Pacific Halibut Fisheries; Catch Sharing Plan, 13906-13923 [2014-05339]
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Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 48 / Wednesday, March 12, 2014 / Rules and Regulations
We continue to engage in ongoing
consultations with states that have
expressed interest in implementing a
BHP through the BHP Learning
Collaborative, which serves as a staff
level policy and technical exchange of
information between CMS and the
states. Through consultations with this
Learning Collaborative, we have been
able to get input from states on many of
the specific issues addressed in this
methodology.
Authority: Section 1331(d)(3) of the
Affordable Care Act.
Dated: February 19, 2014.
Marilyn Tavenner,
Administrator, Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services.
Approved: February 21, 2014.
Kathleen Sebelius,
Secretary, Department of Health and Human
Services.
[FR Doc. 2014–05257 Filed 3–7–14; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
50 CFR Part 300
[Docket No. 131213999–4208–02]
RIN 0648–BD82
Pacific Halibut Fisheries; Catch
Sharing Plan
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
The Assistant Administrator
(AA) for Fisheries, National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration
(NOAA), on behalf of the International
Pacific Halibut Commission (IPHC),
publishes annual management measures
adopted as regulations by the IPHC and
accepted by the Secretary of State
governing the Pacific halibut fishery.
These actions are intended to enhance
the conservation of Pacific halibut and
further the goals and objectives of the
North Pacific Fishery Management
Council (NPFMC).
DATES: The IPHC’s 2014 annual
management measures are effective
March 7, 2014. The 2014 management
measures are effective until superseded.
ADDRESSES: Additional requests for
information regarding this action may
be obtained by contacting the
International Pacific Halibut
Commission, 2320 W. Commodore Way,
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SUMMARY:
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Suite 300, Seattle, WA 98199–1287; or
Sustainable Fisheries Division, NMFS
Alaska Region, P.O. Box 21668, Juneau,
AK 99802, Attn: Ellen Sebastian,
Records Officer; or Sustainable Fisheries
Division, NMFS West Coast Region,
7600 Sand Point Way NE., Seattle, WA
98115. This final rule also is accessible
via the Internet at the Federal
eRulemaking portal at https://
www.regulations.gov.
For
waters off Alaska, Glenn Merrill or Julie
Scheurer, 907–586–7228; or, for waters
off the U.S. West Coast, Sarah Williams,
206–526–4646.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Background
The IPHC has adopted regulations
governing the Pacific halibut fishery in
2014, pursuant to the Convention
between Canada and the United States
for the Preservation of the Halibut
Fishery of the North Pacific Ocean and
Bering Sea (Convention), signed at
Ottawa, Ontario, on March 2, 1953, as
amended by a Protocol Amending the
Convention (signed at Washington, DC,
on March 29, 1979).
As provided by the Northern Pacific
Halibut Act of 1982 (Halibut Act) at 16
U.S.C. 773b, the Secretary of State, with
the concurrence of the Secretary of
Commerce, may accept or reject, on
behalf of the United States, regulations
adopted by the IPHC in accordance with
the Convention (Halibut Act, Sections
773–773k). The Secretary of State of the
United States, with the concurrence of
the Secretary of Commerce, accepted the
2014 IPHC regulations as provided by
the Halibut Act at 16 U.S.C. 773–773k.
The Halibut Act provides the
Secretary of Commerce with the
authority and general responsibility to
carry out the requirements of the
Convention and the Halibut Act. The
Regional Fishery Management Councils
may develop, and the Secretary of
Commerce may implement, regulations
governing harvesting privileges among
U.S. fishermen in U.S. waters that are in
addition to, and not in conflict with,
approved IPHC regulations. The NPFMC
has exercised this authority most
notably in developing halibut
management programs for three
fisheries that harvest halibut in Alaska:
the subsistence, sport, and commercial
fisheries.
Subsistence and sport halibut fishery
regulations are codified at 50 CFR part
300. Commercial halibut fisheries in
Alaska are subject to the Individual
Fishing Quota (IFQ) Program and
Community Development Quota (CDQ)
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Program (50 CFR part 679), and the areaspecific catch sharing plans.
The NPFMC implemented a CSP
among commercial IFQ and CDQ
halibut fisheries in IPHC Areas 4C, 4D
and 4E (Area 4, Western Alaska)
through rulemaking, and the Secretary
approved the plan on March 20, 1996
(61 FR 11337). The Area 4 CSP
regulations were codified at 50 CFR
300.65, and were amended on March 17,
1998 (63 FR 13000). New annual
regulations pertaining to the Area 4 CSP
also may be implemented through IPHC
action, subject to acceptance by the
Secretary of State. The NPFMC
recommended and NMFS implemented
through rulemaking a CSP among
guided sport (charter) and commercial
IFQ halibut fisheries in IPHC Area 2C
(Southeast Alaska) and Area 3A
(Southcentral Alaska) on January 13,
2014 (78 FR 75844, December 12, 2013).
The CSP replaces the guideline harvest
level (GHL) program that had been in
place in these regulatory areas since
2004. The Area 2C and 3A CSP
regulations are codified at 50 CFR
300.65. The CSP defines an annual
process for allocating halibut between
the commercial and charter fisheries so
that each sector’s allocation varies in
proportion to halibut abundance;
specifies a public process for setting
annual management measures; and
authorizes limited annual leases of
commercial IFQ for use in the charter
fishery. The CSP also authorizes
supplemental individual transfers of
commercial halibut IFQ as guided
angler fish (GAF) to qualified charter
halibut permit holders for harvest by
charter vessel anglers in Areas 2C and
3A. Through the GAF program,
qualified charter halibut permit holders
may offer charter vessel anglers the
opportunity to retain halibut up to the
limit for unguided anglers when the
charter management measure in place
would limit charter vessel anglers to a
more restrictive harvest limit. In other
words, a charter vessel angler may
retain a halibut as GAF that exceeds the
daily bag limit and length restrictions in
place for charter anglers only to the
extent that the angler’s halibut retained
under the charter halibut management
measure plus halibut retained as GAF
do not exceed daily bag limit and length
restrictions imposed on unguided
anglers. Federal regulations for the GAF
program are at 50 CFR 300.65.
The IPHC held its annual meeting in
Seattle, Washington, January 13–17,
2014, and adopted a number of changes
to the previous IPHC regulations (78 FR
16423, March 15, 2013). The Secretary
of State accepted the annual
management measures, including the
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Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 48 / Wednesday, March 12, 2014 / Rules and Regulations
following changes to the previous IPHC
regulations for 2014:
1. New halibut catch limits in all
regulatory areas in Section 11;
2. New commercial halibut fishery
opening and closing dates in Section 8;
3. New license due dates and the
separation of the directed commercial
and incidental sablefish licenses for
Area 2A in Section 4; and
4. New management measures for
Area 2C and Area 3A guided sport
fisheries.
Pursuant to regulations at 50 CFR
300.62, the 2014 IPHC annual
management measures are published in
the Federal Register to provide notice of
their immediate regulatory effectiveness
and to inform persons subject to the
regulations of their restrictions and
requirements. Because NMFS publishes
the regulations applicable to the entire
Convention area, these regulations
include some provisions relating to and
affecting Canadian fishing and fisheries.
NMFS could implement more restrictive
regulations for the sport fishery for
halibut or components of it; therefore,
anglers are advised to check the current
Federal or IPHC regulations prior to
fishing.
Catch Limits
The IPHC recommended to the
governments of Canada and the United
States catch limits for 2014 totaling
27,515,000 lb (12,481 mt), which should
achieve a lower coastwide harvest rate
compared to 2013 catch limits, based on
the most recent coast-wide stock
assessment. The IPHC adopted areaspecific catch limits for 2014 that were
lower than 2013 in all of its
management areas except Area 2C. A
description of the process the IPHC used
to set these catch limits follows.
During 2012, IPHC staff conducted a
full review of the data and the general
approach used to assess the stock in
recent years. A retrospective bias in
recent assessments was found to occur
because the model did not correctly
account for variation in the availability
of different sizes of fish in different
areas. As a result of this retrospective
bias, actual historical harvest rates were
higher than the rates the IPHC used to
inform its stock assessments. A peer
review team, including the U.S. and
Canadian Science Advisors, agreed that
the more flexible model structure
developed by the IPHC staff for use in
the 2012 assessment could correct the
retrospective bias. The 2012 assessment
results are more consistent with
observed fishery and survey results than
past assessments. Based on the results
derived from the new model, estimates
of recent recruitment are lower than
previously thought.
During 2013, IPHC staff analysts
completed a thorough exploration of all
available data sources. This analysis
provided several new avenues for stock
assessment modeling. This evaluation
improved the 2013 assessment, and will
be used to help structure the 2014
assessment. For the 2013 stock
assessment, an ensemble of three
alternative models was developed to
produce the stock biomass estimates.
This resulted in estimates of stock size
and management reference points that
are substantially more robust to current
or future technical changes to the
underlying models. The 2013 stock
assessment indicates that the Pacific
halibut stock has been declining
continuously over the last decade, with
recruitment strengths that are much
smaller than those observed through the
1980s and 1990s, and more typical of
those seen during the last century. The
2013 stock assessment notes that
decreasing size at age may also
contribute to lower biomass. In recent
years, the estimated female spawning
biomass appears to have stabilized near
200 million pounds.
