Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic Zone Off Alaska; Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands Crab Rationalization Program; Emergency Rule, 7205-7208 [2010-3111]
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 32 / Thursday, February 18, 2010 / Rules and Regulations
Register on January 21, 2010, at 75 FR
3416, is April 21, 2010.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Jarad Makaiau, NMFS Pacific Islands
Region, 808–944–2108.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
In the document published January
21, 2010 (75 FR 3416), under the DATES
section, the effective date of the final
rule was miscalculated. This document
corrects the effective date to read as
follows:
DATES: This final rule is effective April
21, 2010.
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
Dated: February 12, 2010.
Samuel D. Rauch III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for
Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2010–3074 Filed 2–17–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–S
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
50 CFR Part 679
[Docket No. 09100091344–9056–02]
RIN 0648–XU37
Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic
Zone Off Alaska; Pacific Cod by NonAmerican Fisheries Act Crab Vessels
Catching Pacific Cod for Processing
by the Inshore Component in the
Western Regulatory Area of the Gulf of
Alaska
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AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Temporary rule; closure.
SUMMARY: NMFS is prohibiting directed
fishing for Pacific cod by non-American
Fisheries Act (AFA) crab vessels
catching Pacific cod for processing by
the inshore component in the Western
Regulatory Area of the Gulf of Alaska
(GOA). This action is necessary to
prevent exceeding the A season
allowance of the 2010 Pacific cod
sideboard limits apportioned to nonAFA crab vessels catching Pacific cod
for processing by the inshore
component in the Western Regulatory
Area of the GOA.
DATES: Effective 1200 hrs, Alaska local
time (A.l.t.), February 12, 2010, through
1200 hrs, A.l.t., September 1, 2010.
15:04 Feb 17, 2010
Jkt 220001
NMFS
manages the groundfish fishery in the
GOA exclusive economic zone
according to the Fishery Management
Plan for Groundfish of the Gulf of
Alaska (FMP) prepared by the North
Pacific Fishery Management Council
under authority of the MagnusonStevens Fishery Conservation and
Management Act. Regulations governing
fishing by U.S. vessels in accordance
with the FMP appear at subpart H of 50
CFR part 600 and 50 CFR part 679.
The A season allowance of the 2010
Pacific cod sideboard limits apportioned
to non-AFA crab vessels catching
Pacific cod for processing by the inshore
component in the Western Regulatory
Area of the GOA is 1,011 metric tons
(mt) for the GOA, as established by the
final 2009 and 2010 harvest
specifications for groundfish of the GOA
(74 FR 7333, February 17, 2009) and
inseason adjustment (74 FR 68713,
December 29, 2009).
In accordance with § 680.22(e)(2)(i),
the Regional Administrator, has
determined that A season allowance of
the 2010 Pacific cod sideboard limits
apportioned to non-AFA crab vessels
catching Pacific cod for processing by
the inshore component in the Western
Regulatory Area of the GOA will soon
be reached. Therefore, the Regional
Administrator is establishing a
sideboard directed fishing allowance for
Pacific cod as 1,001 mt for the inshore
component in the Western Regulatory
Area of the GOA. The remaining 10 mt
for the inshore component in the
Western Regulatory Area of the GOA
will be set aside as bycatch to support
other anticipated groundfish fisheries.
In accordance with § 680.22(e)(3), the
Regional Administrator finds that this
sideboard directed fishing allowance
has been reached. Consequently, NMFS
is prohibiting directed fishing for Pacific
cod by non-AFA crab vessels catching
Pacific cod for processing by the inshore
component in the Western Regulatory
Area of the GOA.
After the effective date of this closure
the maximum retainable amounts at
§ 679.20(e) and (f) apply at any time
during a trip.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Need for Correction
VerDate Nov<24>2008
Josh
Keaton, 907–586–7228.
Classification
This action responds to the best
available information recently obtained
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
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7205
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 sideboard directed fishing
closure of Pacific cod apportioned to
non-AFA crab vessels catching Pacific
cod for processing by the inshore
component in the Western Regulatory
Area of the GOA. NMFS was unable to
publish a notice providing time for
public comment because the most
recent, relevant data only became
available as of February 9, 2010.
