Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic Zone Off Alaska; Individual Fishing Quota Program, 9995-10011 [2014-03910]
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Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 36 / Monday, February 24, 2014 / Rules and Regulations
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Aviation Administration
14 CFR Part 71
Docket No. FAA–2013–0017; Airspace
Docket No. 13–AAL–1 Establishment of
Class E Airspace; Central, AK
Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA), DOT.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
This action establishes Class
E airspace at Central Airport, Central,
AK. Controlled airspace is necessary to
accommodate the new Area Navigation
(RNAV) Global Positioning System
(GPS) standard instrument approach
procedures at the airport. This action
enhances the safety and management of
aircraft operations at the airport.
DATES: Effective date, 0901 UTC, May
29, 2014. The Director of the Federal
Register approves this incorporation by
reference action under 1 CFR Part 51,
subject to the annual revision of FAA
Order 7400.9 and publication of
conforming amendments.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Richard Roberts, Federal Aviation
Administration, Operations Support
Group, Western Service Center, 1601
Lind Avenue SW., Renton, WA 98057;
telephone (425) 203–4517.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
History
On October 31, 2013, the FAA
published in the Federal Register a
notice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM)
to establish controlled airspace at
Central Airport, Central, AK (78 FR
65237). Interested parties were invited
to participate in this rulemaking effort
by submitting written comments on the
proposal to the FAA. No comments
were received.
Class E airspace designations are
published in paragraph 6005, of FAA
Order 7400.9X dated August 7, 2013,
and effective September 15, 2013, which
is incorporated by reference in 14 CFR
71.1. The Class E airspace designations
listed in this document will be
published subsequently in that Order.
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The Rule
This action amends Title 14 Code of
Federal Regulations (14 CFR) Part 71 by
establishing Class E airspace at Central,
AK. Class E airspace extending upward
from 700 feet above the surface, at
Central Airport, is established within an
area 17 miles east and west of the
airport and 4 miles north and 9 miles
south of the airport to accommodate
new RNAV (GPS) standard instrument
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approach and departure procedures.
This action enhances the safety and
management of aircraft operations at the
airport.
The FAA has determined this
regulation only involves an established
body of technical regulations for which
frequent and routine amendments are
necessary to keep them operationally
current. Therefore, this regulation: (1) Is
not a ‘‘significant regulatory action’’
under Executive Order 12866; (2) is not
a ‘‘significant rule’’ under DOT
Regulatory Policies and Procedures (44
FR 11034; February 26, 1979); and (3)
does not warrant preparation of a
regulatory evaluation as the anticipated
impact is so minimal. Since this is a
routine matter that only affects air traffic
procedures and air navigation, it is
certified this rule, when promulgated,
does not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities under the criteria of the
Regulatory Flexibility Act. The FAA’s
authority to issue rules regarding
aviation safety is found in Title 49 of the
U.S. Code. Subtitle 1, Section 106
discusses the authority of the FAA
Administrator. Subtitle VII, Aviation
Programs, describes in more detail the
scope of the agency’s authority. This
rulemaking is promulgated under the
authority described in Subtitle VII, Part
A, Subpart I, Section 40103. Under that
section, the FAA is charged with
prescribing regulations to assign the use
of airspace necessary to ensure the
safety of aircraft and the efficient use of
airspace. This regulation is within the
scope of that authority as it establishes
controlled airspace at Central Airport,
Central, AK.
Environmental Review
The FAA has determined that this
action qualifies for categorical exclusion
under the National Environmental
Policy Act in accordance with FAA
Order 1050.1E, ‘‘Environmental
Impacts: Policies and Procedures,’’
paragraph 311a. This airspace action is
not expected to cause any potentially
significant environmental impacts, and
no extraordinary circumstances exist to
warrant preparation of an
environmental assessment.
List of Subjects in 14 CFR Part 71
Airspace, Incorporation by reference,
Navigation (air).
Adoption of the Amendment
In consideration of the foregoing, the
FAA amends 14 CFR Part 71 as follows:
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9995
PART 71—DESIGNATION OF CLASS A,
B, C, D AND E AIRSPACE AREAS; AIR
TRAFFIC SERVICE ROUTES; AND
REPORTING POINTS
1. The authority citation for 14 CFR
part 71 continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 106(g), 40103, 40113,
40120; E.O. 10854, 24 FR 9565, 3 CFR, 1959–
1963 Comp., p. 389.
§ 71.1
[Amended]
2. The incorporation by reference in
14 CFR 71.1 of the FAA Order 7400.9X,
Airspace Designations and Reporting
Points, dated August 7, 2013, and
effective September 15, 2013 is
amended as follows:
■
Paragraph 6005 Class E Airspace Areas
Extending Upward From 700 Feet or More
Above the Surface of the Earth
*
*
*
*
*
AAL AK E5 Central, AK [New]
Central Airport, AK
(Lat. 65°34′26″ N., long. 144°46′51″ W.)
That airspace extending upward from 700
feet above the surface bounded by a line
beginning at lat. 65°44′11″ N., long.
145°29′55″ W.; to lat. 65°34′00″ N., long.
144°04′28″ W.; to lat. 65°22′44″ N., long.
144°10′35″ W.; to lat. 65°26′43″ N., long.
145°19′38″ W.; thence to the point of origin.
Issued in Seattle, Washington, on February
11, 2014.
Clark Desing,
Manager, Operations Support Group, Western
Service Center.
[FR Doc. 2014–03739 Filed 2–21–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–13–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
15 CFR Part 902
50 CFR Part 679
[Docket No. 120416009–4095–02]
RIN 0648–BB78
Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic
Zone Off Alaska; Individual Fishing
Quota Program
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
NMFS adopts a final rule that
modifies the vessel ownership
requirement for an exemption from the
owner-on-board requirement in the
Individual Fishing Quota (IFQ) Program
SUMMARY:
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Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 36 / Monday, February 24, 2014 / Rules and Regulations
for the fixed-gear commercial Pacific
halibut and sablefish fisheries off
Alaska. This rule imposes a 12-month
vessel ownership requirement on initial
individual recipients of quota share
(QS) who wish an exemption from the
owner-on-board requirement and who
wish to use a hired master to harvest
their IFQ. For the 12-month period prior
to applying to use a hired master, an
individual QS holder must own a
minimum 20-percent interest in the
vessel that the hired master will use to
fish the IFQ on behalf of the individual
QS holder. The rule temporarily
suspends the 12-month vessel
ownership requirement for an initial
individual recipient of QS whose vessel
has been totally lost, irreparably
damaged, or so damaged that the vessel
requires at least 60 days for repairs. This
action is intended to maintain a
predominantly owner-operated fishery
in the Pacific halibut and sablefish
fisheries. This action is intended to
promote the goals and objectives of the
Magnuson-Stevens Fishery
Conservation and Management Act, the
Northern Pacific Halibut Act of 1982,
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
other applicable laws. This rule will go
into effect 13 months after the
publication of the rule in the Federal
Register.
DATES: Effective March 23, 2015, except
for § 679.5(l)(7)(i), which will be
effective on March 26, 2014.
ADDRESSES: An electronic copy of the
Regulatory Impact Review/Initial
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (RIR/
IRFA or Analysis) prepared for this
action may be obtained from https://
www.regulations.gov or from the Alaska
Region Web site at https://
alaskafisheries.noaa.gov/cm/analyses/.
An electronic copy of the RIR/IRFA
dated November 9, 2005, prepared for
the prior action on the same subject is
also at https://alaskafisheries.noaa.gov/
cm/analyses/. An electronic copy of the
Proposed Rule (77 FR 65843, October
31, 2012) may be obtained from https://
www.regulations.gov or from the Alaska
Region Web site at https://
alaskafisheries.noaa.gov/regs/
summary.htm.
Written comments regarding the
burden-hour estimates or other aspects
of the collection of information
requirements contained in this final rule
may be submitted by mail to NMFS,
Alaska Region, P.O. Box 21668, Juneau,
AK 99802–1668, Attn: Ellen Sebastian,
Records Officer; in person at NMFS,
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Alaska Region, 709 West 9th Street,
Room 420A, Juneau, AK; or by email to
OIRA_submission@omb.eop.gov or fax
to (202) 395–7285.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Mary Alice McKeen, 907–586–7228.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This rule
amends the vessel ownership
requirement for initial individual
recipients of QS in the IFQ Program
who wish to hire a master to harvest
their IFQ rather than be on board the
vessel themselves for the harvest of their
IFQ. IFQ Program regulations are
located primarily at 50 CFR 679.40 to
679.45. This rule also modifies
regulations at § 679.5 that specify
reporting requirements for Registered
Buyers who receive and purchase
landings of halibut and sablefish. This
modification corrects an unintended
error in a final rule recently
promulgated by NMFS.
Under the current regulations of the
IFQ Program, initial recipients of
catcher vessel QS may receive an
exemption from the owner-on-board
provision, and may hire a master to
harvest their annual IFQ, if those initial
recipients own a minimum 20-percent
interest in the vessel that the hired
master will use (§ 679.42(i)(1)). This rule
adds a 12-month vessel ownership
requirement for initial individual
recipients of catcher vessel QS. This
rule provides that for the 12-month
period prior to applying to use a hired
master, an individual QS holder must
own a minimum 20-percent interest in
the vessel that the hired master will use
to harvest the IFQ. This rule temporarily
suspends the 12-month vessel
ownership requirement for an
individual QS holder who loses a
vessel. This rule does not apply to
individual QS holders in Southeast
Alaska (halibut QS for IFQ regulatory
Area 2C and sablefish QS for the IFQ
regulatory area east of 140° long.)
because they may not hire a master to
harvest their IFQ.
NMFS published a proposed rule with
the 12-month vessel ownership
provision in the Federal Register on
October 31, 2012 (77 FR 65843). The 30day comment period on the proposed
rule ended on November 30, 2012.
NMFS received six comment letters by
November 30, 2012, and one comment
letter on December 5, 2012. NMFS
considered these 7 comment letters,
which contained 22 unique comments.
These comments are summarized and
responded to in the ‘‘Comments and
Responses’’ section of this preamble. In
response to public comments on the
proposed rule and further review by
NMFS, NMFS changed the regulatory
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text between the proposed rule and this
final rule. These changes are described
in the ‘‘Changes From the Proposed
Rule’’ section of this preamble.
Background
The International Pacific Halibut
Commission (IPHC) and NMFS manage
fishing for Pacific halibut through
regulations established under the
authority of the Northern Pacific Halibut
Act of 1982 (Halibut Act). The IPHC
promulgates regulations governing the
halibut fishery under the Convention
between the United States and Canada
for the Preservation of the Halibut
Fishery of the Northern Pacific Ocean
and Bering Sea. The IPHC regulations
are subject to approval by the Secretary
of State with concurrence of the
Secretary of Commerce.
Under the Halibut Act, the North
Pacific Fishery Management Council
(Council) may recommend that the
Secretary of Commerce adopt additional
management regulations for the halibut
fishery in Alaska waters that are not in
conflict with regulations adopted by the
IPHC (16 U.S.C. 773c(c)). The Council
exercised this authority through
development of the IFQ Program and
continues to exercise this authority
when it recommends changes to the IFQ
Program.
NMFS manages sablefish as a
groundfish species under the Fishery
Management Plan for Groundfish of the
Gulf of Alaska (GOA groundfish FMP)
and the Fishery Management Plan for
Groundfish of the Bering Sea and
Aleutian Islands Management Area
(BSAI groundfish FMP). The fishery
management plans are prepared by the
Council under the Magnuson-Stevens
Act (16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.) and are
implemented by regulations at 50 CFR
part 679. After consulting with the
Council, NMFS establishes an annual
total allowable catch (TAC) for each
groundfish species, including sablefish,
in the Gulf of Alaska and BSAI. NMFS
establishes TACs and other groundfish
harvest specifications 2 years in
advance. For an example, see the
Groundfish Harvest Specifications for
2013 and 2014 for BSAI (78 FR 13813,
March 1, 2013).
Individual Fishing Quota (IFQ) Program
In 1995, NMFS implemented the IFQ
Program under the authority of the
Magnuson-Stevens Act and the Halibut
Act (58 FR 59375, November 9, 1993).
The IFQ Program applies to the fixedgear commercial halibut and sablefish
fisheries in the Exclusive Economic
Zone off Alaska. Under the IFQ
Program, NMFS initially awarded quota
share (QS) to applicants that owned or
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leased vessels from which halibut or
sablefish landings occurred in 1988 to
1990 (50 CFR 679.40). A person that
received QS as an initial recipient was
either an (1) individual or natural
person or (2) a non-individual entity or
legal person, such as a corporation,
partnership, or association.
NMFS initially issued QS in Category
A, B, C, and D. Once issued, the
category of QS limits how the QS holder
can use the QS. Category A QS is
catcher/processor QS. Category A QS
authorizes the QS holder to harvest and
process the pounds specified on the IFQ
permit from a vessel of any length.
Category A QS has no owner-on-board
requirement. Category B, C, and D QS is
catcher vessel QS. Category B, C, and D
QS authorizes the QS holder to catch or
harvest the pounds specified on the QS
holder’s IFQ permit from vessels within
specific categories of vessel length (see
§ 679.42(a)(5) for additional detail). This
rule applies only to catcher vessel QS:
Category B, C, and D QS. When this
preamble refers to QS, it means catcher
vessel QS—Category B, C and, D QS—
unless otherwise indicated.
Each year, in accordance with the
Halibut Act and the Magnuson-Stevens
Act, NMFS establishes a halibut catch
limit and sablefish TAC. NMFS divides
among QS holders the portion of the
halibut catch limit and sablefish TAC
that is allocated to the fixed gear fishery
(§ 679.40). NMFS translates each QS
holder’s units into a number of halibut
or sablefish pounds that the QS holder
may harvest. This number of pounds is
the Individual Fishing Quota or IFQ
belonging to the QS holder. With a few
exceptions not relevant to this rule,
NMFS sends every QS holder an annual
IFQ permit. The IFQ permit authorizes
the IFQ permit holder to harvest a
specified number of halibut or sablefish
pounds in a particular year. The IFQ
may only be harvested in the regulatory
area designated on the IFQ permit. If the
IFQ permit is for a catcher vessel, the
IFQ permit specifies the maximum
length of the catcher vessel from which
the IFQ may be fished.
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Owner-on-Board Requirement in the
IFQ Program
The owner-on-board requirement is a
central feature of the IFQ Program. The
IFQ regulations require individuals who
hold catcher vessel QS to be on board
the vessel at all times during an IFQ
fishing trip and to be present during the
landing at the end of the trip
(§ 679.42(c)). The purpose of the owneron-board requirement is to maintain the
predominantly owner-operator character
of the IFQ fisheries and to ensure that
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catcher vessel QS remains largely in the
hands of active fishermen.
In designing the IFQ Program,
however, the Council exempted initial
individual recipients of catcher vessel
QS from the owner-on-board
requirement, as long as the initial
individual recipients owned the vessels
from which their IFQ was fished
(§ 679.42(i)). The exemption from the
owner-on-board requirement did not,
however, apply to individuals who
received QS for Southeast Alaska:
halibut QS for IFQ regulatory Area 2C
and sablefish QS for the IFQ regulatory
area east of 140° long. (§ 679.42(i)(3)).
The Council also exempted nonindividual entities that were initial
recipients of QS from the owner-onboard requirement, as long as they
owned the vessel from which the IFQ
was fished (§ 679.42(j)). Unlike
individuals, non-individual entities do
not have the option of being ‘‘on the
boat’’ while their IFQ is fished. That is
because non-individual entities are legal
entities only. A corporation cannot get
on a vessel. If non-individual entities
are to harvest their IFQ at all, they must
use a hired master or hired skipper.
Thus, non-individual entities must own
the vessel that the hired master will use
simply as a condition of being able to
harvest their QS and associated IFQ at
all.
For all initial recipients of QS—
individuals and non-individuals—the
Council recommended, and NMFS
adopted, a regulation in 1999 that
specified a minimum percentage of
ownership that an initial recipient must
have to show that they ‘‘owned’’ a
vessel that a hired master will use (64
FR 24960, May 10, 1999). Under current
regulations, an initial recipient must
own a minimum 20-percent ownership
interest in the vessel that a hired master
will use on behalf of an initial recipient.
But current regulations do not specify a
duration—for how long—an initial
recipient must have that 20-percent
vessel ownership interest.
Acquiring QS by Transfer in the IFQ
Program
The IFQ Program has two ways to
acquire QS: (1) By initial issuance and
(2) by transfer. Only initial recipients of
QS are exempt from the owner-on-board
requirement by owning the vessel that
their hired master will use. Under
current regulation, an initial recipient
may be exempt from the owner-onboard requirement for all QS that an
initial recipient holds: Whether the
initial recipient acquired the QS by
initial issuance or by transfer. NMFS
has proposed a regulation that would
prevent an initial recipient from using a
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hired master to harvest QS that an
initial recipient acquired by transfer
after February 12, 2010, with a limited
exception for small amounts of QS (78
FR 24707, April 26, 2013). The IFQ
Program restricts who may acquire QS
by transfer. If an individual wishes to
acquire QS by transfer, the individual
must be an initial recipient of QS or an
individual who has 150 days experience
in a harvesting crew in a commercial
fishery in the United States (§ 679.2,
§ 679.42(g)).
Except for Community Quota Entities,
which are discussed in Comment 10, if
a non-individual entity, such as a
corporation or a partnership, wishes to
acquire QS by transfer, the nonindividual entity must have been an
initial recipient of QS. Furthermore, if a
non-individual entity undergoes a
change, and a change includes the
addition of any shareholder to a
cooperation or any partner to a
partnership, the non-individual entity
cannot acquire additional QS by transfer
and loses the ability to use a hired
master for all of its QS (§ 679.42(j)). The
result of the restrictions in current
regulations is that new entrants into the
IFQ fisheries—persons who did not
receive QS at the inception of the IFQ
Program—must be individuals with
substantial crew experience in a
domestic commercial fishery.
By limiting the exemption from the
owner-on-board requirement to initial
recipients and by requiring that new QS
holders have crew experience, the
Council anticipated that all QS would
eventually be held by active fishermen
who would be subject to the owner-onboard requirement. The Council
anticipated that initial recipients who
were individuals would retire from the
fishery and transfer their QS. The
Council took this action because it
concluded that initial individual
recipients of QS were hiring masters
instead of retiring from the fishery.
Rationale for This Final Rule
This rule results from a long-standing
commitment by the Council to enforce
a feature of the IFQ Program that has
been present since the beginning of the
IFQ Program, namely that if an
individual QS holder wishes an
exemption from the owner-on-board
requirement, the QS holder must have
an ownership interest in the vessel that
the hired master will use. The Council
concluded that the current IFQ
regulations did not prevent initial
individual recipients of QS from
circumventing the intention of the
vessel ownership requirement and from
hiring masters to harvest their IFQ from
vessels in which individual QS holders
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had an ownership interest only for the
duration of an IFQ trip.
This rule specifies the duration of
vessel ownership interest that an
individual QS holder must have if the
QS holder wishes an exemption from
the owner-on-board requirement. An
initial individual recipient of QS must
own a minimum 20-percent ownership
interest in the vessel that the hired
master will use to fish the IFQ for the
12-month period prior to when the
individual QS holder applies to use a
hired master. If an individual QS holder
experiences a vessel loss, this rule
suspends the 12-month vessel
ownership requirement until December
31 of the year following the vessel loss.
This rule suspends the vessel ownership
requirement in three situations of vessel
loss: A total, physical loss of a vessel;
a vessel that has been irreparably
damaged; and a temporary loss or
temporary disablement of a vessel,
meaning an accident that materially and
adversely affects the vessel’s
seaworthiness or fitness for service and
requires at least 60 days of repairs.
The preamble to the proposed rule
contains further explanation of the need
for this action, previous actions on the
same subject, and the rationale for this
rule (77 FR 65843, October 31, 2012).
NMFS’ responses to comments also
provide additional detail on this action.
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Terminology
This preamble refers to ‘‘the
individual QS holder’’ as the individual
who is subject to the owner-on-board
requirement and who may be exempt
from the owner-on-board requirement
by owning the vessel that the hired
master will use. To apply for a hired
master permit, the QS holder must have
received an IFQ permit. However, this
preamble generally uses the term
individual QS holder rather than
individual IFQ permit holder.
This preamble uses the terms ‘‘hired
skipper’’ and ‘‘hired master’’
interchangeably as is common practice
by participants in the IFQ fishery. The
Analysis for this action uses the term
‘‘hired skipper.’’ The proposed rule and
final rule text use the term ‘‘hired
master.’’ A hired skipper or hired master
is the person who is named on a hired
master permit. The hired master permit
enables the hired master to harvest the
halibut or sablefish on the IFQ permit
that NMFS has issued to the QS holder.
The QS holder applies for the hired
master permit, designates the individual
who will be the hired master, and
designates the vessel that the hired
master will use.
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This preamble uses the term ‘‘vessel
loss’’ to refer to the three types of vessel
loss described in the preceding section.
Changes From the Proposed Rule
This section explains the 16 changes
in the regulatory text from the proposed
rule to the final rule. Changes 14 and 15
were made in response to public
comments. The other changes make
minor clarifications in the text of the
final rule and correct an unintended
error in a final rule recently
promulgated by NMFS. This section
also clarifies a statement in the
preamble to the proposed rule regarding
the submission of United States Coast
Guard Form 2692 to report a marine
casualty.
The changes from the proposed rule
text in the final rule text are as follows.
1. The final rule clarifies the role of
additional written documentation in
§ 679.42(i)(1)(i) and (ii). The final rule
clarifies that if an individual QS holder
wishes an exemption from the owneron-board requirement, the formal
ownership documents for the vessel that
the hired master will use must list the
individual QS holder as an owner of the
vessel. If these formal documents do not
show the individual QS holder as
owning the required 20-percent
ownership for 12 months, the individual
QS holder may prove that fact with
additional written documentation. The
proposed rule at § 679.42(i)(1)(i) stated
that for a documented vessel, the
individual QS holder must have
‘‘continuously owned a minimum 20percent interest in the vessel for the
previous 12 months as shown by the
U.S. Abstract of Title issued by the U.S.
Coast Guard, and any other
documentation that shows the
individual as an owner indicating
percentage ownership.’’ The proposed
rule at § 679.42(i)(1)(ii) stated that for an
undocumented vessel, which means a
vessel that is not federally documented,
the individual QS holder must have
‘‘continuously owned a minimum 20percent interest in the vessel for the
previous 12 months as shown by a State
of Alaska license or registration, and
any other documentation that shows the
individual as an owner indicating
percentage of ownership.’’ This
language does not clearly state what
must be on the Abstract of Title or State
license and what may be on other
written documentation.
The preamble to the proposed rule
clearly stated that the individual QS
holder must be an owner on the
documents of record showing vessel
ownership—the Abstract of Title for
federally documented vessels and the
State license for State-documented
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vessels—and that the individual QS
holder could submit additional written
documentation only if those documents
did not show the required 20-percent
ownership interest for the 12-month
ownership period: ‘‘If the U.S. Abstract
of Title or State of Alaska documents do
not prove the required percentage
interest and duration, the QS holder
would be required to submit additional
written documentation to NMFS
establishing the required percentage of
ownership interest and duration’’ (77 FR
65847, October 31, 2012).
Accordingly, NMFS clarifies the final
rule in § 679.42(i)(1)(i) and (ii) and
conforms it to the preamble to the
proposed rule and the current
regulation. The final rule provides that
an individual QS holder may claim an
exemption from the owner-on-board
requirement if the individual QS holder
is an owner of a documented vessel ‘‘as
shown by the U.S. Abstract of Title
issued by the U.S. Coast Guard that lists
the individual [QS holder] as an owner
and, if necessary to show 20-percent
ownership for 12 months, additional
written documentation.’’ With a nondocumented vessel, an individual QS
holder may claim an exemption from
the owner-on-board requirement if the
individual QS holder is an owner of the
vessel ‘‘as shown by a State of Alaska
license or registration that lists the
individual [QS holder] as an owner and,
if necessary to show 20-percent
ownership for 12 months, additional
written documentation.’’
2. The final rule revises the proposed
regulatory text at § 679.42(i)(1)(i),
§ 679.42(i)(1)(ii), and § 679.42(i)(1)(v) by
replacing ‘‘for the previous 12 months’’
with ‘‘during the 12-month period
previous to the application by the
individual [QS holder] for a hired
master permit.’’ This change more
precisely defines the 12-month period.
3. The final rule revises proposed
regulatory text at § 679.42(i)(1)(iv)(B) by
replacing the phrase ‘‘individual entity’’
with ‘‘individual’’ because ‘‘individual
entity’’ is not a recognized term and is
a confusing term.
4. The final rule clarifies that the 12month vessel ownership requirement
applies to all individual QS holders
who seek exemption from the owner-onboard requirement based on ownership
of a vessel from which their IFQ will be
fished. Under current regulation,
§ 679.42(i)(1) establishes the general
requirement that an individual QS
holder can be exempt from the owneron-board requirement by owning 20
percent of the vessel that the hired
master will use. Under current
regulation, § 679.42(i)(4) states that the
exemption in § 679.42(i)(1) is available
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to an individual that meets the 20percent vessel ownership requirement
by owning an interest in the nonindividual entity, such as a corporation,
that owns the vessel that the hired
master will use. For example, under
§ 679.42(i)(4), if a corporation is the sole
owner of a vessel, and an individual QS
holder owns 20 percent of the
corporation (typically by owning 20
percent of the shares in a corporation),
the individual QS holder meets the 20percent vessel ownership requirement
and may hire a master to fish IFQ from
that vessel.