As in 2013, and as part of an ongoing
effort to provide Commissioners with
greater flexibility when selecting catch
limits, in January 2014 IPHC staff
provided a decision table that estimates
the consequences to stock and fishery
status and trends from different levels of
harvest. This decision table more fully
reflects uncertainty and allowed the
Commissioners to weigh the risk and
benefits of management choices as they
set the annual catch limits. The row in
the decision table that results in the
current harvest rate policy of the IPHC
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is the ‘‘Blue Line’’ and the application
of the apportionment process
determines the catch limit for each
regulatory area.
After considering harvest advice for
2014 from its scientific staff, Canadian
and U.S. harvesters and processors, and
other fishery agencies, the IPHC
recommended catch limits for 2014 to
the U.S. and Canadian governments (see
Table 1 below). The IPHC recommended
catch limits slightly higher than the
Blue Line apportionment for areas 2A
and 2B because the stock assessment
survey and fishery weight per unit effort
(WPUE) estimates indicate a stable and
upward trend in exploitable biomass in
these areas. However, despite
apportionments above the Blue Line,
catch limits for areas 2A and 2B are
reduced from 2013, in response to
concerns about the coastwide stock
status. For Area 2C, although
exploitable biomass and WPUE in the
survey and commercial fishery show
upward trends, the IPHC was
precautionary and recommended the
Blue Line apportionment. Area 2C is the
only regulatory area for which the IPHC
recommended an increase in its
commercial catch limit from 2013. The
IPHC recommended the Blue Line
apportionments for areas 3A, 3B, and
4A citing concerns about the downward
trends in exploitable biomass and
WPUE in these areas. Catch limits
decreased in these three areas from 2013
levels. Exploitable biomass has shown a
downward trend over the past five years
in Area 4B, but because of concerns
about the negative socioeconomic
effects of a full reduction in catch to the
Blue Line apportionment, the IPHC
recommended a stair-step reduction in
the catch limit to half way between the
2013 catch limit and the Blue Line
apportionment. Likewise, indicators
show a downward trend in areas 4CDE,
but the Commission did not recommend
the full reduction in catch limits to the
Blue Line apportionment. Instead, the
IPHC recommended a catch limit that it
determined to be precautionary, while
still providing sufficient allocation for
the directed fishery to occur.
TABLE 1—PERCENT CHANGE IN CATCH LIMITS FROM 2013 TO 2014 BY IPHC REGULATORY AREA
2014 IPHC
Recommended
catch limit
(lb)
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Regulatory area
2A 1 ..........................................................................................
2B 2 ..........................................................................................
2C 3 ..........................................................................................
3A 3 ..........................................................................................
3B .............................................................................................
4A .............................................................................................
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960,000
6,850,000
4,160,000
9,430,000
2,840,000
850,000
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2014 Blue Line
apportionment
(lb)
720,000
4,980,000
4,160,000
9,430,000
2,840,000
850,000
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2013 Catch limit
(lb)
990,000
7,038,000
2,970,000
11,030,000
4,290,000
1,330,000
12MRR1
Percent
change from 2013
¥3.0
¥2.7
+11.7
¥33.7
¥33.8
¥36.1
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TABLE 1—PERCENT CHANGE IN CATCH LIMITS FROM 2013 TO 2014 BY IPHC REGULATORY AREA—Continued
2014 IPHC
Recommended
catch limit
(lb)
Regulatory area
2014 Blue Line
apportionment
(lb)
2013 Catch limit
(lb)
Percent
change from 2013
4B .............................................................................................
4CDE .......................................................................................
1,140,000
1,285,000
820,000
640,000
1,450,000
1,930,000
¥21.4
¥33.4
Coastwide .........................................................................
27,515,000
..............................
31,028,000
n/a
1 Area
2A catch limit includes sport, commercial, and tribal catch limits.
2B catch limit includes sport and commercial catch limits.
is the combined commercial and charter allocation under the new Area 2C and Area 3A CSP. This value is not directly comparable to
the 2013 catch limit because it also includes allocations to the charter sector, and an amount for commercial wastage. The commercial catch limits after deducting wastage are 3,318,720 lb in Area 2C and 7,317,730 lb in Area 3A. These are the values that were used to calculate the percent change from the 2013 catch limits.
2 Area
3 Shown
Commercial Halibut Fishery Opening
Dates
The opening date for the tribal
commercial fishery in Area 2A and for
the commercial halibut fisheries in
Areas 2B through 4E is March 8, 2014.
The date takes into account a number of
factors, including the timing of halibut
migration and spawning, marketing for
seasonal holidays, and interest in
getting product to processing plants
before the herring season opens. The
closing date for the halibut fisheries is
November 7, 2014. This date takes into
account the anticipated time required to
fully harvest the commercial halibut
catch limits while providing adequate
time for IPHC staff to review the
complete record of 2014 commercial
catch data for use in the 2015 stock
assessment process.
In the Area 2A directed fishery, each
fishing period shall begin at 0800 hours
and terminate at 1800 hours local time
on June 25, July 9, July 23, August 6,
August 20, September 3, and September
17, 2014, unless the IPHC specifies
otherwise. These 10-hour openings will
occur until the quota is taken and the
fishery is closed.
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Area 2A Catch Sharing Plan
The NMFS West Coast Region
published a proposed rule for changes
to the Pacific Halibut Catch Sharing
Plan for Area 2A off Washington,
Oregon, and California on February 6,
2014 (79 FR 7156), with public
comments accepted through February
21, 2014. A separate final rule will be
published to approve changes to the
Area 2A CSP and to implement the
portions of the CSP and management
measures that are not implemented
through the IPHC annual management
measures that are published in this final
rule. These measures include the sport
fishery allocations and management
measures for Area 2A.
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Catch Sharing Plan for Area 2C and
Area 3A
On January 13, 2014, NMFS
implemented a CSP for Area 2C and
Area 3A. The final rule for the CSP was
published on December 12, 2013 (78 FR
75844). The CSP replaces the Guideline
Harvest Level (GHL) program
implemented in 2003 (68 FR 47256,
August 8, 2003), defines an annual
process for allocating halibut between
the charter and commercial fisheries in
Area 2C and Area 3A, and establishes
allocations for each fishery. The
commercial fishery will continue to be
managed under the Individual Fishing
Quota system. To allow flexibility for
individual commercial and charter
fishery participants, the CSP also
authorizes annual transfers of
commercial halibut IFQ to charter
halibut permit holders for harvest in the
charter fishery. Under the CSP, the IPHC
will adopt combined catch limits (CCLs)
for the charter and commercial halibut
fisheries in Area 2C and Area 3A. The
CCL will include estimates of discard
mortality (wastage) for each fishery.
This action was necessary to achieve the
halibut fishery management goals of the
NPFMC. More information about the
CSP is provided in the proposed rule for
the CSP (78 FR 39122, June, 28, 2013)
and in the final rule implementing the
CSP. Implementing regulations for the
CSP are at 50 CFR 300.65. The Area 2C
and Area 3A CSP allocation tables are
Tables 1 through 4 of subpart E of 50
CFR part 300. The IPHC adopted a CCL
of 4,160,000 lb (1,886.9 mt) for Area 2C.
Following the CSP allocations in Tables
1 and 3 of subpart E of 50 CFR part 300,
the commercial fishery is allocated 81.7
percent or 3,398,720 lb (1,541.6 mt), and
the charter fishery is allocated 18.3
percent or 761,280 lb (345.3 mt) of the
CCL. Wastage in the amount of 80,000
lb (36.3 mt) was deducted from the
commercial allocation to obtain the
commercial catch limit of 3,318,720 lb
(1,505.3 mt). The charter catch limit for
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2014 was reduced by 26,720 lb (12.1
mt), or 3.4 percent from the GHL of
788,000 lb (357.4 mt) in 2013. Further,
an estimate of 45,677 lb (20.7 mt), or 6
percent, wastage is assumed to occur in
the charter fishery and is factored into
the management measures. To reduce
Area 2C charter harvest, including
discard mortality, to the lower 2014
catch limit, and keep total harvest in
Area 2C to within the IPHC’s stated
harvest policy, required a change to the
management measures for the charter
fishery (discussed below).
The IPHC adopted a CCL of 9,430,000
lb (4,277.4 mt) for Area 3A. Following
the CSP allocations in Tables 2 and 4 of
subpart E of 50 CFR part 300, the
commercial fishery is allocated 81.1
percent or 7,647,730 lb (3,469 mt), and
the charter fishery is allocated 18.9
percent or 1,782,270 lb (808.4 mt) of the
CCL. Discard mortality in the amount of
330,000 lb (149.7 mt) was deducted
from the commercial allocation to
obtain the commercial catch limit of
7,317,730 lb (3,319.3 mt). The charter
catch limit was reduced by 951,730 lb
(431.7 mt), or 34.8 percent from the GHL
of 2,734,000 lb (1,240.1 mt) in 2013, a
similar percentage reduction as the one
borne by the commercial fishery.
Further, an estimate of 89,113 lb (40.4
mt), or 5 percent, for wastage is assumed
to occur in the charter fishery and is
factored into the management measures.
The reduction from the 2013 GHL to the
2014 charter catch limit required
changes to the management measures
for the charter fishery to keep total
harvest in Area 3A to within the IPHC’s
stated harvest policy (discussed below).
This is the first year that more
restrictive management measures have
been implemented for charter vessel
anglers than unguided anglers in Area
3A.