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 § 680.22
and is exempt from review under
Executive Order 12866.
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
Dated: February 12, 2010.
Emily H. Menashes,
Acting Director, Office of Sustainable
Fisheries, National Marine Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2010–3082 Filed 2–12–10; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–S
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
50 CFR Part 680
[Docket No. 100106010–0074–01]
RIN 0648–AY52
Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic
Zone Off Alaska; Bering Sea and
Aleutian Islands Crab Rationalization
Program; Emergency Rule
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Emergency rule; request for
comments.
SUMMARY: NMFS is exempting, through
this emergency rule, individual fishing
quota (IFQ) issued for the Western
Aleutian Islands golden king crab
fishery from the West regional
designation and individual processing
quota (IPQ) issued for this fishery from
the West regional designation. Under
the Bering Sea/Aleutian Islands Crab
Rationalization Program, golden king
crab harvested with IFQ with a West
regional designation must be delivered
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 32 / Thursday, February 18, 2010 / Rules and Regulations
to a processor with West designated IPQ
in the West region of the Aleutian
Islands. An emergency exists, because
Federal regulations require that a
portion of crab taken in this fishery be
delivered and processed in the West
region, but due to a recent unforeseen
event, no processing facility is open in
the West region. This emergency rule is
necessary to relieve a restriction and
allow fishermen to deliver crab
harvested with West designated IFQ to
processors outside the West region and
allow processors with West designated
IPQ to process that crab outside the
West region. This action is intended to
promote the goals and objectives of the
Magnuson-Stevens Fishery
Conservation and Management Act, the
Fishery Management Plan for Bering
Sea/Aleutian Islands King and Tanner
Crabs, and other applicable law.
DATES: Effective February 18, 2010,
through August 17, 2010. Comments
must be received by March 22, 2010.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments,
identified by RIN 0648–AY52, by any
one of the following methods:
Electronic Submissions: Submit all
electronic public comments via the
Federal eRulemaking Portahttps://
www.regulations.gov.
Fax: (907) 586–7557, Attn: Ellen
Sebastian
Mail: P.O. Box 21668, Juneau, AK
99802.
Instructions: No comments will be
posted for public viewing until after the
comment period has closed. 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 (enter N/A in the required
fields, if you wish to remain
anonymous). You may submit
attachments to electronic comments in
Microsoft Word, Excel, WordPerfect, or
Adobe PDF file formats only.
Electronic copies of the Regulatory
Impact Review (RIR) prepared for this
action may be obtained from https://
www.regulations.gov or from the NMFS
Alaska Region website at https://
alaskafisheries.noaa.gov/regs/
summary.htm.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Gretchen Harrington, 907–586–7228.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The king
and Tanner crab fisheries in the
exclusive economic zone of the Bering
VerDate Nov<24>2008
15:04 Feb 17, 2010
Jkt 220001
Sea and Aleutian Islands (BSAI) are
managed under the Fishery
Management Plan for Bering Sea/
Aleutian Islands King and Tanner Crabs
(FMP). The FMP was prepared by the
North Pacific Fishery Management
Council (Council) under the MagnusonStevens Fishery Conservation and
Management Act as amended by the
Consolidated Appropriations Act of
2004 (Public Law 108–199, section 801).
A final rule implementing the Crab
Rationalization Program (Program) was
published on March 2, 2005 (70 FR
10174). Regulations implementing the
FMP, and all amendments to the
Program, are at 50 CFR part 680. General
regulations related to fishery
management are at 50 CFR part 600.
Crab Rationalization Program
NMFS established the Program as a
catch share program for nine crab
fisheries in the BSAI, and assigned
quota share (QS) to persons based on
their historic participation in one or
more of these nine BSAI crab fisheries
during a specific time period. Under the
Program, NMFS issued four types of QS:
catcher vessel owner (CVO) QS was
assigned to holders of License
Limitation Program (LLP) licenses who
delivered their catch onshore or to
stationary floating crab processors;
catcher/processor vessel owner (CPO)
QS was assigned to LLP holders that
harvested and processed their catch at
sea; captains and crew onboard catcher/
processor vessels were issued catcher/
processor crew (CPC) QS; and captains
and crew onboard catcher vessels were
issued catcher vessel crew (CVC) QS.
