Fisheries Off West Coast States; Pacific Coast Groundfish Fishery; 2012 Specifications and Management Measures and Secretarial Amendment 1, 77415-77430 [2011-31975]
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the above-referenced rule sections are
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SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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Marlene H. Dortch,
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[FR Doc. 2011–31988 Filed 12–12–11; 8:45 am]
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Fisheries Off West Coast States;
Pacific Coast Groundfish Fishery; 2012
Specifications and Management
Measures and Secretarial
Amendment 1
47 CFR Part 20
[WT Docket No. 07–250; FCC 08–68]
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule.
Amendment of the Commission’s
Rules Governing Hearing AidCompatible Mobile Handsets
AGENCY:
Federal Communications
Commission.
ACTION: Final rule; announcement of
effective date.
AGENCY:
In this document, the Federal
Communications Commission (FCC)
announces the effectiveness of hearing
aid compatibility requirements that
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DATES: 47 CFR 20.19(h) and (i),
published May 7, 2008 at 73 FR 25566,
are effective December 13, 2011.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
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SUMMARY:
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This final rule establishes the
2012 harvest specifications and
management measures for certain
groundfish species taken in the U.S.
exclusive economic zone (EEZ) off the
coasts of Washington, Oregon, and
California consistent with the
Magnuson-Stevens Fishery
Conservation and Management Act and
the Pacific Coast Groundfish Fishery
Management Plan (PCGFMP). This
action includes regulations to
implement Secretarial Amendment 1 to
the PCGFMP. Secretarial Amendment 1
contains the rebuilding plans for
SUMMARY:
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overfished species and new reference
points for assessed flatfish species.
DATES: This rule is effective January 1,
2012.
ADDRESSES: Information relevant to this
final rule, which includes a final
environmental impact statement (FEIS),
a regulatory impact review (RIR), and a
final regulatory flexibility analysis
(FRFA) is available for public review
during business hours at the office of
the Pacific Fishery Management Council
(Council), at 7700 NE Ambassador
Place, Portland, OR 97220, phone: (503)
820–2280. Copies of additional reports
referred to in this document may also be
obtained from the Pacific Fishery
Management Council.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Sarah Williams, phone: (206) 526–4646,
fax: (206) 526–6736, or email:
sarah.williams@noaa.gov
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Electronic Access
This rule is accessible via the Internet
at the Office of the Federal Register
Web site at https://www.access.gpo.gov/
su_docs/aces/aces140.html. Background
information and documents are
available at the NMFS Northwest Region
Web site at https://www.nwr.noaa.gov/
Groundfish-Halibut/Groundfish-FisheryManagement/index.cfm and at the
Council’s Web site at https://
www.pcouncil.org.
Summary of Provisions in This Final
Rule
NMFS published a proposed rule on
September 27, 2011 (76 FR 59634) and
a Notice of Availability of Secretarial
Amendment 1 to the Pacific Coast
Groundfish Fishery Management Plan
(PCGFMP) on September 9, 2011 (76 FR
55865). The comment periods on both
the proposed rule and FMP amendment
closed on November 8, 2011. NMFS has
approved Secretarial Amendment 1.
This final rule implements the
provisions from the September 27, 2011,
proposed rule, except for the proposed
regulatory change to add a geographical
split for lingcod at 42° N. latitude. As
a consequence, this final rule makes no
changes to area-specific management of
lingcod, and lingcod continue to be
managed as a coastwide stock in 2012.
A discussion of the comments and
NMFS’s responses can be found in the
Changes from the Proposed Rule and
Comments and Responses section of this
final rule. See the preamble to the
proposed rule for additional background
information on the fishery and on this
final rule. The specifics associated with
the development and decision making
processes for the rebuilding plans in
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Secretarial Amendment 1 can be found
in the proposed rule (75 FR 67810,
November 3, 2010) and final rule (75 FR
27508, May 11, 2011) for the 2011–2012
harvest specifications and management
measures.
Background
Every other year, the Council
recommends biennial harvest levels for
Pacific Coast groundfish, and
management measures for commercial
and recreational fisheries that are
designed to achieve those harvest levels.
For the 2011–2012 biennium, the
Council recommended Amendment 16–
5 to the PCGFMP and proposed
specifications and management
measures. Amendment 16–5 included
one new and seven revised rebuilding
plans, and new reference points for
assessed flatfish species. A Draft
Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS)
was published in August 2010 that
analyzed the effects of Amendment 16–
5 and the 2011–2012 groundfish harvest
specifications and management
measures. NMFS reviewed the DEIS and
the comments and concluded that the
analysis did not clearly explain the
alternatives in such a way that NMFS
could choose among them. Therefore,
NMFS disapproved the Amendment on
December 27, 2010. A Final
Environmental Impact Statement (FEIS),
which analyzed the effects of
Amendment 16–5 and the 2011–2012
groundfish harvest specifications and
management measures, was drafted by
NMFS and a Record of Decision was
signed on April 26, 2011.
Because management measures were
needed for the 2011 fishery, NMFS
published a final rule (75 FR 27508,
May 11, 2011) establishing harvest
specifications and management
measures for most species. Pursuant to
NFMS’ emergency authority under
section 305(c) of the Magnuson-Stevens
Fishery Conservation and Management
Act (MSA), 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.,
NMFS implemented the specifications
based on a slightly modified version of
Amendment 16–5. Accordingly, the
provisions can be effective for a
maximum of 366 days. For more detail,
see the ‘‘Comments and Responses’’
section of the May 11, 2011, final rule.
(76 FR 27509). The provisions
implemented pursuant to emergency
authority for 2011 included the
rebuilding plans and corresponding
harvest levels, new proxy reference
points for assessed flatfish species, and
the Overfishing Limits (OFLs),
Acceptable Biological Catches (ABCs),
and Annual Catch Limits (ACLs) for
assessed flatfish based on the new
reference points.
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Regulations Implemented Through
Secretarial Authority and Secretarial
FMP Amendment 1
Under MSA section 304(a) (16 U.S.C.
1854(c)), when the Secretary of
Commerce (the Secretary) disapproves
of a Council’s FMP amendment, the
Council may resubmit a revised
amendment. If the Council does not
submit a revised amendment, the
Secretary, acting through NMFS, is
authorized to prepare an amendment, 16
U.S.C. 1854(c)(1).
Because NMFS disapproved the
Council’s FMP amendment, the issue
was brought before the Council for
reconsideration and further action. In
June 2011, the Council decided not to
resubmit a revised amendment. NMFS
therefore drafted Secretarial
Amendment 1 to the FMP pursuant to
section 304(c) of the MSA. The notice of
availability for the amendment
published on September 9, 2011 (75 FR
55865) and the comment period closed
on November 8, 2011.
Secretarial Amendment 1 is a revised
version of Amendment 16–5. It contains
rebuilding plans that differ from those
in the Council’s Amendment 16–5 for
three species. As with rebuilding plans
approved and implemented for 2011,
NMFS has determined that these plans
are consistent with the statutory
provisions of section 304(e) of the MSA.
While a Secretarial Amendment is rare,
the substance of this Amendment is
routine and it implements provisions
through notice and comment
rulemaking that were previously created
by emergency action. As stated above,
this final rule updates the regulations at
50 CFR part 660 to establish new and
revised rebuilding plans, establish the
2012 harvest specifications consistent
with those rebuilding plans and new
flatfish proxies, and calculate the
resulting shorebased trawl allocations.
Secretarial Amendment 1 also makes
some non-substantive structural changes
to the PCGFMP by moving the
descriptions of rebuilding plans and
associated text to an appendix. These
changes make it possible to update the
rebuilding plans in the appendix
without requiring an FMP amendment.
The FMP still requires these changes to
undergo notice and comment rule
making. Moving the rebuilding plans
helps ensure that they are easily
accessible to the Council, agency, and
members of the public. Currently, the
PCGFMP allows the updating of
rebuilding parameters, such as the target
year to rebuild, through regulatory
amendments rather than FMP
amendments. However, the exact
provisions of the rebuilding plans are
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frequently difficult to locate because
they are imbedded in the rule’s text and
in the main body of the FMP. By moving
text to an appendix, Secretarial
Amendment 1 does not change any
substantive rebuilding policies or
procedures described in the PCGFMP.
Rather, it enhances the public’s access
to current rebuilding plans; if a
rebuilding parameter or other element of
a rebuilding plan changes through the
biennial harvest specifications and
management process, the appendix
would be updated after the final rule is
in place without a separate FMP
amendment.
Regulations Implemented Through
Routine Rulemaking
In addition to the regulations
implementing Secretarial Amendment
1, this final rule includes one regulatory
change. This rule corrects the 2012
limited entry fixed gear sablefish tier
limits. On May 18, 2011, NMFS was
notified by the Executive Director of the
Council that there was a mistake in the
calculation of the 2011 and 2012
sablefish cumulative limits during the
development of the 2011–2012 biennial
specifications and management
measures. The Executive Director
requested that NMFS correct the
sablefish cumulative limits for the
limited entry fixed gear primary fishery
as quickly as possible, because the 2011
primary fishery season opened on April
1, and some vessels were actively
fishing on their cumulative limits. A
previous rule (76 FR 34910, June 15,
2011) corrected the limits for 2011, but
no correction was made for 2012. These
limits were incorrect in the May 11,
2011, final rule, and therefore this rule
corrects these limits for 2012.
The limits proposed in this rule are
consistent with the analysis in the FEIS
on the 2011–2012 Harvest
Specifications and Management
Measures and the intent of the
previously published regulations. The
tier limits corrected through this rule
are the result of a minor calculation
change and do not reflect a policy or
management shift in regards to season
structure, opening or closing dates of
the fishery or any other management
measure.