The proposed rule modified the 20percent vessel ownership requirement
in § 679.42(i)(1) by adding a time
requirement to it: The individual QS
holder is exempt from the owner-onboard requirement if the individual
owns 20 percent of the vessel for the 12month period prior to when the
individual applies for a hired master
permit. The proposed rule did not
explicitly modify § 679.42(i)(4) to apply
the 12-month vessel ownership
requirement when an individual QS
holder claims an exemption from the
owner-on-board requirement by owning
an interest in the entity that owns the
vessel.
The final rule corrects that omission
and revises § 679.42(i)(4). The final rule
revises § 679.42(i)(4) by applying the 12month ownership requirement to
individual QS holders who claim an
exemption from the owner-on-board
requirement by owning an interest in
the corporation or other entity that owns
the vessel. Under the final rule, those
QS holders must show a 20-percent
ownership interest in the vessel ‘‘during
the 12-month period previous to the
application by the individual for a hired
master permit.’’ Every part of the
rationale in the proposed rule applies
with equal force to individual QS
holders who claim an exemption from
the owner-on-board requirement by
owning 20 percent of a vessel in their
own name and individual QS holders
who claim an exemption by owning an
interest in the corporation or
partnership that owns the vessel.
5. The final rule changes § 679.42(i)(4)
to clarify the provision. The last
sentence in § 679.42(i)(4) currently
states, ‘‘For purposes of this paragraph,
interest in a vessel is determined as the
percentage ownership of a corporation,
partnership, association or other nonindividual entity by that individual
multiplied by the percentage of
ownership of the vessel by the
corporation, partnership, or other nonindividual entity.’’ The final rule revises
this sentence in § 679.42(i)(4) to more
clearly state whose interest in the vessel
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must be determined, namely the interest
of the individual QS holder, and how to
calculate that interest, ‘‘For purposes of
this paragraph, an individual’s interest
in a vessel is determined by the
percentage ownership by the individual
of a corporation, partnership,
association or other non-individual
entity that has an ownership interest in
the vessel multiplied by the percentage
of ownership of the vessel by the
corporation, partnership, or other nonindividual entity.’’ For example, under
the existing regulation and this final
rule, if an individual owns 50 percent
of a corporation, and the corporation
has a 50 percent ownership interest in
the vessel, the individual’s ownership
interest in the vessel is .50 multiplied
by .50, which means the individual has
a .25 or 25 percent ownership interest
in the vessel.
6. The final rule clarifies the proposed
rule at § 679.42(i)(6) and (7) to state that,
in the event of vessel loss and vessel
disablement, the QS holder does not
have to meet the 12-month vessel
ownership requirement but still must
meet the 20-percent vessel ownership
interest requirement.
The Council clearly stated its intent
on this point at its October and
November 2007 meetings. The Council
motions at both meetings explicitly state
that, in the event of a total vessel loss
or a vessel needing significant repairs,
the QS holder is exempt from the 12month vessel ownership requirement,
but not the 20-percent vessel ownership
requirement (Council Minutes, NPFMC
Web site, https://
www.alaskafisheries.noaa.gov/npfmc).
The Analysis states that, in the event of
total vessel loss or temporary vessel loss
due to repairs, the QS holder would be
exempt from the 12-month vessel
ownership requirement, but not the 20percent requirement. The proposed rule
explicitly stated in the preamble: ‘‘The
exemption for loss of or damage to a
vessel applies to the 12-month
ownership requirement only, and not
the 20-percent ownership requirement.
If a QS holder’s vessel is damaged and
undergoing repairs that will take at least
60 days, the QS holder may acquire
temporary interest in another vessel in
order to hire a master, but that
temporary interest must constitute a
minimum of 20-percent ownership of
the vessel.’’ (77 FR 65847, October 31,
2012).
The text of the proposed rule stated
that in the event of total loss or
temporary disablement of a vessel, the
owner of the vessel ‘‘may remain
exempt’’ from the owner-on-board
requirement but did not specify
completely the terms of the QS holder’s
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continuing exemption. The Council
motions, the Analysis, and the preamble
to the proposed rule all clearly state
that, in the event that the individual QS
holder suffers a total or temporary loss
of a vessel, the QS holder’s exemption
from the owner-on-board requirement is
still conditioned on the QS holder
owning a 20-percent interest in the
vessel that will fish the QS holder’s IFQ.
The final rule corrects the proposed rule
on this point.
7. The final rule revises the proposed
regulatory text at § 679.42(i)(6) and
§ 679.42(i)(7) by replacing ‘‘owner,’’
‘‘owner of such vessel,’’ and ‘‘owner of
lost vessel’’ with ‘‘individual.’’ NMFS
makes this change because the rule
applies to individuals who are initial
recipients of QS and because the
existing regulatory text uses
‘‘individual.’’
8. The final rule reorganizes the
proposed regulatory text in § 679.4(i)(6)
and (i)(7) by adding the phrase
‘‘provided the individual meets the
following requirements,’’ and then
numbering all the requirements that the
individual QS holder must meet,
because the proposed rule included
only two of four requirements in the
numbered list.
9. The final rule revises the opening
phrase in the proposed regulatory text at
§ 679.42(i)(6) from ‘‘[i]n the event of the
total loss of a vessel’’ to ‘‘[i]n the event
of the total loss or irreparable damage to
a vessel,’’ because the rule applies to
situations of a total loss of a vessel and
irreparable damage to a vessel. For the
same reason, the final rule makes a
similar change later in § 679.42(i)(6),
namely from ‘‘[t]he lost vessel must be’’
in 679.42(i)(6)(i) to ‘‘[t]he lost vessel or
irreparably damaged vessel is’’ in
§ 679.42(i)(6)(ii).
10. The final rule revises the first
sentence of § 679.42(i)(6) and (i)(7) by
substituting the phrase ‘‘the year
following the year in which’’ for the
phrase ‘‘the year following the year that
which’’ so that the final rule text states,
‘‘the individual may remain exempt
[from the owner-on-board requirement]
under paragraph (i)(1) of this section
until December 31 of the year following
the year in which the vessel was [lost,
damaged, or disabled].’’ This change
eliminates the grammatically incorrect
phrase ‘‘the year that which’’ and makes
clear the ending date of the exemption.
11. The final rule revises the proposed
regulatory text in § 679.42(i)(6) and (i)(7)
from that the lost or disabled vessel
must have been used to harvest halibut
IFQ or sablefish IFQ ‘‘by the owner’’ to
that the vessel must have been used to
harvest halibut IFQ or sablefish IFQ ‘‘of
the individual.’’ NMFS makes this
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change because the lost or disabled
vessel must have harvested IFQ
belonging to the individual QS holder
but the IFQ did not have to be harvested
by the individual QS holder.
12. The final rule changes the
references in the proposed regulatory
text at § 679.42(i)(7) from ‘‘damaged’’
vessel to ‘‘disabled’’ vessel to
distinguish the disabled vessel in
§ 679.42(i)(7) from the irreparably
damaged vessel in § 679.42(i)(6).
13. The final rule revises the proposed
regulatory text in § 679.42(i)(7) from the
requirement that ‘‘necessary repairs
require at least 60 days to be
completed’’ to the more precise
requirement that ‘‘[t]he repairs from the
accident require at least 60 days to be
completed.’’
14. The final rule eliminates the
phrase ‘‘or negligence’’ from the
proposed rule at § 679.42(i)(6). The
proposed rule at § 679.42(i)(6)
temporarily suspended the 12-month
vessel ownership requirement for a QS
holder who suffered a total loss of a
vessel as long as the QS holder showed
that the total loss was caused by ‘‘an act
of God, an act of war, a collision, an act
or omission of a party other than the
owner or agent of the vessel, or any
other event not caused by the willful
misconduct or negligence of the owner
or agent.’’
The ‘‘or negligence’’ phrase was the
subject of a public comment noted in
Comment 11. The commenter noted that
the proposed rule limited the ability of
a QS holder to use a hired master on a
replacement vessel if the QS holder lost
their prior vessel due to an act of
negligence by the vessel owner or the
vessel owner’s agent. The commenter
identified vessel groundings as an event
that could cause a vessel loss. The
commenter stated that most vessel
groundings are the result of some level
of negligence, that a common cause for
grounding is that a skipper or a crew
member falls asleep during wheel
watches and that it would be difficult
for NMFS to determine negligence.
NMFS agrees with the comment.
NMFS concludes that the proposed rule
mistakenly required NMFS to determine
if a QS holder lost a vessel due to
negligence and to deny suspension of
the 12-month vessel ownership
requirement on that basis. Except for the
negligence language, the proposed rule
incorporated the standard in the
American Fisheries Act (AFA) for
determining the cause of a total vessel
loss and for limiting the use of a
replacement vessel. The AFA did not
require NMFS to determine whether
negligence was the cause of any loss or
damage to an AFA vessel. The standard
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in the AFA in 2007, when the Council
considered this action, was that in the
event of a total or constructive loss of
an AFA vessel, the owner of the vessel
could replace the vessel if the loss was
caused by any of the causes that were
specifically enumerated, namely ‘‘an act
of God, an act of war, a collision, an act
or omission of a party other than the
owner or agent of the vessel,’’ or if the
cause of the vessel loss fell within a
remaining catchall category, ‘‘any other
event not caused by the willful
misconduct of the owner or agent’’
(section 208(g) of the AFA, https://
alaskafisheries.noaa.gov/
sustainablefisheries/afa/afa.pdf).
The Analysis for this action contains
no indication that the Council intended
that NMFS determine whether a total
vessel loss was due to negligence—a
determination that could be difficult
and time-consuming—and deny the
suspension of the 12-month ownership
requirement on that basis. The preamble
to the proposed rule did not state that
NMFS should determine whether a total
vessel loss was due to negligence and
deny the suspension of the 12-month
ownership requirement on that basis.
NMFS concludes that the proposed rule
text did not comport with Council
intent and erroneously contained the
negligence limitation. The final rule
retains the AFA standard at
§ 679.42(i)(6)(i), modified for the IFQ
context, namely to use a hired master on
a replacement vessel, the individual QS
holder must show that the ‘‘loss or
irreparable damage to the vessel was
caused by an act of God, an act of war,
a collision, an act or omission of a party
other than the individual [QS holder] or
agent of the individual [QS holder], or
any other event not caused by the
willful misconduct of the individual
[QS holder] or agent of the individual
[QS holder].’’
15. The final rule eliminates the
changes in the proposed rule to
§ 679.42(j). Section 679.42(j) is the
current regulation that governs the use
of IFQ by corporations, partnerships,
associations, or other non-individual
entities that hold QS. The proposed rule
added the 12-month ownership
requirement to § 679.42(j). The
application of the proposed rule to QS
holders that are non-individual entities
was the subject of the public comment
described in Comment 17. In response
to this comment, NMFS reexamined the
record of this action. NMFS concluded
that the Council did not intend to
impose the 12-month vessel ownership
requirement on non-individual QS
holders, such as corporations,
partnerships, or associations. NMFS
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therefore eliminates the changes to
§ 679.42(j) in the final rule.
The Analysis for this action states
unequivocally that the action approved
by the Council imposed the 12-month
ownership requirement only on
individual QS holders. Section 5 of the
Analysis states: ‘‘For clarity, QS and QS
holders who must hire skippers are not
subject to this action or considered in
this analysis. Persons who ‘must’ hire
skippers are all non-individual QS
holders.’’ Non-individual QS holders
means corporations, partnerships,
associations, and other legal entities that
hold QS. Non-individual QS holders
were ‘‘not subject to this action or
considered in this analysis.’’
Individual QS holders were subject to
the Council’s action and were
considered in the Analysis of this
action. Individual QS holders means
natural persons that hold QS. Individual
QS holders who initially received Quota
Share may, but not must, hire a skipper
to harvest their annual IFQ. The
Analysis showed that from 1995 to
2010, the number of individual QS
holders declined through attrition but
the remaining individual QS holders
were increasing their use of hired
masters (Analysis, Table 3, Table 4,
Table 7; see ADDRESSES).
The proposed rule cited this evidence
to describe the problem that the rule
was designed to solve, ‘‘Over the course
of the IFQ Program, the number of
initial QS holders who may hire a
master has declined through attrition,
while the reliance on hired masters by
those QS holders has increased. While
this may appear contradictory, it
demonstrates that initial recipients who
used to be active in the fishery are
retired from active participation and
instead are hiring skippers to fish their
IFQ permits.’’ (77 FR 65846, October 31,
2012). This problem statement only
applies, and only could apply, to
individual QS holders because it is only
individual QS holders, who could have
retired from active participation and
begun hiring skippers to fish their IFQ
permits. Non-individual QS holders
never were, and never could have been,
active in the fishery by fishing their own
IFQ permits. Thus, the record of this
action does not support applying the
proposed rule to QS held by nonindividual entities. NMFS also clarifies
a statement in the preamble to the
proposed rule with regard to Form 2692
and a QS holder’s claim that a vessel is
temporarily disabled. Form 2692 is a
United States Coast Guard (USCG) form.
The current title of Form 2692 is
‘‘Report of Marine Casualty.’’ The
former title of Form 2692 was ‘‘Report
of Marine Accident, Injury or Death.’’
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The preamble to the proposed rule
stated: ‘‘If USCG Form 2692 is not
required to be completed for a vessel at
the time of an incident that caused the
60-day duration of repair, then the
vessel owner would be required to
provide additional documentation to
NMFS demonstrating that the vessel
meets the requirements of this
exception’’ (77 FR 65847, October 31,
2012).
The preamble implies that Form 2692
may not be required in situations where
a QS holder claims that he or she cannot
meet the 12-month vessel ownership
requirement because the QS holder’s
vessel is temporarily disabled. This is
not the case. To prove a claim of
temporary vessel disablement under
§ 679.42(i)(7), the individual QS holder
must show that the vessel is disabled
‘‘from repairs required by an accident
that materially and adversely affected
the vessel’s seaworthiness or fitness for
service.’’ Under USCG regulations at 46
CFR 4.05–1, if a vessel is involved in
‘‘an occurrence materially and adversely
affecting the vessel’s seaworthiness or
fitness for service or route,’’ a vessel
operator or other person in charge of the
vessel must report the incident to the
USCG. The USCG form for reporting
marine accidents is Form 2692: https://
marineinvestigations.us. Thus, although
it is true that a vessel operator does not
have to report all accidents to the USCG,
a vessel operator or other person in
charge of a vessel does have to report to
the USCG on Form 2692 all accidents
that constitute a ‘‘temporary vessel
disablement’’ under this rule. To prove
a claim of temporary vessel
disablement, the individual QS holder
must submit to NMFS a copy of Form
2692 that has been submitted to the
USCG concerning the accident.
NMFS notes that if an individual
submits to NMFS a copy of Form 2692
that has been submitted to the USCG,
that form alone does not show that the
individual QS holder meets the
requirements in the rule to show that a
vessel is temporarily disabled. The
individual QS holder must also submit
documentation that the accident will
require, or has required, at least 60 days
of repairs.
16. The final rule modifies regulations
at § 679.5(l)(7)(i) to correct reporting
requirements for Registered Buyers who
receive and purchase landings of
sablefish or halibut or Community
Development Quota (CDQ) halibut. The
regulations at § 679.5(l)(7)(i) require
Registered Buyers to annually submit an
IFQ Buyer Report to NMFS. The
information submitted on IFQ Buyer
Reports is used to calculate and assess
fees to recover the costs of managing
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and enforcing the IFQ Program from
fishery participants (§ 679.43). NMFS
also uses information submitted on IFQ
Buyer Reports to calculate and assess
observer deployment fees for the North
Pacific Groundfish Observer Program
(§ 679.55). These reporting requirements
were promulgated in a 2012 observer
program final rule (77 FR 70062,
November 21, 2012). NMFS
inadvertently revised these reporting
requirements in a final rule to
implement a halibut catch sharing plan
for guided sport and commercial
fisheries in Alaska (78 FR 75844,
December 12, 2013). The halibut catch
sharing plan final rule incorrectly
removed the requirement for Registered
Buyers of landings of CDQ halibut to
submit an IFQ Buyer Report. The
halibut catch sharing plan final rule also
incorrectly revised regulations
specifying the information that must be
included on an IFQ Buyer Report and
the methods for submitting the report to
NMFS. This final rule revises
§ 679.5(l)(7)(i) to correct these
inadvertent errors.
Comments and Responses
NMFS received 7 letters that
contained 22 comments on the proposed
rule.
Comment 1. One commenter supports
the proposed rule. The commenter
supports the Council’s goal of
preserving the historical character of the
commercial Pacific halibut and sablefish
fisheries as owner/operator fisheries and
believes the proposed rule is an
effective way to promote that goal.
Response. NMFS notes this support.
Comment 2. The commenter asserts
that the Federal system of fishery
management is a fraud and does not
benefit the public who are the real
owners of these fish.
Response. This comment does not
specifically address the proposed rule.
The issue of the overall validity of
Federal management of marine
resources is outside the scope of this
action. The commenter raises no
relevant issues or concerns that were
not addressed in the preamble to the
proposed rule or the Analysis prepared
for this action.
Comment 3. The proposed rule
accomplishes little in light of recent
Council action that limits the exemption
that initial individual recipients have
from the owner-on-board requirement
for QS that they acquire after February
12, 2010. This other Council action
violates the American with Disabilities
Act.
Response. The commenter is correct
that the Council has recommended, and
NMFS has recently proposed, a rule that
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largely eliminates the exemption from
the owner-on-board requirement for QS
that initial individual QS recipients
acquire by transfer after February 12,
2010 (78 FR 24707, April 26, 2013).
NMFS will consider comments that it
receives on that proposed rule when it
responds to comments on that proposed
rule.
NMFS agrees that this other proposed
rule, if adopted, would prevent initial
individual QS recipients from
expanding the amount of QS that is
subject to an exemption from the owneron-board requirement. This other
proposed rule, however, does not
obviate the need for this rule. First, the
other action is a proposed, not a final,
rule. Second, the other action does not
affect in any way QS that initial
individual recipients of QS acquired on
or before February 12, 2010, either by
initial issuance or transfer. Without the
rule that is the subject of this action, for
all QS acquired on or before February
12, 2010, an initial individual recipient
of QS could still use a hired master to
harvest that QS from a vessel in which
the QS holder had only a temporary
ownership interest. With the rule that is
the subject of this action, except for
situations of total or temporary vessel
loss, an initial individual QS holder
who wishes an exemption from the
owner-on-board requirement for any QS
that the individual holds must maintain
a minimum 20-percent ownership
interest in the vessel that the hired
master will use for the 12-month period
before the individual applies to use a
hired master. The effect of this rule is
separate and distinct from the action
that was the subject of this comment.
Comment 4. The proposed rule does
very little to promote the movement of
QS from the first-generation fishing
families to Community Quota Entities or
second-generation fishermen.
Response. The rule gives initial
individual recipients of QS a choice
among three responses to this rule: (1)
The individual QS holder harvests his
or her IFQ by being on board the vessel;
(2) the individual QS holder harvests
his or her IFQ through a hired master
and maintains a 20-percent ownership
interest in the vessel for the 12 months
before hiring the master; or (3) the
individual QS holder transfers his or her
QS. Any of these actions by individual
QS holders represents an improvement
over the status quo and furthers an
objective of the Council in taking this
action.
To the extent that individual QS
holders choose the first alternative, and
harvest their IFQ by being on board the
vessel, this furthers the Council’s
objective of compliance with the owner-
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on-board requirement in the IFQ
fisheries. To the extent that individual
QS holders choose the second
alternative, and maintain the required
vessel ownership interest, this promotes
the Council’s objective that QS holders
have a meaningful interest in the vessel
from which their IFQ is fished as a
condition for using a hired master. To
the extent that individual QS holders
choose the third alternative, and transfer
QS, this increases the opportunity for
Community Quota Entities (CQEs) and
individuals with substantial crew
experience to acquire QS because CQEs
and individuals with substantial crew
experience meet the requirements in
regulation to receive QS by transfer.
NMFS notes that if a CQE acquires QS,
the QS will be fished by a resident of
a small, rural community that the CQE
represents. NMFS examines CQEs
further in Comment 10.
Comment 5. The proposed rule is like
requiring a homeowner to own a new
home for 12 months before moving into
it.
Response. Under this rule, an initial
individual recipient of QS may fish his
or her IFQ from any vessel, including a
vessel in which the individual has no
ownership interest, as long as the
individual is on board the vessel for the
entire trip and landing. Thus, for the
first 12 months that an individual owns
a 20-percent interest in a vessel, the
individual can fish his or her IFQ from
that vessel, as long as the individual is
on board the vessel. If the individual QS
holder does not want to harvest IFQ
from a vessel he or she has owned for
12 months, and does not want to be on
board a new vessel, the individual has
a transferable asset, namely QS, an asset
that the individual received as an initial
recipient and that the individual may
transfer for value.
Comment 6. The proposed rule makes
it difficult for QS holders to acquire a
new vessel by purchase or by
construction because the QS holder
cannot use that new vessel to fish his or
her IFQ for 12 months. The proposed
rule makes it difficult to obtain
financing for a new vessel because the
QS holder cannot use that new vessel to
fish his or her IFQ for 12 months.
Response. An initial individual
recipient of QS may fish his or her IFQ
from any vessel for any reason, as long
as the individual QS holder is on board
the vessel during the trip and landing.
If the ability to use a vessel immediately
to fish IFQ is a key to financing
purchase of a new vessel, the individual
QS holder can use a new vessel
immediately by being on board the
vessel during the harvest of the IFQ.
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If the individual is unwilling or
unable to be on board the vessel, this
suggests that the individual has ceased
active participation in the fishery. When
an individual is no longer an active
participant in the IFQ fishery, the
Council intended that person would
transfer his or her QS and, in that way,
allow future generations to participate
in the commercial harvest of Pacific
halibut and sablefish in Alaska. If the
proposed rule causes QS holders who
are no longer active fishermen to divest
themselves of QS, that is what the
Council intended.
Comment 7. The proposed rule is an
attempt to cause well-meaning fishing
families to sell out.
Response. NMFS disagrees. As noted,
the proposed rule gives initial
individual recipients of QS a choice: (1)
Harvest their IFQ by being on board the
vessel; (2) harvest their IFQ through a
hired master and maintain a 20-percent
ownership interest in the vessel for the
12 months prior to using the hired
master; (3) transfer their QS. If the QS
holder chooses to transfer QS, the QS
holder can transfer it to a family
member, as long as the family member
is eligible to receive QS by transfer. To
receive QS by transfer, an individual
either must have initially received QS or
must have 150 days experience working
as part of a harvesting crew in any U.S.
commercial fishery, a requirement that
favors fishing families. The QS holder
may transfer their QS to a family
member on terms that the QS holder
chooses: as a gift, at a discounted price,
or at full-market value.
Comment 8. The proposed rule
discriminates against initial recipients.
The proposed rule does not apply to
second generation QS holders.
Response. The commenter is correct
that the proposed rule only applies to
first-generation QS holders, or initial
individual recipients of QS, because
initial individual recipients are exempt
from the owner-on-board requirement
by owning the vessel from which their
IFQ will be harvested. This rule tightens
the vessel ownership exemption by
requiring that initial individual
recipients own the vessel for 12 months
prior to using a hired master.
Individuals who are second-generation
QS holders are never exempt from the
owner-on-board requirement based on
vessel ownership. Therefore, the
proposed rule does not, and actually
could not, apply to them.
Comment 9. The proposed rule is an
attempt to prevent QS holders from
marketing quota to different vessels.
Response. NMFS agrees that the rule
seeks to prevent individuals from
marketing their QS to different vessels
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if, by that, the commenter means that a
QS holder will use hired masters to
harvest IFQ on a number of different
vessels in which the QS holder has only
a short-term ownership interest, such as
an ownership interest for only the
duration of the IFQ trip. If an individual
QS holder has a substantial, long-term
interest in a vessel, which the Council
specified as a 20-percent ownership
interest for 12 months, the proposed
rule allows the QS holder to ‘‘market’’
his or her QS to that vessel.
Comment 10. The proposed rule does
not apply to Community Development
Quota (CDQ) groups or Community
Quota Entities (CQEs). CDQ groups and
CQEs have an unfair financial advantage
over other QS holders because CDQ
groups and CQEs are tax-exempt.
Response. The CDQ Program was
established in 1992 (57 FR 54936,
November 23, 1992). The CDQ groups
are six non-profit corporations that
represent one or more communities in
western Alaska. CDQ groups do not
receive QS. CDQ groups do receive an
annual allocation of Pacific halibut,
sablefish, and other species in the BSAI.
CDQ groups use the revenue derived
from the harvest of their fisheries
allocations to fund economic
development activities and provide
employment opportunities for the
communities they represent (77 FR
6492, February 8, 2012).
CQEs are non-profit corporations that
may acquire halibut QS by transfer.
CQEs represent one or more small, rural
communities that are located adjacent to
the coast of the Gulf of Alaska. Since
NMFS began issuing QS in 1995, the
amount of QS and the number of
resident QS holders has declined
substantially in these communities. The
purpose of CQEs is to minimize the
adverse, economic impact of the IFQ
Program on these communities and to
provide the opportunity for the
sustained participation of these
communities in the IFQ fisheries. NMFS
adopted the CQE rule in 2004 (69 FR
23681, April 30, 2004). If a CQE
acquires QS, it must harvest its IFQ
through a resident of the community
that the CQE represents (50 CFR
679.41(c)(10)). Twenty-nine CQEs have
formed representing 30 communities.
Only two CQEs hold any QS. For
additional detail on CQE holdings, see
https://alaskafisheries.noaa.gov/ram/.
The commenter is correct that this
rule does not apply to CDQ groups and
CQEs. This rule applies to individual
QS holders to prevent these QS holders
from using hired masters to harvest their
QS based on short-term ownership of
vessels that the hired masters are using.
