Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic Zone Off Alaska; Pacific Halibut and Sablefish Individual Fishing Quota Program, 51741-51747 [2010-20873]
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 162 / Monday, August 23, 2010 / Proposed Rules
billing of minutes to the Interstate TRS
Fund. Providers must make available at
least one means by which such
disclosure may be made anonymously.
Providers must promptly investigate any
report of wrongdoing and, when
warranted, take appropriate corrective
action. Providers may not discipline any
employee, agent, or contractor solely for
reporting under this provision.
Providers shall also inform all
employees, agents, and contractors that
they may directly contact the
Commission’s Office of Inspector
General to report wrongdoing.
(iv) Record retention. Providers shall
retain their call detail records for five
years from the date of service, and shall
make such records available to the
Commission or administrator upon
request.
(7) In addition to those standards set
forth above, Video Relay Service
providers shall be subject to the
following standards:
(i) Idle time or no face on screen. If
either party to a VRS call is away from
the call, or otherwise unavailable or
unresponsive, for more than two
minutes the CA may disconnect the call,
except when the call has been placed on
hold by a business. If at any time during
a VRS call a VRS CA is confronted with
only a blank screen (e.g., a privacy
screen), or a screen that does not display
the face of the video caller, the CA may
disconnect the call if the video caller’s
face does not reappear within two
minutes.
(ii) Call center information. VRS
providers shall file quarterly reports
with the Commission and the
administrator by March 31, June 30,
September 20, and December 31 each
year stating the name and address of
each call center the provider owns or
controls (including call centers owned
or operated by subcontractors or entities
operating calls centers for a
subcontractor), the number of CAs and
CA managers at each call center, and the
name and contact information for the
key managers at each call center. VRS
providers shall file an amendment to
their most recent quarterly filing within
30 days of opening a call center, closing
a call center, or changing the ownership
or management of a call center.
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(b) * * *
(4) * * *
(iii) Location of call centers. VRS call
centers must be located in the United
States.
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(c) * * *
(5) * * *
(iii) * * *
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(E) Payments to TRS providers. TRS
Fund payments shall be distributed to
TRS providers based on formulas
approved or modified by the
Commission. The administrator shall
file schedules of payment formulas with
the Commission. Such formulas shall be
designed to compensate TRS providers
for reasonable costs of providing
interstate TRS, and shall be subject to
Commission approval. Such formulas
shall be based on total monthly
interstate TRS minutes of use. TRS
minutes of use for purposes of interstate
cost recovery under the TRS Fund are
defined as the minutes of use for
completed interstate TRS calls placed
through the TRS center beginning after
call set-up and concluding after the last
message call unit. In addition to the data
required under paragraph (c)(5)(iii)(C) of
this section, all TRS providers,
including providers who are not
interexchange carriers, local exchange
carriers, or certified state relay
providers, must submit reports of
interstate TRS minutes of use to the
administrator in order to receive
payments. These reports shall include
the call record ID sequence, CA ID,
session start and end times,
conversation start and end times,
incoming telephone number or IP
address for Internet-based TRS service
not subject to the numbering
requirements under § 64.611, outbound
telephone number or IP address for
Internet-based TRS service not subject
to the numbering requirements under
§ 64.611, total conversation minutes,
and total session minutes. In addition,
VRS and IP Relay providers shall
include in their reports speed of answer
compliance data. The administrator
shall establish procedures to verify
payment claims, and may suspend or
delay payments to a TRS provider if the
TRS provider fails to provide adequate
verification of payment upon reasonable
request, or if directed by the
Commission to do so. The administrator
shall make payments only to eligible
TRS providers operating pursuant to the
mandatory minimum standards as
required in this section, and after
disbursements to the administrator for
reasonable expenses incurred by it in
connection with TRS Fund
administration. TRS providers receiving
payments shall file a form prescribed by
the administrator. The administrator
shall fashion a form that is consistent
with parts 32 and 36 of this chapter
procedures reasonably tailored to meet
the needs of TRS providers. The
Commission shall have authority to
audit providers and have access to all
data, including carrier specific data,
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collected by the Fund administrator.
The Fund administrator shall have
authority to audit TRS providers
reporting data to the administrator. The
formulas should appropriately
compensate interstate providers for the
provision of VRS, whether intrastate or
interstate.
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[FR Doc. 2010–20615 Filed 8–20–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6712–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
50 CFR Part 679
Docket No. 0906041011–91012–01
RIN 0648–AX91
Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic
Zone Off Alaska; Pacific Halibut and
Sablefish Individual Fishing Quota
Program
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Proposed rule; request for
comments.
AGENCY:
NMFS proposes regulations to
modify the Individual Fishing Quota
(IFQ) Program for the Fixed-Gear
Commercial Fisheries for Pacific Halibut
and Sablefish in waters in and off
Alaska (IFQ Program) by revoking quota
share (QS) that have been inactive since
they were originally issued in 1995.
Inactive QS are those held by persons
that have never harvested their IFQ and
have never transferred QS or IFQ into or
out of their accounts.
This action is necessary to achieve the
catch limit from the halibut fisheries
and optimum yield from the sablefish
fisheries in Alaska in accordance with
National Standard 1 of the MagnusonStevens Fishery Conservation and
Management Act and results in more
efficient use of these species as
supported by National Standard 5. The
intended effect is to promote the
management provisions in the Fishery
Management Plan for Groundfish of the
Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands
Management Area, the Fishery
Management Plan for Groundfish of the
Gulf of Alaska, and the Northern Pacific
Halibut Act of 1982.
DATES: Comments must be received by
5 p.m., local time, on September 22,
2010.
ADDRESSES: Send comments to Sue
Salveson, Assistant Regional
SUMMARY:
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 162 / Monday, August 23, 2010 / Proposed Rules
Administrator, Sustainable Fisheries
Division, Alaska Region, NMFS, Attn:
Ellen Sebastian. You may submit
comments, identified by RIN 0648–
AX91 (PR), by any one of the following
methods:
• Electronic Submissions: Submit all
electronic public comments via the
Federal eRulemaking Portal at https://
www.regulations.gov.
• Fax: (907) 586–7557, Attn: Ellen
Sebastian.
• Mail: P.O. Box 21668, Juneau, AK
99802.
• Hand delivery to the Federal
Building: 709 West 9th Street, Room
420A, Juneau, AK.
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 Categorical
Exclusion and the Regulatory Impact
Review and Initial Regulatory
Flexibility Analysis (RIR/IRFA)
prepared for this action may be obtained
from https://www.regulations.gov, or
from the Alaska Region website at
https://alaskafisheries.noaa.gov.
Written comments regarding the
burden-hour estimates or other aspects
of the collection-of-information
requirements contained in this proposed
rule may be submitted to NMFS, Alaska
Region, e-mailed to
DavidlRostker@omb.eop.gov, or faxed
to (202) 395–7285.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Peggy Murphy, (907) 586–7228.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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Halibut Management
Management of the commercial
fishery for Pacific halibut (Hippoglossus
stenolepis) in and off Alaska is based on
an international agreement between
Canada and the United States. This
agreement, titled ‘‘Convention Between
United States of America and Canada
for the Preservation of the Halibut
Fishery of the Northern Pacific Ocean
and Bering Sea’’ (Convention), was
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signed in Ottawa, Canada, on March 2,
1953, and amended by the ‘‘Protocol
Amending the Convention,’’ signed in
Washington, D.C., March 29, 1979. The
Convention is administered by the
International Pacific Halibut
Commission (IPHC) and is given effect
in the United States by the Northern
Pacific Halibut Act of 1982 (Halibut
Act).
Generally, the IPHC surveys the
Pacific halibut stock and develops
fishery management regulations
pursuant to the Convention. The IPHC’s
regulations are subject to approval by
the U.S. Secretary of State with
concurrence from the Secretary of
Commerce (Secretary). NMFS publishes
approved regulations in the Federal
Register as annual management
measures pursuant to 50 CFR part
300.62. NMFS published the current
annual management measures on March
18, 2010 (75 FR 13024). Federal
regulations governing the halibut
fisheries appear at 50 CFR part 300,
subpart E.
The Halibut Act (section 773(c)) also
authorizes the North Pacific Fishery
Management Council (Council) to
develop halibut fishery regulations,
including limited access regulations that
are in addition to, and not in conflict
with, approved IPHC regulations for
U.S. Convention waters. Such
regulations may be implemented by
NMFS only after approval by the
Secretary. The Council has exercised
this authority most notably in the
development of the Individual Fishery
Quota (IFQ) Program codified at 50 CFR
part 679.40.