Comments and Responses
NMFS published an NOA for
Secretarial Amendment 1 on September
9, 2011, (76 FR 55865) and a proposed
rule on September 27, 2011 (76 FR
59634). Both comment periods closed
on November 8, 2011. NMFS received 4
comments on the proposed rule and
FMP amendment. The Department of
the Interior submitted a letter stating
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that they reviewed the FMP amendment
and had no comments, no other
comments were received on the FMP
amendment. The remaining comments
were all on the proposed rule and were
all in response to the proposed
implementation of a geographical split
for lingcod at 42° N. latitude. The
Council submitted a letter stating that
the effects of this change on the trawl
rationalization program would result in
negative consequences (that are
summarized below), and therefore this
regulation change should not be made
for the 2012 fishery but should be
further explored through the 2013–2014
harvest specifications and management
measures process. The two other letters
were submitted by fishing industry
representatives and individual
fishermen. The two letters from the
industry also stated that the full
consequences of this regulation change
had not been fully understood by the
industry during the development of the
trawl rationalization program. Because
the substantive comments were very
similar, the main points are summarized
here.
Comments:
• The location of the 42° N. latitude
line runs directly through fishing
grounds, causing fishermen to use a
greater amount of fuel and removing the
flexibility to avoid adverse weather
since they would be restricted to one
area per trip.
• This change in regulation is
occurring without knowledge of the
fishing fleet and without discussion by
the Council and its advisory bodies.
• Splitting quota share (QS) north and
south of a new line will result in the
same amount of quota being allocated to
each quota share holder; however, the
vessel accumulation limits are not going
to change so quota share holders will
not be able to trade quota north and
south of the line, limiting their
flexibility in how they manage their
Quota Pound (QP).
Response: As noted above, NMFS is
not implementing the lingcod
geographic split, and is referring the
issue back to the Council for further
consideration. The Council has already
added this issue for consideration in the
2013–2014 specifications.
As background, NMFS notes that the
requirement for IFQ species matching
the species groupings and area
subdivisions specified in the ABC tables
was implemented through Amendment
20 to the FMP. Amendment 20 was
implemented through an extensive and
intensive review and regulatory
deeming process. The deeming process,
a requirement of section 303(c) of the
MSA, consisted of a thorough review by
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the Council and its advisory bodies of
the FMP amendment and the
regulations implementing the
amendment. Further, the Executive
Director of the Council submitted a
letter to NMFS stating that the
regulations and FMP amendment were
necessary and appropriate to achieve
the goals of the FMP.
The geographic split for the lingcod
stock was in front of the Council at its
March, April, June, and September 2010
meetings in draft FMP language and
draft regulations under the trawl
rationalization program agenda items. It
was also reviewed by the Council’s
Regulatory Deeming Workgroup at their
February, May, and June 2010 meetings.
This requirement was available for
public comment through the NOA for
Amendment 20 and 21 (75 FR 26702,
May 12, 2010), and two rulemakings (75
FR 32994, June 10, 2010 and 75 FR
53380, August 31, 2010). In addition,
the Council considered the provision to
split lingcod north and south of 42° N.
latitude in the ABC tables at its April
and June 2010 meetings under the
harvest specifications agenda item. The
GMT report at the September 2010
meeting under the trawl rationalization
program agenda item recommended
splitting lingcod north and south of 42°
N. latitude for IFQ management to
reflect action taken in the 2011–2012
harvest specifications.
For these reasons, NMFS disagrees
with the comment that the public was
not aware of the requirement for IFQ
species to reflect the species groupings
and area subdivisions from the harvest
specifications (i.e., ABC tables),
including the requirement for
reallocation of IFQ species when there
is an area subdivision through the
harvest specifications, such as the case
with lingcod being split north and south
of 42° N. latitude in the 2011 and 2012
ABC tables.
However, NMFS agrees that it is
appropriate to remove the proposed
geographical split from the final rule.
Given that this change was not
implemented in 2011 because of the
delay in the specifications and because
the initial issuance process for the trawl
rationalization program was
implemented earlier in the year, we
believe issuing QP and QS in 2012 in
the same way as 2011 will not disrupt
the fishery. Further, given that QS
trading doesn’t start until 2013, NMFS
believes not implementing this change
will allow fishers more flexibility for
2012.
Changes From the Proposed Rule
Because of the issues raised by the
commenters and in consideration of the
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fact that the suggestions for alternative
approaches presented by the
commenters have not been analyzed nor
have they gone through public review or
rule making, NMFS is withdrawing
proposed changes to divide harvest
specifications for lingcod at 42° N.
latitude. This final rule makes no
changes to area-specific management of
lingcod, and lingcod will continue to be
managed as a coastwide stock in 2012
and beyond. Therefore, this final rule
does not revise any of the following
regulations that were included in the
proposed rule: the lingcod allocation for
the Pacific coast treaty Indian fisheries
at § 660.50(f)(3), Subpart C, which was
proposed to apply only for the area
north of 42° N. lat.; the at-sea whiting
fishery annual set-aside for lingcod in
Table 2d to Part 660, Subpart C, which
was proposed to apply the set-aside to
only the whiting fishery north of 42° N.
lat.; the list of IFQ species at
§ 660.140(c)(1), which proposed to split
lingcod from a coastwide IFQ species to
two IFQ species, lingcod north of 42° N.
lat. and lingcod south of 42° N. lat.; the
list of IFQ management areas at
§ 660.140(c)(2), Subpart D, which
proposed to add a new management
area between 42° N. lat. and 40°10′ N.
lat. due to the split of lingcod IFQ at 42°
N. lat.; lingcod accumulation limits for
the shorebased IFQ program at § 660.140
(d)(4)(i)(C), which proposed to split
lingcod from a coastwide accumulation
limit to two area-specific accumulation
limits for lingcod; and lingcod quota
pound vessel limits for the shorebased
IFQ program at § 660.140 (e)(4)(i), which
proposed to split lingcod from a
coastwide quota pound vessel limit to
two area-specific quota pound vessel
limits for lingcod. In addition, the
shorebased trawl allocations at
§ 660.140(d)(1)(ii)(D), Subpart D, no
longer split lingcod at 42° N. lat. and
instead present lingcod in terms of a
coastwide value.
Classification
Pursuant to section 304 (b)(1)(A) of
the Magnuson-Stevens Act, the NMFS
Assistant Administrator has determined
that this final rule is consistent with the
Secretarial Amendment 1, other
provisions of the Magnuson-Stevens
Act, and other applicable law.
This final rule has been determined to
be not significant for purposes of
Executive Order 12866.
NMFS prepared a DEIS and FEIS for
the 2011–2012 groundfish harvest
specifications and management
measures, which this action implements
in part. The DEIS includes a RIR and an
IRFA; the FEIS includes a FRFA. The
Environmental Protection Agency
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published a notice of availability for the
final EIS associated with this action on
March 11, 2011 (76 FR 13401). A record
of decision was signed on April 26,
2011. A copy of the DEIS and/or FEIS
is available online at https://
www.pcouncil.org/.
NMFS also prepared a FRFA for this
action to assess its impact on small
entities. The FRFA incorporates the
initial regulatory flexibility analysis
(IRFA), summarizes the significant
issues raised by the public comments in
response to the IRFA, responds to those
comments, and summarizes of the
analyses completed to support the
action. A copy of the FRFA is available
from NMFS (see ADDRESSES) and a
summary of the FRFA, per the
requirements of 5 U.S.C. 604(a), follows:
On May 11, 2011 NMFS published a
final rule establishing the harvest
specifications and management
measures for most species off the U.S.
West Coast for the years 2011 and 2012.
When a rule impacts small entities, the
Regulatory Flexibility Act requires that
the agency issuing the rule assess that
impact as well as alternatives to the
rule. The FEIS and RIR/IRFA associated
with the May 2011 rule analyze a range
of alternatives that were considered by
the Council and NMFS, including the
effects of setting allowable harvest
levels necessary to rebuild the seven
groundfish species that were previously
declared overfished. An eighth species,
petrale sole, was declared overfished in
2010 and this action includes a new
rebuilding plan for this species along
with the ACLs and management
measures consistent with the adopted
rebuilding plan. Associated rebuilding
analyses for all eight species estimate
the time to rebuild under various levels
of harvest.
NMFS considered various alternatives
to the proposed action including a No
Action alternative. The No Action
alternative would maintain the status
quo in the fishery prior to NMFS’
implementing the emergency rules.
NMFS also considered three other
alternatives that presented ‘‘low,’’
‘‘intermediate,’’ and ‘‘high’’ options for
overfished species ACLs. The Council’s
preferred alternative, Alternative 3, was
also considered. The Council-preferred
alternative was a mixture of ‘‘high’’ and
‘‘intermediate’’ alternatives. From the
Council preferred alternative, NMFS
crafted its preferred alternative by
reducing the ACL values for two
overfished species.
The Council initially considered a
wider range of alternatives, but
ultimately rejected from further analysis
alternatives allowing harvest levels
higher than what is generally consistent
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with current policies for rebuilding
overfished stocks and a ‘‘no fishing’’
scenario (F=0). Section 2.4 of the FEIS
describes six integrated alternatives
including No Action, the Council’s FPA,
NMFS’ preferred alternative, and three
other alternatives (including the
Council’s Preliminary Preferred
Alternative, which is similar to the
Council’s FPA). NMFS finds that the
F=0 and Alternatives 1A, 1B, and 2,
while resulting in shorter rebuilding
times for most of the overfished species,
lead to projected major decreases in
commercial revenues and recreational
activity. Allowing too many
communities to suffer commercial or
recreational losses greater than 10
percent fails to take into account the
needs of fishing communities, as NMFS
is required to do under the MSA.