CDQ groups and CQEs are non-profit
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corporations. CDQ groups must use
hired masters to harvest fish on their
behalf. CQEs must lease their IFQ to
community residents. Neither entity is
causing the problem that this rule seeks
to solve.
The commenter is also correct that
CDQ groups and CQEs are non-profit
corporations that are tax-exempt
according to the provisions in Federal
and State laws. The question of tax
exemption for non-profit corporations is
beyond the scope of this rule.
NMFS notes that this rule applies to
individual QS holders who received QS
as initial recipients and who may
transfer that QS on financial terms of
their choosing. CDQ groups do not
receive a transferable asset; they can
harvest their allocation every year but
they cannot sell or transfer the
allocation. CQEs do hold QS and may
transfer it, subject to restrictions. But
CQEs only acquire QS by purchase.
Comment 11. The proposed rule at
§ 679.42(i)(6) limits the ability of a QS
holder to use a hired master if the QS
holder lost their prior vessel due to any
act of negligence by the vessel owner or
the vessel owner’s agent. Most vessel
groundings are the result of some level
of negligence. A common cause for
grounding is that a skipper or a crew
member falls asleep during wheel
watches. It would be difficult for NMFS
to determine negligence.
Response. NMFS agrees with the
action requested by this comment and
eliminates the negligence limitation in
§ 679.42(i)(6) in the final rule. NMFS
concludes that the rule, as proposed,
did not comport with Council intent.
NMFS explains the basis for this
conclusion in the section, ‘‘Changes
From the Proposed Rule.’’
Comment 12. The proposed rule will
encourage vessel owners to continue
fishing in smaller, unsafe vessels
because the cost of having a new vessel
without any revenue for 12 months
could be prohibitive.
Response. NMFS does not believe that
the rule will result in a less safe IFQ
fleet. First, all vessels are subject to
safety regulations. Second, a primary
benefit of the IFQ program is to promote
safety by decreasing the race for fish. A
QS holder has a specific amount of
halibut or sablefish that the QS holder
is authorized to harvest throughout the
season and therefore does not need to
fish in poor weather. Third, the
commenter does not provide evidence
that the status quo is leading QS holders
to invest in newer, safer, or larger IFQ
vessels. The problem that led to this
rule was that the Council concluded
that some QS holders were claiming
exemption from the owner-on-board
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requirement by acquiring an ownership
interest in a vessel for only the duration
of the IFQ trip. It does not seem likely
that short-term ownership of a vessel
would motivate a QS holder to invest in
improvements to the vessel or to invest
in a new vessel. In fact, the opposite
seems more likely, namely that if a QS
holder can only be exempt from the
owner-on-board requirement by owning
an interest in a vessel for 12 months,
then the QS holder may be more
interested in upgrading the vessel.
Most importantly, the rule does not
prevent a QS holder from owning a
newer, bigger, or safer vessel and
immediately using that vessel to harvest
his or her IFQ. An individual QS holder
can immediately use a new vessel to
harvest his or her IFQ, and immediately
get revenue from the new vessel, as long
as the individual QS holder is on board
the vessel for the IFQ trip and landing.
Comment 13. The proposed rule is
based on a false assumption that a
vessel lease cannot be a long-term
arrangement—extending for 12 months
or more—that shows as meaningful a
commitment to the fishery as a 20percent ownership of a vessel.
Response. From the inception of the
IFQ Program, an individual QS holder
had to either fish his or her own IFQ
permit by being on board the vessel or
use a hired master who fished from a
vessel that the QS holder owned. A
vessel leased by the QS holder has never
been a sufficient basis for the QS holder
to use a hired master in the IFQ
Program.
NMFS acknowledges it is possible
that a QS holder could lease a vessel
and that the vessel owner and the QS
holder would agree that the QS holder
would pay expenses that a vessel owner
normally would. The commenter does
not provide any evidence that this is a
common practice and any rationale why
a QS holder would want to lease a
vessel and take on expenses, such as
repairs, that contribute to the long-term
life of the vessel beyond the lease
period. However, if a QS holder has
leased a vessel on financial terms that
more closely resemble a 20-percent
ownership interest for 12 months, the
final rule gives the QS holder 13 months
to choose whether to be on board the
vessel during the IFQ harvest, convert
the lease to an ownership interest, or
transfer the QS.
Comment 14. Under the proposed
rule, a QS holder might have an
ownership interest in a vessel that was
a paper transaction only.
Response. The commenter is correct
that this rule only requires that an
individual QS holder prove the required
12-month period of vessel ownership as
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10003
reflected in the formal records of the
title to the vessel. The QS holder does
not have to submit details to NMFS of
the financial transactions that led to the
ownership interest. The Council,
however, believes that imposing a 12month period of vessel ownership,
coupled with the requirement that the
QS holder prove ownership by
standardized documentation, decreases
the likelihood that QS holders will have
an ownership interest on ‘‘paper only.’’
The Council took this action because
it believed that some individual QS
holders owned a 20-percent interest in
the vessel only for the duration of a trip
as a way to claim an exemption from the
owner-on-board requirement. The
Council concluded that if the QS holder
had to own a 20-percent interest for 12
months, the QS holder would more
likely have an actual, meaningful
ownership interest in the vessel. This
rule increases the likelihood that a QS
holder would be interested in the
condition of the vessel for at least a 12month period, not merely for the
duration of the IFQ trip.
The Council also recommended, and
NMFS adopted, a regulation that QS
holders who wish an exemption from
the owner-on-board requirement must
submit formal documents showing a
minimum 20-percent ownership interest
in the vessel from which their IFQ
would be fished: an United States Coast
Guard Abstract of Title for federallydocumented vessels, a State of Alaska
vessel license or registration for Statedocumented vessels (72 FR 44795,
August 9, 2007). This means that the QS
holder’s claimed ownership interest in
the vessel cannot be proven merely by
a verbal agreement or informal written
agreement between the QS holder and
other owner(s) of the vessel. The QS
holder’s interest must be reflected in
formal vessel ownership documents
maintained by the Federal or State
government.
Comment 15. If a QS holder
experienced an engine failure near the
end of the season, and the repairs would
only take 30 days, the QS holder would
lose the rest of the fishery for that year.
Response. The commenter is correct
that if an individual QS holder’s vessel
has an accident that will take less than
60 days to repair, then the individual
QS holder may not hire a master to fish
his or her IFQ on a vessel that the
individual QS holder has not owned for
12 months. As the commenter implies,
the QS holder can harvest his or her IFQ
any time during the year and this
scenario is only a potential problem if
the engine failure occurred near the end
of the season. In that situation, the
individual QS holder could finish out
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the season with any vessel as long as the
individual QS holder was on board the
vessel during the harvest of the QS
holder’s IFQ.
Comment 16. The proposed rule
underestimates the documentation and
time required to prove ownership of a
vessel by other types of documentation.
Response. Under the current
regulation, a QS holder must prove a
minimum 20-percent ownership of a
vessel by standard documents that a
vessel owner should have fairly easily
available: an Abstract of Title for a
federally documented vessel and a State
of Alaska vessel license or registration
for a State-licensed vessel. If those
documents show a minimum of 20percent ownership for the past 12
months, the QS holder need not submit
other types of documentation. If, for any
reason, the standard documents do not
show that the QS holder has a 20percent ownership interest for at least
12 months, the QS holder must submit
additional documentation.
The need to submit other types of
documentation seems most likely to
occur when an individual QS holder
owns a vessel with other persons. NMFS
hopes, and expects, that most QS
holders would have formalized their
ownership arrangements with other
persons in documents that exist
independently from the application by
the QS holder to use a hired master.
Proving vessel ownership should not
require creating documents but merely
retrieving them.
But since retrieving documents takes
time, and that time should be included
in the estimate of compliance time,
NMFS agrees that the time estimate in
the proposed rule was too low. The time
estimate in the proposed rule was an
estimate of an average of 30 minutes to
fill out the form, ‘‘Application for IFQ/
CDQ Hired Master Permit.’’ NMFS
agrees that the average time to fill out
the form would likely be more than 30
minutes. NMFS revises its estimate to
the average time to fill out the
Application for IFQ/CDQ Hired Master
Permit from 30 minutes to 60 minutes.
Comment 17. Corporate owners of
vessels do not have the ability to be on
board the vessel and thus have no
alternative to fishing their IFQ from a
vessel that they have owned for the 12
months prior to the harvest. Corporate
owners could not upgrade to a new
vessel and use it immediately to fish
their IFQ. Corporate owners would have
to maintain a 20-percent interest in a
second vessel in case they experienced
a problem with their first vessel that
was not covered by this rule.
Response. NMFS agrees with this
comment. NMFS withdraws the changes
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in the proposed rule to § 679.42(j),
which is the regulation that governs the
use of QS held by corporations and
other non-individual entities. NMFS
concludes that the Council did not
intend to apply the 12-month vessel
ownership requirement to the use of QS
by non-individual entities. NMFS
explains the basis for this conclusion in
the section, ‘‘Changes From the
Proposed Rule.’’
Comment 18. The proposed rule
makes it harder for new entrants, such
as IFQ crewmembers, to get into the
fishery. Under the current rules, new
entrants to the halibut and sablefish
fishery can buy a vessel, convey a 20percent interest to an initial recipient,
and make money immediately by
harvesting IFQ under a hired skipper
permit. A new entrant into the IFQ
fisheries cannot afford to purchase a
vessel and own the vessel for 12
months, but not get any money from the
use of the vessel to harvest IFQs for 12
months.
Response. NMFS disagrees that the
overall effect of the rule will make it
harder for new entrants, such as IFQ
crew members, to enter the fishery.
First, the Analysis for this action does
not show that the status quo
management is promoting new entrants
into the IFQ fisheries. In the 12-year
period of 1998 to 2010, the annual
fishable IFQ halibut pounds held by
initial individual recipients decreased
only slightly from 43 percent to 40
percent of the total IFQ halibut pool.
Over the same period, the annual
fishable IFQ sablefish pounds held by
initial individual recipients decreased
only slightly from 28 percent to 22
percent of the total IFQ sablefish pool
(Analysis, Table 6; see ADDRESSES).
Under current regulations, new entrants
are acquiring QS at a very slow rate.
Second, the final rule still allows QS
holders to form agreements with
individuals seeking entry into the IFQ
fisheries. The commenter states that the
status quo promotes the entry of new
persons into the IFQ fisheries by
allowing new entrants to purchase
vessels. The commenter is correct that
under the status quo, a person who
owns a vessel may agree with an
individual QS holder to fish their IFQ
immediately, without the QS holder
being on board the vessel, as long as the
QS holder acquires a 20-percent interest
in the vessel for the duration of the IFQ
trip. The commenter is also correct that
after the final rule goes into effect,
individual QS holders will not be able
to receive an exemption from the owneron-board requirement, unless they
maintain an ownership interest in the
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vessel for the 12 months before they
want the exemption.
After the final rule goes into effect, an
individual seeking entry into the IFQ
fishery by buying a vessel first, rather
than buying QS first, will still be able
to offer a QS holder the immediate use
of a vessel to harvest IFQ, but only if the
QS holder is on board the vessel for the
harvest. The rule will not put any
individual seeking entry into the IFQ
fishery at a competitive disadvantage:
No vessel owner will be able to offer an
individual QS holder an immediate
exemption from the owner-on-board
requirement. Except for vessel loss
situations, all individual QS holders
will have to wait 12 months to claim an
exemption from the owner-on-board
requirement.
When faced with the choice between
(1) being on board the vessel for the
harvest of their QS, (2) maintaining a
20-percent ownership interest in a
vessel for 12 months, or (3) transferring
their QS, some QS holders will choose
to be on board the vessel. Some QS
holders will choose to maintain a 20percent interest in a vessel for 12
months as a way of preserving their
eligibility for an exemption from the
owner-on-board requirement. This will
result in an increased demand by QS
holders for longer-term ownership
agreements with individuals who are
seeking entry into the IFQ fisheries and
who own vessels suitable for fishing
IFQ. Some QS holders will choose the
third alternative and transfer their QS.
This will result in the increased
availability of QS to persons seeking
entry into the IFQ fisheries.
Comment 19. The proposed rule is an
attempt by Alaskans to make nonAlaskans sell out.
Response. The 12-month vessel
ownership requirement in this rule
applies to all initial individual
recipients of QS who wish to use a hired
master to harvest their IFQ. The
proposed rule applies equally to
residents and non-residents of Alaska
and does not discriminate based on
residency.
Comment 20. The proposed rule
would drive down prices for used
vessels and weaken construction of new
vessels.
Response. With regard to the claim
that the proposed rule would drive
down the price of used vessels, the
commenter does not clearly explain
why he believes this would happen and
why it would be bad if it did happen.
It seems that the commenter is asserting
that the proposed rule will cause a
decrease in demand for vessels to
harvest IFQ, and therefore a decrease in
the price of used vessels, because QS
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holders will collectively use fewer
vessels to harvest their IFQ allotments.
NMFS does not believe that this is a
problem with the proposed rule for four
reasons. First, it is not NMFS’s
responsibility to manage the IFQ
fisheries to maintain any particular
price level for IFQ vessels. When vessel
prices decrease, this helps people who
want to buy vessels and enter the
fishery. When vessel prices increase,
this helps people who want to sell their
vessels. It is NMFS’s responsibility to
establish the rules for the issuance, use,
and transfer of QS through the Council
process in the Halibut Act and the
Magnuson-Stevens Act. Within those
rules, the market establishes the price of
QS and the market establishes the price
of vessels that harvest QS.
Second, the rule established by this
regulation is that QS holders cannot use
a hired master by ‘‘owning’’ a 20percent interest in a vessel for the
duration of a trip, ‘‘owning’’ a 20percent interest in another vessel for the
duration of a trip, ‘‘owning’’ a 20percent interest in another vessel for the
duration of a trip, and so forth. Under
this rule, a QS holder must now own
one vessel for 12 months before the QS
holder can use a hired master to fish QS
from that vessel. If this rule decreases
the total number of vessels that harvest
IFQ allotments, that means that QS
holders were using hired masters on
several vessels during a fishing year,
which is the practice that the Council
action and this rule seeks to stop.
Third, this rule may result in some QS
holders transferring their QS. To the
extent that this occurs, the rule will
result in more QS on the market and
could increase the number of vessels
harvesting IFQ.
Finally, NMFS does not anticipate
that this rule will have a significant
effect on IFQ vessel prices upward or
downward. The market determines the
price of vessels that harvest IFQ as a
result of the overall demand for these
vessels and the overall supply of these
vessels. This rule affects, at most,
vessels that harvest 40 percent of the
halibut QS pool and 32 percent of the
sablefish QS pool, the percent of the QS
pool held by initial individual
recipients. The restrictions in this rule
thus will not affect the demand for
vessels that harvest 60 percent of the
halibut QS pool and 68 percent of the
sablefish QS pool. The restrictions in
this rule do not affect other factors that
determine price of vessels and the
supply of vessels, such as the price of
halibut, the price of sablefish, the
amount of the TAC for each species, the
extent to which IFQ vessels can harvest
other species, the availability and terms
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of financing, and general economic
conditions.
As for the assertion that the proposed
rule will weaken the construction of
new vessels, the commenter offers no
evidence that the status quo is leading
to the construction of new vessels to
participate in the IFQ fisheries. Under
the final rule, an individual QS holder
can arrange for construction of a vessel
and use the vessel to fish IFQ as long
as the individual QS holder is on board
the vessel during the harvest of the IFQ.
For NMFS’s response to other
comments involving new vessels,
upgrading vessels and new entrants into
the IFQ fisheries, see NMFS’s response
to Comments 6, 12, and 18.
Comment 21. The problem—shortterm ownership of vessels so the QS
holders do not have to be on board the
vessel—has never been quantified. The
‘‘problem’’ is a personal issue brought
forth by two Alaskans with strong
political ties.
Response. NMFS disagrees that the
12-month vessel ownership requirement
in this rule is the result of personal
issues rather than policy judgments. In
recommending the 12-month ownership
requirement, the Council was
responding to genuine, longstanding
policy concerns and data supporting
those concerns. As described in the
preamble to the proposed rule, from the
beginning of the IFQ Program, the
Council has sought to enforce an
important feature of the program,
namely if a QS holder wishes to harvest
his or her IFQ through a hired master,
the QS must have an ownership interest
in the vessel which the hired master
will use. The preamble also describes
the actions that the Council has
recommended, and that NMFS has
adopted, to ensure that if a QS holder
takes advantage of the exemption from
the owner-on-board requirement, the QS
holder’s ownership interest in the vessel
is actual and meaningful (77 FR 65843,
October 31, 2012). This rule establishes
the benchmark for a meaningful and
actual ownership interest in a vessel,
namely the QS holder maintains a
continuous 20-percent ownership
interest in the vessel for 12 months prior
to when the QS holder wishes to use the
hired master.
The preamble to the proposed rule
described the data supporting the
Council’s concerns: ‘‘Over the course of
the IFQ Program, the number of initial
QS holders who may hire a master has
declined through attrition, while the
reliance on hired masters by those QS
holders has increased. While this may
appear contradictory, it demonstrates
that initial recipients who used to be
active in the fishery are retired from
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10005
active participation and instead are
hiring skippers to fish their IFQ
permits’’ (77 FR 65846, October 31,
2012). The Analysis for this action
shows that for the IFQ halibut fishery,
from 1998 to 2010, the number of
individual QS holders that had landings
and could hire masters declined from
1,005 individual QS holders to 696
individual QS holders, a decline of
approximately 30 percent, but the
number of individual QS holders that
had landings and did hire masters
increased from 110 to 216, an increase
of approximately 100 percent (Analysis,
Table 3; see ADDRESSES). For the IFQ
sablefish fishery, from 1998 to 2010, the
number of individual QS holders that
had landings and could hire masters
declined from 232 to 151, a decline of
35 percent, but the number of
individual QS holders that had landings
and did hire masters increased from 46
to 92, an increase of 100 percent.
(Analysis, Table 4; see ADDRESSES). This
data shows that the number of
individual QS holders is declining but
the remaining individual QS holders are
increasingly using hired masters.
Comment 22. The alleged problem—
sham ownership of vessels fishing IFQ
without the QS holder on board the
vessel—will solve itself because all
initial recipients will eventually die.
Response. NMFS agrees that in the
long run this problem will be resolved
because all initial individual recipients
of QS will eventually leave the fishery
because of voluntary retirement or death
and eventually all QS will be held by
individuals who are subject to the
owner-on-board requirement. However,
initial individual recipients of QS still
hold a considerable amount of QS. As
of 2010, initial individual recipients
held 40 percent of the halibut QS pool
and 32 percent the sablefish QS pool
(Analysis, Table 3, Table 4; see
ADDRESSES).
Under current regulation, these QS
holders must have a 20-percent
ownership interest in the vessel that a
hired master uses to fish their IFQ, but
these QS holders may only own a 20percent interest in the vessel for the
duration of a trip. The Council
recommended this rule to require that,
if initial recipients of QS wish to
continue to hire masters to fish their QS,
they must maintain a longer-term
ownership interest—namely 12
months—in the vessel that the hired
master will use to fish their IFQ.
OMB Revisions to Paperwork Reduction
Act References in 15 CFR 902.1(b)
Section 3507(c)(B)(i) of the PRA
requires that agencies inventory and
display a current control number
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assigned by the Director, OMB, for each
agency information collection. Section
902.1(b) identifies the location of NOAA
regulations for which OMB approval
numbers have been issued. Because this
final rule revises and adds data
elements within a collection-ofinformation for recordkeeping and
reporting requirements, 15 CFR 902.1(b)
is revised to reference correctly the
sections resulting from this final rule. In
addition, corrections and omissions
from previous rules are added.
Classification
Pursuant to sections 304(b)(1)(A) and
305(d) of the Magnuson-Stevens Act, the
NMFS Assistant Administrator has
determined that this final rule is
consistent with the Halibut Act, the
GOA groundfish FMP, the BSAI
groundfish FMP, the national standards
and other provisions of the MagnusonStevens Act, and other applicable laws.
Pursuant to the Administrative
Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(B), the
Assistant Administrator of Fisheries
finds good cause to waive prior notice
and opportunity for public comment
otherwise required by the section for the
revisions to registered buyer reporting
requirements found at § 679.5(l)(7)(i)
that are implemented by this final rule.
NOAA finds that prior notice and
opportunity for public comment are
unnecessary because the revisions to
§ 679.5(l)(7)(i) do not substantively
change the recordkeeping and reporting
requirements specified in that section.
The revisions correct an inadvertent
error made by a final rule recently
promulgated by NOAA as described in
the ‘‘Changes from Proposed to Final
Rule’’ section of the preamble above.
Prior notice and comment are also
unnecessary because the public had an
opportunity to comment on the
registered buyer reporting requirements
during the observer program rulemaking. Prior notice and comment are
also contrary to the public interest
because immediate publication reduces
potential public confusion associated
with the catch-sharing plan rule’s
inadvertent error in registered buyer
reporting requirements. Because prior
notice and opportunity for public
comment are not required by 5 U.S.C.
553(b)(B), or any other law, for the
regulatory revision at § 679.5(l)(7)(i), the
analytical requirements of the
Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5. U.S.C. 601
et. seq. are inapplicable.
Regulatory Impact Review
The Council and NMFS conducted a
Regulatory Impact Review (RIR)
pursuant to Executive Order 12866.
NMFS published a summary of the RIR
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in the preamble to the proposed rule (77
FR 65843, October 31, 2012). The RIR
assessed the costs and benefits of
Alternative 1 and Alternative 2.
Alternative 1 was no action or the status
quo. Alternative 2 was imposition of the
12-month vessel ownership requirement
on initial individual QS holders as a
condition of their using a hired master
and an exemption from the 12-month
vessel ownership requirement in
situations of permanent vessel loss or
temporary vessel disablement. The
Council concluded that Alternative 2 is
likely to result in net benefits to the
nation and recommended Alternative 2.
NMFS published the RIR with the Initial
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (IRFA)
and in this rule refers to the RIR/IRFA
as the Analysis. A copy of the Analysis
is available from NMFS (see
ADDRESSES). The NMFS Assistant
Administrator has determined that this
rule is not significant for purposes of
Executive Order 12866.
Small Entity Compliance Guide
Section 212 of the Small Business
Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of
1996 states that, for each rule or group
of related rules for which an agency is
required to prepare a FRFA, the agency
shall publish one or more guides to
assist small entities in complying with
the rule, and shall designate such
publications as ‘‘small entity
compliance guides.’’ The agency shall
explain the actions a small entity is
required to take to comply with a rule
or group of rules. This section shall be
the Small Entity Compliance Guide for
this rule.
This rule modifies § 679.42(i) of part
679, Title 50. The full text of 50 CFR
679.42 and all IFQ regulations is
available at https://www.ecfr.gov.
This rule applies to individuals who
were initial recipients of catcher vessel
QS, namely QS in Category B, C, or D,
with one geographical exception. This
rule does not apply to catcher vessel QS
that initial individual recipients
received in what is commonly known as
Southeast Alaska: it does not apply to
QS issued for halibut in IFQ regulatory
area 2C and sablefish in the IFQ
regulatory area east of 140° long. This
rule does not apply to initial recipients
of QS that were non-individual entities,
such as corporations, partnerships, or
associations. This rule does not apply to
initial recipients of catcher processor
QS, which is Category A QS.
To harvest halibut or sablefish in a
fishing year, an initial individual
recipient of QS in Category B, C, or D
receives an annual IFQ permit. The QS
holder/IFQ permit holder must be
present on board the vessel at all times
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during the fishing trip and during the
landing which occurs pursuant to the
authority of the IFQ permit, except if
IFQ regulations authorize a hired master
to harvest and land IFQ species without
the QS holder being on board the vessel.
If a QS holder wishes to use a hired
master to harvest his or her IFQ, the QS
holder must apply for, and receive, a
hired master permit that will authorize
the hired master to harvest the IFQ
belonging to the QS holder. The
Application for IFQ/CDQ Hired Master
Permit and all other IFQ applications
are on the NMFS Alaska Region Web
site at https://alaskafisheries.noaa.gov/
ram/ifq.htm.
Under this rule, an individual QS
holder may use a hired master to harvest
his or her IFQ, if the QS holder was an
initial individual recipient of QS and if
the QS holder continuously owned a
minimum 20-percent ownership interest
in the vessel that the hired vessel will
use to harvest the IFQ for 12 months
prior to the QS holder’s application for
a hired master permit.
An individual QS holder may claim
an ownership interest in a documented
or non-documented vessel. A
documented vessel means a vessel
documented with the United States
Coast Guard in accord with Federal
requirements. A non-documented vessel
means a vessel that is not federally
documented but is documented with the
State of Alaska.
If the hired master will use a
documented vessel to harvest the IFQ
belonging to the QS holder, the QS
holder must submit, with the
application for a hired master permit,
documentation showing that the QS
holder has owned a minimum 20percent ownership interest in the vessel
for the 12 months before the
application. For a documented vessel,
the QS holder must submit an Abstract
of Title showing that the QS holder is
an owner of the vessel. If the Abstract
of Title does not show that the QS
holder owns at least a 20-percent
ownership interest in the vessel or does
not show that the QS holder has owned
a 20-percent ownership interest for 12
months prior to the application, the QS
holder must submit additional written
documentation to prove either the 20percent vessel ownership interest or the
12-month ownership period.