Sablefish Management
Federal management of the
commercial fishery for sablefish
(Anoplopoma fimbria) is authorized by
the Fishery Management Plan for
Groundfish of the Bering Sea and
Aleutian Islands Management Area and
the Fishery Management Plan for
Groundfish of the Gulf of Alaska
(FMPs). The FMPs were prepared by the
Council under authority of the
Magnuson-Stevens Fishery
Conservation and Management Act (16
U.S.C. 1801 et seq.) (Magnuson-Stevens
Act) and implemented by regulations at
50 CFR part 679.
IFQ Program
The Council and NMFS developed the
IFQ Program for the halibut and
sablefish fixed-gear fishery in waters in
and off Alaska. The IFQ Program limits
access to the fisheries to persons
holding QS. Annually, the amount of
halibut and sablefish that each QS
holder may harvest is calculated and
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issued as IFQ. The Council adopted the
IFQ Program in 1991 under the
authority of the Halibut Act and the
Magnuson-Stevens Act. The preamble to
the proposed rule, published December
3, 1992 (57 FR 57130), provides details
of the conservation and management
background leading to the Council’s
adoption of the IFQ Program. NMFS
implemented the program on November
9, 1993 (58 FR 59375) through Federal
regulations at 50 CFR part 679. Fishing
under the IFQ Program began on March
15, 1995.
The IFQ Program is designed to
maintain the social character and
economic benefits of the commercial,
fixed-gear fisheries that Alaskan coastal
communities rely on as a source of
revenue. The Council and NMFS intend
the IFQ Program to provide economic
stability for the Pacific halibut and
sablefish commercial fisheries and
improve long-term productivity of the
resources. The IFQ management
approach extended the fishing season,
and harvests of the annual total
allowable catch (TAC) now occur
throughout most of the year. The season
length and known amount of QS let
fishermen set their own pace and their
fishing effort to focus more attention on
safety, operational efficiency and
product quality. The IFQ program also
allows fishermen to transfer QS, giving
them flexibility to determine what type
of investment to make based on when,
where, and how much halibut and
sablefish they can harvest.
Initial Assignment and Recipients of QS
Quota shares were initially assigned
to persons that owned vessels or held a
vessel lease and made at least one
landing in a regulatory area in any one
of the years 1988, 1989, or 1990. The
intent was to assign initial shares only
to those fishermen then currently active
in the halibut and sablefish fixed-gear
fisheries. The amount of QS a person
received was based on his or her
documented, historical catch for 5 out of
6 years (1985 through 1990) for
sablefish, and for 5 out of 7 years (1984
through 1990) for halibut. This allowed
a person to choose the best 5 years to
calculate his or her assignment. The
number of QS units issued to each
person was based on each person’s
selection of years of landings.
Persons holding QS for an area have
harvesting privileges for an amount of
halibut or sablefish that is derived
annually from their QS holdings in that
area and authorized on their IFQ permit.
The specific amount (in pounds) is
determined by the number of QS units
held for that species, the total number
of QS units issued for that species in a
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specific regulatory area, and the TAC of
the species allocated for IFQ fisheries in
a particular year. To simplify the
language in the remainder of this
document, the concept of QS units and
associated IFQ pounds issued annually
is referred to singularly as QS except in
reference to specific Council direction
and in the draft regulations.
One design feature of the IFQ Program
requires IFQ permit holders to be on
board the vessel to maintain a
predominantly ‘‘owner-operated’’ fishery
with a narrow exemption for initial
recipients of QS. Initial recipients of
catcher vessel QS may be absent from a
vessel conducting IFQ halibut or
sablefish fishing, provided the QS
holder can demonstrate at least a
minimum specified level of ownership
of the vessel that harvests the IFQ
halibut or sablefish, as well as
representation on the vessel by a hired
master. This exception allows
fishermen-who historically operated
their fishing businesses using hired
masters before the implementation of
the IFQ Program-to retain the flexibility
of using hired masters under the IFQ
Program.
Need for Action
In June 2006, the Council
recommended removal of initially
allocated halibut and sablefish QS from
QS holders that had never harvested
IFQ halibut or IFQ sablefish, or that had
never transferred any QS or IFQ since
initially receiving the QS. Quota share
would be considered inactive if the QS
and the associated annual allocation of
IFQ pounds have been neither
transferred nor fished.
Inactive QS exists for a variety of
reasons. The initial allocation of halibut
or sablefish QS was made to qualified
persons according to regulations at
§ 679.40(a). These regulations specified
no minimum pounds of halibut or
sablefish to be harvested during the
respective halibut and sablefish base
periods (1984–1990 for halibut and
1985–1990 for sablefish), but one catch
landing had to occur in any one of the
last 3 years of the base period. Hence,
the calculation of initial QS for some
qualified persons resulted in their
receiving very small QS allocations. The
IFQ poundage derived from these
allocations of QS also is small: in some
cases summing to fewer pounds than a
whole fish. The recipients of these small
QS allocations have presumably elected
not to participate actively in the IFQ
fisheries. Though, persons holding
inactive QS have had the same
opportunity as persons with active QS
to participate in the IFQ program by
fishing and transferring QS and IFQ.
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Other persons holding inactive QS are
no longer in the commercial fishing
industry, are deceased, or have been
unable or unwilling to divest or
otherwise transfer their inactive QS.
The existence of inactive QS was not
specifically addressed during the
implementation, development or
maintenance of the IFQ program. As a
result, several hundred accounts with
very small amounts of inactive QS
remain in the IFQ Program database.
Even though the QS is inactive, NMFS
must perform routine administrative
tasks to process, monitor, and maintain
data on the inactive QS, including
recordkeeping, regular correspondence
with QS holders, and monthly and
annual reporting. IFQ permit holders are
responsible for the costs and reimburse
NMFS for those costs through the IFQ
cost recovery program (50 CFR 679.45).
When inactive QS are held and not
harvested, active IFQ holders pay
slightly higher fees for the IFQ Program
because IFQ cost recovery fees apply
only when IFQ species are landed.
As a result of the inactive QS, some
IFQ will not be harvested and a portion
of the TAC will remain unharvested.
This reduces economic and social
benefits from QS harvest typically
realized by fishery dependent
businesses and the public. Unused IFQ
also deprives consumers of product.
Holding inactive QS prevents access to
halibut and sablefish QS by persons
qualified to fish the QS, and limits the
ability of fishermen interested in
entering the IFQ Program or expanding
their QS holdings. Hence the inactive
QS prevent the IFQ fisheries from
optimizing yield.
Proposed Action
This action proposes to revoke
inactive halibut and sablefish QS from
the QS pools. The portion of the annual
halibut and sablefish TACs represented
by the revoked QS and associated IFQ
would be distributed among IFQ permit
holders in an amount proportional to
their IFQ allocation. Alternatively, if a
permit holder requests NMFS not to
revoke his or her inactive QS, then
NMFS would assign an active status to
that QS and the associated IFQ would
continue to be issued annually.
All halibut and sablefish QS
identified as inactive are held by initial
recipients of QS. Revoking QS as
proposed would not change the initial
recipient status of the QS holder. Hence,
if a person was initially allocated QS
that would be revoked under this action,
and then subsequently acquires new QS
in the future, that person still would
retain the benefit of being an initial
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51743
recipient of QS for purposes of retaining
the flexibility of using a hired master.
Although the administrative burden
for the retained QS would not be
reduced, annual administrative tasks
and costs for managing revoked QS
would be eliminated. Reducing the
administrative burden would allow for
more efficient use of IFQ Program
resources, and, for the sablefish
fisheries, is consistent with National
Standard 5. Revoking inactive QS also
would reduce costs and improve
operational flexibility of active program
participants. The change in distribution
of IFQ allows broader opportunity to
achieve the catch limit in halibut
fisheries and optimum yield from the
sablefish fisheries as required by
National Standard 1 of the MagnusonStevens Act.
The Council recommended this
proposed action as part of a multi-part
IFQ regulatory amendment package.
NMFS subsequently separated the
Council’s multiple recommendations
into independent regulatory amendment
packages to better address priority
actions in a timely manner. This
proposed rule is the final one of the
series recommended by the Council in
2006. As a result, several years have
passed between the Council’s action
notifying the public of the pending
change to the IFQ Program and
publication of this proposed rule.