Alternative 3, the Council FPA, and
NMFS’ preferred alternative all reduce
the impacts to communities to less than
10 percent, but they differ in their
impacts on rebuilding times. Alternative
3 reduces rebuilding times from status
quo for many of the overfished species,
but does not reduce the rebuilding time
for yelloweye rockfish, and results in
only minor reductions for cowcod and
darkblotched and rockfish. The
Council’s FPA improves upon
Alternative 3 by reducing the rebuilding
time for darkblotched rockfish by two
years while maintaining Alternative 3’s
small positive increases in commercial
revenues and recreational activity. The
NMFS preferred alternative improves
over the Council FPA by further
reducing the rebuilding times of cowcod
and yelloweye by three years and ten
years, respectively.
Comparing the action alternatives
with the No Action alternative allows an
evaluation of the economic implications
to groundfish sectors, ports, and fishing
communities. Alternative 2011–2012
groundfish management measures are
designed to provide opportunities to
harvest healthy target species within the
constraints of alternative ACLs for
overfished species.
The integrated alternatives allow
estimation of target species catch under
the suite of ACLs for overfished species,
both to demonstrate if target species
ACLs are projected to be exceeded, and
to estimate related socioeconomic
impacts. The Council reviewed these
analyses and read and heard testimony
from Council advisors, fishing industry
representatives, representatives from
non-governmental organizations, and
the general public before deciding the
Council’s FPA in June 2010. The
Council’s final preferred management
measures are intended to stay within all
the final recommended harvest levels
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for groundfish species decided by the
Council at their April and June 2010
meetings. NMFS reviewed these
analyses, read and heard testimony from
Council advisors, fishing industry
representatives, representatives from
non-governmental organizations, the
general public, and considered legal
obligations to comply with a court order
(NRDC v. Locke) before deciding NMFS’
preferred alternative in February 2011.
The NMFS preferred management
measures are intended to stay within all
the final recommended harvest levels
for groundfish species that were part of
the NMFS preferred alternative.
NMFS’ preferred alternative
represents efforts to address the
directions provided by the Ninth Circuit
Court of Appeals. These directions
emphasize the need to rebuild stocks in
as short a time as possible, while taking
into account: (1) The status and biology
of the stocks; (2) the needs of fishing
communities; and (3) interactions of
depleted stocks within the marine
ecosystem. By taking into account the
‘‘needs of fishing communities,’’ NMFS
simultaneously takes into account the
‘‘needs of small businesses,’’ as fishing
communities rely on small businesses as
a source of economic activity and
income.
After adjusting each alternative to
have the same level of whiting harvest,
there are no differences in ex-vessel
revenue or recreational trip projections
between the Council’s FPA and the
NMFS preferred alternative. For both
2011 and 2012, the combined total
annual ex-vessel revenue associated
with the NMFS preferred alternative,
including at-sea whiting, is expected to
be about $90 million, compared with
the No-Action level of $82 million.
(Note that ex-vessel revenue is just one
indicator of the commercial value of the
fishery. For example, ex-vessel revenues
understate the wholesale, export, and
retail revenues earned from the fishery.
Data on these other indicators is either
incomplete or unavailable.)
This rule will regulate small
businesses that harvest groundfish.
According to the Small Business
Administration, a small commercial fish
harvesting business is one that has
annual receipts under $4 million, and a
small charter boat business is one that
has annual receipts under $7 million.
This rule will affect about 2,600 small
entities, which are generally vessels that
either target groundfish or harvest
groundfish as bycatch and that
participate in the fishery. These vessels
are associated with the limited entry
fixed gear fishery, the open access
fishery, the charter boat fleet, the tribal
fleet or the trawl fleet. To determine the
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Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 239 / Tuesday, December 13, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
number of small entities potentially
affected by this rule, NMFS reviewed
analyses of fish ticket data and limited
entry permit data, available employment
data provided by processors,
information on the charterboat and
Tribal fleets, and industry responses to
a survey on vessel ownership. The IRFA
estimates that implementation of NMFS
preferred alternative will affect about
2,600 small entities. These small entities
are those that are directly regulated by
this rule that is being promulgated to
support implementation of NMFS
preferred alternative. These entities are
associated with those vessels that either
target groundfish or harvest groundfish
as bycatch. Consequently, these are the
vessels, other than catcher-processors,
that participate in the limited entry
portion of the fishery, the open access
fishery, the charter boat fleet, and the
tribal fleets. Catcher/processors also
operate in the Alaska pollock fishery,
and all are associated with larger
companies such as Trident and
American Seafoods. Therefore, it is
assumed that all catcher/processors are
‘‘large’’ entities.
Best estimates of the limited entry
groundfish fleet are taken from the
NMFS Limited Entry Permits Office. As
of June 2010, there are 399 limited entry
permits including 177 endorsed for
trawl (172 trawl only, 4 trawl and
longline, and 1 trawl and trap-pot); 199
endorsed for longline (191 longline
only, 4 longline and trap-pot, and 4
trawl and longline); 32 endorsed for
trap-pot (27 trap-pot only, 4 longline
and trap-pot, and 1 trawl and trap-pot).
Of the longline and trap-pot permits,
164 are sablefish endorsed. Of these
endorsements 130 are ‘‘stacked’’ (e.g.
more than one permit registered to a
single vessel) on 50 vessels. Ten of the
limited entry trawl endorsed permits are
used or owned by catcher/processor
companies associated with the whiting
fishery. The remaining 389 entities are
assumed to be small businesses based
on a review of sector revenues and
average revenues per entity. The open
access or nearshore fleet, depending on
the year and level of participation, is
estimated to be about 1,300 to 1,600
vessels. Again, these are assumed to be
‘‘small entities.’’ The tribal fleet
includes about 53 vessels, and the
charter boat fleet includes 525 vessels
that are also assumed to be ‘‘small
entities.’’
The effect of this rule on small
entities will be increased ex-vessel
revenues. As mentioned above, for both
2011 and 2012, the combined total
annual ex-vessel revenue associated
with the NMFS preferred alternative,
including at-sea whiting, is expected to
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be about $90 million, compared with
the No-Action level of $82 million.
NMFS received 4 letters of comment
on this rule. None of these letters
addressed the IRFA. There are no
additional projected reporting, recordkeeping, and other compliance
requirements of this rule not already
envisioned within the scope of current
requirements. References to collectionsof-information made in this action are
intended to properly cite those
collections in Federal regulations, and
not to alter their effect in any way. No
Federal rules have been identified that
duplicate, overlap, or conflict with this
action.
NMFS issued Biological Opinions
under the Endangered Species Act
(ESA) on August 10, 1990, November
26, 1991, August 28, 1992, September
27, 1993, May 14, 1996, and December
15, 1999 pertaining to the effects of the
Pacific Coast groundfish PCGFMP
fisheries on Chinook salmon (Puget
Sound, Snake River spring/summer,
Snake River fall, upper Columbia River
spring, lower Columbia River, upper
Willamette River, Sacramento River
winter, Central Valley spring, California
coastal), coho salmon (Central California
coastal, southern Oregon/northern
California coastal), chum salmon (Hood
Canal summer, Columbia River),
sockeye salmon (Snake River, Ozette
Lake), and steelhead (upper, middle and
lower Columbia River, Snake River
Basin, upper Willamette River, central
California coast, California Central
Valley, south/central California,
northern California, southern
California). These biological opinions
have concluded that implementation of
the PCGFMP for the Pacific Coast
groundfish fishery is not expected to
jeopardize the continued existence of
any endangered or threatened species
under the jurisdiction of NMFS, or
result in the destruction or adverse
modification of critical habitat.
NMFS issued a Supplemental
Biological Opinion on March 11, 2006
concluding that neither the higher
observed bycatch of Chinook in the
2005 whiting fishery nor new data
regarding salmon bycatch in the
groundfish bottom trawl fishery
required a reconsideration of its prior
‘‘no jeopardy’’ conclusion. NMFS also
reaffirmed its prior determination that
implementation of the Groundfish
PCGFMP is not likely to jeopardize the
continued existence of any of the
affected ESUs. Lower Columbia River
coho (70 FR 37160, June 28, 2005) and
Oregon Coastal coho (73 FR 7816,
February 11, 2008) were recently
relisted as threatened under the ESA.
The 1999 biological opinion concluded
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that the bycatch of salmonids in the
Pacific whiting fishery were almost
entirely Chinook salmon, with little or
no bycatch of coho, chum, sockeye, and
steelhead.
NMFS has reinitiated consultation on
the fishery to address newly listed
species including Pacific eulachon and
green sturgeon, and other non-salmonid
listed species (marine mammals, sea
birds, and turtles). NMFS will be
completing a consultation on listed
marine species specifically for this 2012
action by the end of January 2012, and
expects that consultation on seabirds
will be completed prior to late summer
of 2012. Although not anticipated, in
the event the consultations identify
either reasonable and prudent
alternatives to address jeopardy
concerns or reasonable and prudent
measures to minimize incidental take,
NMFS would exercise necessary
authorities in coordination to the extent
possible with the Pacific Fishery
Management Council to put such
additional alternatives or measures in
place for the 2012 fishery.