If the hired master will use a nondocumented vessel to harvest the IFQ
belonging to the individual QS holder,
the individual QS holder must submit,
with the application for a hired master
permit, a State of Alaska vessel license
or vessel registration that lists the QS
holder as an owner of the vessel. If the
State of Alaska vessel license or vessel
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registration does not show that the QS
holder owns at least a 20-percent
ownership interest in the vessel that the
hired master will use for the 12-month
period prior to the application by the
QS holder for a hired master permit, the
QS holder must submit additional
documentation.
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Suspension of 12-Month Vessel
Ownership Requirement if QS Holder
Experiences a Total Physical Loss of a
Vessel or Irreparable Damage to a
Vessel
This rule provides a temporary
suspension of the 12-month vessel
ownership requirement if an individual
QS holder experiences a total, physical
loss of a vessel or irreparable damage to
a vessel and the vessel has been used to
harvest IFQ belonging to the QS holder.
If an individual QS holder experiences
a total loss of a vessel, either because
the vessel is physically lost or
irreparably damaged, and wishes an
exemption from the owner-on-board
requirement on that basis, the
individual QS holder must completely
fill out the sections of the Application
for IFQ/CDQ Hired Master Permit that
pertain to the total loss of a vessel or
irreparable damage to a vessel. Through
the Application, and the materials
submitted with it, the individual QS
holder must show that he or she meets
the following requirements:
1. The total loss or the irreparable
damage to the vessel was caused by an
act of God, an act of war, a collision, an
act or omission of a party other than the
owner or agent of the vessel, or any
other event not caused by the willful
misconduct of the individual QS holder
or agent of the individual QS holder;
2. The vessel that was lost or
irreparably damaged was a commercial
fishing vessel that had been previously
used to harvest halibut IFQ or sablefish
IFQ of the individual QS holder who is
applying for a hired master permit;
3. The individual QS holder submits
to NMFS a copy of the USCG Form 2692
that has been submitted to the United
States Coast Guard. Form 2692 is
‘‘Report of Marine Casualty.’’ An
operator of a commercial vessel
operating in the navigable waters of the
United States is required to file Form
2692 any time that a vessel is involved
in an unintended grounding; a loss of
life; an injury that requires professional
medical treatment; an occurrence
causing property damage in excess of
$25,000; an occurrence materially and
adversely affecting the vessel’s
seaworthiness or fitness for service or
route; and other situations as specified
in 46 CFR 4.05–1. Form 2692 and
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instructions to fill it out are at https://
marineinvestigations.us;
4. The individual QS holder is
applying to use a hired master on a
vessel in which the individual QS
holder has a minimum 20-percent
ownership interest as of the date of the
application by the individual QS holder
for a hired master permit.
If the applicant meets the
requirements for issuance of a hired
master permit based on total loss or
irreparable damage to a vessel, the
individual QS holder may use a hired
master until December 31 of the year
following the total loss or irreparable
damage.
Suspension of 12-Month Vessel
Ownership Requirement if Temporary
Disablement of a Vessel
If an individual QS holder
experiences a temporary disablement of
a vessel, and wishes an exemption from
the owner-on-board requirement, the
individual QS holder must completely
fill out the sections of the Application
for IFQ/CDQ Hired Master Permit that
pertain to the temporary disablement of
a vessel. Through the application, and
materials submitted with it, the
individual QS holder must show that he
or she meets the following
requirements:
1. The temporary disablement of the
vessel results from repairs required by
an accident that materially and
adversely affected the vessel’s
seaworthiness or fitness for service;
2. The repairs from the accident
require at least 60 days to be completed;
3. The disabled vessel is a commercial
fishing vessel that was previously used
to harvest halibut IFQ or sablefish IFQ
of the individual QS holder who is
applying for a hired master permit;
4. The individual QS holder submits
to NMFS a copy of the USCG Form 2692
that has been submitted to the United
States Coast Guard. Form 2692 is
‘‘Report of Marine Casualty.’’ An
operator of a commercial vessel
operating in the navigable waters of the
United States is required to file Form
2692 any time that a vessel is involved
in an occurrence that materially and
adversely affecting the vessel’s
seaworthiness or fitness for service, as
specified in 46 CFR 4.05–1. Form 2692
and instructions to fill it out are
available at https://
marineinvestigations.us;
5. The individual QS holder is
applying to use a hired master on a
vessel in which the individual QS
holder has a minimum 20-percent
ownership interest as of the date of the
application by the individual QS holder
for a hired master permit.
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10007
An applicant will need to submit
documentation to show that the repairs
required by the accident require at least
60 days to be completed. That
documentation will typically be an
estimate or statement from the business
entity that will conduct the repairs.
If the applicant meets the
requirements for a hired master permit
based on temporary disablement of a
vessel, the individual QS holder may
use a hired master until December 31 of
the year following the temporary
disablement of the vessel.
Review of Application for a Hired
Master Permit
NMFS will review all applications for
a hired master permit. If NMFS
concludes that the applicant meets the
requirements for a hired master permit,
NMFS will approve the Application for
IFQ/CDQ Hired Master Permit and issue
a hired master permit to the individual
specified on the application.
If NMFS concludes that it cannot
approve the application based on the
application and the materials submitted
with the application, NMFS will
provide the applicant with an
opportunity to submit additional
information or submit a revised
application. NMFS will review any
additional submissions by the applicant.
If NMFS still concludes that the
applicant does not meet the
requirements of a hired master permit,
NMFS will provide the applicant with
an Initial Administrative Determination
(IAD). The IAD will explain the basis for
the denial of the application and will
explain how the applicant may appeal
the denial of the application.
Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
(FRFA)
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
contains the requirements for the FRFA
in section 604(a)(1) through (5) of the
RFA. The FRFA must contain:
1. A succinct statement of the need
for, and objectives of, the rule;
2. A summary of the significant issues
raised by the public comments in
response to the initial regulatory
flexibility analysis, a summary of the
assessment of the agency of such issues,
and a statement of any changes made in
the proposed rule as a result of such
comments;
3. A description and an estimate of
the number of small entities to which
the rule will apply, or an explanation of
why no such estimate is available;
4. A description of the projected
reporting, recordkeeping, and other
compliance requirements of the rule,
including an estimate of the classes of
small entities which will be subject to
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the requirement and the type of
professional skills necessary for
preparation of the report or record; and
5. A description of the steps the
agency has taken to minimize the
significant economic impact on small
entities consistent with the stated
objectives of applicable statutes,
including a statement of the factual,
policy, and legal reasons for selecting
the alternative adopted in the final rule
and why each one of the other
significant alternatives to the rule
considered by the agency which affect
the impact on small entities was
rejected.
NMFS prepared an Initial Review
Flexibility Analysis (IRFA) that
addressed the requirements described in
section 603(b)(1) through (5) of the RFA.
This FRFA incorporates the IRFA and
the summary of the IRFA in the
proposed rule (77 FR 65843, October 31,
2012). NMFS published the IRFA with
the Regulatory Impact Review on
January 5, 2012. The RIR/IRFA or
Analysis is available at the NMFS
Alaska Region Web site: https://
alaskafisheries.noaa.gov.
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A Succinct Statement of the Need for,
and Objectives of, the Rule
The objective of this rule is to amend
halibut and sablefish IFQ regulations to
implement Council intent for initial
individual recipients of QS who wish to
exercise the hired skipper privilege. The
need for, and objectives of, this rule are
further explained in the preamble to the
proposed rule in the sections, ‘‘The
Need for Action’’ and ‘‘The Proposed
Action.’’ (77 FR 65843, October 31,
2012).
Summary of Significant Issues Raised
During Public Comment
NMFS did not receive any public
comments that were explicitly directed
to the Analysis (RIR/IRFA). But several
comments objected to the proposed rule
on the grounds that, short of a QS
holder experiencing the a total or
temporary loss of a vessel, the proposed
rule would prevent a QS holder from
using a hired master to fish their IFQ,
unless the hired master was using a
vessel that the QS holder had owned for
12 months. One comment on the
proposed rule stated that the proposed
rule would have a special impact on
non-individual QS holders, namely QS
holders that are corporations,
partnerships, associations, or any other
type of non-individual entity, because
these QS holders do not have the option
of fishing their QS themselves rather
than using a hired master.
The comments on the proposed rule
were not accurate with respect to
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individual QS holders because under
the proposed rule, individual QS
holders can use any vessel to harvest
their IFQ as long as they are on board
the vessel. The comments were accurate
with respect to QS held by nonindividual entities because, under the
proposed rule, a non-individual entity
such as a corporation or a partnership
does not have the option of getting on
the vessel and fishing their QS
themselves.
These comments implicitly raised an
issue with the Analysis because Section
5 of the Analysis explicitly stated that
the Council action imposed the 12month ownership requirement on
individual QS holders and did not
impose the 12-month ownership
requirement on non-individual QS
holders, such as corporations,
partnerships, or associations. Section 5
of the Analysis also stated that the
Analysis did not analyze the effect of
imposing the 12-month ownership
requirement on non-individual entities.
The Analysis also described the
regulated entities as individuals only,
namely the 1,307 individual holders of
catcher vessel QS eligible to hire
skippers in 2010 that may hire skippers
(Analysis, Table 2; see ADDRESSES). The
Classification Section in the proposed
rule described the regulated entities as
individual QS holders only (77 FR
65843, October 31, 2012). As a result of
these public comments, NMFS realized
that it was an error for the proposed rule
to apply the 12-month ownership
requirement to non-individual entities.
NMFS therefore eliminated those
provisions in the final rule. NMFS
provides further explanation of this
change in the section of this preamble,
‘‘Changes From the Proposed Rule.’’
Number and Description of Small
Entities Regulated by the Final Rule
The Small Business Administration
(SBA) has established size criteria for all
major industry sectors in the United
States, including fish harvesting and
fish processing businesses. On June 20,
2013, the SBA issued a final rule
revising the small business size
standards for several industries effective
July 22, 2013. (78 FR 37398, June 20,
2013). The rule increased the size
standard for Finfish Fishing from $ 4.0
to 19.0 million, Shellfish Fishing from
$ 4.0 to 5.0 million, and Other Marine
Fishing from $4.0 to 7.0 million. Id. at
37400 (Table 1).
Pursuant to the Regulatory Flexibility
Act, and prior to SBA’s June 20 final
rule, a final regulatory flexibility
analysis was developed for this action
using SBA’s former size standards.
NMFS has reviewed the analyses
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Sfmt 4700
prepared for this action in light of the
new size standards and determined that
the new size standards do not affect the
analyses prepared for this action. Under
the former, lower, size standards, all
entities subject to this action were
considered small entities; thus they all
would continue to be considered small
under the new standards.
The ‘‘universe’’ of entities to be
considered in a FRFA generally
includes only those small entities that
can reasonably be expected to the
directly regulated by the action. This
action directly regulates individuals
who were initial recipients of catcher
vessel QS and who still hold catcher
vessel QS. In 2010, there were a total of
1,307 initial individual recipients of
catcher vessel QS: 1,056 halibut QS
holders and 251 sablefish QS holders
(Analysis, Table 2; see ADDRESSES).
Under current regulations, these
individual QS holders may use a hired
master to harvest their IFQ if the
individual QS holder owns a 20-percent
interest in the vessel that the hired
master uses to harvest the IFQ. This rule
adds a 12-month ownership period to
the vessel ownership provision. Under
the final rule, an initial individual QS
holder may use a hired master to harvest
their IFQ if the individual QS holder
owns a 20-percent ownership interest in
the vessel for the 12 months prior to the
application by the QS holder to use a
hired master.
Although, under the current
regulation, all initial individual QS
holders may hire masters based on
vessel ownership, not all individual QS
holders do hire masters. The Analysis
contained data on how many individual
QS holders had landings and did hire
masters in 2010. Looking at halibut QS
holders first, 665 individual QS holders
had landings under an IFQ permit; 216
of these individual QS holders, or 32
percent, used hired masters (Analysis,
Table 3; see ADDRESSES). Turning to
sablefish QS holders, 151 individual QS
holders had landings under an IFQ
permit; 92 of these individual QS
holders, or 61 percent, used hired
masters (Analysis, Table 4; see
ADDRESSES).
The final rule also directly regulates
hired masters. Under the current
regulation, an individual may receive a
hired master permit to harvest and land
IFQ upon proof that the QS holder/IFQ
permit holder owns a minimum 20percent interest in the vessel that the
hired master will use. Under the final
rule, an individual may receive a hired
master permit to harvest and land IFQ
upon proof that the hired master will
use a vessel in which the IFQ permit
holder has owned a 20-percent interest
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for the 12 months prior to the
application by the IFQ permit holder for
the hired master permit. In 2010, the
number of individuals with hired
master permits in the halibut IFQ
fishery was 217; the number of
individuals with hired master permits
in the sablefish IFQ fishery was 127
(Analysis, Table 7; see ADDRESSES).
It is unknown to what extent this rule
will result in individual QS holders
choosing not to use hired masters in the
future. It is unknown because that will
depend on how individual QS holders
respond to this rule: how many QS
holders will choose to harvest their IFQ
themselves rather than use a hired
skipper; how many will meet the 12month ownership requirement and
continue to use a hired skipper; and
how many will transfer their QS, which
will likely make QS available to a
number of hired skippers because hired
skippers are likely to meet the
requirements to receive QS by transfer.
Only individuals may receive QS by
transfer and the individual either must
be an initial recipient of QS or must
have participated for 150 days in a
harvesting crew in a U.S. commercial
fishery. In 2010, approximately 60
percent of halibut IFQ hired skippers
also owned their own QS; 70 percent of
sablefish IFQ hired skippers also owned
their own QS (Analysis, Table 8; see
ADDRESSES). NMFS does not know how
many of these hired skippers received
QS as initial recipients. However,
almost all persons who have a hired
skipper permit are likely to have, or can
get, 150 days of participating in a
harvest crew in a U.S. commercial
fishery by fishing pursuant to their
hired skipper permit. If this rule results
in the transfer of QS, the persons
holding hired skipper permits are
therefore likely to be eligible to acquire
that QS by transfer.
Recordkeeping and Reporting
Requirements
To use a hired master, an individual
QS holder must submit a complete
Application for IFQ/CDQ Hired Master
Permit. To complete this application, an
individual QS holder must submit
documentation that he or she owns a
minimum 20-percent ownership interest
in the vessel that the hired master will
use for the period of 12 months prior to
the application by the QS holder to use
the hired master. If the QS holder claims
ownership of a documented vessel, the
QS holder must submit an Abstract of
Title that shows the QS as an owner. If
the Abstract of Title does not show that
the QS holder has a minimum 20percent vessel ownership interest for the
12-month period prior to the application
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for a hired master, the QS holder must
submit additional written
documentation. If the QS holder claims
ownership of a non-documented vessel,
the QS holder must submit a State of
Alaska license or registration showing
the QS holder is an owner of the vessel.
As with the Abstract of Title, if the State
document does not show that the QS
holder has a minimum 20-percent vessel
ownership interest for the 12-month
period prior to the application for a
hired master permit, then the QS holder
must submit additional written
documentation.
Under the final rule, if the individual
QS holder wishes to use a hired master
and receive an exemption from the 12month vessel ownership requirement,
then the QS holder must show that the
QS holder’s vessel has been lost,
irreparably damaged, or temporarily
disabled by an accident that materially
and adversely affects the vessel’s
seaworthiness or fitness for service. To
receive this exemption, the QS holder
must provide to NMFS a copy of USCG
Form 2692 that has been submitted to
the USCG. Under 46 CFR 4.05, a vessel
owner is already under an obligation to
submit Form 2692 to the USCG when a
vessel is lost, irreparably damaged, or
suffers an accident that materially and
adversely affects the vessel’s
seaworthiness or fitness for service. If
the QS holder is seeking an exemption
from the 12-month vessel ownership
based on temporary disablement of the
vessel, the QS holder must also submit
documentation that the vessel needs
repairs that require 60 days or more.
The skills necessary to comply with
the recordkeeping and reporting
requirements for small entities regulated
by this rule are the ability to read, write,
and understand English; the ability to
retrieve and submit vessel ownership
documents; and the ability to submit
other documents necessary to complete
an application for a hired master permit,
including Form 2692 in the event of
vessel loss or temporary vessel
disablement. No professional skills are
necessary to comply with these
recordkeeping and reporting
requirements.
Description of Significant Alternatives
to the Proposed Action That Minimize
Adverse Impacts on Small Entities
The Council and NMFS analyzed the
alternative of no action and the action
contained in the proposed and final
rules. The ‘‘no-action’’ alternative
would not achieve the objective of the
proposed rule because it would allow
individual QS holders to use a hired
master to harvest their IFQ based on
ownership of a vessel only for the
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10009
duration of the IFQ trip. NMFS is not
aware of any alternatives that would
accomplish the objectives of this action
while minimizing the adverse economic
impact on small entities.
In adopting the preferred alternative,
the Council chose 12 months as the
appropriate length of time that an
individual QS holder had to own a
vessel before the individual QS holder
could hire a master to fish IFQ from that
vessel. In 2005, when the Council first
recommended the 12-month ownership
requirement, it considered different
periods of time during which a QS
holder would have to own the vessel in
advance of using a hired master: 6
months, 12 months, 24 months, and the
year of application for a hired master
period plus the previous calendar year.
(RIR/IRFA, November 9, 2005, see
ADDRESSES) The Council chose one year
(12 months) because that time period
typically includes an entire fishing
season and most QS holders make
operating decisions, including a
decision to hire a skipper, on a year-toyear basis. NMFS affirms that reasoning
for this action.
Collection of Information Requirements
This final rule contains a collectionof-information requirement subject to
the Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA) and
which has been approved by the Office
of Management and Budget (OMB)
under OMB Control Number 0648–0272.
Public reporting burden for Application
for IFQ/CDQ Hired Master Permit is
estimated to average 60 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. The time-to-complete
the application was changed from 30
minutes per response to 60 minutes per
response due to a public comment on
the proposed rule.
This final rule also corrects an error
in regulatory text in a previous final rule
pertaining to the IFQ Value and Volume
Report that does not affect the burden or
cost of completing the form. Public
reporting burden includes 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 email to OIRA_Submission@
omb.eop.gov, or fax to 202–395–7285.
Notwithstanding any other provision
of the law, no person is required to
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(b) * * *
respond to, nor shall any person 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.
CFR part or section where
the information collection
requirement is located
Current OMB
control No.*
*
*
*
*
15 CFR Part 902
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
*
*
*
679.7(a)(7)(i) .....................
679.7(a)(7)(vii) through (ix)
*
*
–0206
–0334
50 CFR Part 679
Alaska, Fisheries, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
*
*
*
679.7(b)(6) and (7) and
(c)(3) and (c)(4) .............
*
*
*
*
*
679.7(f)(1) through (f)(7)
and (f)(9) through (16) ...
*
Dated: February 18, 2014.
Samuel D. Rauch III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for
Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
–0206,
–0334
*
–0269,
–0272
–0206,
–0334
679.7(f)(8) .........................
For the reasons set out in the
preamble, NMFS amends 15 CFR part
902 and 50 CFR part 679 as follows:
*
*
*
679.7(k) .............................
*
*
–0334
*
*
–0393,
–0401
*
*
*
679.28(b) through (e) and
(i) ...................................
679.28(j) and (k) ................
*
*
*
*
*
679.31(c) ...........................
679.32(c)(1) through (3) ....
*
*
–0269
–0269
*
*
*
679.42(a) through (j) .........
*
*
–0272,
–0665
–0445
*
*
*
679.61(a) through (f) .........
*
*
–0393,
–0401
*
*
*
679.65 ...............................
1. The authority citation for part 902
continues to read as follows:
*
–0393,
–0330
*
*
*
679.21(f) and (g) ...............
PART 902—NOAA INFORMATION
COLLECTION REQUIREMENTS UNDER
THE PAPERWORK REDUCTION ACT:
OMB CONTROL NUMBERS
*
*
*
*
679.7(n)(1) ........................
679.7(n)(2) and (n)(4)
through (8) .....................
679.7(n)(3) ........................
Title 15—Commerce and Foreign Trade
*
*
–0633
*
*
–0545
–0445
■
Authority: 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.
2. In § 902.1, in the table in paragraph
(b), under the entry ‘‘50 CFR’’;
■ a. Remove entries for ‘‘679.7(a)(7)(vii)
through (ix), 679.7(n)(1)(x)’’; ‘‘679.7(f)’’;
‘‘679.7(f)(8)(ii)’’; ‘‘679.7(k)’’;
‘‘679.7(n)(4)(ii)’’; ‘‘679.20(a)(8)(ii)’’;
‘‘679.21(f) and (g)’’; 679.21(h)’’;
‘‘679.27(j)(5)’’; ‘‘679.28(b), (c), (d), (e),
(g), and (j)’’; ‘‘679.28(k)’’; ‘‘679.30’’;
‘‘679.32(c)(1) and (2)’’; ‘‘679.32(f)’’;
‘‘679.42’’; ‘‘679.42(a)(1)(i) through (ii),
(b) through (e), (g), (h)(1), (h)(1)(i),
(h)(2), and (h)(2)(i)’’; ‘‘679.42(a)(2)(iii),
(h)(1)(ii), and (h)(2)(ii)’’; ‘‘679.61(c), (d),
(e), and (f)’’; ‘‘679.65(a), (c), and (d)’’;
and ‘‘679.65(b) through (e)’’;
■ b. Add entries in alphanumeric order
for ‘‘679.7(a)(7)(i)’’; ‘‘679.7(a)(7)(vii)
through (ix)’’; ‘‘679.7(b)(6) and (7) and
(c)(3) and (c)(4)’’; ‘‘679.7(f)(1) through
(f)(7) and (f)(9) through (16)’’;
‘‘679.7(f)(8)’’; ‘‘679.7(k)’’; ‘‘679.7(n)(1)’’;
‘‘679.7(n)(2) and (n)(4) through (8)’’;
‘‘679.7(n)(3)’’; ‘‘679.21(f) and (g)’’;
‘‘679.28(b) through (e) and (i)’’
‘‘679.28(j) and (k)’’; ‘‘679.31(c)’’;
‘‘679.32(c)(1) through (3)’’; ‘‘679.42(a)
through (j)’’; ‘‘679.42(k)’’; ‘‘679.61(a)
through (f)’’; and ‘‘679.65’’.
The additions read as follows:
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■
§ 902.1 OMB control numbers assigned
pursuant to the Paperwork Reduction Act.
*
*
*
VerDate Mar<15>2010
*
*
15:17 Feb 21, 2014
Jkt 232001
§ 679.5
(R&R).
Recordkeeping and reporting
*
*
50 CFR:
List of Subjects
4. In § 679.5, revise paragraph (l)(7)(i)
to read as follows:
■
–0330
–0515
679.42(k) ...........................
*
*
*
* All numbers begin with 0648–.
Title 50—Wildlife and Fisheries
PART 679—FISHERIES OF THE
EXCLUSIVE ECONOMIC ZONE OFF
ALASKA
3. 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.
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*
*
*
*
(l) * * *
(7) * * *
(i) IFQ Registered Buyer Ex-vessel
Volume and Value Report (IFQ Buyer
Report)—(A) Applicability. An IFQ
Registered Buyer that operates as a
shoreside processor and receives and
purchases IFQ landings of sablefish or
halibut or CDQ landings of halibut must
submit annually to NMFS a complete
IFQ Buyer Report as described in this
paragraph (l) and as provided by NMFS
for each reporting period, as described
at § 679.5(1)(7)(i)(E), in which the
Registered Buyer receives IFQ fish or
CDQ halibut.
(B) Due date. A complete IFQ Buyer
Report must be postmarked or received
by the Regional Administrator not later
than October 15 following the reporting
period in which the IFQ Registered
Buyer receives the IFQ fish or CDQ
halibut.
(C) Information required. A complete
IFQ Buyer Report must include the
following information as instructed on
the report form at https://
alaskafisheries.noaa.gov/ram:
(1) IFQ Registered Buyer
identification.
(2) Pounds purchased and values
paid. (i) The monthly total weights,
represented in IFQ equivalent pounds
by IFQ species or CDQ halibut, that
were landed at the landing port location
and purchased by the IFQ Registered
Buyer;
(ii) The monthly total gross ex-vessel
value, in U.S. dollars, of IFQ pounds, by
IFQ species or CDQ halibut, that were
landed at the landing port location and
purchased by the IFQ Registered Buyer;
(3) Value paid for price adjustments—
(i) Retro-payments. The monthly total
U.S. dollar amount of any retropayments (correlated by IFQ species or
CDQ halibut, landing month(s), and
month of payment) made in the current
year to IFQ, or to CDQ halibut permit
holders for landings made during the
previous calendar year;
(ii) Electronic submittal. Certification,
including the NMFS ID and password of
the IFQ Registered Buyer; or
(iii) Non-electronic submittal.
Certification, including the printed
name and signature of the individual
submitting the IFQ Buyer Report on
behalf of the Registered Buyer, and date
of signature.
(D) Submittal. If applicable, the
Registered Buyer must complete an IFQ
Buyer Report and submit by mail or
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Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 36 / Monday, February 24, 2014 / Rules and Regulations
FAX to NMFS at the address provided
on the form, or electronically to NMFS
online at https://
alaskafisheries.noaa.gov/ram.
(E) Reporting period. The reporting
period of the IFQ Buyer Report shall
extend from October 1 through
September 30 of the following year,
inclusive.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 5. In § 679.42,
■ a. Revise paragraphs (i)(1)(i), (i)(1)(ii),
and (i)(4); and
■ b. Add paragraphs (i)(1)(iv), (i)(1)(v),
(i)(6) and (i)(7) to read as follows:
§ 679.42
Limitations on use of QS and IFQ.