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Charter Halibut Management Measures
for Area 2C and Area 3A
The NPFMC formed the Charter
Halibut Management Implementation
Committee to provide it with
recommendations for annual
management measures intended to limit
charter harvest to the charter catch limit
while minimizing negative economic
impacts to the charter fishery
participants in times of low halibut
abundance. The committee is composed
of representatives from the charter
fishing industry in Areas 2C and 3A.
The committee selected management
measures for further analysis from a
suite of more than 15 alternatives that
were proposed to the NPFMC in October
2013. After analyzing the effects of the
alternative measures on estimated
charter harvest, charter businesses, and
charter anglers, the committee
recommended their preferred
management measures to the NPFMC
for 2014. The NPFMC adopted the
committee’s preferred measures to
recommend to the IPHC, and the IPHC
adopted the NPFMC’s
recommendations. The NPFMC has
used this process to select and
recommend annual management
measures to the IPHC since 2012.
The IPHC recognizes the role of the
NPFMC to develop policy and
regulations that allocate the Pacific
halibut resource among fishermen in
and off Alaska, and that NMFS has
developed numerous regulations to
support the NPFMC’s goals of limiting
charter harvests over the past several
years. The IPHC concluded that
additional restrictions were necessary to
limit the Area 2C and Area 3A charter
halibut fisheries to their charter catch
limits under the CSP, to achieve the
IPHC’s overall conservation objective to
limit/maintain total halibut harvests to
established catch limits, and to meet the
NPFMC’s allocation objective for these
areas. The IPHC determined that
limiting charter harvests by
implementing the management
measures discussed below would likely
meet these objectives.
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Reverse Slot Limit for Halibut Retained
on a Charter Vessel Fishing in Area 2C
This final rule amends the 2013
measures applicable to the charter
vessel fishery in Area 2C. For 2014, the
IPHC adopted a management measure
that prohibits a person on board a
charter vessel referred to in 50 CFR
300.65 and fishing in Area 2C from
taking or possessing any halibut, with
head on, that is greater than 44 inches
(111.8 cm) and less than 76 inches
(193.0 cm), as measured in a straight
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line, passing over the pectoral fin from
the tip of the lower jaw with mouth
closed, to the extreme end of the middle
of the tail. This type of restriction is
referred to as a ‘‘reverse slot limit.’’ The
2013 reverse slot limit prohibited
retention by charter anglers of halibut
that were greater than 45 inches (114.3
cm) and less than 68 inches (172.7 cm).
The 2014 reverse slot limit is more
restrictive to reduce charter harvest in
Area 2C to the reduced charter catch
limit under the CSP of 761,280 lb (345.3
mt).
Size Limits for Halibut Retained On
Board and Trip Limits for Charter
Vessel Fishing in Area 3A
This final rule amends the 2013
management measures applicable to the
charter halibut fishery in Area 3A.
Previously, charter vessel anglers in
Area 3A were allowed to catch and
retain two halibut of any size per person
per day, the same limit as for unguided
anglers. For 2014, the IPHC adopted a
two-fish daily bag limit in which one of
the retained halibut may be of any size
and one of the retained halibut must be
less than 29 inches (73.7 cm) total
length. The NPFMC recommended this
measure to restrict charter harvest while
minimizing the negative impacts of new
restrictions on charter operations and
anglers in Area 3A. A similar measure
was used to reduce charter harvest in
Area 2C in 2007 and 2008, before
further reductions in the GHL required
a one-fish bag limit in that area (72 FR
30714, June 4, 2007). A 29-inch halibut
weighs approximately 10.3 lb (4.7 kg).
In Area 3A in 2013, the average size of
a halibut retained in the charter fishery
was 31 inches and 12.8 lb (5.8 kg).
Therefore, assuming an angler caught
two fish of average size, this size limit
would restrict an angler’s total harvest
by about 2.5 lb (1.1 kg). Charter
operators in Area 3A stressed the
importance of maintaining a two-fish
bag limit for charter anglers to maintain
similar angling opportunities to
previous years. This management
measure achieves that objective and is
projected to maintain total Area 3A
charter harvest close to or below the
Area 3A charter catch limit.
Charter vessels will also be limited to
one charter halibut fishing trip in which
halibut are retained per calendar day in
Area 3A. If no halibut are retained
during a charter vessel fishing trip, the
vessel may take an additional trip to
catch and retain halibut that day. The
trip limit applies to vessels only, not to
charter halibut permits. A charter
operator may use more than one vessel
to take more than one charter vessel
fishing trip using the same charter
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13909
halibut permit per day. Trip limits will
affect only a small number of charter
operators and allow the size of the sizerestricted fish to be maximized. Without
a trip limit, a more restrictive size or bag
limit might have been necessary to
achieve harvest targets.
Areas 2C and 3A Carcass Retention
Current IPHC regulations prohibit the
filleting, mutilation or other
disfigurement of sport-caught halibut
that would prevent the determination of
the size or number of halibut possessed
or landed. In Southeast Alaska (Area
2C), the IPHC has not changed the
current regulation at section 28(2)(b)
requiring that a person on board a
charter vessel who possesses filleted
halibut must also retain the entire
carcass, with head and tail connected as
a single piece, on board the vessel until
all the fillets are offloaded. The carcass
retention regulation was first
implemented in Area 2C in 2011 to
facilitate enforcement of a maximum
size limit and a one-fish per angler daily
bag limit. The IPHC adopted no changes
to the carcass retention requirement in
2014 to facilitate enforcement of the
U44/O76 reverse slot limit in Area 2C.
The IPHC also adopted the carcass
retention requirement in Area 3A to
facilitate enforcement of the 29-inch
maximum size limit on one of the two
fish. Anglers in Area 3A will be
required to retain only the carcass of the
halibut that is less than the 29-inch
maximum size limit if two halibut are
retained. If an angler only retains one
halibut in a day, the carcass does not
need to be retained.
Annual Halibut Management Measures
The following annual management
measures for the 2014 Pacific halibut
fishery are those recommended by the
IPHC and accepted by the Secretary of
State, with the concurrence of the
Secretary.
1. Short Title
These Regulations may be cited as the
Pacific Halibut Fishery Regulations.
2. Application
(1) These Regulations apply to
persons and vessels fishing for halibut
in, or possessing halibut taken from, the
maritime area as defined in Section 3.
(2) Sections 3 to 6 apply generally to
all halibut fishing.
(3) Sections 7 to 20 apply to
commercial fishing for halibut.
(4) Section 21 applies to tagged
halibut caught by any vessel.
(5) Section 22 applies to the United
States treaty Indian fishery in Subarea
2A–1.
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(6) Section 23 applies to customary
and traditional fishing in Alaska.
(7) Section 24 applies to Aboriginal
groups fishing for food, social and
ceremonial purposes in British
Columbia.
(8) Sections 25 to 28 apply to sport
fishing for halibut.
(9) These Regulations do not apply to
fishing operations authorized or
conducted by the Commission for
research purposes.
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3. Definitions
(1) In these Regulations,
(a) ‘‘authorized officer’’ means any
State, Federal, or Provincial officer
authorized to enforce these Regulations
including, but not limited to, the
National Marine Fisheries Service
(NMFS), Canada’s Department of
Fisheries and Oceans (DFO), Alaska
Wildlife Troopers (AWT), United States
Coast Guard (USCG), Washington
Department of Fish and Wildlife
(WDFW), and the Oregon State Police
(OSP);
(b) ‘‘authorized clearance personnel’’
means an authorized officer of the
United States, a representative of the
Commission, or a designated fish
processor;
(c) ‘‘charter vessel’’ means a vessel
used for hire in sport fishing for halibut,
but not including a vessel without a
hired operator;
(d) ‘‘commercial fishing’’ means
fishing, the resulting catch of which is
sold or bartered; or is intended to be
sold or bartered, other than (i) sport
fishing, (ii) treaty Indian ceremonial and
subsistence fishing as referred to in
section 22, (iii) customary and
traditional fishing as referred to in
section 23 and defined by and regulated
pursuant to NMFS regulations
published at 50 CFR Part 300, and (iv)
Aboriginal groups fishing in British
Columbia as referred to in section 24;
(e) ‘‘Commission’’ means the
International Pacific Halibut
Commission;
(f) ‘‘daily bag limit’’ means the
maximum number of halibut a person
may take in any calendar day from
Convention waters;
(g) ‘‘fishing’’ means the taking,
harvesting, or catching of fish, or any
activity that can reasonably be expected
to result in the taking, harvesting, or
catching of fish, including specifically
the deployment of any amount or
component part of setline gear
anywhere in the maritime area;
(h) ‘‘fishing period limit’’ means the
maximum amount of halibut that may
be retained and landed by a vessel
during one fishing period;
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(i) ‘‘land’’ or ‘‘offload’’ with respect to
halibut, means the removal of halibut
from the catching vessel;
(j) ‘‘license’’ means a halibut fishing
license issued by the Commission
pursuant to section 4;
(k) ‘‘maritime area’’, in respect of the
fisheries jurisdiction of a Contracting
Party, includes without distinction areas
within and seaward of the territorial sea
and internal waters of that Party;
(l) ‘‘net weight’’ of a halibut means the
weight of halibut that is without gills
and entrails, head-off, washed, and
without ice and slime. If a halibut is
weighed with the head on or with ice
and slime, the required conversion
factors for calculating net weight are a
2 percent deduction for ice and slime
and a 10 percent deduction for the head;
(m) ‘‘operator’’, with respect to any
vessel, means the owner and/or the
master or other individual on board and
in charge of that vessel;
(n) ‘‘overall length’’ of a vessel means
the horizontal distance, rounded to the
nearest foot, between the foremost part
of the stem and the aftermost part of the
stern (excluding bowsprits, rudders,
outboard motor brackets, and similar
fittings or attachments);
(o) ‘‘person’’ includes an individual,
corporation, firm, or association;
(p) ‘‘regulatory area’’ means an area
referred to in section 6;
(q) ‘‘setline gear’’ means one or more
stationary, buoyed, and anchored lines
with hooks attached;
(r) ‘‘sport fishing’’ means all fishing
other than (i) commercial fishing, (ii)
treaty Indian ceremonial and
subsistence fishing as referred to in
section 22, (iii) customary and
traditional fishing as referred to in
section 23 and defined in and regulated
pursuant to NMFS regulations
published in 50 CFR Part 300, and (iv)
Aboriginal groups fishing in British
Columbia as referred to in section 24;
(s) ‘‘tender’’ means any vessel that
buys or obtains fish directly from a
catching vessel and transports it to a
port of landing or fish processor;
(t) ‘‘VMS transmitter’’ means a NMFSapproved vessel monitoring system
transmitter that automatically
determines a vessel’s position and
transmits it to a NMFS-approved
communications service provider.1
(2) In these Regulations, all bearings
are true and all positions are determined
by the most recent charts issued by the
United States National Ocean Service or
the Canadian Hydrographic Service.