After reviewing the available
information, NMFS has concluded that,
consistent with sections 7(a)(2) and 7(d)
of the ESA, this action will not
jeopardize any listed species, would not
adversely modify any designated critical
habitat, and will not result in any
irreversible or irretrievable commitment
of resources that would have the effect
of foreclosing the formulation or
implementation of any reasonable and
prudent alternative measures. Further,
NMFS has concluded that take of any
marine species that will be covered by
the opinion to be issued in early 2012
is very unlikely to occur prior to
completion of that opinion, and that
take of listed seabirds is unlikely to
occur in 2012. NMFS expects to
complete the process leading to any
necessary authorization of incidental
taking of ESA-listed marine mammals
under section 101(a)(5)(E) of the Marine
Mammal Protection Act concurrent with
the 2012 biological opinion.
Pursuant to Executive Order 13175,
this final rule was developed after
meaningful consultation and
collaboration with tribal officials from
the area covered by the PCGFMP. Under
the Magnuson-Stevens Act at 16 U.S.C.
1852(b)(5), one of the voting members of
the Pacific Council is be a representative
of an Indian tribe with federally
recognized fishing rights from the area
of the Council’s jurisdiction. In
addition, regulations implementing the
PCGFMP establish a procedure by
which the tribes with treaty fishing
rights in the area covered by the
PCGFMP request new allocations or
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regulations specific to the tribes, in
writing, before the first of the two
meetings at which the Council considers
groundfish management measures. The
regulations at 50 CFR 660.324(d) further
state ‘‘the Secretary will develop tribal
allocations and regulations under this
paragraph in consultation with the
affected tribe(s) and, insofar as possible,
with tribal consensus.’’
NMFS finds good cause to partially
waive the 30-day delay in effectiveness
pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 553(d)(3), so that
this final rule may become effective on
January 1, 2012, because the delay is
contrary to the public interest. As
discussed above, this rule implements
harvest specifications and management
measures for 2012. The 2012 groundfish
harvest specifications and management
measures are intended to rebuild
overfished stocks as quickly as possible,
taking into account the appropriate
factors, as required by the MSA and are
based on the best available fishery
information, scientific information, and
stock assessments. If this final rule is
not effective by January 1, 2012,
specifications and management
measures for 2012 would not be
consistent with the MSA or based on the
best available information. Further, QP
issuance is based on the year specific
harvest specifications which are
contained in this rule, and must be
distributed to participants in the trawl
fishery prior to the start of the fishing
year, which is January 1, 2012. If the
rule is not effective on January 1, 2012,
fishery participants will be afforded QP
based on the incorrect harvest
specifications. Depending on the species
this would mean QP would be issued
either over or under the correct 2012
specifications. Because NMFS does not
have a mechanism to take QP back if it
was issued over the correct 2012
specifications this could mean QP
issuance would be delayed until the
2012 specifications were in place. This
would cause some fishermen to wait to
fish, resulting in lost profits, yet this
delay will provide no concomitant
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benefit for the harvested species.
Because the 30-day period of delay
before this rule becomes effective will
have negative consequences for the
affected fishery, it is contrary to the
public interest, and NMFS finds good
cause to waive the 30-day delay in
effectiveness pursuant to 5 U.S.C.
553(d)(3), so that this final rule may
become effective January 1, 2012.
List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 660
Fisheries, Fishing, and Indian
Fisheries.
Dated: December 7, 2011.
Eric C. Schwaab,
Assistant Administrator for Fisheries,
National Marine Fisheries Service.
For the reasons set out in the
preamble, 50 CFR part 660 is amended
as follows:
PART 660—FISHERIES OFF WEST
COAST STATES
1. The authority citation for part 660
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq., 16 U.S.C.
773 et seq., and 16 U.S.C. 7001 et seq.
■
2. Revise § 660.40 to read as follows:
§ 660.40
plans.
Overfished species rebuilding
For each overfished groundfish stock
with an approved rebuilding plan, this
section contains the standards to be
used to establish annual or biennial
ACLs, specifically the target date for
rebuilding the stock to its MSY level
and the harvest control rule to be used
to rebuild the stock. The harvest control
rule is expressed as a ‘‘Spawning
Potential Ratio’’ or ‘‘SPR’’ harvest rate.
(a) Bocaccio. Bocaccio south of 40°10′
N. latitude was declared overfished in
1999. The target year for rebuilding the
bocaccio stock south of 40°10′ N.
latitude to BMSY is 2022. The harvest
control rule to be used to rebuild the
southern bocaccio stock is an annual
SPR harvest rate of 77.7 percent.
(b) Canary rockfish. Canary rockfish
was declared overfished in 2000. The
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target year for rebuilding the canary
rockfish stock to BMSY is 2027. The
harvest control rule to be used to
rebuild the canary rockfish stock is an
annual SPR harvest rate of 88.7 percent.
(c) Cowcod. Cowcod was declared
overfished in 2000. The target year for
rebuilding the cowcod stock south of
40°10′ N. latitude to BMSY is 2068. The
harvest control rule to be used to
rebuild the cowcod stock is an annual
SPR harvest rate of 82.7 percent.
(d) Darkblotched rockfish.
Darkblotched rockfish was declared
overfished in 2000. The target year for
rebuilding the darkblotched rockfish
stock to BMSY is 2025. The harvest
control rule to be used to rebuild the
darkblotched rockfish stock is an annual
SPR harvest rate of 64.9 percent.
(e) Pacific Ocean Perch (POP). POP
was declared overfished in 1999. The
target year for rebuilding the POP stock
to BMSY is 2020. The harvest control rule
to be used to rebuild the POP stock is
an annual SPR harvest rate of 86.4
percent.
(f) Petrale Sole. Petrale sole was
declared overfished in 2010. The target
year for rebuilding the petrale sole stock
to BMSY is 2016. The harvest control rule
is the 25–5 default adjustment, which
corresponds to an annual SPR harvest
rate of 32.4 percent in 2012.
(g) Widow rockfish. Widow rockfish
was declared overfished in 2001. The
target year for rebuilding the widow
rockfish stock to BMSY is 2010. The
harvest control rule is a constant catch
of 600 mt, which corresponds to an
annual SPR harvest rate of 91.3 percent
in 2012.
(h) Yelloweye rockfish. Yelloweye
rockfish was declared overfished in
2002. The target year for rebuilding the
yelloweye rockfish stock to BMSY is
2074. The harvest control rule to be
used to rebuild the yelloweye rockfish
stock is an annual SPR harvest rate of
76.0 percent.
■ 3. Tables 2a and 2b, to Part 660,
Subpart C are revised to read as follows:
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Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 239 / Tuesday, December 13, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
BILLING CODE 3510–22–C
§ 660.140
4. In § 660.140 revise paragraph
(d)(1)(ii)(D) to read as follows:
*
■
Shorebased IFQ Program.
*
*
(d) * * *
(1) * * *
*
*
(ii) * * *
(D) For the 2012 trawl fishery, NMFS
will issue QP based on the following
shorebased trawl allocations:
Shorebased trawl
allocation
(mt)
IFQ Species
Management area
Lingcod ...................................................................................
Pacific cod ..............................................................................
Pacific Whiting ........................................................................
Sablefish .................................................................................
Sablefish .................................................................................
Dover sole ..............................................................................
English sole ............................................................................
Petrale sole .............................................................................
Arrowtooth flounder ................................................................
Starry flounder ........................................................................
Other flatfish ...........................................................................
Pacific Ocean perch ...............................................................
Widow rockfish .......................................................................
Canary rockfish .......................................................................
Chilipepper rockfish ................................................................
Bocaccio rockfish ....................................................................
Splitnose rockfish ...................................................................
Yellowtail rockfish ...................................................................
Shortspine thornyhead ...........................................................
Shortspine thornyhead ...........................................................
Longspine thornyhead ............................................................
Cowcod ...................................................................................
Darkblotched rockfish .............................................................
Yelloweye rockfish ..................................................................
Minor shelf rockfish complex ..................................................
Minor shelf rockfish complex ..................................................
Minor slope rockfish complex .................................................
Minor slope rockfish complex .................................................
.................................................................................................
.................................................................................................
.................................................................................................
North lat. of 36° N ..................................................................
South lat. of 36° N ..................................................................
.................................................................................................
.................................................................................................
.................................................................................................
.................................................................................................
.................................................................................................
.................................................................................................
North lat. of 40°10′ N .............................................................
.................................................................................................
.................................................................................................
South lat. of 40°10′ N .............................................................
South lat. of 40°10′ N .............................................................
South lat. of 40°10′ N .............................................................
North lat. of 40°10′ N .............................................................
North lat. of 34°27′ N .............................................................
South lat. of 34°27′ N .............................................................
North lat. of 34°27′ N .............................................................
South lat. of 40°10′ N .............................................................
.................................................................................................
.................................................................................................
North lat. of 40°10′ N .............................................................
South lat. of 40°10′ N .............................................................
North lat. of 40°10′ N .............................................................
South lat. of 40°10′ N .............................................................
*
*
*
*
*
5. In § 660.231 paragraph (b)(3)(i) is
revised to read as follows:
■
§ 660.231 Limited entry fixed gear
sablefish primary fishery.
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*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(3) Cumulative limits. (i) A vessel
participating in the primary season will
be constrained by the sablefish
cumulative limit associated with each of
the permits registered for use with that
vessel. During the primary season, each
vessel authorized to fish in that season
under paragraph (a) of this section may
take, retain, possess, and land sablefish,
up to the cumulative limits for each of
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the permits registered for use with that
vessel (i.e., stacked permits). If multiple
limited entry permits with sablefish
endorsements are registered for use with
a single vessel, that vessel may land up
to the total of all cumulative limits
announced in this paragraph for the
tiers for those permits, except as limited
by paragraph (b)(3)(ii) of this section.