During these years, NMFS followed the
Council’s recommendation to contact
persons holding inactive halibut or
sablefish QS by mail and to
communicate that NMFS is pursuing
rulemaking that, if implemented, would
require persons to notify NMFS in
writing that they do not want their
inactive QS and associated annual IFQ
revoked. NMFS notified persons with
inactive QS of the status of the proposed
action in letters sent by direct mail in
January 2008 and in March 2009. The
notification process was productive,
stimulating transfers of inactive QS that
resulted in almost a 50–percent decline
in the number of persons holding
inactive halibut and sablefish QS. An
additional recommendation of the
Council to provide broad public notice
of the Council’s intent to withdraw
inactive QS is addressed with
publication of this proposed rule in the
Federal Register.
Council Consideration
The RIR/IRFA prepared for this action
(see ADDRESSES) reports that when the
Council initially considered the
proposal in June 2006, 534 persons held
inactive QS for halibut, which yielded
roughly 280,000 pounds (127 mt) of
IFQ. Inactive sablefish QS was held by
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seven persons and yielded roughly
16,000 pounds (7.3 mt) of IFQ that year.
Given this amount of inactive QS and
associated IFQ, the Council
recommended a lottery for a one-time
redistribution of inactive QS if the total
amount of inactive QS is more than the
number of QS units equivalent to 50,000
pounds (22.7 mt) of halibut IFQ for all
IPHC regulatory areas in the year of the
lottery; therefore, the Council’s
secondary recommendation for a lottery
was conditioned on the total amount of
inactive QS that could be revoked being
greater than that which would yield
50,000 pounds (22.7 mt) of halibut IFQ
for all IPHC regulatory areas in the year
of the lottery.
NMFS reported to the Council at its
December 2008 meeting that the amount
of IFQ associated with the number of
inactive halibut QS fell below the
50,000 pound (22.7 mt) threshold for
implementing a lottery to redistribute
the inactive QS. At that time, 278
persons held inactive QS: 275 held
halibut QS, and 4 held sablefish QS (one
person held QS for both species). Using
2008 ratios, this inactive QS represented
34,719 halibut IFQ pounds (15.8 mt)
and 924 sablefish IFQ pounds (0.4 mt).
During 2006–2008, the total number of
unique, inactive QS holders declined 49
percent. Assuming year-specific ratios
of QS units to IFQ pounds, the amount
of change in inactive IFQ pounds of
halibut and sablefish can be generally
represented as a decline of 87.6 percent
and 94.2 percent, respectively. The
Council noted the extent of QS
consolidation and notified the public of
its intention to review its preferred
alternative during the February 2009
Council meeting.
In February 2009, the Council
reaffirmed its preferred alternative to
remove inactive halibut and sablefish
QS. It acknowledged that the amount of
inactive halibut QS had consolidated
below the 50,000 (22.7 mt) pound
threshold level the Council previously
identified to implement a lottery for the
redistribution of inactive QS; therefore,
the proposed action was narrowed to
exclude the lottery recommendation and
to revoke inactive QS only when no
action is taken by the QS holder. Action
by the QS holder means that the QS
holder must notify NMFS in writing to
specifically request that their inactive
QS not be revoked or present evidence
that the QS should not have been
determined inactive.
In the time since the Council
discussed this issue at the beginning of
2009, the number of persons holding
inactive QS has declined further. As of
December 31, 2009, 242 permit holders
held inactive QS; 240 held halibut QS,
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and three held sablefish QS (one person
held QS for both species). Using 2009
ratios, the amount of inactive QS held
represent 24,299 pounds (11.02 mt) of
halibut IFQ and 731 pounds (0.33 mt) of
sablefish IFQ. Between December of
2008 and December of 2009 the total
number of persons holding inactive QS
declined 13 percent. The ratio of QS
units to IFQ pounds is similar in 2008
and 2009, allowing direct comparison of
the IFQ pounds of inactive QS between
the two years. In the 12 months between
December 2008 and 2009, the amount of
inactive halibut QS declined 30 percent
and the amount of inactive sablefish QS
declined 21 percent.
Official Notice and Record
If the proposed rule is approved by
the Secretary of Commerce and
implemented, NMFS would send each
holder of inactive QS a ‘‘Notice of
Determination of Quota Share
Inactivity’’ (Inactive QS Notice). The
Inactive QS Notice would be sent by
certified mail to the address of record at
the time the Inactive QS Notice is sent
(50 CFR 679.43(e)). NMFS bears no
responsibility if the Inactive QS Notice
is sent to the address of record and is
not received because NMFS has not
been notified of the change in the
address of record. The Inactive QS
Notice would describe the inactive
status of the QS, identify the IFQ permit
holder, and provide the date the
authorized 60–day response period
ends.
NMFS would issue an Inactive QS
Notice alerting a holder of inactive
halibut or sablefish QS that their QS is
considered inactive based on records
maintained by NMFS indicating that
initially issued QS was never used to
land IFQ halibut or IFQ sablefish or to
transfer any QS or IFQ to or from
another person. The official record of an
IFQ halibut or IFQ sablefish landing
would contain the IFQ permit number
to which the IFQ landing would have
been credited. The number and amount
of landings would be based only on
legally submitted harvest
documentation. This documentation
must include a state catch report, a
Federal catch report, or other valid
documentation that indicates the
amount of IFQ halibut or IFQ sablefish
harvested, the IPHC or groundfish
reporting area in which the IFQ pounds
were harvested, the vessel and gear type
used for the harvest, and the date of
harvesting, landing, or reporting.
Federal catch reports are production
reports required under 50 CFR 679.5.
NMFS has used production reports only
for catcher/processors to document IFQ
landing and active QS. State catch
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reports are Alaska, California, Oregon,
or Washington fish tickets. State fish
tickets are used by NMFS only for
catcher vessels as data sources to
determine the specific amount and
location of landings that would
demonstrate active QS.
NMFS presumes that the official
record data sources are correct. In the
case where a person believes the official
record is incorrect, his or her claim can
be raised in a separate correspondence
to NMFS, Restricted Access
Management Program, Juneau, AK (see
ADDRESSES).
Options for Persons Holding Inactive
QS
A person that holds inactive QS
would have two options to respond to
receipt of an Inactive QS Notice. During
the 60–day response period specified in
the Inactive QS Notice, the person
holding the inactive QS could choose to
(1) do nothing, thereby resulting in
revocation of the inactive QS; or (2)
request in writing that the inactive QS
not be revoked. Alternatively, a person
holding inactive QS could exercise
options that have existed since the
beginning of the IFQ Program in 1995 to
either transfer some or all of the inactive
QS, or harvest halibut or sablefish based
on IFQ derived from the inactive QS.
These options are further explained
below.
First, a person holding inactive QS
could choose to do nothing. That
person’s inactive QS would be revoked
at the end of the 60–day period
specified in the Inactive QS Notice.
Revoked QS would cease to exist in the
QS pool and would not receive an
annual allocation of IFQ poundage for
IFQ halibut or IFQ sablefish. Any IFQ
derived from the inactive QS also would
be revoked at the time that the inactive
QS are revoked. After inactive QS are
revoked, the previous holder of those
QS could participate in the IFQ halibut
or IFQ sablefish fisheries only if they
receive QS by transfer.
Second, a person with inactive QS
could choose to retain or activate the QS
by notifying NMFS in writing that he or
she does not want the inactive QS
revoked. Such written requests would
have to be postmarked within the 60–
day response period specified in the
Inactive QS Notice. This response
would allow NMFS to activate the
otherwise inactive QS by the QS
holder’s demonstration of at least
minimal activity in the IFQ Program.
NMFS would allocate IFQ based on the
activated QS as it has done since the
beginning of the IFQ Program, and the
holder of such QS would continue to
benefit from the initial recipient
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privileges specified in the regulations
implementing the IFQ Program
(§§ 679.41 and 679.42). Moreover, the
IFQ halibut and IFQ sablefish harvesting
privilege for such a QS holder would
continue as it does for all other QS
holders.
The options to activate otherwise
inactive QS by either transferring some
or all of the inactive QS, or harvesting
halibut or sablefish based on IFQ
derived from the inactive QS, would
continue to be available to a person
holding inactive QS through the end of
the 60–day response period specified in
the Inactive QS Notice. No additional
period of time is proposed to
demonstrate these activities because the
person holding the inactive QS has
already had an opportunity to
demonstrate such activity since the
beginning of the IFQ Program in 1995.
Further, the two information letters sent
by NMFS to persons holding inactive
QS notifying them of this proposed
action successfully alerted a significant
number of persons holding inactive QS
as demonstrated by comparison of IFQ
program participation over time as
summarized under Council
consideration above.
A person holding inactive QS who is
unable to respond to the Inactive QS
Notice from NMFS within the 60–day
response period may appeal to NMFS to
submit his or her response late to the
NMFS Alaska Region Office of
Administrative Appeals pursuant to
§ 679.43. As a practical matter, any
other challenge of the Inactive QS
Notice within the 60–day response
period would be considered as a written
request to not revoke the inactive QS.