Each year, a person who holds QS may
receive an exclusive harvest privilege
for a portion of the annual total
allowable catch (TAC), called individual
fishing quota (IFQ). Under the program,
QS holders can form cooperatives to
pool the harvest of the IFQ on a few
vessels.
NMFS also issued processor quota
share (PQS) under the Program. Each
year, PQS yields an exclusive privilege
to process a portion of the IFQ in each
of the nine BSAI crab fisheries. This
annual exclusive processing privilege is
called individual processor quota (IPQ).
Only a portion of the QS issued yields
IFQ that is required to be delivered to
a processor with IPQ. QS derived from
deliveries made by catcher vessel
owners (i.e., CVO QS) is subject to
designation as either Class A IFQ or
Class B IFQ. Ninety percent of the IFQ
derived from CVO QS is designated as
Class A IFQ, and the remaining 10
percent of the IFQ is designated as Class
B IFQ. Class A IFQ must be matched
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and delivered to a processor with IPQ.
Class B IFQ is not required to be
delivered to a specific processor with
IPQ. Each year there is a one-to-one
match of the total pounds of Class A IFQ
with the total pounds of IPQ issued in
each crab fishery.
The Program seeks to ensure that
communities that were historically
active as processing ports continue to
receive socioeconomic benefits from
crab deliveries. To accomplish this, the
Program imposes regional delivery
requirements, and, for the Western
Aleutian Islands golden king crab
fishery, allocates 10 percent of the TAC
to the Adak community. The specific
geographic regions are based on historic
geographic delivery and processing
patterns.
Western Aleutian Islands Golden King
Crab Fishery
The only fishery affected by this
emergency action is the Western
Aleutian Islands golden king crab
fishery, a relatively small but lengthy
fishery prosecuted in extremely remote
waters. The 2009/2010 Western
Aleutian Islands golden king crab TAC
is 2.835 million pounds, with 283,500
pounds for the Adak Community
Allocation. The fleet consists of two
catcher vessels and a single catcher/
processor. Two IPQ holders hold nearly
99 percent of all of the West designated
IPQ. The season starts on August 15 and
ends on May 15.
For the Western Aleutian Islands
golden king crab fishery, 50 percent of
the Class A IFQ and a corresponding
amount of IPQ are designated for the
West region, west of 174° W. long., and
the other 50 percent of the Class A IFQ
and IPQ are not subject to a regional
designation. Class B, CVC, CPO, CPC
IFQ, and the Adak Community
Allocation are also not subject to
regional delivery requirements. For the
2009/2010 fishery, NMFS issued West
designated IFQ and corresponding IPQ
for approximately 600,000 pounds of
Western Aleutian Islands golden king
crab (approximately 24 percent of the
TAC).
Crab harvested with West designated
Class A IFQ must be delivered to a
processor located in the West region
with West designated IPQ. The purpose
of this delivery requirement was to
support processing facilities in the
remote West region. Since
implementation of the Program, the only
shore-based processing plant in this
region has been located in the
community of Adak.
In April 2009, the Adak shore-based
processing plant closed and in
September 2009, the plant’s owners
filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy. Closure
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of the Adak plant precludes the ability
for catcher vessels to deliver crab
harvested with their West designated
IFQ. West designated IPQ holders lack
a facility at which to process crab with
their West designated IPQ. Subsequent
difficulties with plant ownership and
complicated bankruptcy proceedings
effectively ensure that the Adak plant
cannot open in the near-term.