1 Call NOAA Enforcement Division, Alaska
Region, at 907–586–7225 between the hours of 0800
and 1600 local time for a list of NMFS-approved
VMS transmitters and communications service
providers.
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4. Licensing Vessels for Area 2A
(1) No person shall fish for halibut
from a vessel, nor possess halibut on
board a vessel, used either for
commercial fishing or as a charter vessel
in Area 2A, unless the Commission has
issued a license valid for fishing in Area
2A in respect of that vessel.
(2) A license issued for a vessel
operating in Area 2A shall be valid only
for operating either as a charter vessel
or a commercial vessel, but not both.
(3) A vessel with a valid Area 2A
commercial license cannot be used to
sport fish for Pacific halibut in Area 2A.
(4) A license issued for a vessel
operating in the commercial fishery in
Area 2A shall be valid for one of the
following:
(a) The directed commercial fishery
during the fishing periods specified in
paragraph (2) of section 8 and the
incidental commercial fishery during
the sablefish fishery specified in
paragraph (3) of section 8;
(b) the incidental catch fishery during
the sablefish fishery specified in
paragraph (3) of section 8; or
(c) the incidental catch fishery during
the salmon troll fishery specified in
paragraph (4) of section 8.
(5) No person may apply for or be
issued a license for a vessel operating in
the incidental catch fishery during the
salmon troll fishery in paragraph (4)(c),
if that vessel was previously issued a
license for either the directed
commercial fishery in paragraph (4)(a)
or the incidental catch fishery during
the sablefish fishery in paragraph (4)(b).
(6) A license issued in respect to a
vessel referred to in paragraph (1) of this
section must be carried on board that
vessel at all times and the vessel
operator shall permit its inspection by
any authorized officer.
(7) The Commission shall issue a
license in respect to a vessel, without
fee, from its office in Seattle,
Washington, upon receipt of a
completed, written, and signed
‘‘Application for Vessel License for the
Halibut Fishery’’ form.
(8) A vessel operating in the directed
commercial fishery in Area 2A must
have its ‘‘Application for Vessel License
for the Halibut Fishery’’ form
postmarked no later than 11:59 p.m. on
April 30, or on the first weekday in May
if April 30 is a Saturday or Sunday.
(9) A vessel operating in the
incidental catch fishery during the
sablefish fishery in Area 2A must have
its ‘‘Application for Vessel License for
the Halibut Fishery’’ form postmarked
no later than 11:59 p.m. on March 15,
or the next weekday in March if March
15 is a Saturday or Sunday.
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(10) A vessel operating in the
incidental catch fishery during the
salmon troll fishery in Area 2A must
have its ‘‘Application for Vessel License
for the Halibut Fishery’’ form
postmarked no later than 11:59 p.m. on
March 15, or the next weekday in March
if March 15 is a Saturday or Sunday.
(11) Application forms may be
obtained from any authorized officer or
from the Commission.
(12) Information on ‘‘Application for
Vessel License for the Halibut Fishery’’
form must be accurate.
(13) The ‘‘Application for Vessel
License for the Halibut Fishery’’ form
shall be completed and signed by the
vessel owner.
(14) Licenses issued under this
section shall be valid only during the
year in which they are issued.
(15) A new license is required for a
vessel that is sold, transferred, renamed,
or the documentation is changed.
(16) The license required under this
section is in addition to any license,
however designated, that is required
under the laws of the United States or
any of its States.
(17) The United States may suspend,
revoke, or modify any license issued
under this section under policies and
procedures in Title 15, CFR Part 904.
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5. In-Season Actions
(1) The Commission is authorized to
establish or modify regulations during
the season after determining that such
action:
(a) Will not result in exceeding the
catch limit established preseason for
each regulatory area;
(b) is consistent with the Convention
between Canada and the United States
of America for the Preservation of the
Halibut Fishery of the Northern Pacific
Ocean and Bering Sea, and applicable
domestic law of either Canada or the
United States; and
(c) is consistent, to the maximum
extent practicable, with any domestic
catch sharing plans or other domestic
allocation programs developed by the
United States or Canadian governments.
(2) In-season actions may include, but
are not limited to, establishment or
modification of the following:
(a) Closed areas;
(b) fishing periods;
(c) fishing period limits;
(d) gear restrictions;
(e) recreational bag limits;
(f) size limits; or
(g) vessel clearances.
(3) In-season changes will be effective
at the time and date specified by the
Commission.
(4) The Commission will announce
in-season actions under this section by
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providing notice to major halibut
processors; Federal, State, United States
treaty Indian, and Provincial fishery
officials; and the media.
6. Regulatory Areas
The following areas shall be
regulatory areas (see Figure 1) for the
purposes of the Convention:
(1) Area 2A includes all waters off the
states of California, Oregon, and
Washington;
(2) Area 2B includes all waters off
British Columbia;
(3) Area 2C includes all waters off
Alaska that are east of a line running
340° true from Cape Spencer Light
(58°11′56″ N. latitude, 136°38′26″ W.
longitude) and south and east of a line
running 205° true from said light;
(4) Area 3A includes all waters
between Area 2C and a line extending
from the most northerly point on Cape
Aklek (57°41′15″ N. latitude, 155°35′00″
W. longitude) to Cape Ikolik (57°17′17″
N. latitude, 154°47′18″ W. longitude),
then along the Kodiak Island coastline
to Cape Trinity (56°44′50″ N. latitude,
154°08′44″ W. longitude), then 140°
true;
(5) Area 3B includes all waters
between Area 3A and a line extending
150° true from Cape Lutke (54°29′00″ N.
latitude, 164°20′00″ W. longitude) and
south of 54°49′00″ N. latitude in
Isanotski Strait;
(6) Area 4A includes all waters in the
Gulf of Alaska west of Area 3B and in
the Bering Sea west of the closed area
defined in section 10 that are east of
172°00′00″ W. longitude and south of
56°20′00″ N. latitude;
(7) Area 4B includes all waters in the
Bering Sea and the Gulf of Alaska west
of Area 4A and south of 56°20′00″ N.
latitude;
(8) Area 4C includes all waters in the
Bering Sea north of Area 4A and north
of the closed area defined in section 10
which are east of 171°00′00″ W.
longitude, south of 58°00′00″ N.
latitude, and west of 168°00′00″ W.
longitude;
(9) Area 4D includes all waters in the
Bering Sea north of Areas 4A and 4B,
north and west of Area 4C, and west of
168°00′00″ W. longitude; and
(10) Area 4E includes all waters in the
Bering Sea north and east of the closed
area defined in section 10, east of
168°00′00″ W. longitude, and south of
65°34′00″ N. latitude.
7. Fishing in Regulatory Area 4E and 4D
(1) Section 7 applies only to any
person fishing, or vessel that is used to
fish for, Area 4E Community
Development Quota (CDQ) or Area 4D
CDQ halibut, provided that the total
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annual halibut catch of that person or
vessel is landed at a port within Area 4E
or 4D.
(2) A person may retain halibut taken
with setline gear in Area 4E CDQ and
4D CDQ fishery that are smaller than the
size limit specified in section 13,
provided that no person may sell or
barter such halibut.
(3) The manager of a CDQ
organization that authorizes persons to
harvest halibut in the Area 4E or 4D
CDQ fisheries must report to the
Commission the total number and
weight of undersized halibut taken and
retained by such persons pursuant to
section 7, paragraph (2). This report,
which shall include data and
methodology used to collect the data,
must be received by the Commission
prior to November 1 of the year in
which such halibut were harvested.
8. Fishing Periods
(1) The fishing periods for each
regulatory area apply where the catch
limits specified in section 11 have not
been taken.
(2) Each fishing period in the Area 2A
directed commercial fishery 2 shall
begin at 0800 hours and terminate at
1800 hours local time on June 25, July
9, July 23, August 6, August 20,
September 3, and September 17 unless
the Commission specifies otherwise.