As such, a challenge would activate the
otherwise inactive QS by demonstrating
a reaction and therefore at least minimal
activity in the IFQ Program.
Written Response
The Inactive QS Notice provides the
person holding the inactive QS with the
opportunity to respond in writing to
NMFS within a single 60–day response
period, from the date that the Inactive
QS Notice is sent, and clearly request
the QS and IFQ remain active. Response
will only be accepted by mail to
simplify processing of responses. Email, fax or any other form of response
is not acceptable. The Inactive QS
Notice would be constructed to allow
the bottom half of the document to be
separated and used as a mail-in
response form to NMFS indicating
whether the holder of the inactive QS
wants to retain the QS. The following
written statement would be printed on
the mail-in response form as an
expression of request to not revoke the
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inactive QS: ‘‘I [print first name, middle
initial and surname] request that NMFS
not revoke my quota share authorized
by my signature on this date. Signed
[Write signature]. Dated [Enter the
current date].’’ A holder of inactive QS
may also respond by mail without using
the provided form, but must include all
the same specific information, names,
signatures and dates as included on the
mail-in response form. Once the
completed mail-in form or other
response statement is received in the
mail by NMFS and verified correct, a
letter of acknowledgement will be
issued to the person identified as the
holder of the inactive QS or his or her
legal representative. The letter would
serve as final agency action advising
that QS would be ’active’ and no further
response by the person holding the
inactive QS or NMFS would be
required.
Previous Response to NMFS
NMFS previously sent QS holders two
informational letters noticing them of
this proposed action to revoke inactive
QS. A QS holder who previously
responded to NMFS letters that still
holds inactive QS must resubmit a
response to NMFS by mail within the
authorized 60–day response period or
NMFS would revoke the inactive QS.
Any previous request to NMFS to
activate inactive QS is not sufficient for
NMFS to change that QS status. A
written response is required within the
60–day response period specifically
provided by the Inactive QS Notice. If
a response was submitted to NMFS on
the subject of inactive QS and the IFQ
permit holder has since had the inactive
QS officially activated by completing a
transfer or fishing the IFQ, then no
further response is required. If an IFQ
permit holder previously responded to
NMFS letters about inactive QS and
requested he or she be able to keep the
inactive QS, then the IFQ permit holder
must submit that request to NMFS again
within the 60–day response period
provided by the Inactive QS Notice or
the inactive QS will be revoked. If a
person holding inactive QS fails to
notify NMFS of his or her interest to
activate their QS within the 60–day
response period, then NMFS would
revoke the inactive QS.
Classification
Pursuant to section 304 (b)(1)(A) of
the Magnuson-Stevens Act, the NMFS
Assistant Administrator has determined
that this proposed rule is consistent
with the Halibut Act, the FMPs, other
provisions of the Magnuson-Stevens
Act, and other applicable law, subject to
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51745
further consideration after public
comment.
Regulations governing the U.S.
fisheries for Pacific halibut are
developed by the International Pacific
Halibut Commission, the Pacific Fishery
Management Council, the North Pacific
Fishery Management Council, and the
Secretary of Commerce. Section 5 of the
Northern Pacific Halibut Act of 1982
(Halibut Act, 16 U.S.C. 773c) allows the
Regional Council having authority for a
particular geographical area to develop
regulations governing the allocation and
catch of halibut in U.S. Convention
waters as long as those regulations do
not conflict with IPHC regulations. This
action is consistent with the Council’s
authority to allocate halibut catches
among fishery participants in the waters
in and off Alaska.
This proposed rule has been
determined to be not significant for
purposes of Executive Order 12866.
An initial regulatory flexibility
analysis (IRFA) was prepared, as
required by section 603 of the
Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA). The
IRFA 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. A
summary of the analysis follows. A copy
of this analysis is available from NMFS
(see ADDRESSES).
The IRFA prepared for this proposed
action assesses the potential adverse
economic impacts each alternative
would have on directly regulated small
entities if the proposed regulations were
adopted to revoke inactive QS. A
business is considered a small entity if
annual gross revenues are less than $4.0
million. NMFS defines all halibut and
sablefish vessels as small businesses, for
the purpose of this analysis. The
number of small entities operating as
fishing vessels in the IFQ fisheries may
be deduced from the restrictions placed
on the amount of annual IFQ that may
be landed from any individual vessel. In
1995, the year the IFQ Program began
and the year before the Council
recommended this proposed action, a
total of 2,057 vessels participated in IFQ
halibut fisheries in all areas, and a total
of 616 vessels participated in the IFQ
sablefish fisheries in all areas combined.
In late 2008, when the Council chose to
revisit this action, a total of 1,156
vessels participated in the IFQ halibut
fishery, and 362 vessels participated in
the IFQ sablefish fishery in all areas.
The total number of vessels includes
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individual vessels that participated in
the fisheries in any regulatory area.
The purpose of amending the
regulations for the halibut and sablefish
IFQ Program is to improve program
administration, reduce costs and
improve operational flexibility of
program participants, and help achieve
optimum yield. Inquiries about the cost
of the IFQ Program and access to
inactive QS provided impetus for the
Council to consider this proposed
action. There is no regulatory authority
for NMFS to revoke QS or accept
relinquishment of QS amounts that are
impractical or uneconomical to fish;
instead, QS may be voluntarily
transferred or fished.
The Council initiated analysis of four
issues pertaining to the IFQ Program for
the fixed-gear halibut and sablefish
fishery in 2006. An RIR/IRFA was
provided for public review May 12,
2006 that analyzed each issue in one,
multi-part, IFQ regulatory amendment
package. This proposed action on the
issue of inactive QS was referred to as
Action 3 in the 2006 RIR/IRFA. The
Council reviewed the status quo
alternative of not revoking inactive
halibut or sablefish QS, and two
alternatives to withdraw inactive QS.
Alternative 1 is the no action alternative
and would not change any economic
impacts on directly regulated small
entities. Under the status quo, holders of
inactive QS would have no option to
relinquish their inactive halibut or
sablefish QS. Federal regulations do not
provide for the voluntary removal of QS
other than through transfer.
Alternative 2 would revoke all
inactive halibut and sablefish QS.
Inactive QS is initially allocated QS that
has never been used to harvest halibut
or sablefish and has never been
transferred in to or out of the initial QS
account. Only persons who do not hold
active QS would be affected. Persons
that transferred some or all of their
halibut or sablefish IFQ but never
harvested any IFQ halibut or IFQ
sablefish would not be subject to
revocation of their QS under this
alternative.
Alternative 3, recommended by the
Council, would revoke all inactive QS
unless the holder of the inactive QS
notifies NMFS of his or her interest to
retain their inactive QS. Alternative 3
also provides for a lottery to redistribute
revoked QS to eligible persons unless
the amount of inactive QS available to
be revoked is below a threshold of QS
units equal to 50,000 pounds (22.7 mt)
for all IPHC regulatory areas.
NMFS is not aware of any additional
alternatives to those considered that
would accomplish the objectives of the
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action and that would minimize the
economic impact of the proposed rule
on small entities.
In June 2006, the Council adopted a
preferred alternative, Alternative 3, to
(a) revoke all inactive halibut and
sablefish QS, held by initial QS
recipients, from the QS pools and (b)
redistribute inactive halibut QS through
a lottery if the final amount of revoked
inactive QS exceeds the number of QS
units equivalent to 50,000 pounds (22.7
mt) for all IPHC regulatory areas in the
year of the lottery.
After the Council’s 2006 action on the
multi-part IFQ regulatory amendment
package, NMFS separated the Council’s
multiple recommendations into
different regulatory amendment
packages, including this proposed
action on inactive QS. In 2008, the
amount of inactive QS was less than the
threshold poundage prompting the
Council, in February 2009, to reaffirm
its previous recommendation for
Alternative 3, minus the lottery. An
updated RIR/IRFA for this proposed
regulatory amendment to the halibut
and sablefish IFQ program was finalized
September 8, 2009.
In 1995, more than 500 persons were
issued QS that they subsequently did
not use and that would be considered
inactive QS under this proposed action.
By December 31, 2009, the number of
IFQ permit holders with inactive QS
declined to 242, with 240 holding
inactive halibut QS, and three holding
inactive sablefish QS (one person held
inactive QS for both species). Using
2009 ratios, the amount of inactive QS
held in December 2009 represent 24,299
pounds (1 mt) of halibut and 731
pounds (0.33 mt) of sablefish.