In October 2009, fishery participants
petitioned the Council for approval of
an emergency rule to suspend the West
region delivery requirement for the
2009/2010 fishing season due to the
closure of the Adak plant. The Council
delayed taking action until its December
meeting and tasked staff to develop a
discussion paper that analyzes the
circumstances in this fishery for
determining whether an emergency
exists. Delaying action by one meeting
also provided more time for
circumstances with the Adak plant
bankruptcy to change and for industry
members to look at whether other
solutions to resolve this situation, such
as a floating processor, would be viable
in the West region. Processor
representatives provided testimony to
the Council at the December 2009
Council meeting that operating a
floating processor in the West region for
this season would not be profitable, due
to the length of the golden king crab
fishery, the expected price per pound
for golden king crab, and operating
costs.
Emergency Action
This emergency rule exempts West
designated IFQ and West designated
IPQ for the Western Aleutian Islands
golden king crab fishery from the West
regional designation in regulations at 50
CFR 680.40(c)(4) and § 680.40(e)(2),
respectively, for the period that this rule
is effective (see DATES). Removing the
West regional designation from this IFQ
and IPQ would remove the requirement
that these shares be used in the West
region. With this exemption, Western
Aleutian Islands golden king crab
harvested with West designated IFQ
could be delivered to a processor with
IPQ in any location and processors
could process crab using West
designated IPQ in any location.
Section 305(c) of the MagnusonStevens Fishery Conservation and
Management Act provides authority for
rule making to address an emergency.
Under that section, a Council may
recommend emergency rule making, if it
finds an emergency exists.
At its December 2009 meeting, the
Council voted 10 to 1 to request that
NMFS promulgate an emergency rule to
relieve the existing regional delivery
VerDate Nov<24>2008
15:04 Feb 17, 2010
Jkt 220001
and processing requirement in the
Western Aleutian Islands golden king
crab fishery. The Council considered
this issue over two meetings to provide
the public with notice and the
opportunity to comment and to see if
industry members could resolve this
situation either through re-opening the
Adak plant or providing an alternate
processing facility, such as a floating
processor, in the West region and thus
ameliorate the need for an emergency
rule. The Council received testimony in
support of emergency action from West
region IFQ and IPQ holders and
representatives from the community of
Adak; no testimony in opposition was
presented to the Council.
The Council determined that an
emergency exists because, due to a
recent unforeseen event, no processing
facility is currently, or likely to, open in
the West region for the 2009/2010
fishing year, yet federal regulations
require that a portion of crab be
processed in the West region.
Exempting the West designated IFQ and
IPQ from the West regional designation
would relieve these shares from delivery
restrictions and thus would enable
fishermen to deliver harvests made with
West designated IFQ outside the West
region. Without the ability to deliver
and process the crab, a substantial
portion of the fishery will likely remain
unharvested, causing economic harm to
fishery participants. The emergency rule
would provide relief for the 2009/2010
crab fishing year and enable the fishery
to occur while the Council develops an
FMP amendment to permanently
address this situation. The Council is
scheduled to review a draft analysis at
its February 2010 meeting that assesses
alternatives to amend the FMP, should
unforeseen events prevent deliveries in
the West region in future years.
In making this recommendation, the
Council considered the NMFS policy
guidelines for the development and
approval of regulations to address
emergencies. Emergency rule making is
intended for circumstances that are
extremely urgent, where substantial
harm to or disruption of the fishery
would be caused in the time it would
take to follow standard rulemaking
procedures (62 FR 44421). An
emergency is a situation that: results
from recent, unforeseen events or
recently discovered circumstances;
presents serious conservation or
management problems in the fishery;
and can be addressed through
emergency regulations for which the
immediate benefits outweigh the value
of advance notice, public comment, and
deliberative consideration of the
impacts on participants to the same
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7207
extent as would be expected under the
normal rule making process.
NMFS finds that an emergency exists
because
• The bankruptcy and closure of the
Adak plant is a recent and unforeseen
event. Additionally, the absence of other
processing alternatives entering the
West region in light of the Adak plant
closure is a recent and unforeseen event.
• Regulations that prevent a
substantial portion of the Western
Aleutian Islands golden king crab TAC
from being harvested and processed
present a serious management problem.
• This problem can be addressed
through an emergency rule that would
exempt shares from regulatory
requirement, thus allowing crab to be
delivered and processed outside the
West region.