Up to 3 permits may be registered for
use with a single vessel during the
primary season; thus, a single vessel
may not take and retain, possess or land
more than 3 primary season sablefish
cumulative limits in any one year. A
vessel registered for use with multiple
limited entry permits is subject to per
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1810.65
1,135.00
TBD
2,467.00
514.08
22,234.50
9,542.50
1,054.60
9,462.45
671.50
4,197.40
119.50
342.62
26.20
1,331.25
60.00
1,454.45
3,107.36
1,415.45
50.00
1,914.00
1.80
248.94
0.60
522.00
86.00
829.52
377.37
vessel limits for species other than
sablefish, and to per vessel limits when
participating in the daily trip limit
fishery for sablefish under § 660.232,
subpart E. In 2011, the following annual
limits are in effect: Tier 1 at 47,697 lb
(21,635 kg), Tier 2 at 21,680 lb (9,834
kg), and Tier 3 at 12,389 lb (5,620 kg).
For 2012 and beyond, the following
annual limits are in effect: Tier 1 at
46,238 lb (21,017 kg), Tier 2 at 21,017
lb (9553 kg), and Tier 3 at 12,010 lb
(5,459 kg).
*
*
*
*
*
[FR Doc. 2011–31975 Filed 12–12–11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 76, Number 239 (Tuesday, December 13, 2011)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 77415-77430]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2011-31975]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
50 CFR Part 660
[Docket No. 110908575-1687-03]
RIN 0648-BB27
Fisheries Off West Coast States; Pacific Coast Groundfish
Fishery; 2012 Specifications and Management Measures and Secretarial
Amendment 1
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This final rule establishes the 2012 harvest specifications
and management measures for certain groundfish species taken in the
U.S. exclusive economic zone (EEZ) off the coasts of Washington,
Oregon, and California consistent with the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery
Conservation and Management Act and the Pacific Coast Groundfish
Fishery Management Plan (PCGFMP). This action includes regulations to
implement Secretarial Amendment 1 to the PCGFMP. Secretarial Amendment
1 contains the rebuilding plans for overfished species and new
reference points for assessed flatfish species.
DATES: This rule is effective January 1, 2012.
ADDRESSES: Information relevant to this final rule, which includes a
final environmental impact statement (FEIS), a regulatory impact review
(RIR), and a final regulatory flexibility analysis (FRFA) is available
for public review during business hours at the office of the Pacific
Fishery Management Council (Council), at 7700 NE Ambassador Place,
Portland, OR 97220, phone: (503) 820-2280. Copies of additional reports
referred to in this document may also be obtained from the Pacific
Fishery Management Council.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Sarah Williams, phone: (206) 526-4646,
fax: (206) 526-6736, or email: sarah.williams@noaa.gov
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Electronic Access
This rule is accessible via the Internet at the Office of the
Federal Register Web site at https://www.access.gpo.gov/su_docs/aces/aces140.html. Background information and documents are available at the
NMFS Northwest Region Web site at https://www.nwr.noaa.gov/Groundfish-Halibut/Groundfish-Fishery-Management/index.cfm and at the Council's
Web site at https://www.pcouncil.org.
Summary of Provisions in This Final Rule
NMFS published a proposed rule on September 27, 2011 (76 FR 59634)
and a Notice of Availability of Secretarial Amendment 1 to the Pacific
Coast Groundfish Fishery Management Plan (PCGFMP) on September 9, 2011
(76 FR 55865). The comment periods on both the proposed rule and FMP
amendment closed on November 8, 2011. NMFS has approved Secretarial
Amendment 1. This final rule implements the provisions from the
September 27, 2011, proposed rule, except for the proposed regulatory
change to add a geographical split for lingcod at 42[deg] N. latitude.
As a consequence, this final rule makes no changes to area-specific
management of lingcod, and lingcod continue to be managed as a
coastwide stock in 2012.
A discussion of the comments and NMFS's responses can be found in
the Changes from the Proposed Rule and Comments and Responses section
of this final rule. See the preamble to the proposed rule for
additional background information on the fishery and on this final
rule. The specifics associated with the development and decision making
processes for the rebuilding plans in
[[Page 77416]]
Secretarial Amendment 1 can be found in the proposed rule (75 FR 67810,
November 3, 2010) and final rule (75 FR 27508, May 11, 2011) for the
2011-2012 harvest specifications and management measures.
Background
Every other year, the Council recommends biennial harvest levels
for Pacific Coast groundfish, and management measures for commercial
and recreational fisheries that are designed to achieve those harvest
levels. For the 2011-2012 biennium, the Council recommended Amendment
16-5 to the PCGFMP and proposed specifications and management measures.
Amendment 16-5 included one new and seven revised rebuilding plans, and
new reference points for assessed flatfish species. A Draft
Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS) was published in August 2010 that
analyzed the effects of Amendment 16-5 and the 2011-2012 groundfish
harvest specifications and management measures. NMFS reviewed the DEIS
and the comments and concluded that the analysis did not clearly
explain the alternatives in such a way that NMFS could choose among
them. Therefore, NMFS disapproved the Amendment on December 27, 2010. A
Final Environmental Impact Statement (FEIS), which analyzed the effects
of Amendment 16-5 and the 2011-2012 groundfish harvest specifications
and management measures, was drafted by NMFS and a Record of Decision
was signed on April 26, 2011.
Because management measures were needed for the 2011 fishery, NMFS
published a final rule (75 FR 27508, May 11, 2011) establishing harvest
specifications and management measures for most species. Pursuant to
NFMS' emergency authority under section 305(c) of the Magnuson-Stevens
Fishery Conservation and Management Act (MSA), 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.,
NMFS implemented the specifications based on a slightly modified
version of Amendment 16-5. Accordingly, the provisions can be effective
for a maximum of 366 days. For more detail, see the ``Comments and
Responses'' section of the May 11, 2011, final rule. (76 FR 27509). The
provisions implemented pursuant to emergency authority for 2011
included the rebuilding plans and corresponding harvest levels, new
proxy reference points for assessed flatfish species, and the
Overfishing Limits (OFLs), Acceptable Biological Catches (ABCs), and
Annual Catch Limits (ACLs) for assessed flatfish based on the new
reference points.
Regulations Implemented Through Secretarial Authority and Secretarial
FMP Amendment 1
Under MSA section 304(a) (16 U.S.C. 1854(c)), when the Secretary of
Commerce (the Secretary) disapproves of a Council's FMP amendment, the
Council may resubmit a revised amendment. If the Council does not
submit a revised amendment, the Secretary, acting through NMFS, is
authorized to prepare an amendment, 16 U.S.C. 1854(c)(1).
Because NMFS disapproved the Council's FMP amendment, the issue was
brought before the Council for reconsideration and further action. In
June 2011, the Council decided not to resubmit a revised amendment.
NMFS therefore drafted Secretarial Amendment 1 to the FMP pursuant to
section 304(c) of the MSA. The notice of availability for the amendment
published on September 9, 2011 (75 FR 55865) and the comment period
closed on November 8, 2011.
Secretarial Amendment 1 is a revised version of Amendment 16-5. It
contains rebuilding plans that differ from those in the Council's
Amendment 16-5 for three species. As with rebuilding plans approved and
implemented for 2011, NMFS has determined that these plans are
consistent with the statutory provisions of section 304(e) of the MSA.
While a Secretarial Amendment is rare, the substance of this Amendment
is routine and it implements provisions through notice and comment
rulemaking that were previously created by emergency action. As stated
above, this final rule updates the regulations at 50 CFR part 660 to
establish new and revised rebuilding plans, establish the 2012 harvest
specifications consistent with those rebuilding plans and new flatfish
proxies, and calculate the resulting shorebased trawl allocations.
Secretarial Amendment 1 also makes some non-substantive structural
changes to the PCGFMP by moving the descriptions of rebuilding plans
and associated text to an appendix. These changes make it possible to
update the rebuilding plans in the appendix without requiring an FMP
amendment. The FMP still requires these changes to undergo notice and
comment rule making. Moving the rebuilding plans helps ensure that they
are easily accessible to the Council, agency, and members of the
public. Currently, the PCGFMP allows the updating of rebuilding
parameters, such as the target year to rebuild, through regulatory
amendments rather than FMP amendments. However, the exact provisions of
the rebuilding plans are frequently difficult to locate because they
are imbedded in the rule's text and in the main body of the FMP. By
moving text to an appendix, Secretarial Amendment 1 does not change any
substantive rebuilding policies or procedures described in the PCGFMP.
Rather, it enhances the public's access to current rebuilding plans; if
a rebuilding parameter or other element of a rebuilding plan changes
through the biennial harvest specifications and management process, the
appendix would be updated after the final rule is in place without a
separate FMP amendment.
Regulations Implemented Through Routine Rulemaking
In addition to the regulations implementing Secretarial Amendment
1, this final rule includes one regulatory change. This rule corrects
the 2012 limited entry fixed gear sablefish tier limits. On May 18,
2011, NMFS was notified by the Executive Director of the Council that
there was a mistake in the calculation of the 2011 and 2012 sablefish
cumulative limits during the development of the 2011-2012 biennial
specifications and management measures. The Executive Director
requested that NMFS correct the sablefish cumulative limits for the
limited entry fixed gear primary fishery as quickly as possible,
because the 2011 primary fishery season opened on April 1, and some
vessels were actively fishing on their cumulative limits. A previous
rule (76 FR 34910, June 15, 2011) corrected the limits for 2011, but no
correction was made for 2012. These limits were incorrect in the May
11, 2011, final rule, and therefore this rule corrects these limits for
2012.