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*
*
*
*
*
(i) * * *
(1) * * *
(i) For a documented vessel, during
the 12-month period previous to the
application by the individual for a hired
master permit, continuously owned a
minimum 20-percent interest in the
vessel as shown by the U.S. Abstract of
Title issued by the U.S. Coast Guard that
lists the individual as an owner and, if
necessary to show 20-percent ownership
for 12 months, additional written
documentation; or
(ii) For an undocumented vessel,
during the 12-month period previous to
the application by the individual for a
hired master permit, continuously
owned a minimum 20-percent interest
in the vessel as shown by a State of
Alaska license or registration that lists
the individual as an owner and, if
necessary to show the 20-percent
ownership for 12 months, additional
written documentation; and
*
*
*
*
*
(iv) NMFS review of application for
exemption—(A) Initial evaluation. The
Regional Administrator will evaluate an
application for a hired master submitted
in accordance with paragraphs (i)(1),
(i)(6), and (i)(7) of this section. An
applicant who fails to submit the
information specified in the application
for a hired master will be provided a
reasonable opportunity to submit the
specified information or submit a
revised application.
(B) Initial administrative
determinations (IAD). The Regional
Administrator will prepare and send an
IAD to an individual submitting an
application for a hired master submitted
in accordance with paragraphs (i)(1),
(i)(6), and (i)(7) of this section if the
Regional Administrator determines that
the information required to be
submitted to NMFS is deficient or if the
applicant fails to submit the required
information. The IAD will indicate the
deficiencies with the information
VerDate Mar<15>2010
15:17 Feb 21, 2014
Jkt 232001
submitted. An applicant who receives
an IAD may appeal under the appeals
procedures set out at § 679.43.
(v) Upon request by the Regional
Administrator or an authorized officer,
a person must submit additional written
documentation necessary to establish
the required minimum 20-percent
interest in the vessel during the 12month period previous to the
application by the individual for a hired
master permit.
*
*
*
*
*
(4) The exemption provided in
paragraph (i)(1) of this section may be
exercised by an individual on a vessel
owned by a corporation, partnership,
association or other non-individual
entity in which the individual is a
shareholder, partner, or member,
provided that during the 12-month
period previous to the application by
the individual for a hired master permit,
the individual continuously maintained
a minimum 20-percent ownership
interest in the vessel owned by the
corporation, partnership, association or
other non-individual entity. For
purposes of this paragraph, an
individual’s interest in a vessel is
determined by the percentage
ownership by the individual of a
corporation, partnership, association or
other non-individual entity that has an
ownership interest in the vessel
multiplied by the percentage of
ownership of the vessel by the
corporation, partnership, or other nonindividual entity.
*
*
*
*
*
(6) In the event of the total loss or
irreparable damage to a vessel owned by
an individual who qualifies for the
exemption in paragraph (i)(1) of this
section, the individual may remain
exempt under paragraph (i)(1) of this
section until December 31 of the year
following the year in which the vessel
was lost or damaged, provided that the
individual meets the following
requirements:
(i) The loss or irreparable damage to
the vessel was caused by an act of God,
an act of war, a collision, an act or
omission of a party other than the
individual or agent of the individual, or
any other event not caused by the
willful misconduct of the individual or
agent of the individual.
(ii) The lost or irreparably damaged
vessel is a commercial fishing vessel
that was previously used to harvest
halibut IFQ or sablefish IFQ of the
individual who qualifies for the
exemption in paragraph (i)(1) of this
section;
(iii) As part of the application for
exemption, the individual submits to
PO 00000
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Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
10011
NMFS a copy of the USCG Form 2692
submitted to the USCG as specified in
46 CFR 4.05; and
(iv) The individual is applying to use
a hired master on a vessel in which the
individual has a minimum 20-percent
ownership interest as of the date of the
application by the individual for a hired
master permit.
(7) In the event of temporary
disablement of a vessel owned by an
individual who qualifies for the
exemption in paragraph (i)(1) of this
section, the individual may remain
exempt under paragraph (i)(1) of this
section until December 31 of the year
following the year in which the vessel
was disabled, provided that the
individual meets the following
requirements:
(i) The temporary disablement of the
vessel results from repairs required by
an accident that materially and
adversely affected the vessel’s
seaworthiness or fitness for service,
such as from sinking, grounding, or fire;
(ii) The repairs from the accident
require at least 60 days to be completed;
(iii) The disabled vessel is a
commercial fishing vessel that was
previously used to harvest halibut IFQ
or sablefish IFQ of the individual who
qualifies for the exemption in paragraph
(i)(1) of this section;
(iv) The individual submits to NMFS
a copy of the USCG Form 2692
submitted to the USCG as specified in
46 CFR 4.05; and
(v) The individual is applying to use
a hired master on a vessel in which the
individual has a minimum 20-percent
ownership interest as of the date of the
application by the individual for a hired
master permit.
*
*
*
*
*
[FR Doc. 2014–03910 Filed 2–21–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
SECURITY
Coast Guard
33 CFR Part 117
[Docket No. USCG–2013–0936]
Drawbridge Operation Regulations;
Upper Mississippi River, Rock Island,
IL
Coast Guard, DHS.
Notice canceling temporary
deviation from regulations.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
The Coast Guard is canceling
the temporary deviation concerning the
Rock Island Railroad and Highway
Drawbridge across the Upper
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\24FER1.SGM
24FER1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 79, Number 36 (Monday, February 24, 2014)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 9995-10011]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2014-03910]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
15 CFR Part 902
50 CFR Part 679
[Docket No. 120416009-4095-02]
RIN 0648-BB78
Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic Zone Off Alaska; Individual
Fishing Quota Program
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: NMFS adopts a final rule that modifies the vessel ownership
requirement for an exemption from the owner-on-board requirement in the
Individual Fishing Quota (IFQ) Program
[[Page 9996]]
for the fixed-gear commercial Pacific halibut and sablefish fisheries
off Alaska. This rule imposes a 12-month vessel ownership requirement
on initial individual recipients of quota share (QS) who wish an
exemption from the owner-on-board requirement and who wish to use a
hired master to harvest their IFQ. For the 12-month period prior to
applying to use a hired master, an individual QS holder must own a
minimum 20-percent interest in the vessel that the hired master will
use to fish the IFQ on behalf of the individual QS holder. The rule
temporarily suspends the 12-month vessel ownership requirement for an
initial individual recipient of QS whose vessel has been totally lost,
irreparably damaged, or so damaged that the vessel requires at least 60
days for repairs. This action is intended to maintain a predominantly
owner-operated fishery in the Pacific halibut and sablefish fisheries.
This action is intended to promote the goals and objectives of the
Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act, the Northern
Pacific Halibut Act of 1982, 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 other
applicable laws. This rule will go into effect 13 months after the
publication of the rule in the Federal Register.
DATES: Effective March 23, 2015, except for Sec. 679.5(l)(7)(i), which
will be effective on March 26, 2014.
ADDRESSES: An electronic copy of the Regulatory Impact Review/Initial
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (RIR/IRFA or Analysis) prepared for
this action may be obtained from https://www.regulations.gov or from the
Alaska Region Web site at https://alaskafisheries.noaa.gov/cm/analyses/
. An electronic copy of the RIR/IRFA dated November 9, 2005, prepared
for the prior action on the same subject is also at https://alaskafisheries.noaa.gov/cm/analyses/. An electronic copy of the
Proposed Rule (77 FR 65843, October 31, 2012) may be obtained from
https://www.regulations.gov or from the Alaska Region Web site at
https://alaskafisheries.noaa.gov/regs/summary.htm.
Written comments regarding the burden-hour estimates or other
aspects of the collection of information requirements contained in this
final rule may be submitted by mail to NMFS, Alaska Region, P.O. Box
21668, Juneau, AK 99802-1668, Attn: Ellen Sebastian, Records Officer;
in person at NMFS, Alaska Region, 709 West 9th Street, Room 420A,
Juneau, AK; or by email to OIRA_submission@omb.eop.gov or fax to (202)
395-7285.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mary Alice McKeen, 907-586-7228.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This rule amends the vessel ownership
requirement for initial individual recipients of QS in the IFQ Program
who wish to hire a master to harvest their IFQ rather than be on board
the vessel themselves for the harvest of their IFQ. IFQ Program
regulations are located primarily at 50 CFR 679.40 to 679.45. This rule
also modifies regulations at Sec. 679.5 that specify reporting
requirements for Registered Buyers who receive and purchase landings of
halibut and sablefish. This modification corrects an unintended error
in a final rule recently promulgated by NMFS.
Under the current regulations of the IFQ Program, initial
recipients of catcher vessel QS may receive an exemption from the
owner-on-board provision, and may hire a master to harvest their annual
IFQ, if those initial recipients own a minimum 20-percent interest in
the vessel that the hired master will use (Sec. 679.42(i)(1)). This
rule adds a 12-month vessel ownership requirement for initial
individual recipients of catcher vessel QS. This rule provides that for
the 12-month period prior to applying to use a hired master, an
individual QS holder must own a minimum 20-percent interest in the
vessel that the hired master will use to harvest the IFQ. This rule
temporarily suspends the 12-month vessel ownership requirement for an
individual QS holder who loses a vessel. This rule does not apply to
individual QS holders in Southeast Alaska (halibut QS for IFQ
regulatory Area 2C and sablefish QS for the IFQ regulatory area east of
140[deg] long.) because they may not hire a master to harvest their
IFQ.
NMFS published a proposed rule with the 12-month vessel ownership
provision in the Federal Register on October 31, 2012 (77 FR 65843).
The 30-day comment period on the proposed rule ended on November 30,
2012. NMFS received six comment letters by November 30, 2012, and one
comment letter on December 5, 2012. NMFS considered these 7 comment
letters, which contained 22 unique comments. These comments are
summarized and responded to in the ``Comments and Responses'' section
of this preamble. In response to public comments on the proposed rule
and further review by NMFS, NMFS changed the regulatory text between
the proposed rule and this final rule. These changes are described in
the ``Changes From the Proposed Rule'' section of this preamble.
Background
The International Pacific Halibut Commission (IPHC) and NMFS manage
fishing for Pacific halibut through regulations established under the
authority of the Northern Pacific Halibut Act of 1982 (Halibut Act).
The IPHC promulgates regulations governing the halibut fishery under
the Convention between the United States and Canada for the
Preservation of the Halibut Fishery of the Northern Pacific Ocean and
Bering Sea. The IPHC regulations are subject to approval by the
Secretary of State with concurrence of the Secretary of Commerce.
Under the Halibut Act, the North Pacific Fishery Management Council
(Council) may recommend that the Secretary of Commerce adopt additional
management regulations for the halibut fishery in Alaska waters that
are not in conflict with regulations adopted by the IPHC (16 U.S.C.
773c(c)). The Council exercised this authority through development of
the IFQ Program and continues to exercise this authority when it
recommends changes to the IFQ Program.
NMFS manages sablefish as a groundfish species under the Fishery
Management Plan for Groundfish of the Gulf of Alaska (GOA groundfish
FMP) and the Fishery Management Plan for Groundfish of the Bering Sea
and Aleutian Islands Management Area (BSAI groundfish FMP). The fishery
management plans are prepared by the Council under the Magnuson-Stevens
Act (16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.) and are implemented by regulations at 50
CFR part 679. After consulting with the Council, NMFS establishes an
annual total allowable catch (TAC) for each groundfish species,
including sablefish, in the Gulf of Alaska and BSAI. NMFS establishes
TACs and other groundfish harvest specifications 2 years in advance.
For an example, see the Groundfish Harvest Specifications for 2013 and
2014 for BSAI (78 FR 13813, March 1, 2013).
Individual Fishing Quota (IFQ) Program
In 1995, NMFS implemented the IFQ Program under the authority of
the Magnuson-Stevens Act and the Halibut Act (58 FR 59375, November 9,
1993). The IFQ Program applies to the fixed-gear commercial halibut and
sablefish fisheries in the Exclusive Economic Zone off Alaska. Under
the IFQ Program, NMFS initially awarded quota share (QS) to applicants
that owned or
[[Page 9997]]
leased vessels from which halibut or sablefish landings occurred in
1988 to 1990 (50 CFR 679.40). A person that received QS as an initial
recipient was either an (1) individual or natural person or (2) a non-
individual entity or legal person, such as a corporation, partnership,
or association.
NMFS initially issued QS in Category A, B, C, and D. Once issued,
the category of QS limits how the QS holder can use the QS. Category A
QS is catcher/processor QS. Category A QS authorizes the QS holder to
harvest and process the pounds specified on the IFQ permit from a
vessel of any length. Category A QS has no owner-on-board requirement.
Category B, C, and D QS is catcher vessel QS. Category B, C, and D QS
authorizes the QS holder to catch or harvest the pounds specified on
the QS holder's IFQ permit from vessels within specific categories of
vessel length (see Sec. 679.42(a)(5) for additional detail). This rule
applies only to catcher vessel QS: Category B, C, and D QS. When this
preamble refers to QS, it means catcher vessel QS--Category B, C and, D
QS--unless otherwise indicated.
Each year, in accordance with the Halibut Act and the Magnuson-
Stevens Act, NMFS establishes a halibut catch limit and sablefish TAC.
NMFS divides among QS holders the portion of the halibut catch limit
and sablefish TAC that is allocated to the fixed gear fishery (Sec.
679.40). NMFS translates each QS holder's units into a number of
halibut or sablefish pounds that the QS holder may harvest. This number
of pounds is the Individual Fishing Quota or IFQ belonging to the QS
holder. With a few exceptions not relevant to this rule, NMFS sends
every QS holder an annual IFQ permit. The IFQ permit authorizes the IFQ
permit holder to harvest a specified number of halibut or sablefish
pounds in a particular year. The IFQ may only be harvested in the
regulatory area designated on the IFQ permit. If the IFQ permit is for
a catcher vessel, the IFQ permit specifies the maximum length of the
catcher vessel from which the IFQ may be fished.
Owner-on-Board Requirement in the IFQ Program
The owner-on-board requirement is a central feature of the IFQ
Program. The IFQ regulations require individuals who hold catcher
vessel QS to be on board the vessel at all times during an IFQ fishing
trip and to be present during the landing at the end of the trip (Sec.
679.42(c)). The purpose of the owner-on-board requirement is to
maintain the predominantly owner-operator character of the IFQ
fisheries and to ensure that catcher vessel QS remains largely in the
hands of active fishermen.
In designing the IFQ Program, however, the Council exempted initial
individual recipients of catcher vessel QS from the owner-on-board
requirement, as long as the initial individual recipients owned the
vessels from which their IFQ was fished (Sec. 679.42(i)). The
exemption from the owner-on-board requirement did not, however, apply
to individuals who received QS for Southeast Alaska: halibut QS for IFQ
regulatory Area 2C and sablefish QS for the IFQ regulatory area east of
140[deg] long. (Sec. 679.42(i)(3)).
The Council also exempted non-individual entities that were initial
recipients of QS from the owner-on-board requirement, as long as they
owned the vessel from which the IFQ was fished (Sec. 679.42(j)).
Unlike individuals, non-individual entities do not have the option of
being ``on the boat'' while their IFQ is fished. That is because non-
individual entities are legal entities only. A corporation cannot get
on a vessel. If non-individual entities are to harvest their IFQ at
all, they must use a hired master or hired skipper. Thus, non-
individual entities must own the vessel that the hired master will use
simply as a condition of being able to harvest their QS and associated
IFQ at all.
For all initial recipients of QS--individuals and non-individuals--
the Council recommended, and NMFS adopted, a regulation in 1999 that
specified a minimum percentage of ownership that an initial recipient
must have to show that they ``owned'' a vessel that a hired master will
use (64 FR 24960, May 10, 1999). Under current regulations, an initial
recipient must own a minimum 20-percent ownership interest in the
vessel that a hired master will use on behalf of an initial recipient.
But current regulations do not specify a duration--for how long--an
initial recipient must have that 20-percent vessel ownership interest.
Acquiring QS by Transfer in the IFQ Program
The IFQ Program has two ways to acquire QS: (1) By initial issuance
and (2) by transfer. Only initial recipients of QS are exempt from the
owner-on-board requirement by owning the vessel that their hired master
will use. Under current regulation, an initial recipient may be exempt
from the owner-on-board requirement for all QS that an initial
recipient holds: Whether the initial recipient acquired the QS by
initial issuance or by transfer. NMFS has proposed a regulation that
would prevent an initial recipient from using a hired master to harvest
QS that an initial recipient acquired by transfer after February 12,
2010, with a limited exception for small amounts of QS (78 FR 24707,
April 26, 2013). The IFQ Program restricts who may acquire QS by
transfer. If an individual wishes to acquire QS by transfer, the
individual must be an initial recipient of QS or an individual who has
150 days experience in a harvesting crew in a commercial fishery in the
United States (Sec. 679.2, Sec. 679.42(g)).
Except for Community Quota Entities, which are discussed in Comment
10, if a non-individual entity, such as a corporation or a partnership,
wishes to acquire QS by transfer, the non-individual entity must have
been an initial recipient of QS. Furthermore, if a non-individual
entity undergoes a change, and a change includes the addition of any
shareholder to a cooperation or any partner to a partnership, the non-
individual entity cannot acquire additional QS by transfer and loses
the ability to use a hired master for all of its QS (Sec. 679.42(j)).
The result of the restrictions in current regulations is that new
entrants into the IFQ fisheries--persons who did not receive QS at the
inception of the IFQ Program--must be individuals with substantial crew
experience in a domestic commercial fishery.
By limiting the exemption from the owner-on-board requirement to
initial recipients and by requiring that new QS holders have crew
experience, the Council anticipated that all QS would eventually be
held by active fishermen who would be subject to the owner-on-board
requirement. The Council anticipated that initial recipients who were
individuals would retire from the fishery and transfer their QS. The
Council took this action because it concluded that initial individual
recipients of QS were hiring masters instead of retiring from the
fishery.
Rationale for This Final Rule
This rule results from a long-standing commitment by the Council to
enforce a feature of the IFQ Program that has been present since the
beginning of the IFQ Program, namely that if an individual QS holder
wishes an exemption from the owner-on-board requirement, the QS holder
must have an ownership interest in the vessel that the hired master
will use. The Council concluded that the current IFQ regulations did
not prevent initial individual recipients of QS from circumventing the
intention of the vessel ownership requirement and from hiring masters
to harvest their IFQ from vessels in which individual QS holders
[[Page 9998]]
had an ownership interest only for the duration of an IFQ trip.
This rule specifies the duration of vessel ownership interest that
an individual QS holder must have if the QS holder wishes an exemption
from the owner-on-board requirement. An initial individual recipient of
QS must own a minimum 20-percent ownership interest in the vessel that
the hired master will use to fish the IFQ for the 12-month period prior
to when the individual QS holder applies to use a hired master. If an
individual QS holder experiences a vessel loss, this rule suspends the
12-month vessel ownership requirement until December 31 of the year
following the vessel loss. This rule suspends the vessel ownership
requirement in three situations of vessel loss: A total, physical loss
of a vessel; a vessel that has been irreparably damaged; and a
temporary loss or temporary disablement of a vessel, meaning an
accident that materially and adversely affects the vessel's
seaworthiness or fitness for service and requires at least 60 days of
repairs.
The preamble to the proposed rule contains further explanation of
the need for this action, previous actions on the same subject, and the
rationale for this rule (77 FR 65843, October 31, 2012). NMFS'
responses to comments also provide additional detail on this action.
Terminology
This preamble refers to ``the individual QS holder'' as the
individual who is subject to the owner-on-board requirement and who may
be exempt from the owner-on-board requirement by owning the vessel that
the hired master will use. To apply for a hired master permit, the QS
holder must have received an IFQ permit. However, this preamble
generally uses the term individual QS holder rather than individual IFQ
permit holder.
This preamble uses the terms ``hired skipper'' and ``hired master''
interchangeably as is common practice by participants in the IFQ
fishery. The Analysis for this action uses the term ``hired skipper.''
The proposed rule and final rule text use the term ``hired master.'' A
hired skipper or hired master is the person who is named on a hired
master permit. The hired master permit enables the hired master to
harvest the halibut or sablefish on the IFQ permit that NMFS has issued
to the QS holder. The QS holder applies for the hired master permit,
designates the individual who will be the hired master, and designates
the vessel that the hired master will use.
This preamble uses the term ``vessel loss'' to refer to the three
types of vessel loss described in the preceding section.
Changes From the Proposed Rule
This section explains the 16 changes in the regulatory text from
the proposed rule to the final rule. Changes 14 and 15 were made in
response to public comments. The other changes make minor
clarifications in the text of the final rule and correct an unintended
error in a final rule recently promulgated by NMFS. This section also
clarifies a statement in the preamble to the proposed rule regarding
the submission of United States Coast Guard Form 2692 to report a
marine casualty.
The changes from the proposed rule text in the final rule text are
as follows.
1. The final rule clarifies the role of additional written
documentation in Sec. 679.42(i)(1)(i) and (ii). The final rule
clarifies that if an individual QS holder wishes an exemption from the
owner-on-board requirement, the formal ownership documents for the
vessel that the hired master will use must list the individual QS
holder as an owner of the vessel. If these formal documents do not show
the individual QS holder as owning the required 20-percent ownership
for 12 months, the individual QS holder may prove that fact with
additional written documentation. The proposed rule at Sec.
679.42(i)(1)(i) stated that for a documented vessel, the individual QS
holder must have ``continuously owned a minimum 20-percent interest in
the vessel for the previous 12 months as shown by the U.S. Abstract of
Title issued by the U.S. Coast Guard, and any other documentation that
shows the individual as an owner indicating percentage ownership.'' The
proposed rule at Sec. 679.42(i)(1)(ii) stated that for an undocumented
vessel, which means a vessel that is not federally documented, the
individual QS holder must have ``continuously owned a minimum 20-
percent interest in the vessel for the previous 12 months as shown by a
State of Alaska license or registration, and any other documentation
that shows the individual as an owner indicating percentage of
ownership.'' This language does not clearly state what must be on the
Abstract of Title or State license and what may be on other written
documentation.
The preamble to the proposed rule clearly stated that the
individual QS holder must be an owner on the documents of record
showing vessel ownership--the Abstract of Title for federally
documented vessels and the State license for State-documented vessels--
and that the individual QS holder could submit additional written
documentation only if those documents did not show the required 20-
percent ownership interest for the 12-month ownership period: ``If the
U.S. Abstract of Title or State of Alaska documents do not prove the
required percentage interest and duration, the QS holder would be
required to submit additional written documentation to NMFS
establishing the required percentage of ownership interest and
duration'' (77 FR 65847, October 31, 2012).
Accordingly, NMFS clarifies the final rule in Sec. 679.42(i)(1)(i)
and (ii) and conforms it to the preamble to the proposed rule and the
current regulation. The final rule provides that an individual QS
holder may claim an exemption from the owner-on-board requirement if
the individual QS holder is an owner of a documented vessel ``as shown
by the U.S. Abstract of Title issued by the U.S. Coast Guard that lists
the individual [QS holder] as an owner and, if necessary to show 20-
percent ownership for 12 months, additional written documentation.''
With a non-documented vessel, an individual QS holder may claim an
exemption from the owner-on-board requirement if the individual QS
holder is an owner of the vessel ``as shown by a State of Alaska
license or registration that lists the individual [QS holder] as an
owner and, if necessary to show 20-percent ownership for 12 months,
additional written documentation.''
2. The final rule revises the proposed regulatory text at Sec.
679.42(i)(1)(i), Sec. 679.42(i)(1)(ii), and Sec. 679.42(i)(1)(v) by
replacing ``for the previous 12 months'' with ``during the 12-month
period previous to the application by the individual [QS holder] for a
hired master permit.'' This change more precisely defines the 12-month
period.
3. The final rule revises proposed regulatory text at Sec.
679.42(i)(1)(iv)(B) by replacing the phrase ``individual entity'' with
``individual'' because ``individual entity'' is not a recognized term
and is a confusing term.
4. The final rule clarifies that the 12-month vessel ownership
requirement applies to all individual QS holders who seek exemption
from the owner-on-board requirement based on ownership of a vessel from
which their IFQ will be fished. Under current regulation, Sec.
679.42(i)(1) establishes the general requirement that an individual QS
holder can be exempt from the owner-on-board requirement by owning 20
percent of the vessel that the hired master will use. Under current
regulation, Sec. 679.42(i)(4) states that the exemption in Sec.
679.42(i)(1) is available
[[Page 9999]]
to an individual that meets the 20-percent vessel ownership requirement
by owning an interest in the non-individual entity, such as a
corporation, that owns the vessel that the hired master will use. For
example, under Sec. 679.42(i)(4), if a corporation is the sole owner
of a vessel, and an individual QS holder owns 20 percent of the
corporation (typically by owning 20 percent of the shares in a
corporation), the individual QS holder meets the 20-percent vessel
ownership requirement and may hire a master to fish IFQ from that
vessel.
The proposed rule modified the 20-percent vessel ownership
requirement in Sec. 679.42(i)(1) by adding a time requirement to it:
The individual QS holder is exempt from the owner-on-board requirement
if the individual owns 20 percent of the vessel for the 12-month period
prior to when the individual applies for a hired master permit. The
proposed rule did not explicitly modify Sec. 679.42(i)(4) to apply the
12-month vessel ownership requirement when an individual QS holder
claims an exemption from the owner-on-board requirement by owning an
interest in the entity that owns the vessel.
The final rule corrects that omission and revises Sec.
679.42(i)(4). The final rule revises Sec. 679.42(i)(4) by applying the
12-month ownership requirement to individual QS holders who claim an
exemption from the owner-on-board requirement by owning an interest in
the corporation or other entity that owns the vessel. Under the final
rule, those QS holders must show a 20-percent ownership interest in the
vessel ``during the 12-month period previous to the application by the
individual for a hired master permit.'' Every part of the rationale in
the proposed rule applies with equal force to individual QS holders who
claim an exemption from the owner-on-board requirement by owning 20
percent of a vessel in their own name and individual QS holders who
claim an exemption by owning an interest in the corporation or
partnership that owns the vessel.