(3) Notwithstanding paragraph (7) of
section 11, an incidental catch fishery 3
is authorized during the sablefish
seasons in Area 2A in accordance with
regulations promulgated by NMFS. This
fishery will occur between 1200 hours
local time on March 8 and 1200 hours
local time on November 7.
(4) Notwithstanding paragraph (2),
and paragraph (7) of section 11, an
incidental catch fishery is authorized
during salmon troll seasons in Area 2A
in accordance with regulations
promulgated by NMFS. This fishery will
occur between 1200 hours local time on
March 8 and 1200 hours local time on
November 7.
(5) The fishing period in Areas 2B, 2C,
3A, 3B, 4A, 4B, 4C, 4D, and 4E shall
begin at 1200 hours local time on March
8 and terminate at 1200 hours local time
on November 7, unless the Commission
specifies otherwise.
2 The directed fishery is restricted to waters that
are south of Point Chehalis, Washington (46°53′18″
N. latitude) under regulations promulgated by
NMFS and published in the Federal Register.
3 The incidental fishery during the directed, fixed
gear sablefish season is restricted to waters that are
north of Point Chehalis, Washington (46°53′18″ N.
latitude) under regulations promulgated by NMFS
at 50 CFR 300.63. Landing restrictions for halibut
retention in the fixed gear sablefish fishery can be
found at 50 CFR 660.231.
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(6) All commercial fishing for halibut
in Areas 2A, 2B, 2C, 3A, 3B, 4A, 4B, 4C,
4D, and 4E shall cease at 1200 hours
local time on November 7.
9. Closed Periods
(1) No person shall engage in fishing
for halibut in any regulatory area other
than during the fishing periods set out
in section 8 in respect of that area.
(2) No person shall land or otherwise
retain halibut caught outside a fishing
period applicable to the regulatory area
where the halibut was taken.
(3) Subject to paragraphs (7), (8), (9),
and (10) of section 19, these Regulations
do not prohibit fishing for any species
of fish other than halibut during the
closed periods.
(4) Notwithstanding paragraph (3), no
person shall have halibut in his/her
possession while fishing for any other
species of fish during the closed
periods.
(5) No vessel shall retrieve any halibut
fishing gear during a closed period if the
vessel has any halibut on board.
(6) A vessel that has no halibut on
board may retrieve any halibut fishing
gear during the closed period after the
operator notifies an authorized officer or
representative of the Commission prior
to that retrieval.
(7) After retrieval of halibut gear in
accordance with paragraph (6), the
vessel shall submit to a hold inspection
at the discretion of the authorized
officer or representative of the
Commission.
(8) No person shall retain any halibut
caught on gear retrieved in accordance
with paragraph (6).
(9) No person shall possess halibut on
board a vessel in a regulatory area
during a closed period unless that vessel
is in continuous transit to or within a
port in which that halibut may be
lawfully sold.
10. Closed Area
All waters in the Bering Sea north of
55°00′00″ N. latitude in Isanotski Strait
that are enclosed by a line from Cape
Sarichef Light (54°36′00″ N. latitude,
164°55′42″ W. longitude) to a point at
56°20′00″ N. latitude, 168°30′00″ W.
longitude; thence to a point at 58°21′25″
N. latitude, 163°00′00″ W. longitude;
thence to Strogonof Point (56°53′18″ N.
latitude, 158°50′37″ W. longitude); and
then along the northern coasts of the
Alaska Peninsula and Unimak Island to
the point of origin at Cape Sarichef
Light are closed to halibut fishing and
no person shall fish for halibut therein
or have halibut in his/her possession
while in those waters, except in the
course of a continuous transit across
those waters. All waters in Isanotski
Strait between 55°00′00″ N. latitude and
54°49′00″ N. latitude are closed to
halibut fishing.
11. Catch Limits
(1) The total allowable catch of
halibut to be taken during the halibut
fishing periods specified in section 8
shall be limited to the net weights
expressed in pounds or metric tons
shown in the following table:
Catch limit—net weight
Regulatory area
Pounds
2A: Directed commercial, and incidental commercial catch during salmon troll fishery .............................
2A: Incidental commercial during sablefish fishery .....................................................................................
2B 4 ..............................................................................................................................................................
2C 5 ..............................................................................................................................................................
3A 6 ..............................................................................................................................................................
3B .................................................................................................................................................................
4A .................................................................................................................................................................
4B .................................................................................................................................................................
4C ................................................................................................................................................................
4D ................................................................................................................................................................
4E .................................................................................................................................................................
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(2) Notwithstanding paragraph (1),
regulations pertaining to the division of
the Area 2A catch limit between the
directed commercial fishery and the
incidental catch fishery as described in
paragraph (4) of section 8 will be
promulgated by NMFS and published in
the Federal Register.
4 Area 2B includes combined commercial and
sport catch limits that will be allocated by DFO. See
section 27 for sport fishing regulations.
5 For the commercial fishery in Area 2C, in
addition to the catch limit, the estimate of
incidental mortality from the commercial fishery is
80,000 pounds. This amount is included in the
combined commercial and guided sport sector catch
limit set by IPHC and allocated by NMFS by a catch
sharing plan.
6 For the commercial fishery in Area 3A, in
addition to the catch limit, the estimate of
incidental mortality from the commercial fishery is
330,000 pounds. This amount is included in the
combined commercial and guided sport sector catch
limit set by IPHC and allocated by NMFS by a catch
sharing plan.
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(3) The Commission shall determine
and announce to the public the date on
which the catch limit for Area 2A will
be taken.
(4) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), the
commercial fishing in Area 2B will
close only when all Individual Vessel
Quotas (IVQs) assigned by DFO are
taken, or November 7, whichever is
earlier.
(5) Notwithstanding paragraph (1),
Areas 2C, 3A, 3B, 4A, 4B, 4C, 4D, and
4E will each close only when all
Individual Fishing Quotas (IFQ) and all
CDQs issued by NMFS have been taken,
or November 7, whichever is earlier.
(6) If the Commission determines that
the catch limit specified for Area 2A in
paragraph (1) would be exceeded in an
unrestricted 10-hour fishing period as
specified in paragraph (2) of section 8,
the catch limit for that area shall be
considered to have been taken unless
fishing period limits are implemented.
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197,808
14,274
6,850,000
3,318,720
7,317,730
2,840,000
850,000
1,140,000
596,600
596,600
91,800
Metric tons
89.7
6.5
3,107.1
1,505.3
3,319.3
1,288.2
385.6
517.1
270.6
270.6
41.6
(7) When under paragraphs (2), (3),
and (6) the Commission has announced
a date on which the catch limit for Area
2A will be taken, no person shall fish
for halibut in that area after that date for
the rest of the year, unless the
Commission has announced the
reopening of that area for halibut
fishing.
(8) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), the
total allowable catch of halibut that may
be taken in the Area 4E directed
commercial fishery is equal to the
combined annual catch limits specified
for the Area 4D and Area 4E CDQ
fisheries. The annual Area 4D CDQ
catch limit will decrease by the
equivalent amount of halibut CDQ taken
in Area 4E in excess of the annual Area
4E CDQ catch limit.
(9) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), the
total allowable catch of halibut that may
be taken in the Area 4D directed
commercial fishery is equal to the
combined annual catch limits specified
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for Area 4C and Area 4D. The annual
Area 4C catch limit will decrease by the
equivalent amount of halibut taken in
Area 4D in excess of the annual Area 4D
catch limit.
Area 2B includes combined
commercial and sport catch limits that
will be allocated by DFO.
12. Fishing Period Limits
(1) It shall be unlawful for any vessel
to retain more halibut than authorized
by that vessel’s license in any fishing
period for which the Commission has
announced a fishing period limit.
(2) The operator of any vessel that
fishes for halibut during a fishing period
when fishing period limits are in effect
must, upon commencing an offload of
halibut to a commercial fish processor,
completely offload all halibut on board
said vessel to that processor and ensure
that all halibut is weighed and reported
on State fish tickets.
(3) The operator of any vessel that
fishes for halibut during a fishing period
when fishing period limits are in effect
must, upon commencing an offload of
halibut other than to a commercial fish
processor, completely offload all halibut
on board said vessel and ensure that all
halibut are weighed and reported on
State fish tickets.
(4) The provisions of paragraph (3) are
not intended to prevent retail over-theside sales to individual purchasers so
long as all the halibut on board is
ultimately offloaded and reported.
(5) When fishing period limits are in
effect, a vessel’s maximum retainable
catch will be determined by the
Commission based on:
(a) The vessel’s overall length in feet
and associated length class;
(b) the average performance of all
vessels within that class; and
(c) the remaining catch limit.
(6) Length classes are shown in the
following table:
Overall length
(in feet)
Vessel
class
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1–25 ..............................................
26–30 ............................................
31–35 ............................................
36–40 ............................................
41–45 ............................................
46–50 ............................................
51–55 ............................................
56+ ................................................
(7) Fishing period limits in Area 2A
apply only to the directed halibut
fishery referred to in paragraph (2) of
section 8.
13. Size Limits
(1) No person shall take or possess
any halibut that:
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A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
(a) With the head on, is less than 32
inches (81.3 cm) as measured in a
straight line, passing over the pectoral
fin from the tip of the lower jaw with
the mouth closed, to the extreme end of
the middle of the tail, as illustrated in
Figure 2; or
(b) with the head removed, is less
than 24 inches (61.0 cm) as measured
from the base of the pectoral fin at its
most anterior point to the extreme end
of the middle of the tail, as illustrated
in Figure 2.