The limits proposed in this rule are consistent with the analysis
in the FEIS on the 2011-2012 Harvest Specifications and Management
Measures and the intent of the previously published regulations. The
tier limits corrected through this rule are the result of a minor
calculation change and do not reflect a policy or management shift in
regards to season structure, opening or closing dates of the fishery or
any other management measure.
Comments and Responses
NMFS published an NOA for Secretarial Amendment 1 on September 9,
2011, (76 FR 55865) and a proposed rule on September 27, 2011 (76 FR
59634). Both comment periods closed on November 8, 2011. NMFS received
4 comments on the proposed rule and FMP amendment. The Department of
the Interior submitted a letter stating
[[Page 77417]]
that they reviewed the FMP amendment and had no comments, no other
comments were received on the FMP amendment. The remaining comments
were all on the proposed rule and were all in response to the proposed
implementation of a geographical split for lingcod at 42[deg] N.
latitude. The Council submitted a letter stating that the effects of
this change on the trawl rationalization program would result in
negative consequences (that are summarized below), and therefore this
regulation change should not be made for the 2012 fishery but should be
further explored through the 2013-2014 harvest specifications and
management measures process. The two other letters were submitted by
fishing industry representatives and individual fishermen. The two
letters from the industry also stated that the full consequences of
this regulation change had not been fully understood by the industry
during the development of the trawl rationalization program. Because
the substantive comments were very similar, the main points are
summarized here.
Comments:
The location of the 42[deg] N. latitude line runs directly
through fishing grounds, causing fishermen to use a greater amount of
fuel and removing the flexibility to avoid adverse weather since they
would be restricted to one area per trip.
This change in regulation is occurring without knowledge
of the fishing fleet and without discussion by the Council and its
advisory bodies.
Splitting quota share (QS) north and south of a new line
will result in the same amount of quota being allocated to each quota
share holder; however, the vessel accumulation limits are not going to
change so quota share holders will not be able to trade quota north and
south of the line, limiting their flexibility in how they manage their
Quota Pound (QP).
Response: As noted above, NMFS is not implementing the lingcod
geographic split, and is referring the issue back to the Council for
further consideration. The Council has already added this issue for
consideration in the 2013-2014 specifications.
As background, NMFS notes that the requirement for IFQ species
matching the species groupings and area subdivisions specified in the
ABC tables was implemented through Amendment 20 to the FMP. Amendment
20 was implemented through an extensive and intensive review and
regulatory deeming process. The deeming process, a requirement of
section 303(c) of the MSA, consisted of a thorough review by the
Council and its advisory bodies of the FMP amendment and the
regulations implementing the amendment. Further, the Executive Director
of the Council submitted a letter to NMFS stating that the regulations
and FMP amendment were necessary and appropriate to achieve the goals
of the FMP.
The geographic split for the lingcod stock was in front of the
Council at its March, April, June, and September 2010 meetings in draft
FMP language and draft regulations under the trawl rationalization
program agenda items. It was also reviewed by the Council's Regulatory
Deeming Workgroup at their February, May, and June 2010 meetings. This
requirement was available for public comment through the NOA for
Amendment 20 and 21 (75 FR 26702, May 12, 2010), and two rulemakings
(75 FR 32994, June 10, 2010 and 75 FR 53380, August 31, 2010). In
addition, the Council considered the provision to split lingcod north
and south of 42[deg] N. latitude in the ABC tables at its April and
June 2010 meetings under the harvest specifications agenda item. The
GMT report at the September 2010 meeting under the trawl
rationalization program agenda item recommended splitting lingcod north
and south of 42[deg] N. latitude for IFQ management to reflect action
taken in the 2011-2012 harvest specifications.
For these reasons, NMFS disagrees with the comment that the public
was not aware of the requirement for IFQ species to reflect the species
groupings and area subdivisions from the harvest specifications (i.e.,
ABC tables), including the requirement for reallocation of IFQ species
when there is an area subdivision through the harvest specifications,
such as the case with lingcod being split north and south of 42[deg] N.
latitude in the 2011 and 2012 ABC tables.
However, NMFS agrees that it is appropriate to remove the proposed
geographical split from the final rule. Given that this change was not
implemented in 2011 because of the delay in the specifications and
because the initial issuance process for the trawl rationalization
program was implemented earlier in the year, we believe issuing QP and
QS in 2012 in the same way as 2011 will not disrupt the fishery.
Further, given that QS trading doesn't start until 2013, NMFS believes
not implementing this change will allow fishers more flexibility for
2012.
Changes From the Proposed Rule
Because of the issues raised by the commenters and in consideration
of the fact that the suggestions for alternative approaches presented
by the commenters have not been analyzed nor have they gone through
public review or rule making, NMFS is withdrawing proposed changes to
divide harvest specifications for lingcod at 42[deg] N. latitude. This
final rule makes no changes to area-specific management of lingcod, and
lingcod will continue to be managed as a coastwide stock in 2012 and
beyond. Therefore, this final rule does not revise any of the following
regulations that were included in the proposed rule: the lingcod
allocation for the Pacific coast treaty Indian fisheries at Sec.
660.50(f)(3), Subpart C, which was proposed to apply only for the area
north of 42[deg] N. lat.; the at-sea whiting fishery annual set-aside
for lingcod in Table 2d to Part 660, Subpart C, which was proposed to
apply the set-aside to only the whiting fishery north of 42[deg] N.
lat.; the list of IFQ species at Sec. 660.140(c)(1), which proposed to
split lingcod from a coastwide IFQ species to two IFQ species, lingcod
north of 42[deg] N. lat. and lingcod south of 42[deg] N. lat.; the list
of IFQ management areas at Sec. 660.140(c)(2), Subpart D, which
proposed to add a new management area between 42[deg] N. lat. and
40[deg]10' N. lat. due to the split of lingcod IFQ at 42[deg] N. lat.;
lingcod accumulation limits for the shorebased IFQ program at Sec.
660.140 (d)(4)(i)(C), which proposed to split lingcod from a coastwide
accumulation limit to two area-specific accumulation limits for
lingcod; and lingcod quota pound vessel limits for the shorebased IFQ
program at Sec. 660.140 (e)(4)(i), which proposed to split lingcod
from a coastwide quota pound vessel limit to two area-specific quota
pound vessel limits for lingcod. In addition, the shorebased trawl
allocations at Sec. 660.140(d)(1)(ii)(D), Subpart D, no longer split
lingcod at 42[deg] N. lat. and instead present lingcod in terms of a
coastwide value.
Classification
Pursuant to section 304 (b)(1)(A) of the Magnuson-Stevens Act, the
NMFS Assistant Administrator has determined that this final rule is
consistent with the Secretarial Amendment 1, other provisions of the
Magnuson-Stevens Act, and other applicable law.
This final rule has been determined to be not significant for
purposes of Executive Order 12866.
NMFS prepared a DEIS and FEIS for the 2011-2012 groundfish harvest
specifications and management measures, which this action implements in
part. The DEIS includes a RIR and an IRFA; the FEIS includes a FRFA.
The Environmental Protection Agency
[[Page 77418]]
published a notice of availability for the final EIS associated with
this action on March 11, 2011 (76 FR 13401). A record of decision was
signed on April 26, 2011. A copy of the DEIS and/or FEIS is available
online at https://www.pcouncil.org/.
NMFS also prepared a FRFA for this action to assess its impact on
small entities. The FRFA incorporates the initial regulatory
flexibility analysis (IRFA), summarizes the significant issues raised
by the public comments in response to the IRFA, responds to those
comments, and summarizes of the analyses completed to support the
action. A copy of the FRFA is available from NMFS (see ADDRESSES) and a
summary of the FRFA, per the requirements of 5 U.S.C. 604(a), follows:
On May 11, 2011 NMFS published a final rule establishing the
harvest specifications and management measures for most species off the
U.S. West Coast for the years 2011 and 2012. When a rule impacts small
entities, the Regulatory Flexibility Act requires that the agency
issuing the rule assess that impact as well as alternatives to the
rule. The FEIS and RIR/IRFA associated with the May 2011 rule analyze a
range of alternatives that were considered by the Council and NMFS,
including the effects of setting allowable harvest levels necessary to
rebuild the seven groundfish species that were previously declared
overfished. An eighth species, petrale sole, was declared overfished in
2010 and this action includes a new rebuilding plan for this species
along with the ACLs and management measures consistent with the adopted
rebuilding plan. Associated rebuilding analyses for all eight species
estimate the time to rebuild under various levels of harvest.
NMFS considered various alternatives to the proposed action
including a No Action alternative. The No Action alternative would
maintain the status quo in the fishery prior to NMFS' implementing the
emergency rules. NMFS also considered three other alternatives that
presented ``low,'' ``intermediate,'' and ``high'' options for
overfished species ACLs. The Council's preferred alternative,
Alternative 3, was also considered. The Council-preferred alternative
was a mixture of ``high'' and ``intermediate'' alternatives. From the
Council preferred alternative, NMFS crafted its preferred alternative
by reducing the ACL values for two overfished species.
The Council initially considered a wider range of alternatives, but
ultimately rejected from further analysis alternatives allowing harvest
levels higher than what is generally consistent with current policies
for rebuilding overfished stocks and a ``no fishing'' scenario (F=0).
Section 2.4 of the FEIS describes six integrated alternatives including
No Action, the Council's FPA, NMFS' preferred alternative, and three
other alternatives (including the Council's Preliminary Preferred
Alternative, which is similar to the Council's FPA). NMFS finds that
the F=0 and Alternatives 1A, 1B, and 2, while resulting in shorter
rebuilding times for most of the overfished species, lead to projected
major decreases in commercial revenues and recreational activity.