5. The final rule changes Sec. 679.42(i)(4) to clarify the
provision. The last sentence in Sec. 679.42(i)(4) currently states,
``For purposes of this paragraph, interest in a vessel is determined as
the percentage ownership of a corporation, partnership, association or
other non-individual entity by that individual multiplied by the
percentage of ownership of the vessel by the corporation, partnership,
or other non-individual entity.'' The final rule revises this sentence
in Sec. 679.42(i)(4) to more clearly state whose interest in the
vessel must be determined, namely the interest of the individual QS
holder, and how to calculate that interest, ``For purposes of this
paragraph, an individual's interest in a vessel is determined by the
percentage ownership by the individual of a corporation, partnership,
association or other non-individual entity that has an ownership
interest in the vessel multiplied by the percentage of ownership of the
vessel by the corporation, partnership, or other non-individual
entity.'' For example, under the existing regulation and this final
rule, if an individual owns 50 percent of a corporation, and the
corporation has a 50 percent ownership interest in the vessel, the
individual's ownership interest in the vessel is .50 multiplied by .50,
which means the individual has a .25 or 25 percent ownership interest
in the vessel.
6. The final rule clarifies the proposed rule at Sec. 679.42(i)(6)
and (7) to state that, in the event of vessel loss and vessel
disablement, the QS holder does not have to meet the 12-month vessel
ownership requirement but still must meet the 20-percent vessel
ownership interest requirement.
The Council clearly stated its intent on this point at its October
and November 2007 meetings. The Council motions at both meetings
explicitly state that, in the event of a total vessel loss or a vessel
needing significant repairs, the QS holder is exempt from the 12-month
vessel ownership requirement, but not the 20-percent vessel ownership
requirement (Council Minutes, NPFMC Web site, https://www.alaskafisheries.noaa.gov/npfmc). The Analysis states that, in the
event of total vessel loss or temporary vessel loss due to repairs, the
QS holder would be exempt from the 12-month vessel ownership
requirement, but not the 20-percent requirement. The proposed rule
explicitly stated in the preamble: ``The exemption for loss of or
damage to a vessel applies to the 12-month ownership requirement only,
and not the 20-percent ownership requirement. If a QS holder's vessel
is damaged and undergoing repairs that will take at least 60 days, the
QS holder may acquire temporary interest in another vessel in order to
hire a master, but that temporary interest must constitute a minimum of
20-percent ownership of the vessel.'' (77 FR 65847, October 31, 2012).
The text of the proposed rule stated that in the event of total
loss or temporary disablement of a vessel, the owner of the vessel
``may remain exempt'' from the owner-on-board requirement but did not
specify completely the terms of the QS holder's continuing exemption.
The Council motions, the Analysis, and the preamble to the proposed
rule all clearly state that, in the event that the individual QS holder
suffers a total or temporary loss of a vessel, the QS holder's
exemption from the owner-on-board requirement is still conditioned on
the QS holder owning a 20-percent interest in the vessel that will fish
the QS holder's IFQ. The final rule corrects the proposed rule on this
point.
7. The final rule revises the proposed regulatory text at Sec.
679.42(i)(6) and Sec. 679.42(i)(7) by replacing ``owner,'' ``owner of
such vessel,'' and ``owner of lost vessel'' with ``individual.'' NMFS
makes this change because the rule applies to individuals who are
initial recipients of QS and because the existing regulatory text uses
``individual.''
8. The final rule reorganizes the proposed regulatory text in Sec.
679.4(i)(6) and (i)(7) by adding the phrase ``provided the individual
meets the following requirements,'' and then numbering all the
requirements that the individual QS holder must meet, because the
proposed rule included only two of four requirements in the numbered
list.
9. The final rule revises the opening phrase in the proposed
regulatory text at Sec. 679.42(i)(6) from ``[i]n the event of the
total loss of a vessel'' to ``[i]n the event of the total loss or
irreparable damage to a vessel,'' because the rule applies to
situations of a total loss of a vessel and irreparable damage to a
vessel. For the same reason, the final rule makes a similar change
later in Sec. 679.42(i)(6), namely from ``[t]he lost vessel must be''
in 679.42(i)(6)(i) to ``[t]he lost vessel or irreparably damaged vessel
is'' in Sec. 679.42(i)(6)(ii).
10. The final rule revises the first sentence of Sec. 679.42(i)(6)
and (i)(7) by substituting the phrase ``the year following the year in
which'' for the phrase ``the year following the year that which'' so
that the final rule text states, ``the individual may remain exempt
[from the owner-on-board requirement] under paragraph (i)(1) of this
section until December 31 of the year following the year in which the
vessel was [lost, damaged, or disabled].'' This change eliminates the
grammatically incorrect phrase ``the year that which'' and makes clear
the ending date of the exemption.
11. The final rule revises the proposed regulatory text in Sec.
679.42(i)(6) and (i)(7) from that the lost or disabled vessel must have
been used to harvest halibut IFQ or sablefish IFQ ``by the owner'' to
that the vessel must have been used to harvest halibut IFQ or sablefish
IFQ ``of the individual.'' NMFS makes this
[[Page 10000]]
change because the lost or disabled vessel must have harvested IFQ
belonging to the individual QS holder but the IFQ did not have to be
harvested by the individual QS holder.
12. The final rule changes the references in the proposed
regulatory text at Sec. 679.42(i)(7) from ``damaged'' vessel to
``disabled'' vessel to distinguish the disabled vessel in Sec.
679.42(i)(7) from the irreparably damaged vessel in Sec. 679.42(i)(6).
13. The final rule revises the proposed regulatory text in Sec.
679.42(i)(7) from the requirement that ``necessary repairs require at
least 60 days to be completed'' to the more precise requirement that
``[t]he repairs from the accident require at least 60 days to be
completed.''
14. The final rule eliminates the phrase ``or negligence'' from the
proposed rule at Sec. 679.42(i)(6). The proposed rule at Sec.
679.42(i)(6) temporarily suspended the 12-month vessel ownership
requirement for a QS holder who suffered a total loss of a vessel as
long as the QS holder showed that the total loss was caused by ``an act
of God, an act of war, a collision, an act or omission of a party other
than the owner or agent of the vessel, or any other event not caused by
the willful misconduct or negligence of the owner or agent.''
The ``or negligence'' phrase was the subject of a public comment
noted in Comment 11. The commenter noted that the proposed rule limited
the ability of a QS holder to use a hired master on a replacement
vessel if the QS holder lost their prior vessel due to an act of
negligence by the vessel owner or the vessel owner's agent. The
commenter identified vessel groundings as an event that could cause a
vessel loss. The commenter stated that most vessel groundings are the
result of some level of negligence, that a common cause for grounding
is that a skipper or a crew member falls asleep during wheel watches
and that it would be difficult for NMFS to determine negligence.
NMFS agrees with the comment. NMFS concludes that the proposed rule
mistakenly required NMFS to determine if a QS holder lost a vessel due
to negligence and to deny suspension of the 12-month vessel ownership
requirement on that basis. Except for the negligence language, the
proposed rule incorporated the standard in the American Fisheries Act
(AFA) for determining the cause of a total vessel loss and for limiting
the use of a replacement vessel. The AFA did not require NMFS to
determine whether negligence was the cause of any loss or damage to an
AFA vessel. The standard in the AFA in 2007, when the Council
considered this action, was that in the event of a total or
constructive loss of an AFA vessel, the owner of the vessel could
replace the vessel if the loss was caused by any of the causes that
were specifically enumerated, namely ``an act of God, an act of war, a
collision, an act or omission of a party other than the owner or agent
of the vessel,'' or if the cause of the vessel loss fell within a
remaining catchall category, ``any other event not caused by the
willful misconduct of the owner or agent'' (section 208(g) of the AFA,
https://alaskafisheries.noaa.gov/sustainablefisheries/afa/afa.pdf).
The Analysis for this action contains no indication that the
Council intended that NMFS determine whether a total vessel loss was
due to negligence--a determination that could be difficult and time-
consuming--and deny the suspension of the 12-month ownership
requirement on that basis. The preamble to the proposed rule did not
state that NMFS should determine whether a total vessel loss was due to
negligence and deny the suspension of the 12-month ownership
requirement on that basis. NMFS concludes that the proposed rule text
did not comport with Council intent and erroneously contained the
negligence limitation. The final rule retains the AFA standard at Sec.
679.42(i)(6)(i), modified for the IFQ context, namely to use a hired
master on a replacement vessel, the individual QS holder must show that
the ``loss or irreparable damage to the vessel was caused by an act of
God, an act of war, a collision, an act or omission of a party other
than the individual [QS holder] or agent of the individual [QS holder],
or any other event not caused by the willful misconduct of the
individual [QS holder] or agent of the individual [QS holder].''
15. The final rule eliminates the changes in the proposed rule to
Sec. 679.42(j). Section 679.42(j) is the current regulation that
governs the use of IFQ by corporations, partnerships, associations, or
other non-individual entities that hold QS. The proposed rule added the
12-month ownership requirement to Sec. 679.42(j). The application of
the proposed rule to QS holders that are non-individual entities was
the subject of the public comment described in Comment 17. In response
to this comment, NMFS reexamined the record of this action. NMFS
concluded that the Council did not intend to impose the 12-month vessel
ownership requirement on non-individual QS holders, such as
corporations, partnerships, or associations. NMFS therefore eliminates
the changes to Sec. 679.42(j) in the final rule.
The Analysis for this action states unequivocally that the action
approved by the Council imposed the 12-month ownership requirement only
on individual QS holders. Section 5 of the Analysis states: ``For
clarity, QS and QS holders who must hire skippers are not subject to
this action or considered in this analysis. Persons who `must' hire
skippers are all non-individual QS holders.'' Non-individual QS holders
means corporations, partnerships, associations, and other legal
entities that hold QS. Non-individual QS holders were ``not subject to
this action or considered in this analysis.''
Individual QS holders were subject to the Council's action and were
considered in the Analysis of this action. Individual QS holders means
natural persons that hold QS. Individual QS holders who initially
received Quota Share may, but not must, hire a skipper to harvest their
annual IFQ. The Analysis showed that from 1995 to 2010, the number of
individual QS holders declined through attrition but the remaining
individual QS holders were increasing their use of hired masters
(Analysis, Table 3, Table 4, Table 7; see ADDRESSES).
The proposed rule cited this evidence to describe the problem that
the rule was designed to solve, ``Over the course of the IFQ Program,
the number of initial QS holders who may hire a master has declined
through attrition, while the reliance on hired masters by those QS
holders has increased. While this may appear contradictory, it
demonstrates that initial recipients who used to be active in the
fishery are retired from active participation and instead are hiring
skippers to fish their IFQ permits.'' (77 FR 65846, October 31, 2012).
This problem statement only applies, and only could apply, to
individual QS holders because it is only individual QS holders, who
could have retired from active participation and begun hiring skippers
to fish their IFQ permits. Non-individual QS holders never were, and
never could have been, active in the fishery by fishing their own IFQ
permits. Thus, the record of this action does not support applying the
proposed rule to QS held by non-individual entities. NMFS also
clarifies a statement in the preamble to the proposed rule with regard
to Form 2692 and a QS holder's claim that a vessel is temporarily
disabled. Form 2692 is a United States Coast Guard (USCG) form. The
current title of Form 2692 is ``Report of Marine Casualty.'' The former
title of Form 2692 was ``Report of Marine Accident, Injury or Death.''
[[Page 10001]]
The preamble to the proposed rule stated: ``If USCG Form 2692 is not
required to be completed for a vessel at the time of an incident that
caused the 60-day duration of repair, then the vessel owner would be
required to provide additional documentation to NMFS demonstrating that
the vessel meets the requirements of this exception'' (77 FR 65847,
October 31, 2012).
The preamble implies that Form 2692 may not be required in
situations where a QS holder claims that he or she cannot meet the 12-
month vessel ownership requirement because the QS holder's vessel is
temporarily disabled. This is not the case. To prove a claim of
temporary vessel disablement under Sec. 679.42(i)(7), the individual
QS holder must show that the vessel is disabled ``from repairs required
by an accident that materially and adversely affected the vessel's
seaworthiness or fitness for service.'' Under USCG regulations at 46
CFR 4.05-1, if a vessel is involved in ``an occurrence materially and
adversely affecting the vessel's seaworthiness or fitness for service
or route,'' a vessel operator or other person in charge of the vessel
must report the incident to the USCG. The USCG form for reporting
marine accidents is Form 2692: https://marineinvestigations.us. Thus,
although it is true that a vessel operator does not have to report all
accidents to the USCG, a vessel operator or other person in charge of a
vessel does have to report to the USCG on Form 2692 all accidents that
constitute a ``temporary vessel disablement'' under this rule. To prove
a claim of temporary vessel disablement, the individual QS holder must
submit to NMFS a copy of Form 2692 that has been submitted to the USCG
concerning the accident.
NMFS notes that if an individual submits to NMFS a copy of Form
2692 that has been submitted to the USCG, that form alone does not show
that the individual QS holder meets the requirements in the rule to
show that a vessel is temporarily disabled. The individual QS holder
must also submit documentation that the accident will require, or has
required, at least 60 days of repairs.
16. The final rule modifies regulations at Sec. 679.5(l)(7)(i) to
correct reporting requirements for Registered Buyers who receive and
purchase landings of sablefish or halibut or Community Development
Quota (CDQ) halibut. The regulations at Sec. 679.5(l)(7)(i) require
Registered Buyers to annually submit an IFQ Buyer Report to NMFS. The
information submitted on IFQ Buyer Reports is used to calculate and
assess fees to recover the costs of managing and enforcing the IFQ
Program from fishery participants (Sec. 679.43). NMFS also uses
information submitted on IFQ Buyer Reports to calculate and assess
observer deployment fees for the North Pacific Groundfish Observer
Program (Sec. 679.55). These reporting requirements were promulgated
in a 2012 observer program final rule (77 FR 70062, November 21, 2012).
NMFS inadvertently revised these reporting requirements in a final rule
to implement a halibut catch sharing plan for guided sport and
commercial fisheries in Alaska (78 FR 75844, December 12, 2013). The
halibut catch sharing plan final rule incorrectly removed the
requirement for Registered Buyers of landings of CDQ halibut to submit
an IFQ Buyer Report. The halibut catch sharing plan final rule also
incorrectly revised regulations specifying the information that must be
included on an IFQ Buyer Report and the methods for submitting the
report to NMFS. This final rule revises Sec. 679.5(l)(7)(i) to correct
these inadvertent errors.
Comments and Responses
NMFS received 7 letters that contained 22 comments on the proposed
rule.
Comment 1. One commenter supports the proposed rule. The commenter
supports the Council's goal of preserving the historical character of
the commercial Pacific halibut and sablefish fisheries as owner/
operator fisheries and believes the proposed rule is an effective way
to promote that goal.
Response. NMFS notes this support.
Comment 2. The commenter asserts that the Federal system of fishery
management is a fraud and does not benefit the public who are the real
owners of these fish.
Response. This comment does not specifically address the proposed
rule. The issue of the overall validity of Federal management of marine
resources is outside the scope of this action. The commenter raises no
relevant issues or concerns that were not addressed in the preamble to
the proposed rule or the Analysis prepared for this action.
Comment 3. The proposed rule accomplishes little in light of recent
Council action that limits the exemption that initial individual
recipients have from the owner-on-board requirement for QS that they
acquire after February 12, 2010. This other Council action violates the
American with Disabilities Act.
Response. The commenter is correct that the Council has
recommended, and NMFS has recently proposed, a rule that largely
eliminates the exemption from the owner-on-board requirement for QS
that initial individual QS recipients acquire by transfer after
February 12, 2010 (78 FR 24707, April 26, 2013). NMFS will consider
comments that it receives on that proposed rule when it responds to
comments on that proposed rule.
NMFS agrees that this other proposed rule, if adopted, would
prevent initial individual QS recipients from expanding the amount of
QS that is subject to an exemption from the owner-on-board requirement.
This other proposed rule, however, does not obviate the need for this
rule. First, the other action is a proposed, not a final, rule. Second,
the other action does not affect in any way QS that initial individual
recipients of QS acquired on or before February 12, 2010, either by
initial issuance or transfer. Without the rule that is the subject of
this action, for all QS acquired on or before February 12, 2010, an
initial individual recipient of QS could still use a hired master to
harvest that QS from a vessel in which the QS holder had only a
temporary ownership interest. With the rule that is the subject of this
action, except for situations of total or temporary vessel loss, an
initial individual QS holder who wishes an exemption from the owner-on-
board requirement for any QS that the individual holds must maintain a
minimum 20-percent ownership interest in the vessel that the hired
master will use for the 12-month period before the individual applies
to use a hired master. The effect of this rule is separate and distinct
from the action that was the subject of this comment.
Comment 4. The proposed rule does very little to promote the
movement of QS from the first-generation fishing families to Community
Quota Entities or second-generation fishermen.
Response. The rule gives initial individual recipients of QS a
choice among three responses to this rule: (1) The individual QS holder
harvests his or her IFQ by being on board the vessel; (2) the
individual QS holder harvests his or her IFQ through a hired master and
maintains a 20-percent ownership interest in the vessel for the 12
months before hiring the master; or (3) the individual QS holder
transfers his or her QS. Any of these actions by individual QS holders
represents an improvement over the status quo and furthers an objective
of the Council in taking this action.
To the extent that individual QS holders choose the first
alternative, and harvest their IFQ by being on board the vessel, this
furthers the Council's objective of compliance with the owner-
[[Page 10002]]
on-board requirement in the IFQ fisheries. To the extent that
individual QS holders choose the second alternative, and maintain the
required vessel ownership interest, this promotes the Council's
objective that QS holders have a meaningful interest in the vessel from
which their IFQ is fished as a condition for using a hired master. To
the extent that individual QS holders choose the third alternative, and
transfer QS, this increases the opportunity for Community Quota
Entities (CQEs) and individuals with substantial crew experience to
acquire QS because CQEs and individuals with substantial crew
experience meet the requirements in regulation to receive QS by
transfer. NMFS notes that if a CQE acquires QS, the QS will be fished
by a resident of a small, rural community that the CQE represents. NMFS
examines CQEs further in Comment 10.
Comment 5. The proposed rule is like requiring a homeowner to own a
new home for 12 months before moving into it.
Response. Under this rule, an initial individual recipient of QS
may fish his or her IFQ from any vessel, including a vessel in which
the individual has no ownership interest, as long as the individual is
on board the vessel for the entire trip and landing. Thus, for the
first 12 months that an individual owns a 20-percent interest in a
vessel, the individual can fish his or her IFQ from that vessel, as
long as the individual is on board the vessel. If the individual QS
holder does not want to harvest IFQ from a vessel he or she has owned
for 12 months, and does not want to be on board a new vessel, the
individual has a transferable asset, namely QS, an asset that the
individual received as an initial recipient and that the individual may
transfer for value.
Comment 6. The proposed rule makes it difficult for QS holders to
acquire a new vessel by purchase or by construction because the QS
holder cannot use that new vessel to fish his or her IFQ for 12 months.
The proposed rule makes it difficult to obtain financing for a new
vessel because the QS holder cannot use that new vessel to fish his or
her IFQ for 12 months.
Response. An initial individual recipient of QS may fish his or her
IFQ from any vessel for any reason, as long as the individual QS holder
is on board the vessel during the trip and landing. If the ability to
use a vessel immediately to fish IFQ is a key to financing purchase of
a new vessel, the individual QS holder can use a new vessel immediately
by being on board the vessel during the harvest of the IFQ.
If the individual is unwilling or unable to be on board the vessel,
this suggests that the individual has ceased active participation in
the fishery. When an individual is no longer an active participant in
the IFQ fishery, the Council intended that person would transfer his or
her QS and, in that way, allow future generations to participate in the
commercial harvest of Pacific halibut and sablefish in Alaska. If the
proposed rule causes QS holders who are no longer active fishermen to
divest themselves of QS, that is what the Council intended.
Comment 7. The proposed rule is an attempt to cause well-meaning
fishing families to sell out.
Response. NMFS disagrees. As noted, the proposed rule gives initial
individual recipients of QS a choice: (1) Harvest their IFQ by being on
board the vessel; (2) harvest their IFQ through a hired master and
maintain a 20-percent ownership interest in the vessel for the 12
months prior to using the hired master; (3) transfer their QS. If the
QS holder chooses to transfer QS, the QS holder can transfer it to a
family member, as long as the family member is eligible to receive QS
by transfer. To receive QS by transfer, an individual either must have
initially received QS or must have 150 days experience working as part
of a harvesting crew in any U.S. commercial fishery, a requirement that
favors fishing families. The QS holder may transfer their QS to a
family member on terms that the QS holder chooses: as a gift, at a
discounted price, or at full-market value.
Comment 8. The proposed rule discriminates against initial
recipients. The proposed rule does not apply to second generation QS
holders.
Response. The commenter is correct that the proposed rule only
applies to first-generation QS holders, or initial individual
recipients of QS, because initial individual recipients are exempt from
the owner-on-board requirement by owning the vessel from which their
IFQ will be harvested. This rule tightens the vessel ownership
exemption by requiring that initial individual recipients own the
vessel for 12 months prior to using a hired master. Individuals who are
second-generation QS holders are never exempt from the owner-on-board
requirement based on vessel ownership. Therefore, the proposed rule
does not, and actually could not, apply to them.
Comment 9. The proposed rule is an attempt to prevent QS holders
from marketing quota to different vessels.
Response. NMFS agrees that the rule seeks to prevent individuals
from marketing their QS to different vessels if, by that, the commenter
means that a QS holder will use hired masters to harvest IFQ on a
number of different vessels in which the QS holder has only a short-
term ownership interest, such as an ownership interest for only the
duration of the IFQ trip. If an individual QS holder has a substantial,
long-term interest in a vessel, which the Council specified as a 20-
percent ownership interest for 12 months, the proposed rule allows the
QS holder to ``market'' his or her QS to that vessel.
Comment 10. The proposed rule does not apply to Community
Development Quota (CDQ) groups or Community Quota Entities (CQEs). CDQ
groups and CQEs have an unfair financial advantage over other QS
holders because CDQ groups and CQEs are tax-exempt.
Response. The CDQ Program was established in 1992 (57 FR 54936,
November 23, 1992). The CDQ groups are six non-profit corporations that
represent one or more communities in western Alaska. CDQ groups do not
receive QS. CDQ groups do receive an annual allocation of Pacific
halibut, sablefish, and other species in the BSAI. CDQ groups use the
revenue derived from the harvest of their fisheries allocations to fund
economic development activities and provide employment opportunities
for the communities they represent (77 FR 6492, February 8, 2012).
CQEs are non-profit corporations that may acquire halibut QS by
transfer. CQEs represent one or more small, rural communities that are
located adjacent to the coast of the Gulf of Alaska. Since NMFS began
issuing QS in 1995, the amount of QS and the number of resident QS
holders has declined substantially in these communities. The purpose of
CQEs is to minimize the adverse, economic impact of the IFQ Program on
these communities and to provide the opportunity for the sustained
participation of these communities in the IFQ fisheries. NMFS adopted
the CQE rule in 2004 (69 FR 23681, April 30, 2004). If a CQE acquires
QS, it must harvest its IFQ through a resident of the community that
the CQE represents (50 CFR 679.41(c)(10)). Twenty-nine CQEs have formed
representing 30 communities. Only two CQEs hold any QS. For additional
detail on CQE holdings, see https://alaskafisheries.noaa.gov/ram/.
The commenter is correct that this rule does not apply to CDQ
groups and CQEs. This rule applies to individual QS holders to prevent
these QS holders from using hired masters to harvest their QS based on
short-term ownership of vessels that the hired masters are using. CDQ
groups and CQEs are non-profit
[[Page 10003]]
corporations. CDQ groups must use hired masters to harvest fish on
their behalf. CQEs must lease their IFQ to community residents. Neither
entity is causing the problem that this rule seeks to solve.
The commenter is also correct that CDQ groups and CQEs are non-
profit corporations that are tax-exempt according to the provisions in
Federal and State laws. The question of tax exemption for non-profit
corporations is beyond the scope of this rule.
NMFS notes that this rule applies to individual QS holders who
received QS as initial recipients and who may transfer that QS on
financial terms of their choosing. CDQ groups do not receive a
transferable asset; they can harvest their allocation every year but
they cannot sell or transfer the allocation. CQEs do hold QS and may
transfer it, subject to restrictions. But CQEs only acquire QS by
purchase.
Comment 11. The proposed rule at Sec. 679.42(i)(6) limits the
ability of a QS holder to use a hired master if the QS holder lost
their prior vessel due to any act of negligence by the vessel owner or
the vessel owner's agent. Most vessel groundings are the result of some
level of negligence. A common cause for grounding is that a skipper or
a crew member falls asleep during wheel watches. It would be difficult
for NMFS to determine negligence.
Response. NMFS agrees with the action requested by this comment and
eliminates the negligence limitation in Sec. 679.42(i)(6) in the final
rule. NMFS concludes that the rule, as proposed, did not comport with
Council intent. NMFS explains the basis for this conclusion in the
section, ``Changes From the Proposed Rule.''
Comment 12. The proposed rule will encourage vessel owners to
continue fishing in smaller, unsafe vessels because the cost of having
a new vessel without any revenue for 12 months could be prohibitive.
Response. NMFS does not believe that the rule will result in a less
safe IFQ fleet. First, all vessels are subject to safety regulations.