(2) No person on board a vessel
fishing for, or tendering, halibut caught
in Area 2A shall possess any halibut
that has had its head removed.
14. Careful Release of Halibut
(1) All halibut that are caught and are
not retained shall be immediately
released outboard of the roller and
returned to the sea with a minimum of
injury by:
(a) Hook straightening;
(b) cutting the gangion near the hook;
or
(c) carefully removing the hook by
twisting it from the halibut with a gaff.
(2) Except that paragraph (1) shall not
prohibit the possession of halibut on
board a vessel that has been brought
aboard to be measured to determine if
the minimum size limit of the halibut is
met and, if sublegal-sized, is promptly
returned to the sea with a minimum of
injury.
15. Vessel Clearance in Area 4
(1) The operator of any vessel that
fishes for halibut in Areas 4A, 4B, 4C,
or 4D must obtain a vessel clearance
before fishing in any of these areas, and
before the landing of any halibut caught
in any of these areas, unless specifically
exempted in paragraphs (10), (13), (14),
(15), or (16).
(2) An operator obtaining a vessel
clearance required by paragraph (1)
must obtain the clearance in person
from the authorized clearance personnel
and sign the IPHC form documenting
that a clearance was obtained, except
that when the clearance is obtained via
VHF radio referred to in paragraphs (5),
(8), and (9), the authorized clearance
personnel must sign the IPHC form
documenting that the clearance was
obtained.
(3) The vessel clearance required
under paragraph (1) prior to fishing in
Area 4A may be obtained only at Nazan
Bay on Atka Island, Dutch Harbor or
Akutan, Alaska, from an authorized
officer of the United States, a
representative of the Commission, or a
designated fish processor.
(4) The vessel clearance required
under paragraph (1) prior to fishing in
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Area 4B may only be obtained at Nazan
Bay on Atka Island or Adak, Alaska,
from an authorized officer of the United
States, a representative of the
Commission, or a designated fish
processor.
(5) The vessel clearance required
under paragraph (1) prior to fishing in
Area 4C or 4D may be obtained only at
St. Paul or St. George, Alaska, from an
authorized officer of the United States,
a representative of the Commission, or
a designated fish processor by VHF
radio and allowing the person contacted
to confirm visually the identity of the
vessel.
(6) The vessel operator shall specify
the specific regulatory area in which
fishing will take place.
(7) Before unloading any halibut
caught in Area 4A, a vessel operator
may obtain the clearance required under
paragraph (1) only in Dutch Harbor or
Akutan, Alaska, by contacting an
authorized officer of the United States,
a representative of the Commission, or
a designated fish processor.
(8) Before unloading any halibut
caught in Area 4B, a vessel operator may
obtain the clearance required under
paragraph (1) only in Nazan Bay on
Atka Island or Adak, by contacting an
authorized officer of the United States,
a representative of the Commission, or
a designated fish processor by VHF
radio or in person.
(9) Before unloading any halibut
caught in Area 4C and 4D, a vessel
operator may obtain the clearance
required under paragraph (1) only in St.
Paul, St. George, Dutch Harbor, or
Akutan, Alaska, either in person or by
contacting an authorized officer of the
United States, a representative of the
Commission, or a designated fish
processor. The clearances obtained in
St. Paul or St. George, Alaska, can be
obtained by VHF radio and allowing the
person contacted to confirm visually the
identity of the vessel.
(10) Any vessel operator who
complies with the requirements in
section 18 for possessing halibut on
board a vessel that was caught in more
than one regulatory area in Area 4 is
exempt from the clearance requirements
of paragraph (1) of this section,
provided that:
(a) The operator of the vessel obtains
a vessel clearance prior to fishing in
Area 4 in either Dutch Harbor, Akutan,
St. Paul, St. George, Adak, or Nazan Bay
on Atka Island by contacting an
authorized officer of the United States,
a representative of the Commission, or
a designated fish processor. The
clearance obtained in St. Paul, St.
George, Adak, or Nazan Bay on Atka
Island can be obtained by VHF radio
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and allowing the person contacted to
confirm visually the identity of the
vessel. This clearance will list the areas
in which the vessel will fish; and
(b) before unloading any halibut from
Area 4, the vessel operator obtains a
vessel clearance from Dutch Harbor,
Akutan, St. Paul, St. George, Adak, or
Nazan Bay on Atka Island by contacting
an authorized officer of the United
States, a representative of the
Commission, or a designated fish
processor. The clearance obtained in St.
Paul or St. George can be obtained by
VHF radio and allowing the person
contacted to confirm visually the
identity of the vessel. The clearance
obtained in Adak or Nazan Bay on Atka
Island can be obtained by VHF radio.
(11) Vessel clearances shall be
obtained between 0600 and 1800 hours,
local time.
(12) No halibut shall be on board the
vessel at the time of the clearances
required prior to fishing in Area 4.
(13) Any vessel that is used to fish for
halibut only in Area 4A and lands its
total annual halibut catch at a port
within Area 4A is exempt from the
clearance requirements of paragraph (1).
(14) Any vessel that is used to fish for
halibut only in Area 4B and lands its
total annual halibut catch at a port
within Area 4B is exempt from the
clearance requirements of paragraph (1).
(15) Any vessel that is used to fish for
halibut only in Area 4C or 4D or 4E and
lands its total annual halibut catch at a
port within Area 4C, 4D, 4E, or the
closed area defined in section 10, is
exempt from the clearance requirements
of paragraph (1).
(16) Any vessel that carries a
transmitting VMS transmitter while
fishing for halibut in Area 4A, 4B, 4C,
or 4D and until all halibut caught in any
of these areas is landed, is exempt from
the clearance requirements of paragraph
(1) of this section, provided that:
(a) The operator of the vessel
complies with NMFS’ vessel monitoring
system regulations published at 50 CFR
sections 679.28(f)(3), (4) and (5); and
(b) the operator of the vessel notifies
NOAA Fisheries Office for Law
Enforcement at 800–304–4846 (select
option 1 to speak to an Enforcement
Data Clerk) between the hours of 0600
and 0000 (midnight) local time within
72 hours before fishing for halibut in
Area 4A, 4B, 4C, or 4D and receives a
VMS confirmation number.
16. Logs
(1) The operator of any U.S. vessel
fishing for halibut that has an overall
length of 26 feet (7.9 meters) or greater
shall maintain an accurate log of halibut
fishing operations. The operator of a
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vessel fishing in waters in and off
Alaska must use one of the following
logbooks: The Groundfish/IFQ Daily
Fishing Longline and Pot Gear Logbook
provided by NMFS; the Alaska hookand-line logbook provided by Petersburg
Vessel Owners Association or Alaska
Longline Fisherman’s Association; the
Alaska Department of Fish and Game
(ADF&G) longline-pot logbook; or the
logbook provided by IPHC. The operator
of a vessel fishing in Area 2A must use
either the Washington Department of
Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) Voluntary
Sablefish Logbook, Oregon Department
of Fish and Wildlife (ODFW) Fixed Gear
Logbook, or the logbook provided by
IPHC.
(2) The logbook referred to in
paragraph (1) must include the
following information:
(a) The name of the vessel and the
State (ADF&G, WDFW, ODFW, or
California Department of Fish and
Game) or Tribal vessel number;
(b) the date(s) upon which the fishing
gear is set or retrieved;
(c) the latitude and longitude
coordinates or a direction and distance
from a point of land for each set or day;
(d) the number of skates deployed or
retrieved, and number of skates lost; and
(e) the total weight or number of
halibut retained for each set or day.
(3) The logbook referred to in
paragraph (1) shall be:
(a) Maintained on board the vessel;
(b) updated not later than 24 hours
after 0000 (midnight) local time for each
day fished and prior to the offloading or
sale of halibut taken during that fishing
trip;
(c) retained for a period of two years
by the owner or operator of the vessel;
(d) open to inspection by an
authorized officer or any authorized
representative of the Commission upon
demand; and
(e) kept on board the vessel when
engaged in halibut fishing, during
transits to port of landing, and until the
offloading of all halibut is completed.
(4) The log referred to in paragraph (1)
does not apply to the incidental halibut
fishery during the salmon troll season in
Area 2A defined in paragraph (4) of
section 8.
(5) The operator of any Canadian
vessel fishing for halibut shall maintain
an accurate log recorded in the British
Columbia Integrated Groundfish Fishing
Log provided by DFO.
(6) The logbook referred to in
paragraph (5) must include the
following information:
(a) The name of the vessel and the
DFO vessel registration number;
(b) the date(s) upon which the fishing
gear is set and retrieved;
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Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
(c) the latitude and longitude
coordinates for each set;
(d) the number of skates deployed or
retrieved, and number of skates lost; and
(e) the total weight or number of
halibut retained for each set.
(7) The logbook referred to in
paragraph (5) shall be:
(a) Maintained on board the vessel;
(b) retained for a period of two years
by the owner or operator of the vessel;
(c) open to inspection by an
authorized officer or any authorized
representative of the Commission upon
demand;
(d) kept on board the vessel when
engaged in halibut fishing, during
transits to port of landing, and until the
offloading of all halibut is completed;
(e) mailed to the DFO (white copy)
within seven days of offloading; and
(f) mailed to the Commission (yellow
copy) within seven days of the final
offload if not collected by a Commission
employee.
(8) No person shall make a false entry
in a log referred to in this section.