This proposed rule contains a
collection-of-information requirement
subject to the Paperwork Reduction Act
(PRA) and which has been approved by
the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) under Control No. 0648–0272.
Public reporting burden for a letter
requesting NMFS not revoke IFQ
Program QS is estimated to average 15
minutes per response, including the
time for reviewing instructions,
searching existing data sources,
gathering and maintaining the data
needed, and completing and reviewing
the collection of information. Send
comments regarding this burden
estimate, or any other aspect of this data
collection, including suggestions for
reducing the burden, to NMFS (see
ADDRESSES) and by e-mail to
DavidlRostker@omb.eop.gov, or fax to
(202) 395–7285.
Notwithstanding any other provision
of the law, no person is required to
respond to, and no person shall be
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subject to a penalty for failure to comply
with, a collection of information subject
to the requirements of the PRA, unless
that collection of information displays a
currently valid OMB control number.
List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 679
Alaska, Fisheries, Recordkeeping and
reporting requirements.
Dated: August 17, 2010.
Samuel D. Rauch III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for
Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
For the reasons set out in the
preamble, 50 CFR part 679 is proposed
to be amended as follows:
PART 679–FISHERIES OF THE
EXCLUSIVE ECONOMIC ZONE OFF
ALASKA
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.
2. In § 679.40, add paragraph (a)(10) to
read as follows:
§ 679.40
Sablefish and halibut QS.
*
*
*
*
*
(a) * * *
(10) NMFS revokes inactive QS if the
person holding inactive QS does not:
(i) Respond in writing to NMFS,
within 60 days after NMFS issues a
Notice of Determination of Quota Share
Inactivity (Inactive QS Notice) sent to
the address of record as defined at
§ 679.43(e) of this part, requesting that
the inactive QS not be revoked.
(ii) For purposes of paragraph (a)(10)
of this section, ‘‘respond in writing’’
means write a statement directing
NMFS to change the status of QS to
‘‘active’’ and sign and date the statement
or complete the form attached to the
Inactive QS Notice and send through
U.S Mail to the NMFS, Alaska Region
address provided on the Inactive QS
Notice and printed on the front side of
the form.
(iii) For purposes of paragraph (a)(10)
of this section, the term ‘‘inactive QS’’
means halibut QS or sablefish QS, held
by a person who received an initial
allocation of halibut QS or sablefish QS
and has not taken any of the following
actions:
(A) Transferred any halibut QS or
sablefish QS pursuant to § 679.41;
(B) Transferred any halibut IFQ or
sablefish IFQ pursuant to § 679.41;
(C) Landed any halibut authorized by
IFQ halibut permit(s) issued to that
person; or
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(D) Landed any sablefish authorized
by IFQ sablefish permit(s) issued to that
person.
*
*
*
*
*
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 75, Number 162 (Monday, August 23, 2010)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 51741-51747]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2010-20873]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
50 CFR Part 679
Docket No. 0906041011-91012-01
RIN 0648-AX91
Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic Zone Off Alaska; Pacific
Halibut and Sablefish Individual Fishing Quota Program
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Proposed rule; request for comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: NMFS proposes regulations to modify the Individual Fishing
Quota (IFQ) Program for the Fixed-Gear Commercial Fisheries for Pacific
Halibut and Sablefish in waters in and off Alaska (IFQ Program) by
revoking quota share (QS) that have been inactive since they were
originally issued in 1995. Inactive QS are those held by persons that
have never harvested their IFQ and have never transferred QS or IFQ
into or out of their accounts.
This action is necessary to achieve the catch limit from the
halibut fisheries and optimum yield from the sablefish fisheries in
Alaska in accordance with National Standard 1 of the Magnuson-Stevens
Fishery Conservation and Management Act and results in more efficient
use of these species as supported by National Standard 5. The intended
effect is to promote the management provisions in the Fishery
Management Plan for Groundfish of the Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands
Management Area, the Fishery Management Plan for Groundfish of the Gulf
of Alaska, and the Northern Pacific Halibut Act of 1982.
DATES: Comments must be received by 5 p.m., local time, on September
22, 2010.
ADDRESSES: Send comments to Sue Salveson, Assistant Regional
[[Page 51742]]
Administrator, Sustainable Fisheries Division, Alaska Region, NMFS,
Attn: Ellen Sebastian. You may submit comments, identified by RIN 0648-
AX91 (PR), by any one of the following methods:
Electronic Submissions: Submit all electronic public
comments via the Federal eRulemaking Portal at https://www.regulations.gov.
Fax: (907) 586-7557, Attn: Ellen Sebastian.
Mail: P.O. Box 21668, Juneau, AK 99802.
Hand delivery to the Federal Building: 709 West 9th
Street, Room 420A, Juneau, AK.
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 Categorical Exclusion and the Regulatory
Impact Review and Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (RIR/IRFA)
prepared for this action may be obtained from https://www.regulations.gov, or from the Alaska Region website at https://alaskafisheries.noaa.gov.
Written comments regarding the burden-hour estimates or other
aspects of the collection-of-information requirements contained in this
proposed rule may be submitted to NMFS, Alaska Region, e-mailed to
David_Rostker@omb.eop.gov, or faxed to (202) 395-7285.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Peggy Murphy, (907) 586-7228.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Halibut Management
Management of the commercial fishery for Pacific halibut
(Hippoglossus stenolepis) in and off Alaska is based on an
international agreement between Canada and the United States. This
agreement, titled ``Convention Between United States of America and
Canada for the Preservation of the Halibut Fishery of the Northern
Pacific Ocean and Bering Sea'' (Convention), was signed in Ottawa,
Canada, on March 2, 1953, and amended by the ``Protocol Amending the
Convention,'' signed in Washington, D.C., March 29, 1979. The
Convention is administered by the International Pacific Halibut
Commission (IPHC) and is given effect in the United States by the
Northern Pacific Halibut Act of 1982 (Halibut Act).
Generally, the IPHC surveys the Pacific halibut stock and develops
fishery management regulations pursuant to the Convention. The IPHC's
regulations are subject to approval by the U.S. Secretary of State with
concurrence from the Secretary of Commerce (Secretary). NMFS publishes
approved regulations in the Federal Register as annual management
measures pursuant to 50 CFR part 300.62. NMFS published the current
annual management measures on March 18, 2010 (75 FR 13024). Federal
regulations governing the halibut fisheries appear at 50 CFR part 300,
subpart E.
The Halibut Act (section 773(c)) also authorizes the North Pacific
Fishery Management Council (Council) to develop halibut fishery
regulations, including limited access regulations that are in addition
to, and not in conflict with, approved IPHC regulations for U.S.
Convention waters. Such regulations may be implemented by NMFS only
after approval by the Secretary. The Council has exercised this
authority most notably in the development of the Individual Fishery
Quota (IFQ) Program codified at 50 CFR part 679.40.
Sablefish Management
Federal management of the commercial fishery for sablefish
(Anoplopoma fimbria) is authorized by the Fishery Management Plan for
Groundfish of the Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands Management Area and
the Fishery Management Plan for Groundfish of the Gulf of Alaska
(FMPs). The FMPs were prepared by the Council under authority of the
Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act (16 U.S.C.
1801 et seq.) (Magnuson-Stevens Act) and implemented by regulations at
50 CFR part 679.
IFQ Program
The Council and NMFS developed the IFQ Program for the halibut and
sablefish fixed-gear fishery in waters in and off Alaska. The IFQ
Program limits access to the fisheries to persons holding QS. Annually,
the amount of halibut and sablefish that each QS holder may harvest is
calculated and issued as IFQ. The Council adopted the IFQ Program in
1991 under the authority of the Halibut Act and the Magnuson-Stevens
Act. The preamble to the proposed rule, published December 3, 1992 (57
FR 57130), provides details of the conservation and management
background leading to the Council's adoption of the IFQ Program. NMFS
implemented the program on November 9, 1993 (58 FR 59375) through
Federal regulations at 50 CFR part 679. Fishing under the IFQ Program
began on March 15, 1995.
The IFQ Program is designed to maintain the social character and
economic benefits of the commercial, fixed-gear fisheries that Alaskan
coastal communities rely on as a source of revenue. The Council and
NMFS intend the IFQ Program to provide economic stability for the
Pacific halibut and sablefish commercial fisheries and improve long-
term productivity of the resources. The IFQ management approach
extended the fishing season, and harvests of the annual total allowable
catch (TAC) now occur throughout most of the year. The season length
and known amount of QS let fishermen set their own pace and their
fishing effort to focus more attention on safety, operational
efficiency and product quality. The IFQ program also allows fishermen
to transfer QS, giving them flexibility to determine what type of
investment to make based on when, where, and how much halibut and
sablefish they can harvest.