Second, a primary benefit of the IFQ program is to promote safety by
decreasing the race for fish. A QS holder has a specific amount of
halibut or sablefish that the QS holder is authorized to harvest
throughout the season and therefore does not need to fish in poor
weather. Third, the commenter does not provide evidence that the status
quo is leading QS holders to invest in newer, safer, or larger IFQ
vessels. The problem that led to this rule was that the Council
concluded that some QS holders were claiming exemption from the owner-
on-board requirement by acquiring an ownership interest in a vessel for
only the duration of the IFQ trip. It does not seem likely that short-
term ownership of a vessel would motivate a QS holder to invest in
improvements to the vessel or to invest in a new vessel. In fact, the
opposite seems more likely, namely that if a QS holder can only be
exempt from the owner-on-board requirement by owning an interest in a
vessel for 12 months, then the QS holder may be more interested in
upgrading the vessel.
Most importantly, the rule does not prevent a QS holder from owning
a newer, bigger, or safer vessel and immediately using that vessel to
harvest his or her IFQ. An individual QS holder can immediately use a
new vessel to harvest his or her IFQ, and immediately get revenue from
the new vessel, as long as the individual QS holder is on board the
vessel for the IFQ trip and landing.
Comment 13. The proposed rule is based on a false assumption that a
vessel lease cannot be a long-term arrangement--extending for 12 months
or more--that shows as meaningful a commitment to the fishery as a 20-
percent ownership of a vessel.
Response. From the inception of the IFQ Program, an individual QS
holder had to either fish his or her own IFQ permit by being on board
the vessel or use a hired master who fished from a vessel that the QS
holder owned. A vessel leased by the QS holder has never been a
sufficient basis for the QS holder to use a hired master in the IFQ
Program.
NMFS acknowledges it is possible that a QS holder could lease a
vessel and that the vessel owner and the QS holder would agree that the
QS holder would pay expenses that a vessel owner normally would. The
commenter does not provide any evidence that this is a common practice
and any rationale why a QS holder would want to lease a vessel and take
on expenses, such as repairs, that contribute to the long-term life of
the vessel beyond the lease period. However, if a QS holder has leased
a vessel on financial terms that more closely resemble a 20-percent
ownership interest for 12 months, the final rule gives the QS holder 13
months to choose whether to be on board the vessel during the IFQ
harvest, convert the lease to an ownership interest, or transfer the
QS.
Comment 14. Under the proposed rule, a QS holder might have an
ownership interest in a vessel that was a paper transaction only.
Response. The commenter is correct that this rule only requires
that an individual QS holder prove the required 12-month period of
vessel ownership as reflected in the formal records of the title to the
vessel. The QS holder does not have to submit details to NMFS of the
financial transactions that led to the ownership interest. The Council,
however, believes that imposing a 12-month period of vessel ownership,
coupled with the requirement that the QS holder prove ownership by
standardized documentation, decreases the likelihood that QS holders
will have an ownership interest on ``paper only.''
The Council took this action because it believed that some
individual QS holders owned a 20-percent interest in the vessel only
for the duration of a trip as a way to claim an exemption from the
owner-on-board requirement. The Council concluded that if the QS holder
had to own a 20-percent interest for 12 months, the QS holder would
more likely have an actual, meaningful ownership interest in the
vessel. This rule increases the likelihood that a QS holder would be
interested in the condition of the vessel for at least a 12-month
period, not merely for the duration of the IFQ trip.
The Council also recommended, and NMFS adopted, a regulation that
QS holders who wish an exemption from the owner-on-board requirement
must submit formal documents showing a minimum 20-percent ownership
interest in the vessel from which their IFQ would be fished: an United
States Coast Guard Abstract of Title for federally-documented vessels,
a State of Alaska vessel license or registration for State-documented
vessels (72 FR 44795, August 9, 2007). This means that the QS holder's
claimed ownership interest in the vessel cannot be proven merely by a
verbal agreement or informal written agreement between the QS holder
and other owner(s) of the vessel. The QS holder's interest must be
reflected in formal vessel ownership documents maintained by the
Federal or State government.
Comment 15. If a QS holder experienced an engine failure near the
end of the season, and the repairs would only take 30 days, the QS
holder would lose the rest of the fishery for that year.
Response. The commenter is correct that if an individual QS
holder's vessel has an accident that will take less than 60 days to
repair, then the individual QS holder may not hire a master to fish his
or her IFQ on a vessel that the individual QS holder has not owned for
12 months. As the commenter implies, the QS holder can harvest his or
her IFQ any time during the year and this scenario is only a potential
problem if the engine failure occurred near the end of the season. In
that situation, the individual QS holder could finish out
[[Page 10004]]
the season with any vessel as long as the individual QS holder was on
board the vessel during the harvest of the QS holder's IFQ.
Comment 16. The proposed rule underestimates the documentation and
time required to prove ownership of a vessel by other types of
documentation.
Response. Under the current regulation, a QS holder must prove a
minimum 20-percent ownership of a vessel by standard documents that a
vessel owner should have fairly easily available: an Abstract of Title
for a federally documented vessel and a State of Alaska vessel license
or registration for a State-licensed vessel. If those documents show a
minimum of 20-percent ownership for the past 12 months, the QS holder
need not submit other types of documentation. If, for any reason, the
standard documents do not show that the QS holder has a 20-percent
ownership interest for at least 12 months, the QS holder must submit
additional documentation.
The need to submit other types of documentation seems most likely
to occur when an individual QS holder owns a vessel with other persons.
NMFS hopes, and expects, that most QS holders would have formalized
their ownership arrangements with other persons in documents that exist
independently from the application by the QS holder to use a hired
master. Proving vessel ownership should not require creating documents
but merely retrieving them.
But since retrieving documents takes time, and that time should be
included in the estimate of compliance time, NMFS agrees that the time
estimate in the proposed rule was too low. The time estimate in the
proposed rule was an estimate of an average of 30 minutes to fill out
the form, ``Application for IFQ/CDQ Hired Master Permit.'' NMFS agrees
that the average time to fill out the form would likely be more than 30
minutes. NMFS revises its estimate to the average time to fill out the
Application for IFQ/CDQ Hired Master Permit from 30 minutes to 60
minutes.
Comment 17. Corporate owners of vessels do not have the ability to
be on board the vessel and thus have no alternative to fishing their
IFQ from a vessel that they have owned for the 12 months prior to the
harvest. Corporate owners could not upgrade to a new vessel and use it
immediately to fish their IFQ. Corporate owners would have to maintain
a 20-percent interest in a second vessel in case they experienced a
problem with their first vessel that was not covered by this rule.
Response. NMFS agrees with this comment. NMFS withdraws the changes
in the proposed rule to Sec. 679.42(j), which is the regulation that
governs the use of QS held by corporations and other non-individual
entities. NMFS concludes that the Council did not intend to apply the
12-month vessel ownership requirement to the use of QS by non-
individual entities. NMFS explains the basis for this conclusion in the
section, ``Changes From the Proposed Rule.''
Comment 18. The proposed rule makes it harder for new entrants,
such as IFQ crewmembers, to get into the fishery. Under the current
rules, new entrants to the halibut and sablefish fishery can buy a
vessel, convey a 20-percent interest to an initial recipient, and make
money immediately by harvesting IFQ under a hired skipper permit. A new
entrant into the IFQ fisheries cannot afford to purchase a vessel and
own the vessel for 12 months, but not get any money from the use of the
vessel to harvest IFQs for 12 months.
Response. NMFS disagrees that the overall effect of the rule will
make it harder for new entrants, such as IFQ crew members, to enter the
fishery. First, the Analysis for this action does not show that the
status quo management is promoting new entrants into the IFQ fisheries.
In the 12-year period of 1998 to 2010, the annual fishable IFQ halibut
pounds held by initial individual recipients decreased only slightly
from 43 percent to 40 percent of the total IFQ halibut pool. Over the
same period, the annual fishable IFQ sablefish pounds held by initial
individual recipients decreased only slightly from 28 percent to 22
percent of the total IFQ sablefish pool (Analysis, Table 6; see
ADDRESSES). Under current regulations, new entrants are acquiring QS at
a very slow rate.
Second, the final rule still allows QS holders to form agreements
with individuals seeking entry into the IFQ fisheries. The commenter
states that the status quo promotes the entry of new persons into the
IFQ fisheries by allowing new entrants to purchase vessels. The
commenter is correct that under the status quo, a person who owns a
vessel may agree with an individual QS holder to fish their IFQ
immediately, without the QS holder being on board the vessel, as long
as the QS holder acquires a 20-percent interest in the vessel for the
duration of the IFQ trip. The commenter is also correct that after the
final rule goes into effect, individual QS holders will not be able to
receive an exemption from the owner-on-board requirement, unless they
maintain an ownership interest in the vessel for the 12 months before
they want the exemption.
After the final rule goes into effect, an individual seeking entry
into the IFQ fishery by buying a vessel first, rather than buying QS
first, will still be able to offer a QS holder the immediate use of a
vessel to harvest IFQ, but only if the QS holder is on board the vessel
for the harvest. The rule will not put any individual seeking entry
into the IFQ fishery at a competitive disadvantage: No vessel owner
will be able to offer an individual QS holder an immediate exemption
from the owner-on-board requirement. Except for vessel loss situations,
all individual QS holders will have to wait 12 months to claim an
exemption from the owner-on-board requirement.
When faced with the choice between (1) being on board the vessel
for the harvest of their QS, (2) maintaining a 20-percent ownership
interest in a vessel for 12 months, or (3) transferring their QS, some
QS holders will choose to be on board the vessel. Some QS holders will
choose to maintain a 20-percent interest in a vessel for 12 months as a
way of preserving their eligibility for an exemption from the owner-on-
board requirement. This will result in an increased demand by QS
holders for longer-term ownership agreements with individuals who are
seeking entry into the IFQ fisheries and who own vessels suitable for
fishing IFQ. Some QS holders will choose the third alternative and
transfer their QS. This will result in the increased availability of QS
to persons seeking entry into the IFQ fisheries.
Comment 19. The proposed rule is an attempt by Alaskans to make
non-Alaskans sell out.
Response. The 12-month vessel ownership requirement in this rule
applies to all initial individual recipients of QS who wish to use a
hired master to harvest their IFQ. The proposed rule applies equally to
residents and non-residents of Alaska and does not discriminate based
on residency.
Comment 20. The proposed rule would drive down prices for used
vessels and weaken construction of new vessels.
Response. With regard to the claim that the proposed rule would
drive down the price of used vessels, the commenter does not clearly
explain why he believes this would happen and why it would be bad if it
did happen. It seems that the commenter is asserting that the proposed
rule will cause a decrease in demand for vessels to harvest IFQ, and
therefore a decrease in the price of used vessels, because QS
[[Page 10005]]
holders will collectively use fewer vessels to harvest their IFQ
allotments.
NMFS does not believe that this is a problem with the proposed rule
for four reasons. First, it is not NMFS's responsibility to manage the
IFQ fisheries to maintain any particular price level for IFQ vessels.
When vessel prices decrease, this helps people who want to buy vessels
and enter the fishery. When vessel prices increase, this helps people
who want to sell their vessels. It is NMFS's responsibility to
establish the rules for the issuance, use, and transfer of QS through
the Council process in the Halibut Act and the Magnuson-Stevens Act.
Within those rules, the market establishes the price of QS and the
market establishes the price of vessels that harvest QS.
Second, the rule established by this regulation is that QS holders
cannot use a hired master by ``owning'' a 20-percent interest in a
vessel for the duration of a trip, ``owning'' a 20-percent interest in
another vessel for the duration of a trip, ``owning'' a 20-percent
interest in another vessel for the duration of a trip, and so forth.
Under this rule, a QS holder must now own one vessel for 12 months
before the QS holder can use a hired master to fish QS from that
vessel. If this rule decreases the total number of vessels that harvest
IFQ allotments, that means that QS holders were using hired masters on
several vessels during a fishing year, which is the practice that the
Council action and this rule seeks to stop.
Third, this rule may result in some QS holders transferring their
QS. To the extent that this occurs, the rule will result in more QS on
the market and could increase the number of vessels harvesting IFQ.
Finally, NMFS does not anticipate that this rule will have a
significant effect on IFQ vessel prices upward or downward. The market
determines the price of vessels that harvest IFQ as a result of the
overall demand for these vessels and the overall supply of these
vessels. This rule affects, at most, vessels that harvest 40 percent of
the halibut QS pool and 32 percent of the sablefish QS pool, the
percent of the QS pool held by initial individual recipients. The
restrictions in this rule thus will not affect the demand for vessels
that harvest 60 percent of the halibut QS pool and 68 percent of the
sablefish QS pool. The restrictions in this rule do not affect other
factors that determine price of vessels and the supply of vessels, such
as the price of halibut, the price of sablefish, the amount of the TAC
for each species, the extent to which IFQ vessels can harvest other
species, the availability and terms of financing, and general economic
conditions.
As for the assertion that the proposed rule will weaken the
construction of new vessels, the commenter offers no evidence that the
status quo is leading to the construction of new vessels to participate
in the IFQ fisheries. Under the final rule, an individual QS holder can
arrange for construction of a vessel and use the vessel to fish IFQ as
long as the individual QS holder is on board the vessel during the
harvest of the IFQ.
For NMFS's response to other comments involving new vessels,
upgrading vessels and new entrants into the IFQ fisheries, see NMFS's
response to Comments 6, 12, and 18.
Comment 21. The problem--short-term ownership of vessels so the QS
holders do not have to be on board the vessel--has never been
quantified. The ``problem'' is a personal issue brought forth by two
Alaskans with strong political ties.
Response. NMFS disagrees that the 12-month vessel ownership
requirement in this rule is the result of personal issues rather than
policy judgments. In recommending the 12-month ownership requirement,
the Council was responding to genuine, longstanding policy concerns and
data supporting those concerns. As described in the preamble to the
proposed rule, from the beginning of the IFQ Program, the Council has
sought to enforce an important feature of the program, namely if a QS
holder wishes to harvest his or her IFQ through a hired master, the QS
must have an ownership interest in the vessel which the hired master
will use. The preamble also describes the actions that the Council has
recommended, and that NMFS has adopted, to ensure that if a QS holder
takes advantage of the exemption from the owner-on-board requirement,
the QS holder's ownership interest in the vessel is actual and
meaningful (77 FR 65843, October 31, 2012). This rule establishes the
benchmark for a meaningful and actual ownership interest in a vessel,
namely the QS holder maintains a continuous 20-percent ownership
interest in the vessel for 12 months prior to when the QS holder wishes
to use the hired master.
The preamble to the proposed rule described the data supporting the
Council's concerns: ``Over the course of the IFQ Program, the number of
initial QS holders who may hire a master has declined through
attrition, while the reliance on hired masters by those QS holders has
increased. While this may appear contradictory, it demonstrates that
initial recipients who used to be active in the fishery are retired
from active participation and instead are hiring skippers to fish their
IFQ permits'' (77 FR 65846, October 31, 2012). The Analysis for this
action shows that for the IFQ halibut fishery, from 1998 to 2010, the
number of individual QS holders that had landings and could hire
masters declined from 1,005 individual QS holders to 696 individual QS
holders, a decline of approximately 30 percent, but the number of
individual QS holders that had landings and did hire masters increased
from 110 to 216, an increase of approximately 100 percent (Analysis,
Table 3; see ADDRESSES). For the IFQ sablefish fishery, from 1998 to
2010, the number of individual QS holders that had landings and could
hire masters declined from 232 to 151, a decline of 35 percent, but the
number of individual QS holders that had landings and did hire masters
increased from 46 to 92, an increase of 100 percent. (Analysis, Table
4; see ADDRESSES). This data shows that the number of individual QS
holders is declining but the remaining individual QS holders are
increasingly using hired masters.
Comment 22. The alleged problem--sham ownership of vessels fishing
IFQ without the QS holder on board the vessel--will solve itself
because all initial recipients will eventually die.
Response. NMFS agrees that in the long run this problem will be
resolved because all initial individual recipients of QS will
eventually leave the fishery because of voluntary retirement or death
and eventually all QS will be held by individuals who are subject to
the owner-on-board requirement. However, initial individual recipients
of QS still hold a considerable amount of QS. As of 2010, initial
individual recipients held 40 percent of the halibut QS pool and 32
percent the sablefish QS pool (Analysis, Table 3, Table 4; see
ADDRESSES).
Under current regulation, these QS holders must have a 20-percent
ownership interest in the vessel that a hired master uses to fish their
IFQ, but these QS holders may only own a 20-percent interest in the
vessel for the duration of a trip. The Council recommended this rule to
require that, if initial recipients of QS wish to continue to hire
masters to fish their QS, they must maintain a longer-term ownership
interest--namely 12 months--in the vessel that the hired master will
use to fish their IFQ.
OMB Revisions to Paperwork Reduction Act References in 15 CFR 902.1(b)
Section 3507(c)(B)(i) of the PRA requires that agencies inventory
and display a current control number
[[Page 10006]]
assigned by the Director, OMB, for each agency information collection.
Section 902.1(b) identifies the location of NOAA regulations for which
OMB approval numbers have been issued. Because this final rule revises
and adds data elements within a collection-of-information for
recordkeeping and reporting requirements, 15 CFR 902.1(b) is revised to
reference correctly the sections resulting from this final rule. In
addition, corrections and omissions from previous rules are added.
Classification
Pursuant to sections 304(b)(1)(A) and 305(d) of the Magnuson-
Stevens Act, the NMFS Assistant Administrator has determined that this
final rule is consistent with the Halibut Act, the GOA groundfish FMP,
the BSAI groundfish FMP, the national standards and other provisions of
the Magnuson-Stevens Act, and other applicable laws.
Pursuant to the Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(B),
the Assistant Administrator of Fisheries finds good cause to waive
prior notice and opportunity for public comment otherwise required by
the section for the revisions to registered buyer reporting
requirements found at Sec. 679.5(l)(7)(i) that are implemented by this
final rule. NOAA finds that prior notice and opportunity for public
comment are unnecessary because the revisions to Sec. 679.5(l)(7)(i)
do not substantively change the recordkeeping and reporting
requirements specified in that section. The revisions correct an
inadvertent error made by a final rule recently promulgated by NOAA as
described in the ``Changes from Proposed to Final Rule'' section of the
preamble above. Prior notice and comment are also unnecessary because
the public had an opportunity to comment on the registered buyer
reporting requirements during the observer program rule-making. Prior
notice and comment are also contrary to the public interest because
immediate publication reduces potential public confusion associated
with the catch-sharing plan rule's inadvertent error in registered
buyer reporting requirements. Because prior notice and opportunity for
public comment are not required by 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(B), or any other
law, for the regulatory revision at Sec. 679.5(l)(7)(i), the
analytical requirements of the Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5. U.S.C.
601 et. seq. are inapplicable.
Regulatory Impact Review
The Council and NMFS conducted a Regulatory Impact Review (RIR)
pursuant to Executive Order 12866. NMFS published a summary of the RIR
in the preamble to the proposed rule (77 FR 65843, October 31, 2012).
The RIR assessed the costs and benefits of Alternative 1 and
Alternative 2. Alternative 1 was no action or the status quo.
Alternative 2 was imposition of the 12-month vessel ownership
requirement on initial individual QS holders as a condition of their
using a hired master and an exemption from the 12-month vessel
ownership requirement in situations of permanent vessel loss or
temporary vessel disablement. The Council concluded that Alternative 2
is likely to result in net benefits to the nation and recommended
Alternative 2. NMFS published the RIR with the Initial Regulatory
Flexibility Analysis (IRFA) and in this rule refers to the RIR/IRFA as
the Analysis. A copy of the Analysis is available from NMFS (see
ADDRESSES). The NMFS Assistant Administrator has determined that this
rule is not significant for purposes of Executive Order 12866.
Small Entity Compliance Guide
Section 212 of the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness
Act of 1996 states that, for each rule or group of related rules for
which an agency is required to prepare a FRFA, the agency shall publish
one or more guides to assist small entities in complying with the rule,
and shall designate such publications as ``small entity compliance
guides.'' The agency shall explain the actions a small entity is
required to take to comply with a rule or group of rules. This section
shall be the Small Entity Compliance Guide for this rule.
This rule modifies Sec. 679.42(i) of part 679, Title 50. The full
text of 50 CFR 679.42 and all IFQ regulations is available at https://www.ecfr.gov.
This rule applies to individuals who were initial recipients of
catcher vessel QS, namely QS in Category B, C, or D, with one
geographical exception. This rule does not apply to catcher vessel QS
that initial individual recipients received in what is commonly known
as Southeast Alaska: it does not apply to QS issued for halibut in IFQ
regulatory area 2C and sablefish in the IFQ regulatory area east of
140[deg] long. This rule does not apply to initial recipients of QS
that were non-individual entities, such as corporations, partnerships,
or associations. This rule does not apply to initial recipients of
catcher processor QS, which is Category A QS.
To harvest halibut or sablefish in a fishing year, an initial
individual recipient of QS in Category B, C, or D receives an annual
IFQ permit. The QS holder/IFQ permit holder must be present on board
the vessel at all times during the fishing trip and during the landing
which occurs pursuant to the authority of the IFQ permit, except if IFQ
regulations authorize a hired master to harvest and land IFQ species
without the QS holder being on board the vessel. If a QS holder wishes
to use a hired master to harvest his or her IFQ, the QS holder must
apply for, and receive, a hired master permit that will authorize the
hired master to harvest the IFQ belonging to the QS holder. The
Application for IFQ/CDQ Hired Master Permit and all other IFQ
applications are on the NMFS Alaska Region Web site at https://alaskafisheries.noaa.gov/ram/ifq.htm.
Under this rule, an individual QS holder may use a hired master to
harvest his or her IFQ, if the QS holder was an initial individual
recipient of QS and if the QS holder continuously owned a minimum 20-
percent ownership interest in the vessel that the hired vessel will use
to harvest the IFQ for 12 months prior to the QS holder's application
for a hired master permit.
An individual QS holder may claim an ownership interest in a
documented or non-documented vessel. A documented vessel means a vessel
documented with the United States Coast Guard in accord with Federal
requirements. A non-documented vessel means a vessel that is not
federally documented but is documented with the State of Alaska.
If the hired master will use a documented vessel to harvest the IFQ
belonging to the QS holder, the QS holder must submit, with the
application for a hired master permit, documentation showing that the
QS holder has owned a minimum 20-percent ownership interest in the
vessel for the 12 months before the application. For a documented
vessel, the QS holder must submit an Abstract of Title showing that the
QS holder is an owner of the vessel. If the Abstract of Title does not
show that the QS holder owns at least a 20-percent ownership interest
in the vessel or does not show that the QS holder has owned a 20-
percent ownership interest for 12 months prior to the application, the
QS holder must submit additional written documentation to prove either
the 20-percent vessel ownership interest or the 12-month ownership
period.
If the hired master will use a non-documented vessel to harvest the
IFQ belonging to the individual QS holder, the individual QS holder
must submit, with the application for a hired master permit, a State of
Alaska vessel license or vessel registration that lists the QS holder
as an owner of the vessel. If the State of Alaska vessel license or
vessel
[[Page 10007]]
registration does not show that the QS holder owns at least a 20-
percent ownership interest in the vessel that the hired master will use
for the 12-month period prior to the application by the QS holder for a
hired master permit, the QS holder must submit additional
documentation.
Suspension of 12-Month Vessel Ownership Requirement if QS Holder
Experiences a Total Physical Loss of a Vessel or Irreparable Damage to
a Vessel
This rule provides a temporary suspension of the 12-month vessel
ownership requirement if an individual QS holder experiences a total,
physical loss of a vessel or irreparable damage to a vessel and the
vessel has been used to harvest IFQ belonging to the QS holder. If an
individual QS holder experiences a total loss of a vessel, either
because the vessel is physically lost or irreparably damaged, and
wishes an exemption from the owner-on-board requirement on that basis,
the individual QS holder must completely fill out the sections of the
Application for IFQ/CDQ Hired Master Permit that pertain to the total
loss of a vessel or irreparable damage to a vessel. Through the
Application, and the materials submitted with it, the individual QS
holder must show that he or she meets the following requirements:
1. The total loss or the irreparable damage to the vessel was
caused by an act of God, an act of war, a collision, an act or omission
of a party other than the owner or agent of the vessel, or any other
event not caused by the willful misconduct of the individual QS holder
or agent of the individual QS holder;
2. The vessel that was lost or irreparably damaged was a commercial
fishing vessel that had been previously used to harvest halibut IFQ or
sablefish IFQ of the individual QS holder who is applying for a hired
master permit;
3. The individual QS holder submits to NMFS a copy of the USCG Form
2692 that has been submitted to the United States Coast Guard. Form
2692 is ``Report of Marine Casualty.'' An operator of a commercial
vessel operating in the navigable waters of the United States is
required to file Form 2692 any time that a vessel is involved in an
unintended grounding; a loss of life; an injury that requires
professional medical treatment; an occurrence causing property damage
in excess of $25,000; an occurrence materially and adversely affecting
the vessel's seaworthiness or fitness for service or route; and other
situations as specified in 46 CFR 4.05-1. Form 2692 and instructions to
fill it out are at https://marineinvestigations.us;
4. The individual QS holder is applying to use a hired master on a
vessel in which the individual QS holder has a minimum 20-percent
ownership interest as of the date of the application by the individual
QS holder for a hired master permit.
If the applicant meets the requirements for issuance of a hired
master permit based on total loss or irreparable damage to a vessel,
the individual QS holder may use a hired master until December 31 of
the year following the total loss or irreparable damage.