17. Receipt and Possession of Halibut
(1) No person shall receive halibut
caught in Area 2A from a United States
vessel that does not have on board the
license required by section 4.
(2) No person shall possess on board
a vessel a halibut other than whole or
with gills and entrails removed, except
that this paragraph shall not prohibit the
possession on board a vessel of:
(a) Halibut cheeks cut from halibut
caught by persons authorized to process
the halibut on board in accordance with
NMFS regulations published at 50 CFR
Part 679;
(b) fillets from halibut offloaded in
accordance with section 17 that are
possessed on board the harvesting
vessel in the port of landing up to 1800
hours local time on the calendar day
following the offload; 7 and
(c) halibut with their heads removed
in accordance with section 13.
(3) No person shall offload halibut
from a vessel unless the gills and
entrails have been removed prior to
offloading.
(4) It shall be the responsibility of a
vessel operator who lands halibut to
continuously and completely offload at
a single offload site all halibut on board
the vessel.
(5) A registered buyer (as that term is
defined in regulations promulgated by
NMFS and codified at 50 CFR Part 679)
who receives halibut harvested in IFQ
and CDQ fisheries in Areas 2C, 3A, 3B,
7 DFO has more restrictive regulations; therefore,
section 17 paragraph (2)(b) does not apply to fish
caught in Area 2B or landed in British Columbia.
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4A, 4B, 4C, 4D, and 4E, directly from
the vessel operator that harvested such
halibut must weigh all the halibut
received and record the following
information on Federal catch reports:
Date of offload; name of vessel; vessel
number (State, Tribal or Federal, not
IPHC vessel number); scale weight
obtained at the time of offloading,
including the scale weight (in pounds)
of halibut purchased by the registered
buyer, the scale weight (in pounds) of
halibut offloaded in excess of the IFQ or
CDQ, the scale weight of halibut (in
pounds) retained for personal use or for
future sale, and the scale weight (in
pounds) of halibut discarded as unfit for
human consumption.
(6) The first recipient, commercial
fish processor, or buyer in the United
States who purchases or receives halibut
directly from the vessel operator that
harvested such halibut must weigh and
record all halibut received and record
the following information on State fish
tickets: The date of offload; vessel
number (State, Tribal or Federal, not
IPHC vessel number); total weight
obtained at the time of offload including
the weight (in pounds) of halibut
purchased; the weight (in pounds) of
halibut offloaded in excess of the IFQ,
CDQ, or fishing period limits; the
weight of halibut (in pounds) retained
for personal use or for future sale; and
the weight (in pounds) of halibut
discarded as unfit for human
consumption.
(7) The individual completing the
State fish tickets for the Area 2A
fisheries as referred to in paragraph (6)
must additionally record whether the
halibut weight is of head-on or head-off
fish.
(8) For halibut landings made in
Alaska, the requirements as listed in
paragraph (5) and (6) can be met by
recording the information in the
Interagency Electronic Reporting
Systems, eLandings in accordance with
NMFS regulation published at 50 CFR
Part 679.
(9) The master or operator of a
Canadian vessel that was engaged in
halibut fishing must weigh and record
all halibut on board said vessel at the
time offloading commences and record
on Provincial fish tickets or Federal
catch reports the date; locality; name of
vessel; the name(s) of the person(s) from
whom the halibut was purchased; and
the scale weight obtained at the time of
offloading of all halibut on board the
vessel including the pounds purchased,
pounds in excess of IVQs, pounds
retained for personal use, and pounds
discarded as unfit for human
consumption.
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(10) No person shall make a false
entry on a State or Provincial fish ticket
or a Federal catch or landing report
referred to in paragraphs (5), (6), and (9)
of section 17.
(11) A copy of the fish tickets or catch
reports referred to in paragraphs (5), (6),
and (9) shall be:
(a) Retained by the person making
them for a period of three years from the
date the fish tickets or catch reports are
made; and
(b) open to inspection by an
authorized officer or any authorized
representative of the Commission.
(12) No person shall possess any
halibut taken or retained in
contravention of these Regulations.
(13) When halibut are landed to other
than a commercial fish processor, the
records required by paragraph (6) shall
be maintained by the operator of the
vessel from which that halibut was
caught, in compliance with paragraph
(11).
(14) No person shall tag halibut unless
the tagging is authorized by IPHC permit
or by a Federal or State agency.
18. Fishing Multiple Regulatory Areas
(1) Except as provided in this section,
no person shall possess at the same time
on board a vessel halibut caught in more
than one regulatory area.
(2) Halibut caught in more than one
of the Regulatory Areas 2C, 3A, or 3B
may be possessed on board a vessel at
the same time, provided the operator of
the vessel:
(a) Has a NMFS-certified observer on
board when required by NMFS
regulations 8 published at 50 CFR
679.7(f)(4); and
(b) can identify the regulatory area in
which each halibut on board was caught
by separating halibut from different
areas in the hold, tagging halibut, or by
other means.
(3) Halibut caught in more than one
of the Regulatory Areas 4A, 4B, 4C, or
4D may be possessed on board a vessel
at the same time, provided the operator
of the vessel:
(a) Has a NMFS-certified observer on
board the vessel as required by NMFS
regulations published at 50 CFR
679.7(f)(4); or has an operational VMS
on board actively transmitting in all
regulatory areas fished and does not
possess at any time more halibut on
board the vessel than the IFQ permit
holders on board the vessel have
cumulatively available for any single
Area 4 regulatory area fished; and
8 Without an observer, a vessel cannot have on
board more halibut than the IFQ for the area that
is being fished, even if some of the catch occurred
earlier in a different area.
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13915
(b) can identify the regulatory area in
which each halibut on board was caught
by separating halibut from different
areas in the hold, tagging halibut, or by
other means.
(4) If halibut from Area 4 are on board
the vessel, the vessel can have halibut
caught in Regulatory Areas 2C, 3A, and
3B on board if in compliance with
paragraph (2).
19. Fishing Gear
(1) No person shall fish for halibut
using any gear other than hook and line
gear, except that vessels licensed to
catch sablefish in Area 2B using
sablefish trap gear as defined in the
Condition of Sablefish Licence can
retain halibut caught as bycatch under
regulations promulgated by the
Canadian Department of Fisheries and
Oceans.
(2) No person shall possess halibut
taken with any gear other than hook and
line gear, except that vessels licensed to
catch sablefish in Area 2B using
sablefish trap gear as defined by the
Condition of Sablefish Licence can
retain halibut caught as bycatch under
regulations promulgated by the
Canadian Department of Fisheries and
Oceans.
(3) No person shall possess halibut
while on board a vessel carrying any
trawl nets or fishing pots capable of
catching halibut, except that in Areas
2C, 3A, 3B, 4A, 4B, 4C, 4D, or 4E,
halibut heads, skin, entrails, bones or
fins for use as bait may be possessed on
board a vessel carrying pots capable of
catching halibut, provided that a receipt
documenting purchase or transfer of
these halibut parts is on board the
vessel.
(4) All setline or skate marker buoys
carried on board or used by any United
States vessel used for halibut fishing
shall be marked with one of the
following:
(a) The vessel’s State license number;
or
(b) the vessel’s registration number.
(5) The markings specified in
paragraph (4) shall be in characters at
least four inches in height and one-half
inch in width in a contrasting color
visible above the water and shall be
maintained in legible condition.
(6) All setline or skate marker buoys
carried on board or used by a Canadian
vessel used for halibut fishing shall be:
(a) floating and visible on the surface
of the water; and
(b) legibly marked with the
identification plate number of the vessel
engaged in commercial fishing from
which that setline is being operated.
(7) No person on board a vessel used
to fish for any species of fish anywhere
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Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 48 / Wednesday, March 12, 2014 / Rules and Regulations
in Area 2A during the 72-hour period
immediately before the fishing period
for the directed commercial fishery shall
catch or possess halibut anywhere in
those waters during that halibut fishing
period unless, prior to the start of the
halibut fishing period, the vessel has
removed its gear from the water and has
either:
(a) Made a landing and completely
offloaded its catch of other fish; or
(b) submitted to a hold inspection by
an authorized officer.
(8) No vessel used to fish for any
species of fish anywhere in Area 2A
during the 72-hour period immediately
before the fishing period for the directed
commercial fishery may be used to
catch or possess halibut anywhere in
those waters during that halibut fishing
period unless, prior to the start of the
halibut fishing period, the vessel has
removed its gear from the water and has
either:
(a) Made a landing and completely
offloaded its catch of other fish; or
(b) submitted to a hold inspection by
an authorized officer.
(9) No person on board a vessel from
which setline gear was used to fish for
any species of fish anywhere in Areas
2B, 2C, 3A, 3B, 4A, 4B, 4C, 4D, or 4E
during the 72-hour period immediately
before the opening of the halibut fishing
season shall catch or possess halibut
anywhere in those areas until the vessel
has removed all of its setline gear from
the water and has either:
(a) Made a landing and completely
offloaded its entire catch of other fish;
or
(b) submitted to a hold inspection by
an authorized officer.
(10) No vessel from which setline gear
was used to fish for any species of fish
anywhere in Areas 2B, 2C, 3A, 3B, 4A,
4B, 4C, 4D, or 4E during the 72-hour
period immediately before the opening
of the halibut fishing season may be
used to catch or possess halibut
anywhere in those areas until the vessel
has removed all of its setline gear from
the water and has either:
(a) Made a landing and completely
offloaded its entire catch of other fish;
or
(b) submitted to a hold inspection by
an authorized officer.