Initial Assignment and Recipients of QS
Quota shares were initially assigned to persons that owned vessels
or held a vessel lease and made at least one landing in a regulatory
area in any one of the years 1988, 1989, or 1990. The intent was to
assign initial shares only to those fishermen then currently active in
the halibut and sablefish fixed-gear fisheries. The amount of QS a
person received was based on his or her documented, historical catch
for 5 out of 6 years (1985 through 1990) for sablefish, and for 5 out
of 7 years (1984 through 1990) for halibut. This allowed a person to
choose the best 5 years to calculate his or her assignment. The number
of QS units issued to each person was based on each person's selection
of years of landings.
Persons holding QS for an area have harvesting privileges for an
amount of halibut or sablefish that is derived annually from their QS
holdings in that area and authorized on their IFQ permit. The specific
amount (in pounds) is determined by the number of QS units held for
that species, the total number of QS units issued for that species in a
[[Page 51743]]
specific regulatory area, and the TAC of the species allocated for IFQ
fisheries in a particular year. To simplify the language in the
remainder of this document, the concept of QS units and associated IFQ
pounds issued annually is referred to singularly as QS except in
reference to specific Council direction and in the draft regulations.
One design feature of the IFQ Program requires IFQ permit holders
to be on board the vessel to maintain a predominantly ``owner-
operated'' fishery with a narrow exemption for initial recipients of
QS. Initial recipients of catcher vessel QS may be absent from a vessel
conducting IFQ halibut or sablefish fishing, provided the QS holder can
demonstrate at least a minimum specified level of ownership of the
vessel that harvests the IFQ halibut or sablefish, as well as
representation on the vessel by a hired master. This exception allows
fishermen-who historically operated their fishing businesses using
hired masters before the implementation of the IFQ Program-to retain
the flexibility of using hired masters under the IFQ Program.
Need for Action
In June 2006, the Council recommended removal of initially
allocated halibut and sablefish QS from QS holders that had never
harvested IFQ halibut or IFQ sablefish, or that had never transferred
any QS or IFQ since initially receiving the QS. Quota share would be
considered inactive if the QS and the associated annual allocation of
IFQ pounds have been neither transferred nor fished.
Inactive QS exists for a variety of reasons. The initial allocation
of halibut or sablefish QS was made to qualified persons according to
regulations at Sec. 679.40(a). These regulations specified no minimum
pounds of halibut or sablefish to be harvested during the respective
halibut and sablefish base periods (1984-1990 for halibut and 1985-1990
for sablefish), but one catch landing had to occur in any one of the
last 3 years of the base period. Hence, the calculation of initial QS
for some qualified persons resulted in their receiving very small QS
allocations. The IFQ poundage derived from these allocations of QS also
is small: in some cases summing to fewer pounds than a whole fish. The
recipients of these small QS allocations have presumably elected not to
participate actively in the IFQ fisheries. Though, persons holding
inactive QS have had the same opportunity as persons with active QS to
participate in the IFQ program by fishing and transferring QS and IFQ.
Other persons holding inactive QS are no longer in the commercial
fishing industry, are deceased, or have been unable or unwilling to
divest or otherwise transfer their inactive QS.
The existence of inactive QS was not specifically addressed during
the implementation, development or maintenance of the IFQ program. As a
result, several hundred accounts with very small amounts of inactive QS
remain in the IFQ Program database. Even though the QS is inactive,
NMFS must perform routine administrative tasks to process, monitor, and
maintain data on the inactive QS, including recordkeeping, regular
correspondence with QS holders, and monthly and annual reporting. IFQ
permit holders are responsible for the costs and reimburse NMFS for
those costs through the IFQ cost recovery program (50 CFR 679.45). When
inactive QS are held and not harvested, active IFQ holders pay slightly
higher fees for the IFQ Program because IFQ cost recovery fees apply
only when IFQ species are landed.
As a result of the inactive QS, some IFQ will not be harvested and
a portion of the TAC will remain unharvested. This reduces economic and
social benefits from QS harvest typically realized by fishery dependent
businesses and the public. Unused IFQ also deprives consumers of
product. Holding inactive QS prevents access to halibut and sablefish
QS by persons qualified to fish the QS, and limits the ability of
fishermen interested in entering the IFQ Program or expanding their QS
holdings. Hence the inactive QS prevent the IFQ fisheries from
optimizing yield.
Proposed Action
This action proposes to revoke inactive halibut and sablefish QS
from the QS pools. The portion of the annual halibut and sablefish TACs
represented by the revoked QS and associated IFQ would be distributed
among IFQ permit holders in an amount proportional to their IFQ
allocation. Alternatively, if a permit holder requests NMFS not to
revoke his or her inactive QS, then NMFS would assign an active status
to that QS and the associated IFQ would continue to be issued annually.
All halibut and sablefish QS identified as inactive are held by
initial recipients of QS. Revoking QS as proposed would not change the
initial recipient status of the QS holder. Hence, if a person was
initially allocated QS that would be revoked under this action, and
then subsequently acquires new QS in the future, that person still
would retain the benefit of being an initial recipient of QS for
purposes of retaining the flexibility of using a hired master.
Although the administrative burden for the retained QS would not be
reduced, annual administrative tasks and costs for managing revoked QS
would be eliminated. Reducing the administrative burden would allow for
more efficient use of IFQ Program resources, and, for the sablefish
fisheries, is consistent with National Standard 5. Revoking inactive QS
also would reduce costs and improve operational flexibility of active
program participants. The change in distribution of IFQ allows broader
opportunity to achieve the catch limit in halibut fisheries and optimum
yield from the sablefish fisheries as required by National Standard 1
of the Magnuson-Stevens Act.
The Council recommended this proposed action as part of a multi-
part IFQ regulatory amendment package. NMFS subsequently separated the
Council's multiple recommendations into independent regulatory
amendment packages to better address priority actions in a timely
manner. This proposed rule is the final one of the series recommended
by the Council in 2006. As a result, several years have passed between
the Council's action notifying the public of the pending change to the
IFQ Program and publication of this proposed rule. During these years,
NMFS followed the Council's recommendation to contact persons holding
inactive halibut or sablefish QS by mail and to communicate that NMFS
is pursuing rulemaking that, if implemented, would require persons to
notify NMFS in writing that they do not want their inactive QS and
associated annual IFQ revoked. NMFS notified persons with inactive QS
of the status of the proposed action in letters sent by direct mail in
January 2008 and in March 2009. The notification process was
productive, stimulating transfers of inactive QS that resulted in
almost a 50-percent decline in the number of persons holding inactive
halibut and sablefish QS. An additional recommendation of the Council
to provide broad public notice of the Council's intent to withdraw
inactive QS is addressed with publication of this proposed rule in the
Federal Register.
Council Consideration
The RIR/IRFA prepared for this action (see ADDRESSES) reports that
when the Council initially considered the proposal in June 2006, 534
persons held inactive QS for halibut, which yielded roughly 280,000
pounds (127 mt) of IFQ. Inactive sablefish QS was held by
[[Page 51744]]
seven persons and yielded roughly 16,000 pounds (7.3 mt) of IFQ that
year. Given this amount of inactive QS and associated IFQ, the Council
recommended a lottery for a one-time redistribution of inactive QS if
the total amount of inactive QS is more than the number of QS units
equivalent to 50,000 pounds (22.7 mt) of halibut IFQ for all IPHC
regulatory areas in the year of the lottery; therefore, the Council's
secondary recommendation for a lottery was conditioned on the total
amount of inactive QS that could be revoked being greater than that
which would yield 50,000 pounds (22.7 mt) of halibut IFQ for all IPHC
regulatory areas in the year of the lottery.
NMFS reported to the Council at its December 2008 meeting that the
amount of IFQ associated with the number of inactive halibut QS fell
below the 50,000 pound (22.7 mt) threshold for implementing a lottery
to redistribute the inactive QS. At that time, 278 persons held
inactive QS: 275 held halibut QS, and 4 held sablefish QS (one person
held QS for both species). Using 2008 ratios, this inactive QS
represented 34,719 halibut IFQ pounds (15.8 mt) and 924 sablefish IFQ
pounds (0.4 mt). During 2006-2008, the total number of unique, inactive
QS holders declined 49 percent. Assuming year-specific ratios of QS
units to IFQ pounds, the amount of change in inactive IFQ pounds of
halibut and sablefish can be generally represented as a decline of 87.6
percent and 94.2 percent, respectively. The Council noted the extent of
QS consolidation and notified the public of its intention to review its
preferred alternative during the February 2009 Council meeting.