• Allowing the full harvest of the IFQ
in the 2009/2010 crab fishing year
provides immediate benefits that
outweigh the value of the deliberative
notice-and-comment rule making
process.
The circumstances that justified the
constraint on deliveries have changed,
and, at least temporarily, the constraint
no longer achieves the goals that led to
its incorporation in the Program.
Therefore, lifting the constraint should
relieve an unnecessary and
unanticipated burden on the region’s
economic activity, enhance resource
management and conservation, and,
thus, increase the value the Nation
receives from the Western Aleutian
Islands golden king crab resource.
Classification
The Assistant Administrator for
Fisheries, NOAA, has determined that
this emergency rule is consistent with
the national standards and other
provisions of the Magnuson-Stevens
Fishery Conservation and Management
Act and other applicable laws. The rule
may be extended for a period of not
more than 186 days as described under
section 305(c)(3)(B) of the MagnusonStevens Fishery Conservation
Management Act.
The Assistant Administrator for
Fisheries, NOAA, finds good cause
pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(B) to waive
prior notice and the opportunity for
public comment because it would be
impracticable and contrary to the public
interest.
Waiver of the notice-and-comment
rulemaking period will serve the public
by allowing the restriction to be relieved
in the current fishing season to enable
full harvest of the total allowable catch.
This fishery began on August 15, 2009,
and the fleet is harvesting golden king
crab with undesignated IFQ. This
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emergency rule would allow the harvest
of approximately 600,000 pounds of
West designated IFQ prior to the closure
of the fishery on May 15, 2010. Noticeand-comment rulemaking would
preclude a solution for the 2009/2010
crab fishing year, resulting in
approximately 600,000 pounds of
forgone golden king crab harvest. The
cost of this lost harvest outweighs the
benefit of using the more protracted,
normal process that would be
ineffective for addressing the immediate
issue.
VerDate Nov<24>2008
15:04 Feb 17, 2010
Jkt 220001
Because this rule relieves a restriction
by exempting IFQ and IPQ from the
West region designation, it is not subject
to the 30–day delayed effectiveness
provision of the APA pursuant to 5
U.S.C. 553(d) (1).
This emergency rule has been
determined to be not significant for
purposes of Executive Order 12866. The
regulatory impact review prepared for
this action is available from NMFS (see
ADDRESSES).
This emergency rule is exempt from
the procedures of the Regulatory
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Flexibility Act because the rule is not
subject to the requirement to provide
prior notice and opportunity for public
comment pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 553 or
any other law.
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1862; Pub. L. 109–
241; Pub. L. 109–479.
Dated: February 12, 2010.
Samuel D. Rauch III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for
Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2010–3111 Filed 2–17–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–S
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 75, Number 32 (Thursday, February 18, 2010)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 7205-7208]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2010-3111]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
50 CFR Part 680
[Docket No. 100106010-0074-01]
RIN 0648-AY52
Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic Zone Off Alaska; Bering Sea
and Aleutian Islands Crab Rationalization Program; Emergency Rule
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Emergency rule; request for comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: NMFS is exempting, through this emergency rule, individual
fishing quota (IFQ) issued for the Western Aleutian Islands golden king
crab fishery from the West regional designation and individual
processing quota (IPQ) issued for this fishery from the West regional
designation. Under the Bering Sea/Aleutian Islands Crab Rationalization
Program, golden king crab harvested with IFQ with a West regional
designation must be delivered
[[Page 7206]]
to a processor with West designated IPQ in the West region of the
Aleutian Islands. An emergency exists, because Federal regulations
require that a portion of crab taken in this fishery be delivered and
processed in the West region, but due to a recent unforeseen event, no
processing facility is open in the West region. This emergency rule is
necessary to relieve a restriction and allow fishermen to deliver crab
harvested with West designated IFQ to processors outside the West
region and allow processors with West designated IPQ to process that
crab outside the West region. This action is intended to promote the
goals and objectives of the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and
Management Act, the Fishery Management Plan for Bering Sea/Aleutian
Islands King and Tanner Crabs, and other applicable law.
