-IFQ and IFQ species on
a vessel that is otherwise authorized to process non-IFQ species when
any amount of halibut IFQ resulting from QS in categories B, C, or D
are held by persons onboard the vessel. This action will not allow the
processing of category B, C, or D halibut IFQ onboard a catcher/
processor vessel. Instead, this action will allow persons possessing
unused catcher vessel category B, C, or D halibut QS to be onboard a
catcher/processor vessel when that vessel is harvesting and processing
category A halibut or sablefish IFQ or is harvesting and processing
non-IFQ species. This action will relieve a restriction on catcher/
processor vessels which will increase their efficiency. The regulatory
change will remove regulatory text currently at Sec. 679.7(f)(13) and
(14) and Sec. 679.42(k). There is no new regulatory text.
Response to Comments
The proposed rule for this action was published in the Federal
Register on November 14, 2007 (72 FR 64034). One commenter submitted a
comment to NMFS in support of the rule.
Changes From the Proposed Rule
No changes are made in this final rule from the proposed rule.
Classification
The Administrator, Alaska Region, NMFS, determined that this
amendment is necessary for the conservation and management of the
halibut fishery and that it is consistent with the Halibut Act and
other applicable laws.
This final rule has been determined to be not significant for
purposes of Executive Order 12866. This final rule also complies with
the Secretary's authority under the Halibut Act to implement management
measures for the halibut fishery.
A final regulatory flexibility analysis (FRFA) was prepared. The
FRFA incorporates the initial regulatory flexibility analysis (IRFA), a
summary of the significant issues raised by the public comments in
response to the IRFA, NMFS's responses to those comments, and a summary
of the analyses completed to support the action. A copy of this
analysis is available from NMFS (see ADDRESSES). A description of this
action, why it is being considered, and the legal basis for this action
are presented above in the preamble to this rule. NMFS received one
public comment, and that was in support of the proposed rule. No
comments were received in response to the IRFA or on the economic
impacts of the rule and no changes were made in the proposed rule. A
summary of the FRFA follows.
This action will directly regulate approximately 3,233 persons
holding category B, C, or D halibut QS, 33 catcher/processor vessels,
and 1,312 vessels that hold catcher vessel endorsements for vessels
less than 60 ft (18.6 m) length overall on their license limitation
program permits. NMFS does not possess sufficient ownership and
affiliation information to determine the precise number of quota share
holders considered small entities in the IFQ Program or the number of
small entities that will be adversely impacted by this action. NMFS
assumes that all directly regulated entities have gross revenues less
than $4 million, and that they are thus small entities for the purposes
of the Regulatory Flexibility Act. In 2004, 1,335 unique IFQ vessels
made IFQ landings.
Compared with status quo, this action may increase the revenue
generated from non-IFQ species harvested by increasing the quality of
offloaded product. This action will allow QS holders already authorized
to process fish at-sea to optimize the revenue generated from harvested
non-IFQ groundfish. Processing capacity is not expected to increase
because the number of vessels currently authorized to process
groundfish catch onboard while harvesting IFQ derived from category A
quota share will not change. This action also may increase benefits to
persons holding QS because it allows IFQ to be processed regardless of
whether another quota share holder is onboard, including crew holding
catcher vessel category B, C, or D QS who are working onboard vessels
with category A QS.
The purpose of this action is to relieve a restriction on small
entities. NMFS is not aware of any additional alternatives to those
considered that would accomplish the objectives of this action, the
Halibut Act, and other applicable statutes and that would minimize the
economic impact of the action on small entities. The Council received
two proposals on this issue, incorporated them into what became this
final action, and evaluated them jointly after a preliminary review
found that they were functionally the same. This action will completely
repeal the subject requirements. Repeal will remove a restriction from
directly regulated entities and potentially lead to increased profits.
Other alternatives might have been designed to limit the ability of
this action to accomplish the objectives, by limiting the scope of the
repeal to particular species or halibut QS classes, or by providing for
a delayed effective date. However, these alternatives would not have
been significantly different from this action. They would not have
involved substantively different approaches to addressing the problem
that had been identified. Moreover, because this action relaxes a
restriction on directly regulated small entities, these alternatives
would have reduced the potential benefits of this action for these
small entities or the classes of entities that might benefit from them.
According to NOAA Administrative Order (NAO) 216-6, including the
criteria used to determine significance, this rule will not have a
significant effect, individually or cumulatively, on the human
environment beyond those effects identified in the previous National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) analysis. An environmental impact
statement (EIS; dated December 1992) was prepared for the final rule
implementing the original halibut and sablefish IFQ and Community
Development Quota Programs (58 FR 59375; November 9, 1993). The scope
of the EIS includes the potential environmental impacts of this
proposed rule because the EIS analyzed the original IFQ Program, which
included analyses of biological and socioeconomic impacts on the
environment, affected fishermen, and affected communities. Based on the
nature of the proposed rule and the previous environmental analysis,
this proposed rule is categorically excluded from the requirement to
prepare either
[[Page 8824]]
an EIS or an environmental assessment, in accordance with Section 5.05b
of NAO 216-6. Copies of the EIS for the original halibut and sablefish
IFQ and Community Development Quota Programs and the categorical
exclusion for this action are available from NMFS (see ADDRESSES).
Small Entity Compliance Guide
Section 212 of the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness
Act of 1996 states that, for each rule or group of related rules for
which an agency is required to prepare a FRFA, the agency shall publish
one or more guides to assist small entities in complying with the rule,
and shall designate such publications as ``small entity compliance
guides.'' The agency shall explain the actions a small entity is
required to take to comply with a rule or group of rules.
The preamble to this final rule serves as the small entity
compliance guide. This action does not require any additional
compliance from small entities that is not described in the preamble.
Copies of this final rule are available from NMFS (see ADDRESSES) and
at the following website: https://www.fakr.noaa.gov.
List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 679
Alaska, Fisheries, Recordkeeping and reporting requirements.
Dated: February 11, 2008.
Samuel D. Rauch III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
0
For the reasons set out in the preamble, 50 CFR part 679 is amended as
follows:
PART 679--FISHERIES OF THE EXCLUSIVE ECONOMIC ZONE OFF ALASKA
0
1. The authority citation for part 679 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 773 et seq., 1801 et seq., 3631 et seq.;
Pub. L. 108 447.
Sec. 679.7 [Amended]
0
2. In Sec. 679.7, paragraph (f)(13) is removed and reserved, paragraph
(f)(15) is removed, and paragraphs (f)(16) and (f)(17) are redesignated
as paragraphs (f)(15) and (f)(16), respectively.
Sec. 679.42 [Amended]
0
3. In Sec. 679.42, paragraph (k) is removed and paragraph (l) is
redesignated as paragraph (k).
[FR Doc. E8-2932 Filed 2-14-08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-22-S