Suspension of 12-Month Vessel Ownership Requirement if Temporary
Disablement of a Vessel
If an individual QS holder experiences a temporary disablement of a
vessel, and wishes an exemption from the owner-on-board requirement,
the individual QS holder must completely fill out the sections of the
Application for IFQ/CDQ Hired Master Permit that pertain to the
temporary disablement of a vessel. Through the application, and
materials submitted with it, the individual QS holder must show that he
or she meets the following requirements:
1. The temporary disablement of the vessel results from repairs
required by an accident that materially and adversely affected the
vessel's seaworthiness or fitness for service;
2. The repairs from the accident require at least 60 days to be
completed;
3. The disabled vessel is a commercial fishing vessel that was
previously used to harvest halibut IFQ or sablefish IFQ of the
individual QS holder who is applying for a hired master permit;
4. The individual QS holder submits to NMFS a copy of the USCG Form
2692 that has been submitted to the United States Coast Guard. Form
2692 is ``Report of Marine Casualty.'' An operator of a commercial
vessel operating in the navigable waters of the United States is
required to file Form 2692 any time that a vessel is involved in an
occurrence that materially and adversely affecting the vessel's
seaworthiness or fitness for service, as specified in 46 CFR 4.05-1.
Form 2692 and instructions to fill it out are available at https://marineinvestigations.us;
5. The individual QS holder is applying to use a hired master on a
vessel in which the individual QS holder has a minimum 20-percent
ownership interest as of the date of the application by the individual
QS holder for a hired master permit.
An applicant will need to submit documentation to show that the
repairs required by the accident require at least 60 days to be
completed. That documentation will typically be an estimate or
statement from the business entity that will conduct the repairs.
If the applicant meets the requirements for a hired master permit
based on temporary disablement of a vessel, the individual QS holder
may use a hired master until December 31 of the year following the
temporary disablement of the vessel.
Review of Application for a Hired Master Permit
NMFS will review all applications for a hired master permit. If
NMFS concludes that the applicant meets the requirements for a hired
master permit, NMFS will approve the Application for IFQ/CDQ Hired
Master Permit and issue a hired master permit to the individual
specified on the application.
If NMFS concludes that it cannot approve the application based on
the application and the materials submitted with the application, NMFS
will provide the applicant with an opportunity to submit additional
information or submit a revised application. NMFS will review any
additional submissions by the applicant. If NMFS still concludes that
the applicant does not meet the requirements of a hired master permit,
NMFS will provide the applicant with an Initial Administrative
Determination (IAD). The IAD will explain the basis for the denial of
the application and will explain how the applicant may appeal the
denial of the application.
Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (FRFA)
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) contains the requirements for
the FRFA in section 604(a)(1) through (5) of the RFA. The FRFA must
contain:
1. A succinct statement of the need for, and objectives of, the
rule;
2. A summary of the significant issues raised by the public
comments in response to the initial regulatory flexibility analysis, a
summary of the assessment of the agency of such issues, and a statement
of any changes made in the proposed rule as a result of such comments;
3. A description and an estimate of the number of small entities to
which the rule will apply, or an explanation of why no such estimate is
available;
4. A description of the projected reporting, recordkeeping, and
other compliance requirements of the rule, including an estimate of the
classes of small entities which will be subject to
[[Page 10008]]
the requirement and the type of professional skills necessary for
preparation of the report or record; and
5. A description of the steps the agency has taken to minimize the
significant economic impact on small entities consistent with the
stated objectives of applicable statutes, including a statement of the
factual, policy, and legal reasons for selecting the alternative
adopted in the final rule and why each one of the other significant
alternatives to the rule considered by the agency which affect the
impact on small entities was rejected.
NMFS prepared an Initial Review Flexibility Analysis (IRFA) that
addressed the requirements described in section 603(b)(1) through (5)
of the RFA. This FRFA incorporates the IRFA and the summary of the IRFA
in the proposed rule (77 FR 65843, October 31, 2012). NMFS published
the IRFA with the Regulatory Impact Review on January 5, 2012. The RIR/
IRFA or Analysis is available at the NMFS Alaska Region Web site:
https://alaskafisheries.noaa.gov.
A Succinct Statement of the Need for, and Objectives of, the Rule
The objective of this rule is to amend halibut and sablefish IFQ
regulations to implement Council intent for initial individual
recipients of QS who wish to exercise the hired skipper privilege. The
need for, and objectives of, this rule are further explained in the
preamble to the proposed rule in the sections, ``The Need for Action''
and ``The Proposed Action.'' (77 FR 65843, October 31, 2012).
Summary of Significant Issues Raised During Public Comment
NMFS did not receive any public comments that were explicitly
directed to the Analysis (RIR/IRFA). But several comments objected to
the proposed rule on the grounds that, short of a QS holder
experiencing the a total or temporary loss of a vessel, the proposed
rule would prevent a QS holder from using a hired master to fish their
IFQ, unless the hired master was using a vessel that the QS holder had
owned for 12 months. One comment on the proposed rule stated that the
proposed rule would have a special impact on non-individual QS holders,
namely QS holders that are corporations, partnerships, associations, or
any other type of non-individual entity, because these QS holders do
not have the option of fishing their QS themselves rather than using a
hired master.
The comments on the proposed rule were not accurate with respect to
individual QS holders because under the proposed rule, individual QS
holders can use any vessel to harvest their IFQ as long as they are on
board the vessel. The comments were accurate with respect to QS held by
non-individual entities because, under the proposed rule, a non-
individual entity such as a corporation or a partnership does not have
the option of getting on the vessel and fishing their QS themselves.
These comments implicitly raised an issue with the Analysis because
Section 5 of the Analysis explicitly stated that the Council action
imposed the 12-month ownership requirement on individual QS holders and
did not impose the 12-month ownership requirement on non-individual QS
holders, such as corporations, partnerships, or associations. Section 5
of the Analysis also stated that the Analysis did not analyze the
effect of imposing the 12-month ownership requirement on non-individual
entities. The Analysis also described the regulated entities as
individuals only, namely the 1,307 individual holders of catcher vessel
QS eligible to hire skippers in 2010 that may hire skippers (Analysis,
Table 2; see ADDRESSES). The Classification Section in the proposed
rule described the regulated entities as individual QS holders only (77
FR 65843, October 31, 2012). As a result of these public comments, NMFS
realized that it was an error for the proposed rule to apply the 12-
month ownership requirement to non-individual entities. NMFS therefore
eliminated those provisions in the final rule. NMFS provides further
explanation of this change in the section of this preamble, ``Changes
From the Proposed Rule.''
Number and Description of Small Entities Regulated by the Final Rule
The Small Business Administration (SBA) has established size
criteria for all major industry sectors in the United States, including
fish harvesting and fish processing businesses. On June 20, 2013, the
SBA issued a final rule revising the small business size standards for
several industries effective July 22, 2013. (78 FR 37398, June 20,
2013). The rule increased the size standard for Finfish Fishing from $
4.0 to 19.0 million, Shellfish Fishing from $ 4.0 to 5.0 million, and
Other Marine Fishing from $4.0 to 7.0 million. Id. at 37400 (Table 1).
Pursuant to the Regulatory Flexibility Act, and prior to SBA's June
20 final rule, a final regulatory flexibility analysis was developed
for this action using SBA's former size standards. NMFS has reviewed
the analyses prepared for this action in light of the new size
standards and determined that the new size standards do not affect the
analyses prepared for this action. Under the former, lower, size
standards, all entities subject to this action were considered small
entities; thus they all would continue to be considered small under the
new standards.
The ``universe'' of entities to be considered in a FRFA generally
includes only those small entities that can reasonably be expected to
the directly regulated by the action. This action directly regulates
individuals who were initial recipients of catcher vessel QS and who
still hold catcher vessel QS. In 2010, there were a total of 1,307
initial individual recipients of catcher vessel QS: 1,056 halibut QS
holders and 251 sablefish QS holders (Analysis, Table 2; see
ADDRESSES). Under current regulations, these individual QS holders may
use a hired master to harvest their IFQ if the individual QS holder
owns a 20-percent interest in the vessel that the hired master uses to
harvest the IFQ. This rule adds a 12-month ownership period to the
vessel ownership provision. Under the final rule, an initial individual
QS holder may use a hired master to harvest their IFQ if the individual
QS holder owns a 20-percent ownership interest in the vessel for the 12
months prior to the application by the QS holder to use a hired master.
Although, under the current regulation, all initial individual QS
holders may hire masters based on vessel ownership, not all individual
QS holders do hire masters. The Analysis contained data on how many
individual QS holders had landings and did hire masters in 2010.
Looking at halibut QS holders first, 665 individual QS holders had
landings under an IFQ permit; 216 of these individual QS holders, or 32
percent, used hired masters (Analysis, Table 3; see ADDRESSES). Turning
to sablefish QS holders, 151 individual QS holders had landings under
an IFQ permit; 92 of these individual QS holders, or 61 percent, used
hired masters (Analysis, Table 4; see ADDRESSES).
The final rule also directly regulates hired masters. Under the
current regulation, an individual may receive a hired master permit to
harvest and land IFQ upon proof that the QS holder/IFQ permit holder
owns a minimum 20-percent interest in the vessel that the hired master
will use. Under the final rule, an individual may receive a hired
master permit to harvest and land IFQ upon proof that the hired master
will use a vessel in which the IFQ permit holder has owned a 20-percent
interest
[[Page 10009]]
for the 12 months prior to the application by the IFQ permit holder for
the hired master permit. In 2010, the number of individuals with hired
master permits in the halibut IFQ fishery was 217; the number of
individuals with hired master permits in the sablefish IFQ fishery was
127 (Analysis, Table 7; see ADDRESSES).
It is unknown to what extent this rule will result in individual QS
holders choosing not to use hired masters in the future. It is unknown
because that will depend on how individual QS holders respond to this
rule: how many QS holders will choose to harvest their IFQ themselves
rather than use a hired skipper; how many will meet the 12-month
ownership requirement and continue to use a hired skipper; and how many
will transfer their QS, which will likely make QS available to a number
of hired skippers because hired skippers are likely to meet the
requirements to receive QS by transfer.
Only individuals may receive QS by transfer and the individual
either must be an initial recipient of QS or must have participated for
150 days in a harvesting crew in a U.S. commercial fishery. In 2010,
approximately 60 percent of halibut IFQ hired skippers also owned their
own QS; 70 percent of sablefish IFQ hired skippers also owned their own
QS (Analysis, Table 8; see ADDRESSES). NMFS does not know how many of
these hired skippers received QS as initial recipients. However, almost
all persons who have a hired skipper permit are likely to have, or can
get, 150 days of participating in a harvest crew in a U.S. commercial
fishery by fishing pursuant to their hired skipper permit. If this rule
results in the transfer of QS, the persons holding hired skipper
permits are therefore likely to be eligible to acquire that QS by
transfer.
Recordkeeping and Reporting Requirements
To use a hired master, an individual QS holder must submit a
complete Application for IFQ/CDQ Hired Master Permit. To complete this
application, an individual QS holder must submit documentation that he
or she owns a minimum 20-percent ownership interest in the vessel that
the hired master will use for the period of 12 months prior to the
application by the QS holder to use the hired master. If the QS holder
claims ownership of a documented vessel, the QS holder must submit an
Abstract of Title that shows the QS as an owner. If the Abstract of
Title does not show that the QS holder has a minimum 20-percent vessel
ownership interest for the 12-month period prior to the application for
a hired master, the QS holder must submit additional written
documentation. If the QS holder claims ownership of a non-documented
vessel, the QS holder must submit a State of Alaska license or
registration showing the QS holder is an owner of the vessel. As with
the Abstract of Title, if the State document does not show that the QS
holder has a minimum 20-percent vessel ownership interest for the 12-
month period prior to the application for a hired master permit, then
the QS holder must submit additional written documentation.
Under the final rule, if the individual QS holder wishes to use a
hired master and receive an exemption from the 12-month vessel
ownership requirement, then the QS holder must show that the QS
holder's vessel has been lost, irreparably damaged, or temporarily
disabled by an accident that materially and adversely affects the
vessel's seaworthiness or fitness for service. To receive this
exemption, the QS holder must provide to NMFS a copy of USCG Form 2692
that has been submitted to the USCG. Under 46 CFR 4.05, a vessel owner
is already under an obligation to submit Form 2692 to the USCG when a
vessel is lost, irreparably damaged, or suffers an accident that
materially and adversely affects the vessel's seaworthiness or fitness
for service. If the QS holder is seeking an exemption from the 12-month
vessel ownership based on temporary disablement of the vessel, the QS
holder must also submit documentation that the vessel needs repairs
that require 60 days or more.
The skills necessary to comply with the recordkeeping and reporting
requirements for small entities regulated by this rule are the ability
to read, write, and understand English; the ability to retrieve and
submit vessel ownership documents; and the ability to submit other
documents necessary to complete an application for a hired master
permit, including Form 2692 in the event of vessel loss or temporary
vessel disablement. No professional skills are necessary to comply with
these recordkeeping and reporting requirements.
Description of Significant Alternatives to the Proposed Action That
Minimize Adverse Impacts on Small Entities
The Council and NMFS analyzed the alternative of no action and the
action contained in the proposed and final rules. The ``no-action''
alternative would not achieve the objective of the proposed rule
because it would allow individual QS holders to use a hired master to
harvest their IFQ based on ownership of a vessel only for the duration
of the IFQ trip. NMFS is not aware of any alternatives that would
accomplish the objectives of this action while minimizing the adverse
economic impact on small entities.
In adopting the preferred alternative, the Council chose 12 months
as the appropriate length of time that an individual QS holder had to
own a vessel before the individual QS holder could hire a master to
fish IFQ from that vessel. In 2005, when the Council first recommended
the 12-month ownership requirement, it considered different periods of
time during which a QS holder would have to own the vessel in advance
of using a hired master: 6 months, 12 months, 24 months, and the year
of application for a hired master period plus the previous calendar
year. (RIR/IRFA, November 9, 2005, see ADDRESSES) The Council chose one
year (12 months) because that time period typically includes an entire
fishing season and most QS holders make operating decisions, including
a decision to hire a skipper, on a year-to-year basis. NMFS affirms
that reasoning for this action.
Collection of Information Requirements
This final 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 OMB Control
Number 0648-0272. Public reporting burden for Application for IFQ/CDQ
Hired Master Permit is estimated to average 60 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. The time-to-complete the
application was changed from 30 minutes per response to 60 minutes per
response due to a public comment on the proposed rule.
This final rule also corrects an error in regulatory text in a
previous final rule pertaining to the IFQ Value and Volume Report that
does not affect the burden or cost of completing the form. Public
reporting burden includes 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 email to OIRA_Submission@omb.eop.gov, or
fax to 202-395-7285.
Notwithstanding any other provision of the law, no person is
required to
[[Page 10010]]
respond to, nor shall any person 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
15 CFR Part 902
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
50 CFR Part 679
Alaska, Fisheries, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
Dated: February 18, 2014.
Samuel D. Rauch III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
For the reasons set out in the preamble, NMFS amends 15 CFR part
902 and 50 CFR part 679 as follows:
Title 15--Commerce and Foreign Trade
PART 902--NOAA INFORMATION COLLECTION REQUIREMENTS UNDER THE
PAPERWORK REDUCTION ACT: OMB CONTROL NUMBERS
0
1. The authority citation for part 902 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.
0
2. In Sec. 902.1, in the table in paragraph (b), under the entry ``50
CFR'';
0
a. Remove entries for ``679.7(a)(7)(vii) through (ix),
679.7(n)(1)(x)''; ``679.7(f)''; ``679.7(f)(8)(ii)''; ``679.7(k)'';
``679.7(n)(4)(ii)''; ``679.20(a)(8)(ii)''; ``679.21(f) and (g)'';
679.21(h)''; ``679.27(j)(5)''; ``679.28(b), (c), (d), (e), (g), and
(j)''; ``679.28(k)''; ``679.30''; ``679.32(c)(1) and (2)'';
``679.32(f)''; ``679.42''; ``679.42(a)(1)(i) through (ii), (b) through
(e), (g), (h)(1), (h)(1)(i), (h)(2), and (h)(2)(i)'';
``679.42(a)(2)(iii), (h)(1)(ii), and (h)(2)(ii)''; ``679.61(c), (d),
(e), and (f)''; ``679.65(a), (c), and (d)''; and ``679.65(b) through
(e)'';
0
b. Add entries in alphanumeric order for ``679.7(a)(7)(i)'';
``679.7(a)(7)(vii) through (ix)''; ``679.7(b)(6) and (7) and (c)(3) and
(c)(4)''; ``679.7(f)(1) through (f)(7) and (f)(9) through (16)'';
``679.7(f)(8)''; ``679.7(k)''; ``679.7(n)(1)''; ``679.7(n)(2) and
(n)(4) through (8)''; ``679.7(n)(3)''; ``679.21(f) and (g)'';
``679.28(b) through (e) and (i)'' ``679.28(j) and (k)''; ``679.31(c)'';
``679.32(c)(1) through (3)''; ``679.42(a) through (j)''; ``679.42(k)'';
``679.61(a) through (f)''; and ``679.65''.
The additions read as follows:
Sec. 902.1 OMB control numbers assigned pursuant to the Paperwork
Reduction Act.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
------------------------------------------------------------------------
CFR part or section where the information collection Current OMB
requirement is located control No.*
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * *
50 CFR:
* * * * *
679.7(a)(7)(i)........................................ -0206
679.7(a)(7)(vii) through (ix)......................... -0334
* * * * *
679.7(b)(6) and (7) and (c)(3) and (c)(4)............. -0206,
-0334
* * * * *
679.7(f)(1) through (f)(7) and (f)(9) through (16).... -0269,
-0272
679.7(f)(8)........................................... -0206,
-0334
* * * * *
679.7(k).............................................. -0393,
-0330
* * * * *
679.7(n)(1)........................................... -0334
679.7(n)(2) and (n)(4) through (8).................... -0545
679.7(n)(3)........................................... -0445
* * * * *
679.21(f) and (g)..................................... -0393,
-0401
* * * * *
679.28(b) through (e) and (i)......................... -0330
679.28(j) and (k)..................................... -0515
* * * * *
679.31(c)............................................. -0269
679.32(c)(1) through (3).............................. -0269
* * * * *
679.42(a) through (j)................................. -0272,
-0665
679.42(k)............................................. -0445
* * * * *
679.61(a) through (f)................................. -0393,
-0401
* * * * *
679.65................................................ -0633
* * * * *
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* All numbers begin with 0648-.
Title 50--Wildlife and Fisheries
PART 679--FISHERIES OF THE EXCLUSIVE ECONOMIC ZONE OFF ALASKA
0
3. 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.
0
4. In Sec. 679.5, revise paragraph (l)(7)(i) to read as follows:
Sec. 679.5 Recordkeeping and reporting (R&R).
* * * * *
(l) * * *
(7) * * *
(i) IFQ Registered Buyer Ex-vessel Volume and Value Report (IFQ
Buyer Report)--(A) Applicability. An IFQ Registered Buyer that operates
as a shoreside processor and receives and purchases IFQ landings of
sablefish or halibut or CDQ landings of halibut must submit annually to
NMFS a complete IFQ Buyer Report as described in this paragraph (l) and
as provided by NMFS for each reporting period, as described at Sec.
679.5(1)(7)(i)(E), in which the Registered Buyer receives IFQ fish or
CDQ halibut.
(B) Due date. A complete IFQ Buyer Report must be postmarked or
received by the Regional Administrator not later than October 15
following the reporting period in which the IFQ Registered Buyer
receives the IFQ fish or CDQ halibut.
(C) Information required. A complete IFQ Buyer Report must include
the following information as instructed on the report form at https://alaskafisheries.noaa.gov/ram:
(1) IFQ Registered Buyer identification.
(2) Pounds purchased and values paid. (i) The monthly total
weights, represented in IFQ equivalent pounds by IFQ species or CDQ
halibut, that were landed at the landing port location and purchased by
the IFQ Registered Buyer;
(ii) The monthly total gross ex-vessel value, in U.S. dollars, of
IFQ pounds, by IFQ species or CDQ halibut, that were landed at the
landing port location and purchased by the IFQ Registered Buyer;
(3) Value paid for price adjustments--(i) Retro-payments. The
monthly total U.S. dollar amount of any retro-payments (correlated by
IFQ species or CDQ halibut, landing month(s), and month of payment)
made in the current year to IFQ, or to CDQ halibut permit holders for
landings made during the previous calendar year;
(ii) Electronic submittal. Certification, including the NMFS ID and
password of the IFQ Registered Buyer; or
(iii) Non-electronic submittal. Certification, including the
printed name and signature of the individual submitting the IFQ Buyer
Report on behalf of the Registered Buyer, and date of signature.
(D) Submittal. If applicable, the Registered Buyer must complete an
IFQ Buyer Report and submit by mail or
[[Page 10011]]
FAX to NMFS at the address provided on the form, or electronically to
NMFS online at https://alaskafisheries.noaa.gov/ram.
(E) Reporting period. The reporting period of the IFQ Buyer Report
shall extend from October 1 through September 30 of the following year,
inclusive.
* * * * *
0
5. In Sec. 679.42,
0
a. Revise paragraphs (i)(1)(i), (i)(1)(ii), and (i)(4); and
0
b. Add paragraphs (i)(1)(iv), (i)(1)(v), (i)(6) and (i)(7) to read as
follows:
Sec. 679.42 Limitations on use of QS and IFQ.
* * * * *
(i) * * *
(1) * * *
(i) For a documented vessel, during the 12-month period previous to
the application by the individual for a hired master permit,
continuously owned a minimum 20-percent interest in the vessel as shown
by the U.S. Abstract of Title issued by the U.S. Coast Guard that lists
the individual as an owner and, if necessary to show 20-percent
ownership for 12 months, additional written documentation; or
(ii) For an undocumented vessel, during the 12-month period
previous to the application by the individual for a hired master
permit, continuously owned a minimum 20-percent interest in the vessel
as shown by a State of Alaska license or registration that lists the
individual as an owner and, if necessary to show the 20-percent
ownership for 12 months, additional written documentation; and
* * * * *
(iv) NMFS review of application for exemption--(A) Initial
evaluation. The Regional Administrator will evaluate an application for
a hired master submitted in accordance with paragraphs (i)(1), (i)(6),
and (i)(7) of this section. An applicant who fails to submit the
information specified in the application for a hired master will be
provided a reasonable opportunity to submit the specified information
or submit a revised application.
(B) Initial administrative determinations (IAD). The Regional
Administrator will prepare and send an IAD to an individual submitting
an application for a hired master submitted in accordance with
paragraphs (i)(1), (i)(6), and (i)(7) of this section if the Regional
Administrator determines that the information required to be submitted
to NMFS is deficient or if the applicant fails to submit the required
information. The IAD will indicate the deficiencies with the
information submitted. An applicant who receives an IAD may appeal
under the appeals procedures set out at Sec. 679.43.
(v) Upon request by the Regional Administrator or an authorized
officer, a person must submit additional written documentation
necessary to establish the required minimum 20-percent interest in the
vessel during the 12-month period previous to the application by the
individual for a hired master permit.
* * * * *
(4) The exemption provided in paragraph (i)(1) of this section may
be exercised by an individual on a vessel owned by a corporation,
partnership, association or other non-individual entity in which the
individual is a shareholder, partner, or member, provided that during
the 12-month period previous to the application by the individual for a
hired master permit, the individual continuously maintained a minimum
20-percent ownership interest in the vessel owned by the corporation,
partnership, association or other non-individual entity. For purposes
of this paragraph, an individual's interest in a vessel is determined
by the percentage ownership by the individual of a corporation,
partnership, association or other non-individual entity that has an
ownership interest in the vessel multiplied by the percentage of
ownership of the vessel by the corporation, partnership, or other non-
individual entity.
* * * * *
(6) In the event of the total loss or irreparable damage to a
vessel owned by an individual who qualifies for the exemption in
paragraph (i)(1) of this section, the individual may remain exempt
under paragraph (i)(1) of this section until December 31 of the year
following the year in which the vessel was lost or damaged, provided
that the individual meets the following requirements:
(i) The loss or irreparable damage to the vessel was caused by an
act of God, an act of war, a collision, an act or omission of a party
other than the individual or agent of the individual, or any other
event not caused by the willful misconduct of the individual or agent
of the individual.
(ii) The lost or irreparably damaged vessel is a commercial fishing
vessel that was previously used to harvest halibut IFQ or sablefish IFQ
of the individual who qualifies for the exemption in paragraph (i)(1)
of this section;
(iii) As part of the application for exemption, the individual
submits to NMFS a copy of the USCG Form 2692 submitted to the USCG as
specified in 46 CFR 4.05; and
(iv) The individual is applying to use a hired master on a vessel
in which the individual has a minimum 20-percent ownership interest as
of the date of the application by the individual for a hired master
permit.
(7) In the event of temporary disablement of a vessel owned by an
individual who qualifies for the exemption in paragraph (i)(1) of this
section, the individual may remain exempt under paragraph (i)(1) of
this section until December 31 of the year following the year in which
the vessel was disabled, provided that the individual meets the
following requirements:
(i) The temporary disablement of the vessel results from repairs
required by an accident that materially and adversely affected the
vessel's seaworthiness or fitness for service, such as from sinking,
grounding, or fire;
(ii) The repairs from the accident require at least 60 days to be
completed;
(iii) The disabled vessel is a commercial fishing vessel that was
previously used to harvest halibut IFQ or sablefish IFQ of the
individual who qualifies for the exemption in paragraph (i)(1) of this
section;
(iv) The individual submits to NMFS a copy of the USCG Form 2692
submitted to the USCG as specified in 46 CFR 4.05; and
(v) The individual is applying to use a hired master on a vessel in
which the individual has a minimum 20-percent ownership interest as of
the date of the application by the individual for a hired master
permit.
* * * * *
[FR Doc. 2014-03910 Filed 2-21-14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-22-P