DATES: Effective February 18, 2010, through August 17, 2010. Comments
must be received by March 22, 2010.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments, identified by RIN 0648-AY52, by
any one of the following methods:
Electronic Submissions: Submit all electronic public comments via
the Federal eRulemaking Portahttps://www.regulations.gov.
Fax: (907) 586-7557, Attn: Ellen Sebastian
Mail: P.O. Box 21668, Juneau, AK 99802.
Instructions: No comments will be posted for public viewing until
after the comment period has closed. 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 (enter N/A in the required
fields, if you wish to remain anonymous). You may submit attachments to
electronic comments in Microsoft Word, Excel, WordPerfect, or Adobe PDF
file formats only.
Electronic copies of the Regulatory Impact Review (RIR) prepared
for this action may be obtained from https://www.regulations.gov or from
the NMFS Alaska Region website at https://alaskafisheries.noaa.gov/regs/summary.htm.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Gretchen Harrington, 907-586-7228.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The king and Tanner crab fisheries in the
exclusive economic zone of the Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands (BSAI)
are managed under the Fishery Management Plan for Bering Sea/Aleutian
Islands King and Tanner Crabs (FMP). The FMP was prepared by the North
Pacific Fishery Management Council (Council) under the Magnuson-Stevens
Fishery Conservation and Management Act as amended by the Consolidated
Appropriations Act of 2004 (Public Law 108-199, section 801). A final
rule implementing the Crab Rationalization Program (Program) was
published on March 2, 2005 (70 FR 10174). Regulations implementing the
FMP, and all amendments to the Program, are at 50 CFR part 680. General
regulations related to fishery management are at 50 CFR part 600.
Crab Rationalization Program
NMFS established the Program as a catch share program for nine crab
fisheries in the BSAI, and assigned quota share (QS) to persons based
on their historic participation in one or more of these nine BSAI crab
fisheries during a specific time period. Under the Program, NMFS issued
four types of QS: catcher vessel owner (CVO) QS was assigned to holders
of License Limitation Program (LLP) licenses who delivered their catch
onshore or to stationary floating crab processors; catcher/processor
vessel owner (CPO) QS was assigned to LLP holders that harvested and
processed their catch at sea; captains and crew onboard catcher/
processor vessels were issued catcher/processor crew (CPC) QS; and
captains and crew onboard catcher vessels were issued catcher vessel
crew (CVC) QS. Each year, a person who holds QS may receive an
exclusive harvest privilege for a portion of the annual total allowable
catch (TAC), called individual fishing quota (IFQ). Under the program,
QS holders can form cooperatives to pool the harvest of the IFQ on a
few vessels.
NMFS also issued processor quota share (PQS) under the Program.
Each year, PQS yields an exclusive privilege to process a portion of
the IFQ in each of the nine BSAI crab fisheries. This annual exclusive
processing privilege is called individual processor quota (IPQ). Only a
portion of the QS issued yields IFQ that is required to be delivered to
a processor with IPQ. QS derived from deliveries made by catcher vessel
owners (i.e., CVO QS) is subject to designation as either Class A IFQ
or Class B IFQ. Ninety percent of the IFQ derived from CVO QS is
designated as Class A IFQ, and the remaining 10 percent of the IFQ is
designated as Class B IFQ. Class A IFQ must be matched and delivered to
a processor with IPQ. Class B IFQ is not required to be delivered to a
specific processor with IPQ. Each year there is a one-to-one match of
the total pounds of Class A IFQ with the total pounds of IPQ issued in
each crab fishery.
The Program seeks to ensure that communities that were historically
active as processing ports continue to receive socioeconomic benefits
from crab deliveries. To accomplish this, the Program imposes regional
delivery requirements, and, for the Western Aleutian Islands golden
king crab fishery, allocates 10 percent of the TAC to the Adak
community. The specific geographic regions are based on historic
geographic delivery and processing patterns.