In February 2009, the Council reaffirmed its preferred alternative
to remove inactive halibut and sablefish QS. It acknowledged that the
amount of inactive halibut QS had consolidated below the 50,000 (22.7
mt) pound threshold level the Council previously identified to
implement a lottery for the redistribution of inactive QS; therefore,
the proposed action was narrowed to exclude the lottery recommendation
and to revoke inactive QS only when no action is taken by the QS
holder. Action by the QS holder means that the QS holder must notify
NMFS in writing to specifically request that their inactive QS not be
revoked or present evidence that the QS should not have been determined
inactive.
In the time since the Council discussed this issue at the beginning
of 2009, the number of persons holding inactive QS has declined
further. As of December 31, 2009, 242 permit holders held inactive QS;
240 held halibut QS, and three held sablefish QS (one person held QS
for both species). Using 2009 ratios, the amount of inactive QS held
represent 24,299 pounds (11.02 mt) of halibut IFQ and 731 pounds (0.33
mt) of sablefish IFQ. Between December of 2008 and December of 2009 the
total number of persons holding inactive QS declined 13 percent. The
ratio of QS units to IFQ pounds is similar in 2008 and 2009, allowing
direct comparison of the IFQ pounds of inactive QS between the two
years. In the 12 months between December 2008 and 2009, the amount of
inactive halibut QS declined 30 percent and the amount of inactive
sablefish QS declined 21 percent.
Official Notice and Record
If the proposed rule is approved by the Secretary of Commerce and
implemented, NMFS would send each holder of inactive QS a ``Notice of
Determination of Quota Share Inactivity'' (Inactive QS Notice). The
Inactive QS Notice would be sent by certified mail to the address of
record at the time the Inactive QS Notice is sent (50 CFR 679.43(e)).
NMFS bears no responsibility if the Inactive QS Notice is sent to the
address of record and is not received because NMFS has not been
notified of the change in the address of record. The Inactive QS Notice
would describe the inactive status of the QS, identify the IFQ permit
holder, and provide the date the authorized 60-day response period
ends.
NMFS would issue an Inactive QS Notice alerting a holder of
inactive halibut or sablefish QS that their QS is considered inactive
based on records maintained by NMFS indicating that initially issued QS
was never used to land IFQ halibut or IFQ sablefish or to transfer any
QS or IFQ to or from another person. The official record of an IFQ
halibut or IFQ sablefish landing would contain the IFQ permit number to
which the IFQ landing would have been credited. The number and amount
of landings would be based only on legally submitted harvest
documentation. This documentation must include a state catch report, a
Federal catch report, or other valid documentation that indicates the
amount of IFQ halibut or IFQ sablefish harvested, the IPHC or
groundfish reporting area in which the IFQ pounds were harvested, the
vessel and gear type used for the harvest, and the date of harvesting,
landing, or reporting. Federal catch reports are production reports
required under 50 CFR 679.5. NMFS has used production reports only for
catcher/processors to document IFQ landing and active QS. State catch
reports are Alaska, California, Oregon, or Washington fish tickets.
State fish tickets are used by NMFS only for catcher vessels as data
sources to determine the specific amount and location of landings that
would demonstrate active QS.
NMFS presumes that the official record data sources are correct. In
the case where a person believes the official record is incorrect, his
or her claim can be raised in a separate correspondence to NMFS,
Restricted Access Management Program, Juneau, AK (see ADDRESSES).
Options for Persons Holding Inactive QS
A person that holds inactive QS would have two options to respond
to receipt of an Inactive QS Notice. During the 60-day response period
specified in the Inactive QS Notice, the person holding the inactive QS
could choose to (1) do nothing, thereby resulting in revocation of the
inactive QS; or (2) request in writing that the inactive QS not be
revoked. Alternatively, a person holding inactive QS could exercise
options that have existed since the beginning of the IFQ Program in
1995 to either transfer some or all of the inactive QS, or harvest
halibut or sablefish based on IFQ derived from the inactive QS. These
options are further explained below.
First, a person holding inactive QS could choose to do nothing.
That person's inactive QS would be revoked at the end of the 60-day
period specified in the Inactive QS Notice. Revoked QS would cease to
exist in the QS pool and would not receive an annual allocation of IFQ
poundage for IFQ halibut or IFQ sablefish. Any IFQ derived from the
inactive QS also would be revoked at the time that the inactive QS are
revoked. After inactive QS are revoked, the previous holder of those QS
could participate in the IFQ halibut or IFQ sablefish fisheries only if
they receive QS by transfer.
Second, a person with inactive QS could choose to retain or
activate the QS by notifying NMFS in writing that he or she does not
want the inactive QS revoked. Such written requests would have to be
postmarked within the 60-day response period specified in the Inactive
QS Notice. This response would allow NMFS to activate the otherwise
inactive QS by the QS holder's demonstration of at least minimal
activity in the IFQ Program. NMFS would allocate IFQ based on the
activated QS as it has done since the beginning of the IFQ Program, and
the holder of such QS would continue to benefit from the initial
recipient
[[Page 51745]]
privileges specified in the regulations implementing the IFQ Program
(Sec. Sec. 679.41 and 679.42). Moreover, the IFQ halibut and IFQ
sablefish harvesting privilege for such a QS holder would continue as
it does for all other QS holders.
The options to activate otherwise inactive QS by either
transferring some or all of the inactive QS, or harvesting halibut or
sablefish based on IFQ derived from the inactive QS, would continue to
be available to a person holding inactive QS through the end of the 60-
day response period specified in the Inactive QS Notice. No additional
period of time is proposed to demonstrate these activities because the
person holding the inactive QS has already had an opportunity to
demonstrate such activity since the beginning of the IFQ Program in
1995. Further, the two information letters sent by NMFS to persons
holding inactive QS notifying them of this proposed action successfully
alerted a significant number of persons holding inactive QS as
demonstrated by comparison of IFQ program participation over time as
summarized under Council consideration above.
A person holding inactive QS who is unable to respond to the
Inactive QS Notice from NMFS within the 60-day response period may
appeal to NMFS to submit his or her response late to the NMFS Alaska
Region Office of Administrative Appeals pursuant to Sec. 679.43. As a
practical matter, any other challenge of the Inactive QS Notice within
the 60-day response period would be considered as a written request to
not revoke the inactive QS. As such, a challenge would activate the
otherwise inactive QS by demonstrating a reaction and therefore at
least minimal activity in the IFQ Program.
Written Response
The Inactive QS Notice provides the person holding the inactive QS
with the opportunity to respond in writing to NMFS within a single 60-
day response period, from the date that the Inactive QS Notice is sent,
and clearly request the QS and IFQ remain active. Response will only be
accepted by mail to simplify processing of responses. E-mail, fax or
any other form of response is not acceptable. The Inactive QS Notice
would be constructed to allow the bottom half of the document to be
separated and used as a mail-in response form to NMFS indicating
whether the holder of the inactive QS wants to retain the QS. The
following written statement would be printed on the mail-in response
form as an expression of request to not revoke the inactive QS: ``I
[print first name, middle initial and surname] request that NMFS not
revoke my quota share authorized by my signature on this date. Signed
[Write signature]. Dated [Enter the current date].'' A holder of
inactive QS may also respond by mail without using the provided form,
but must include all the same specific information, names, signatures
and dates as included on the mail-in response form. Once the completed
mail-in form or other response statement is received in the mail by
NMFS and verified correct, a letter of acknowledgement will be issued
to the person identified as the holder of the inactive QS or his or her
legal representative. The letter would serve as final agency action
advising that QS would be 'active' and no further response by the
person holding the inactive QS or NMFS would be required.
Previous Response to NMFS
NMFS previously sent QS holders two informational letters noticing
them of this proposed action to revoke inactive QS. A QS holder who
previously responded to NMFS letters that still holds inactive QS must
resubmit a response to NMFS by mail within the authorized 60-day
response period or NMFS would revoke the inactive QS. Any previous
request to NMFS to activate inactive QS is not sufficient for NMFS to
change that QS status. A written response is required within the 60-day
response period specifically provided by the Inactive QS Notice. If a
response was submitted to NMFS on the subject of inactive QS and the
IFQ permit holder has since had the inactive QS officially activated by
completing a transfer or fishing the IFQ, then no further response is
required. If an IFQ permit holder previously responded to NMFS letters
about inactive QS and requested he or she be able to keep the inactive
QS, then the IFQ permit holder must submit that request to NMFS again
within the 60-day response period provided by the Inactive QS Notice or
the inactive QS will be revoked. If a person holding inactive QS fails
to notify NMFS of his or her interest to activate their QS within the
60-day response period, then NMFS would revoke the inactive QS.