Allowing too many communities to suffer commercial or recreational
losses greater than 10 percent fails to take into account the needs of
fishing communities, as NMFS is required to do under the MSA.
Alternative 3, the Council FPA, and NMFS' preferred alternative all
reduce the impacts to communities to less than 10 percent, but they
differ in their impacts on rebuilding times. Alternative 3 reduces
rebuilding times from status quo for many of the overfished species,
but does not reduce the rebuilding time for yelloweye rockfish, and
results in only minor reductions for cowcod and darkblotched and
rockfish. The Council's FPA improves upon Alternative 3 by reducing the
rebuilding time for darkblotched rockfish by two years while
maintaining Alternative 3's small positive increases in commercial
revenues and recreational activity. The NMFS preferred alternative
improves over the Council FPA by further reducing the rebuilding times
of cowcod and yelloweye by three years and ten years, respectively.
Comparing the action alternatives with the No Action alternative
allows an evaluation of the economic implications to groundfish
sectors, ports, and fishing communities. Alternative 2011-2012
groundfish management measures are designed to provide opportunities to
harvest healthy target species within the constraints of alternative
ACLs for overfished species.
The integrated alternatives allow estimation of target species
catch under the suite of ACLs for overfished species, both to
demonstrate if target species ACLs are projected to be exceeded, and to
estimate related socioeconomic impacts. The Council reviewed these
analyses and read and heard testimony from Council advisors, fishing
industry representatives, representatives from non-governmental
organizations, and the general public before deciding the Council's FPA
in June 2010. The Council's final preferred management measures are
intended to stay within all the final recommended harvest levels for
groundfish species decided by the Council at their April and June 2010
meetings. NMFS reviewed these analyses, read and heard testimony from
Council advisors, fishing industry representatives, representatives
from non-governmental organizations, the general public, and considered
legal obligations to comply with a court order (NRDC v. Locke) before
deciding NMFS' preferred alternative in February 2011. The NMFS
preferred management measures are intended to stay within all the final
recommended harvest levels for groundfish species that were part of the
NMFS preferred alternative.
NMFS' preferred alternative represents efforts to address the
directions provided by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals. These
directions emphasize the need to rebuild stocks in as short a time as
possible, while taking into account: (1) The status and biology of the
stocks; (2) the needs of fishing communities; and (3) interactions of
depleted stocks within the marine ecosystem. By taking into account the
``needs of fishing communities,'' NMFS simultaneously takes into
account the ``needs of small businesses,'' as fishing communities rely
on small businesses as a source of economic activity and income.
After adjusting each alternative to have the same level of whiting
harvest, there are no differences in ex-vessel revenue or recreational
trip projections between the Council's FPA and the NMFS preferred
alternative. For both 2011 and 2012, the combined total annual ex-
vessel revenue associated with the NMFS preferred alternative,
including at-sea whiting, is expected to be about $90 million, compared
with the No-Action level of $82 million. (Note that ex-vessel revenue
is just one indicator of the commercial value of the fishery. For
example, ex-vessel revenues understate the wholesale, export, and
retail revenues earned from the fishery. Data on these other indicators
is either incomplete or unavailable.)
This rule will regulate small businesses that harvest groundfish.
According to the Small Business Administration, a small commercial fish
harvesting business is one that has annual receipts under $4 million,
and a small charter boat business is one that has annual receipts under
$7 million. This rule will affect about 2,600 small entities, which are
generally vessels that either target groundfish or harvest groundfish
as bycatch and that participate in the fishery. These vessels are
associated with the limited entry fixed gear fishery, the open access
fishery, the charter boat fleet, the tribal fleet or the trawl fleet.
To determine the
[[Page 77419]]
number of small entities potentially affected by this rule, NMFS
reviewed analyses of fish ticket data and limited entry permit data,
available employment data provided by processors, information on the
charterboat and Tribal fleets, and industry responses to a survey on
vessel ownership. The IRFA estimates that implementation of NMFS
preferred alternative will affect about 2,600 small entities. These
small entities are those that are directly regulated by this rule that
is being promulgated to support implementation of NMFS preferred
alternative. These entities are associated with those vessels that
either target groundfish or harvest groundfish as bycatch.
Consequently, these are the vessels, other than catcher-processors,
that participate in the limited entry portion of the fishery, the open
access fishery, the charter boat fleet, and the tribal fleets. Catcher/
processors also operate in the Alaska pollock fishery, and all are
associated with larger companies such as Trident and American Seafoods.
Therefore, it is assumed that all catcher/processors are ``large''
entities.
Best estimates of the limited entry groundfish fleet are taken from
the NMFS Limited Entry Permits Office. As of June 2010, there are 399
limited entry permits including 177 endorsed for trawl (172 trawl only,
4 trawl and longline, and 1 trawl and trap-pot); 199 endorsed for
longline (191 longline only, 4 longline and trap-pot, and 4 trawl and
longline); 32 endorsed for trap-pot (27 trap-pot only, 4 longline and
trap-pot, and 1 trawl and trap-pot). Of the longline and trap-pot
permits, 164 are sablefish endorsed. Of these endorsements 130 are
``stacked'' (e.g. more than one permit registered to a single vessel)
on 50 vessels. Ten of the limited entry trawl endorsed permits are used
or owned by catcher/processor companies associated with the whiting
fishery. The remaining 389 entities are assumed to be small businesses
based on a review of sector revenues and average revenues per entity.
The open access or nearshore fleet, depending on the year and level of
participation, is estimated to be about 1,300 to 1,600 vessels. Again,
these are assumed to be ``small entities.'' The tribal fleet includes
about 53 vessels, and the charter boat fleet includes 525 vessels that
are also assumed to be ``small entities.''
The effect of this rule on small entities will be increased ex-
vessel revenues. As mentioned above, for both 2011 and 2012, the
combined total annual ex-vessel revenue associated with the NMFS
preferred alternative, including at-sea whiting, is expected to be
about $90 million, compared with the No-Action level of $82 million.
NMFS received 4 letters of comment on this rule. None of these
letters addressed the IRFA. There are no additional projected
reporting, record-keeping, and other compliance requirements of this
rule not already envisioned within the scope of current requirements.
References to collections-of-information made in this action are
intended to properly cite those collections in Federal regulations, and
not to alter their effect in any way. No Federal rules have been
identified that duplicate, overlap, or conflict with this action.
NMFS issued Biological Opinions under the Endangered Species Act
(ESA) on August 10, 1990, November 26, 1991, August 28, 1992, September
27, 1993, May 14, 1996, and December 15, 1999 pertaining to the effects
of the Pacific Coast groundfish PCGFMP fisheries on Chinook salmon
(Puget Sound, Snake River spring/summer, Snake River fall, upper
Columbia River spring, lower Columbia River, upper Willamette River,
Sacramento River winter, Central Valley spring, California coastal),
coho salmon (Central California coastal, southern Oregon/northern
California coastal), chum salmon (Hood Canal summer, Columbia River),
sockeye salmon (Snake River, Ozette Lake), and steelhead (upper, middle
and lower Columbia River, Snake River Basin, upper Willamette River,
central California coast, California Central Valley, south/central
California, northern California, southern California). These biological
opinions have concluded that implementation of the PCGFMP for the
Pacific Coast groundfish fishery is not expected to jeopardize the
continued existence of any endangered or threatened species under the
jurisdiction of NMFS, or result in the destruction or adverse
modification of critical habitat.
NMFS issued a Supplemental Biological Opinion on March 11, 2006
concluding that neither the higher observed bycatch of Chinook in the
2005 whiting fishery nor new data regarding salmon bycatch in the
groundfish bottom trawl fishery required a reconsideration of its prior
``no jeopardy'' conclusion. NMFS also reaffirmed its prior
determination that implementation of the Groundfish PCGFMP is not
likely to jeopardize the continued existence of any of the affected
ESUs. Lower Columbia River coho (70 FR 37160, June 28, 2005) and Oregon
Coastal coho (73 FR 7816, February 11, 2008) were recently relisted as
threatened under the ESA. The 1999 biological opinion concluded that
the bycatch of salmonids in the Pacific whiting fishery were almost
entirely Chinook salmon, with little or no bycatch of coho, chum,
sockeye, and steelhead.
NMFS has reinitiated consultation on the fishery to address newly
listed species including Pacific eulachon and green sturgeon, and other
non-salmonid listed species (marine mammals, sea birds, and turtles).
NMFS will be completing a consultation on listed marine species
specifically for this 2012 action by the end of January 2012, and
expects that consultation on seabirds will be completed prior to late
summer of 2012. Although not anticipated, in the event the
consultations identify either reasonable and prudent alternatives to
address jeopardy concerns or reasonable and prudent measures to
minimize incidental take, NMFS would exercise necessary authorities in
coordination to the extent possible with the Pacific Fishery Management
Council to put such additional alternatives or measures in place for
the 2012 fishery.
After reviewing the available information, NMFS has concluded that,
consistent with sections 7(a)(2) and 7(d) of the ESA, this action will
not jeopardize any listed species, would not adversely modify any
designated critical habitat, and will not result in any irreversible or
irretrievable commitment of resources that would have the effect of
foreclosing the formulation or implementation of any reasonable and
prudent alternative measures. Further, NMFS has concluded that take of
any marine species that will be covered by the opinion to be issued in
early 2012 is very unlikely to occur prior to completion of that
opinion, and that take of listed seabirds is unlikely to occur in 2012.
NMFS expects to complete the process leading to any necessary
authorization of incidental taking of ESA-listed marine mammals under
section 101(a)(5)(E) of the Marine Mammal Protection Act concurrent
with the 2012 biological opinion.