Western Aleutian Islands Golden King Crab Fishery
The only fishery affected by this emergency action is the Western
Aleutian Islands golden king crab fishery, a relatively small but
lengthy fishery prosecuted in extremely remote waters. The 2009/2010
Western Aleutian Islands golden king crab TAC is 2.835 million pounds,
with 283,500 pounds for the Adak Community Allocation. The fleet
consists of two catcher vessels and a single catcher/processor. Two IPQ
holders hold nearly 99 percent of all of the West designated IPQ. The
season starts on August 15 and ends on May 15.
For the Western Aleutian Islands golden king crab fishery, 50
percent of the Class A IFQ and a corresponding amount of IPQ are
designated for the West region, west of 174[deg] W. long., and the
other 50 percent of the Class A IFQ and IPQ are not subject to a
regional designation. Class B, CVC, CPO, CPC IFQ, and the Adak
Community Allocation are also not subject to regional delivery
requirements. For the 2009/2010 fishery, NMFS issued West designated
IFQ and corresponding IPQ for approximately 600,000 pounds of Western
Aleutian Islands golden king crab (approximately 24 percent of the
TAC).
Crab harvested with West designated Class A IFQ must be delivered
to a processor located in the West region with West designated IPQ. The
purpose of this delivery requirement was to support processing
facilities in the remote West region. Since implementation of the
Program, the only shore-based processing plant in this region has been
located in the community of Adak.
In April 2009, the Adak shore-based processing plant closed and in
September 2009, the plant's owners filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy.
Closure
[[Page 7207]]
of the Adak plant precludes the ability for catcher vessels to deliver
crab harvested with their West designated IFQ. West designated IPQ
holders lack a facility at which to process crab with their West
designated IPQ. Subsequent difficulties with plant ownership and
complicated bankruptcy proceedings effectively ensure that the Adak
plant cannot open in the near-term.
In October 2009, fishery participants petitioned the Council for
approval of an emergency rule to suspend the West region delivery
requirement for the 2009/2010 fishing season due to the closure of the
Adak plant. The Council delayed taking action until its December
meeting and tasked staff to develop a discussion paper that analyzes
the circumstances in this fishery for determining whether an emergency
exists. Delaying action by one meeting also provided more time for
circumstances with the Adak plant bankruptcy to change and for industry
members to look at whether other solutions to resolve this situation,
such as a floating processor, would be viable in the West region.
Processor representatives provided testimony to the Council at the
December 2009 Council meeting that operating a floating processor in
the West region for this season would not be profitable, due to the
length of the golden king crab fishery, the expected price per pound
for golden king crab, and operating costs.
Emergency Action
This emergency rule exempts West designated IFQ and West designated
IPQ for the Western Aleutian Islands golden king crab fishery from the
West regional designation in regulations at 50 CFR 680.40(c)(4) and
Sec. 680.40(e)(2), respectively, for the period that this rule is
effective (see DATES). Removing the West regional designation from this
IFQ and IPQ would remove the requirement that these shares be used in
the West region. With this exemption, Western Aleutian Islands golden
king crab harvested with West designated IFQ could be delivered to a
processor with IPQ in any location and processors could process crab
using West designated IPQ in any location.
Section 305(c) of the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and
Management Act provides authority for rule making to address an
emergency. Under that section, a Council may recommend emergency rule
making, if it finds an emergency exists.
At its December 2009 meeting, the Council voted 10 to 1 to request
that NMFS promulgate an emergency rule to relieve the existing regional
delivery and processing requirement in the Western Aleutian Islands
golden king crab fishery. The Council considered this issue over two
meetings to provide the public with notice and the opportunity to
comment and to see if industry members could resolve this situation
either through re-opening the Adak plant or providing an alternate
processing facility, such as a floating processor, in the West region
and thus ameliorate the need for an emergency rule. The Council
received testimony in support of emergency action from West region IFQ
and IPQ holders and representatives from the community of Adak; no
testimony in opposition was presented to the Council.