Classification
Pursuant to section 304 (b)(1)(A) of the Magnuson-Stevens Act, the
NMFS Assistant Administrator has determined that this proposed rule is
consistent with the Halibut Act, the FMPs, other provisions of the
Magnuson-Stevens Act, and other applicable law, subject to further
consideration after public comment.
Regulations governing the U.S. fisheries for Pacific halibut are
developed by the International Pacific Halibut Commission, the Pacific
Fishery Management Council, the North Pacific Fishery Management
Council, and the Secretary of Commerce. Section 5 of the Northern
Pacific Halibut Act of 1982 (Halibut Act, 16 U.S.C. 773c) allows the
Regional Council having authority for a particular geographical area to
develop regulations governing the allocation and catch of halibut in
U.S. Convention waters as long as those regulations do not conflict
with IPHC regulations. This action is consistent with the Council's
authority to allocate halibut catches among fishery participants in the
waters in and off Alaska.
This proposed rule has been determined to be not significant for
purposes of Executive Order 12866.
An initial regulatory flexibility analysis (IRFA) was prepared, as
required by section 603 of the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA). The
IRFA 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. A summary of the analysis follows. A copy of
this analysis is available from NMFS (see ADDRESSES).
The IRFA prepared for this proposed action assesses the potential
adverse economic impacts each alternative would have on directly
regulated small entities if the proposed regulations were adopted to
revoke inactive QS. A business is considered a small entity if annual
gross revenues are less than $4.0 million. NMFS defines all halibut and
sablefish vessels as small businesses, for the purpose of this
analysis. The number of small entities operating as fishing vessels in
the IFQ fisheries may be deduced from the restrictions placed on the
amount of annual IFQ that may be landed from any individual vessel. In
1995, the year the IFQ Program began and the year before the Council
recommended this proposed action, a total of 2,057 vessels participated
in IFQ halibut fisheries in all areas, and a total of 616 vessels
participated in the IFQ sablefish fisheries in all areas combined. In
late 2008, when the Council chose to revisit this action, a total of
1,156 vessels participated in the IFQ halibut fishery, and 362 vessels
participated in the IFQ sablefish fishery in all areas. The total
number of vessels includes
[[Page 51746]]
individual vessels that participated in the fisheries in any regulatory
area.
The purpose of amending the regulations for the halibut and
sablefish IFQ Program is to improve program administration, reduce
costs and improve operational flexibility of program participants, and
help achieve optimum yield. Inquiries about the cost of the IFQ Program
and access to inactive QS provided impetus for the Council to consider
this proposed action. There is no regulatory authority for NMFS to
revoke QS or accept relinquishment of QS amounts that are impractical
or uneconomical to fish; instead, QS may be voluntarily transferred or
fished.
The Council initiated analysis of four issues pertaining to the IFQ
Program for the fixed-gear halibut and sablefish fishery in 2006. An
RIR/IRFA was provided for public review May 12, 2006 that analyzed each
issue in one, multi-part, IFQ regulatory amendment package. This
proposed action on the issue of inactive QS was referred to as Action 3
in the 2006 RIR/IRFA. The Council reviewed the status quo alternative
of not revoking inactive halibut or sablefish QS, and two alternatives
to withdraw inactive QS. Alternative 1 is the no action alternative and
would not change any economic impacts on directly regulated small
entities. Under the status quo, holders of inactive QS would have no
option to relinquish their inactive halibut or sablefish QS. Federal
regulations do not provide for the voluntary removal of QS other than
through transfer.
Alternative 2 would revoke all inactive halibut and sablefish QS.
Inactive QS is initially allocated QS that has never been used to
harvest halibut or sablefish and has never been transferred in to or
out of the initial QS account. Only persons who do not hold active QS
would be affected. Persons that transferred some or all of their
halibut or sablefish IFQ but never harvested any IFQ halibut or IFQ
sablefish would not be subject to revocation of their QS under this
alternative.
Alternative 3, recommended by the Council, would revoke all
inactive QS unless the holder of the inactive QS notifies NMFS of his
or her interest to retain their inactive QS. Alternative 3 also
provides for a lottery to redistribute revoked QS to eligible persons
unless the amount of inactive QS available to be revoked is below a
threshold of QS units equal to 50,000 pounds (22.7 mt) for all IPHC
regulatory areas.
NMFS is not aware of any additional alternatives to those
considered that would accomplish the objectives of the action and that
would minimize the economic impact of the proposed rule on small
entities.
In June 2006, the Council adopted a preferred alternative,
Alternative 3, to (a) revoke all inactive halibut and sablefish QS,
held by initial QS recipients, from the QS pools and (b) redistribute
inactive halibut QS through a lottery if the final amount of revoked
inactive QS exceeds the number of QS units equivalent to 50,000 pounds
(22.7 mt) for all IPHC regulatory areas in the year of the lottery.
After the Council's 2006 action on the multi-part IFQ regulatory
amendment package, NMFS separated the Council's multiple
recommendations into different regulatory amendment packages, including
this proposed action on inactive QS. In 2008, the amount of inactive QS
was less than the threshold poundage prompting the Council, in February
2009, to reaffirm its previous recommendation for Alternative 3, minus
the lottery. An updated RIR/IRFA for this proposed regulatory amendment
to the halibut and sablefish IFQ program was finalized September 8,
2009.
In 1995, more than 500 persons were issued QS that they
subsequently did not use and that would be considered inactive QS under
this proposed action. By December 31, 2009, the number of IFQ permit
holders with inactive QS declined to 242, with 240 holding inactive
halibut QS, and three holding inactive sablefish QS (one person held
inactive QS for both species). Using 2009 ratios, the amount of
inactive QS held in December 2009 represent 24,299 pounds (1 mt) of
halibut and 731 pounds (0.33 mt) of sablefish.
This proposed rule contains a collection-of-information requirement
subject to the Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA) and which has been
approved by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) under Control No.
0648-0272. Public reporting burden for a letter requesting NMFS not
revoke IFQ Program QS is estimated to average 15 minutes per response,
including the time for reviewing instructions, searching existing data
sources, gathering and maintaining the data needed, and completing and
reviewing the collection of information. Send comments regarding this
burden estimate, or any other aspect of this data collection, including
suggestions for reducing the burden, to NMFS (see ADDRESSES) and by e-
mail to David_Rostker@omb.eop.gov, or fax to (202) 395-7285.
Notwithstanding any other provision of the law, no person is
required to respond to, and no person shall be subject to a penalty for
failure to comply with, a collection of information subject to the
requirements of the PRA, unless that collection of information displays
a currently valid OMB control number.
List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 679
Alaska, Fisheries, Recordkeeping and reporting requirements.
Dated: August 17, 2010.
Samuel D. Rauch III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
For the reasons set out in the preamble, 50 CFR part 679 is
proposed to be amended as follows:
PART 679-FISHERIES OF THE EXCLUSIVE ECONOMIC ZONE OFF ALASKA
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.
2. In Sec. 679.40, add paragraph (a)(10) to read as follows:
Sec. 679.40 Sablefish and halibut QS.
* * * * *
(a) * * *
(10) NMFS revokes inactive QS if the person holding inactive QS
does not:
(i) Respond in writing to NMFS, within 60 days after NMFS issues a
Notice of Determination of Quota Share Inactivity (Inactive QS Notice)
sent to the address of record as defined at Sec. 679.43(e) of this
part, requesting that the inactive QS not be revoked.
(ii) For purposes of paragraph (a)(10) of this section, ``respond
in writing'' means write a statement directing NMFS to change the
status of QS to ``active'' and sign and date the statement or complete
the form attached to the Inactive QS Notice and send through U.S Mail
to the NMFS, Alaska Region address provided on the Inactive QS Notice
and printed on the front side of the form.
(iii) For purposes of paragraph (a)(10) of this section, the term
``inactive QS'' means halibut QS or sablefish QS, held by a person who
received an initial allocation of halibut QS or sablefish QS and has
not taken any of the following actions:
(A) Transferred any halibut QS or sablefish QS pursuant to Sec.
679.41;
(B) Transferred any halibut IFQ or sablefish IFQ pursuant to Sec.
679.41;
(C) Landed any halibut authorized by IFQ halibut permit(s) issued
to that person; or
[[Page 51747]]
(D) Landed any sablefish authorized by IFQ sablefish permit(s)
issued to that person.
* * * * *
[FR Doc. 2010-20873 Filed 8-20-10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-22-S