Pursuant to Executive Order 13175, this final rule was developed
after meaningful consultation and collaboration with tribal officials
from the area covered by the PCGFMP. Under the Magnuson-Stevens Act at
16 U.S.C. 1852(b)(5), one of the voting members of the Pacific Council
is be a representative of an Indian tribe with federally recognized
fishing rights from the area of the Council's jurisdiction. In
addition, regulations implementing the PCGFMP establish a procedure by
which the tribes with treaty fishing rights in the area covered by the
PCGFMP request new allocations or
[[Page 77420]]
regulations specific to the tribes, in writing, before the first of the
two meetings at which the Council considers groundfish management
measures. The regulations at 50 CFR 660.324(d) further state ``the
Secretary will develop tribal allocations and regulations under this
paragraph in consultation with the affected tribe(s) and, insofar as
possible, with tribal consensus.''
NMFS finds good cause to partially waive the 30-day delay in
effectiveness pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 553(d)(3), so that this final rule
may become effective on January 1, 2012, because the delay is contrary
to the public interest. As discussed above, this rule implements
harvest specifications and management measures for 2012. The 2012
groundfish harvest specifications and management measures are intended
to rebuild overfished stocks as quickly as possible, taking into
account the appropriate factors, as required by the MSA and are based
on the best available fishery information, scientific information, and
stock assessments. If this final rule is not effective by January 1,
2012, specifications and management measures for 2012 would not be
consistent with the MSA or based on the best available information.
Further, QP issuance is based on the year specific harvest
specifications which are contained in this rule, and must be
distributed to participants in the trawl fishery prior to the start of
the fishing year, which is January 1, 2012. If the rule is not
effective on January 1, 2012, fishery participants will be afforded QP
based on the incorrect harvest specifications. Depending on the species
this would mean QP would be issued either over or under the correct
2012 specifications. Because NMFS does not have a mechanism to take QP
back if it was issued over the correct 2012 specifications this could
mean QP issuance would be delayed until the 2012 specifications were in
place. This would cause some fishermen to wait to fish, resulting in
lost profits, yet this delay will provide no concomitant benefit for
the harvested species. Because the 30-day period of delay before this
rule becomes effective will have negative consequences for the affected
fishery, it is contrary to the public interest, and NMFS finds good
cause to waive the 30-day delay in effectiveness pursuant to 5 U.S.C.
553(d)(3), so that this final rule may become effective January 1,
2012.
List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 660
Fisheries, Fishing, and Indian Fisheries.
Dated: December 7, 2011.
Eric C. Schwaab,
Assistant Administrator for Fisheries, National Marine Fisheries
Service.
For the reasons set out in the preamble, 50 CFR part 660 is amended
as follows:
PART 660--FISHERIES OFF WEST COAST STATES
0
1. The authority citation for part 660 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq., 16 U.S.C. 773 et seq., and 16
U.S.C. 7001 et seq.
0
2. Revise Sec. 660.40 to read as follows:
Sec. 660.40 Overfished species rebuilding plans.
For each overfished groundfish stock with an approved rebuilding
plan, this section contains the standards to be used to establish
annual or biennial ACLs, specifically the target date for rebuilding
the stock to its MSY level and the harvest control rule to be used to
rebuild the stock. The harvest control rule is expressed as a
``Spawning Potential Ratio'' or ``SPR'' harvest rate.
(a) Bocaccio. Bocaccio south of 40[deg]10' N. latitude was declared
overfished in 1999. The target year for rebuilding the bocaccio stock
south of 40[deg]10' N. latitude to BMSY is 2022. The harvest
control rule to be used to rebuild the southern bocaccio stock is an
annual SPR harvest rate of 77.7 percent.
(b) Canary rockfish. Canary rockfish was declared overfished in
2000. The target year for rebuilding the canary rockfish stock to
BMSY is 2027. The harvest control rule to be used to rebuild
the canary rockfish stock is an annual SPR harvest rate of 88.7
percent.
(c) Cowcod. Cowcod was declared overfished in 2000. The target year
for rebuilding the cowcod stock south of 40[deg]10' N. latitude to
BMSY is 2068. The harvest control rule to be used to rebuild
the cowcod stock is an annual SPR harvest rate of 82.7 percent.
(d) Darkblotched rockfish. Darkblotched rockfish was declared
overfished in 2000. The target year for rebuilding the darkblotched
rockfish stock to BMSY is 2025. The harvest control rule to
be used to rebuild the darkblotched rockfish stock is an annual SPR
harvest rate of 64.9 percent.
(e) Pacific Ocean Perch (POP). POP was declared overfished in 1999.
The target year for rebuilding the POP stock to BMSY is
2020. The harvest control rule to be used to rebuild the POP stock is
an annual SPR harvest rate of 86.4 percent.
(f) Petrale Sole. Petrale sole was declared overfished in 2010. The
target year for rebuilding the petrale sole stock to BMSY is
2016. The harvest control rule is the 25-5 default adjustment, which
corresponds to an annual SPR harvest rate of 32.4 percent in 2012.
(g) Widow rockfish. Widow rockfish was declared overfished in 2001.
The target year for rebuilding the widow rockfish stock to
BMSY is 2010. The harvest control rule is a constant catch
of 600 mt, which corresponds to an annual SPR harvest rate of 91.3
percent in 2012.
(h) Yelloweye rockfish. Yelloweye rockfish was declared overfished
in 2002. The target year for rebuilding the yelloweye rockfish stock to
BMSY is 2074. The harvest control rule to be used to rebuild
the yelloweye rockfish stock is an annual SPR harvest rate of 76.0
percent.
0
3. Tables 2a and 2b, to Part 660, Subpart C are revised to read as
follows:
BILLING CODE 3510-22-P
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BILLING CODE 3510-22-C
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4. In Sec. 660.140 revise paragraph (d)(1)(ii)(D) to read as follows:
Sec. 660.140 Shorebased IFQ Program.
* * * * *
(d) * * *
(1) * * *
(ii) * * *
(D) For the 2012 trawl fishery, NMFS will issue QP based on the
following shorebased trawl allocations:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Shorebased trawl
IFQ Species Management area allocation (mt)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Lingcod......................... .................. 1810.65
Pacific cod..................... .................. 1,135.00
Pacific Whiting................. .................. TBD
Sablefish....................... North lat. of 2,467.00
36[deg] N.
Sablefish....................... South lat. of 514.08
36[deg] N.
Dover sole...................... .................. 22,234.50
English sole.................... .................. 9,542.50
Petrale sole.................... .................. 1,054.60
Arrowtooth flounder............. .................. 9,462.45
Starry flounder................. .................. 671.50
Other flatfish.................. .................. 4,197.40
Pacific Ocean perch............. North lat. of 119.50
40[deg]10' N.
Widow rockfish.................. .................. 342.62
Canary rockfish................. .................. 26.20
Chilipepper rockfish............ South lat. of 1,331.25
40[deg]10' N.
Bocaccio rockfish............... South lat. of 60.00
40[deg]10' N.
Splitnose rockfish.............. South lat. of 1,454.45
40[deg]10' N.
Yellowtail rockfish............. North lat. of 3,107.36
40[deg]10' N.
Shortspine thornyhead........... North lat. of 1,415.45
34[deg]27' N.
Shortspine thornyhead........... South lat. of 50.00
34[deg]27' N.
Longspine thornyhead............ North lat. of 1,914.00
34[deg]27' N.
Cowcod.......................... South lat. of 1.80
40[deg]10' N.
Darkblotched rockfish........... .................. 248.94
Yelloweye rockfish.............. .................. 0.60
Minor shelf rockfish complex.... North lat. of 522.00
40[deg]10' N.
Minor shelf rockfish complex.... South lat. of 86.00
40[deg]10' N.
Minor slope rockfish complex.... North lat. of 829.52
40[deg]10' N.
Minor slope rockfish complex.... South lat. of 377.37
40[deg]10' N.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * *
0
5. In Sec. 660.231 paragraph (b)(3)(i) is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 660.231 Limited entry fixed gear sablefish primary fishery.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(3) Cumulative limits. (i) A vessel participating in the primary
season will be constrained by the sablefish cumulative limit associated
with each of the permits registered for use with that vessel. During
the primary season, each vessel authorized to fish in that season under
paragraph (a) of this section may take, retain, possess, and land
sablefish, up to the cumulative limits for each of the permits
registered for use with that vessel (i.e., stacked permits). If
multiple limited entry permits with sablefish endorsements are
registered for use with a single vessel, that vessel may land up to the
total of all cumulative limits announced in this paragraph for the
tiers for those permits, except as limited by paragraph (b)(3)(ii) of
this section. Up to 3 permits may be registered for use with a single
vessel during the primary season; thus, a single vessel may not take
and retain, possess or land more than 3 primary season sablefish
cumulative limits in any one year. A vessel registered for use with
multiple limited entry permits is subject to per vessel limits for
species other than sablefish, and to per vessel limits when
participating in the daily trip limit fishery for sablefish under Sec.
660.232, subpart E. In 2011, the following annual limits are in effect:
Tier 1 at 47,697 lb (21,635 kg), Tier 2 at 21,680 lb (9,834 kg), and
Tier 3 at 12,389 lb (5,620 kg). For 2012 and beyond, the following
annual limits are in effect: Tier 1 at 46,238 lb (21,017 kg), Tier 2 at
21,017 lb (9553 kg), and Tier 3 at 12,010 lb (5,459 kg).
* * * * *
[FR Doc. 2011-31975 Filed 12-12-11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-22-P