The Council determined that an emergency exists because, due to a
recent unforeseen event, no processing facility is currently, or likely
to, open in the West region for the 2009/2010 fishing year, yet federal
regulations require that a portion of crab be processed in the West
region. Exempting the West designated IFQ and IPQ from the West
regional designation would relieve these shares from delivery
restrictions and thus would enable fishermen to deliver harvests made
with West designated IFQ outside the West region. Without the ability
to deliver and process the crab, a substantial portion of the fishery
will likely remain unharvested, causing economic harm to fishery
participants. The emergency rule would provide relief for the 2009/2010
crab fishing year and enable the fishery to occur while the Council
develops an FMP amendment to permanently address this situation. The
Council is scheduled to review a draft analysis at its February 2010
meeting that assesses alternatives to amend the FMP, should unforeseen
events prevent deliveries in the West region in future years.
In making this recommendation, the Council considered the NMFS
policy guidelines for the development and approval of regulations to
address emergencies. Emergency rule making is intended for
circumstances that are extremely urgent, where substantial harm to or
disruption of the fishery would be caused in the time it would take to
follow standard rulemaking procedures (62 FR 44421). An emergency is a
situation that: results from recent, unforeseen events or recently
discovered circumstances; presents serious conservation or management
problems in the fishery; and can be addressed through emergency
regulations for which the immediate benefits outweigh the value of
advance notice, public comment, and deliberative consideration of the
impacts on participants to the same extent as would be expected under
the normal rule making process.
NMFS finds that an emergency exists because
The bankruptcy and closure of the Adak plant is a recent
and unforeseen event. Additionally, the absence of other processing
alternatives entering the West region in light of the Adak plant
closure is a recent and unforeseen event.
Regulations that prevent a substantial portion of the
Western Aleutian Islands golden king crab TAC from being harvested and
processed present a serious management problem.
This problem can be addressed through an emergency rule
that would exempt shares from regulatory requirement, thus allowing
crab to be delivered and processed outside the West region.
Allowing the full harvest of the IFQ in the 2009/2010 crab
fishing year provides immediate benefits that outweigh the value of the
deliberative notice-and-comment rule making process.
The circumstances that justified the constraint on deliveries have
changed, and, at least temporarily, the constraint no longer achieves
the goals that led to its incorporation in the Program. Therefore,
lifting the constraint should relieve an unnecessary and unanticipated
burden on the region's economic activity, enhance resource management
and conservation, and, thus, increase the value the Nation receives
from the Western Aleutian Islands golden king crab resource.
Classification
The Assistant Administrator for Fisheries, NOAA, has determined
that this emergency rule is consistent with the national standards and
other provisions of the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and
Management Act and other applicable laws. The rule may be extended for
a period of not more than 186 days as described under section
305(c)(3)(B) of the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation Management
Act.
The Assistant Administrator for Fisheries, NOAA, finds good cause
pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(B) to waive prior notice and the
opportunity for public comment because it would be impracticable and
contrary to the public interest.
Waiver of the notice-and-comment rulemaking period will serve the
public by allowing the restriction to be relieved in the current
fishing season to enable full harvest of the total allowable catch.
This fishery began on August 15, 2009, and the fleet is harvesting
golden king crab with undesignated IFQ. This
[[Page 7208]]
emergency rule would allow the harvest of approximately 600,000 pounds
of West designated IFQ prior to the closure of the fishery on May 15,
2010. Notice-and-comment rulemaking would preclude a solution for the
2009/2010 crab fishing year, resulting in approximately 600,000 pounds
of forgone golden king crab harvest. The cost of this lost harvest
outweighs the benefit of using the more protracted, normal process that
would be ineffective for addressing the immediate issue.
Because this rule relieves a restriction by exempting IFQ and IPQ
from the West region designation, it is not subject to the 30-day
delayed effectiveness provision of the APA pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 553(d)
(1).
This emergency rule has been determined to be not significant for
purposes of Executive Order 12866. The regulatory impact review
prepared for this action is available from NMFS (see ADDRESSES).
This emergency rule is exempt from the procedures of the Regulatory
Flexibility Act because the rule is not subject to the requirement to
provide prior notice and opportunity for public comment pursuant to 5
U.S.C. 553 or any other law.
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1862; Pub. L. 109-241; Pub. L. 109-479.
Dated: February 12, 2010.
Samuel D. Rauch III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2010-3111 Filed 2-17-10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-22-S