(11) Notwithstanding any other
provision in these Regulations, a person
may retain, possess and dispose of
halibut taken with trawl gear only as
authorized by Prohibited Species
Donation regulations of NMFS.
20. Supervision of Unloading and
Weighing
The unloading and weighing of
halibut may be subject to the
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supervision of authorized officers to
assure the fulfillment of the provisions
of these Regulations.
21. Retention of Tagged Halibut
(1) Nothing contained in these
Regulations prohibits any vessel at any
time from retaining and landing a
halibut that bears a Commission
external tag at the time of capture, if the
halibut with the tag still attached is
reported at the time of landing and
made available for examination by a
representative of the Commission or by
an authorized officer.
(2) After examination and removal of
the tag by a representative of the
Commission or an authorized officer,
the halibut:
(a) May be retained for personal use;
or
(b) may be sold only if the halibut is
caught during commercial halibut
fishing and complies with the other
commercial fishing provisions of these
Regulations.
(3) Externally tagged fish must count
against commercial IVQs, CDQs, IFQs,
or daily bag or possession limits unless
otherwise exempted by State,
Provincial, or Federal regulations.
22. Fishing by United States Treaty
Indian Tribes
(1) Halibut fishing in Subarea 2A–1 by
members of United States treaty Indian
tribes located in the State of Washington
shall be regulated under regulations
promulgated by NMFS and published in
the Federal Register.
(2) Subarea 2A–1 includes all waters
off the coast of Washington that are
north of 46°53´18´´ N. latitude and east
of 125°44´00´´ W. longitude, and all
inland marine waters of Washington.
(3) Section 13 (size limits), section 14
(careful release of halibut), section 16
(logs), section 17 (receipt and
possession of halibut) and section 19
(fishing gear), except paragraphs (7) and
(8) of section 19, apply to commercial
fishing for halibut in Subarea 2A–1 by
the treaty Indian tribes.
(4) Regulations in paragraph (3) of this
section that apply to State fish tickets
apply to Tribal tickets that are
authorized by Washington Department
of Fish and Wildlife.
(5) Section 4 (Licensing Vessels for
Area 2A) does not apply to commercial
fishing for halibut in Subarea 2A–1 by
treaty Indian tribes.
(6) Commercial fishing for halibut in
Subarea 2A–1 is permitted with hook
and line gear from March 8 through
November 7, or until 307,500 pounds
(139.5 metric tons) net weight is taken,
whichever occurs first.
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(7) Ceremonial and subsistence
fishing for halibut in Subarea 2A–1 is
permitted with hook and line gear from
January 1 through December 31, and is
estimated to take 28,500 pounds (12.9
metric tons) net weight.
23. Customary and Traditional Fishing
in Alaska
(1) Customary and traditional fishing
for halibut in Regulatory Areas 2C, 3A,
3B, 4A, 4B, 4C, 4D, and 4E shall be
governed pursuant to regulations
promulgated by NMFS and published in
50 CFR Part 300.
(2) Customary and traditional fishing
is authorized from January 1 through
December 31.
24. Aboriginal Groups Fishing for Food,
Social and Ceremonial Purposes in
British Columbia
(1) Fishing for halibut for food, social
and ceremonial purposes by Aboriginal
groups in Regulatory Area 2B shall be
governed by the Fisheries Act of Canada
and regulations as amended from time
to time.
25. Sport Fishing for Halibut—General
(1) No person shall engage in sport
fishing for halibut using gear other than
a single line with no more than two
hooks attached; or a spear.
(2) Any minimum overall size limit
promulgated under IPHC or NMFS
regulations shall be measured in a
straight line passing over the pectoral
fin from the tip of the lower jaw with
the mouth closed, to the extreme end of
the middle of the tail.
(3) Any halibut brought aboard a
vessel and not immediately returned to
the sea with a minimum of injury will
be included in the daily bag limit of the
person catching the halibut.
(4) No person may possess halibut on
a vessel while fishing in a closed area.
(5) No halibut caught by sport fishing
shall be offered for sale, sold, traded, or
bartered.
(6) No halibut caught in sport fishing
shall be possessed on board a vessel
when other fish or shellfish aboard said
vessel are destined for commercial use,
sale, trade, or barter.
(7) The operator of a charter vessel
shall be liable for any violations of these
Regulations committed by a passenger
aboard said vessel.
26. Sport Fishing for Halibut—Area 2A
(1) The total allowable catch of
halibut shall be limited to:
(a) 214,110 pounds (97.1 metric tons)
net weight in waters off Washington;
and
(b) 197,808 pounds (89.7 metric tons)
net weight in waters off California and
Oregon.
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(2) The Commission shall determine
and announce closing dates to the
public for any area in which the catch
limits promulgated by NMFS are
estimated to have been taken.
(3) When the Commission has
determined that a subquota under
paragraph (8) of this section is estimated
to have been taken, and has announced
a date on which the season will close,
no person shall sport fish for halibut in
that area after that date for the rest of the
year, unless a reopening of that area for
sport halibut fishing is scheduled in
accordance with the Catch Sharing Plan
for Area 2A, or announced by the
Commission.
(4) In California, Oregon, or
Washington, no person shall fillet,
mutilate, or otherwise disfigure a
halibut in any manner that prevents the
determination of minimum size or the
number of fish caught, possessed, or
landed.
(5) The possession limit on a vessel
for halibut in the waters off the coast of
Washington is the same as the daily bag
limit. The possession limit on land in
Washington for halibut caught in U.S.
waters off the coast of Washington is
two halibut.
(6) The possession limit on a vessel
for halibut caught in the waters off the
coast of Oregon is the same as the daily
bag limit. The possession limit for
halibut on land in Oregon is three daily
bag limits.
(7) The possession limit on a vessel
for halibut caught in the waters off the
coast of California is one halibut. The
possession limit for halibut on land in
California is one halibut.
(8) The sport fishing subareas,
subquotas, fishing dates, and daily bag
limits are as follows, except as modified
under the in-season actions in 50 CFR
300.63(c). All sport fishing in Area 2A
is managed on a ‘‘port of landing’’ basis,
whereby any halibut landed into a port
counts toward the quota for the area in
which that port is located, and the
regulations governing the area of
landing apply, regardless of the specific
area of catch.
27. Sport Fishing for Halibut—Area 2B
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(1) In all waters off British
Columbia: 9 10
(a) the sport fishing season will open
on February 1 unless more restrictive
regulations are in place; 10
9 DFO could implement more restrictive
regulations for the sport fishery, therefore anglers
are advised to check the current Federal or
Provincial regulations prior to fishing.
10 For regulations on the experimental
recreational fishery implement by DFO check the
current Federal or Provincial regulations.
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(b) The sport fishing season will close
when the sport catch limit allocated by
DFO, is taken, or December 31,
whichever is earlier;
(c) the daily bag limit is two halibut
of any size per day per person.
(2) In British Columbia, no person
shall fillet, mutilate, or otherwise
disfigure a halibut in any manner that
prevents the determination of minimum
size or the number of fish caught,
possessed, or landed.
(3) The possession limit for halibut in
the waters off the coast of British
Columbia is three halibut.
28. Sport Fishing for Halibut—Areas 2C,
3A, 3B, 4A, 4B, 4C, 4D, 4E
(1) In Convention waters in and off
Alaska: 11,*12
(a) The sport fishing season is from
February 1 to December 31.
(b) The daily bag limit is two halibut
of any size per day per person unless a
more restrictive bag limit applies in
Commission regulations or Federal
regulations at 50 CFR 300.65.
(c) No person may possess more than
two daily bag limits.
(d) No person shall possess on board
a vessel, including charter vessels and
pleasure craft used for fishing, halibut
that have been filleted, mutilated, or
otherwise disfigured in any manner,
except that each halibut may be cut into
no more than 2 ventral pieces, 2 dorsal
pieces, and 2 cheek pieces, with skin on
all pieces.
(e) Halibut in excess of the possession
limit in paragraph (1)(c) of this section
may be possessed on a vessel that does
not contain sport fishing gear, fishing
rods, hand lines, or gaffs.
(2) For guided sport fishing (as
referred to in 50 CFR 300.65) in
Regulatory Area 2C:
(a) The total catch allocation,
including an estimate of incidental
mortality (wastage), is 761,280 pounds
(345.3 metric tons).
(b) No person on board a charter
vessel (as referred to in 50 CFR 300.65)
shall catch and retain more than one
halibut per calendar day.13
(c) No person aboard a charter vessel
(as referred to in 50 CFR 300.65) shall
take or possess any halibut that with
head on that is greater than 44 inches
11 NMFS could implement more restrictive
regulations for the sport fishery or components of
it, therefore, anglers are advised to check the
current Federal or State regulations prior to fishing.
12 Charter vessels are prohibited from harvesting
halibut in Area 2C and 3A during one charter vessel
fishing trip under regulations promulgated by
NMFS at 50 CFR 300.66(v).
13 Guided angler fish (GAF), as described at 50
CFR 300.65(c), may be used to allow a charter
vessel angler to harvest additional halibut up to the
limits in place for unguided anglers.
PO 00000
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13917
(111.8 cm) and less than 76 inches
(194.0 cm) as measured in a straight
line, passing over the pectoral fin from
the tip of the lower jaw with mouth
closed, to the extreme end of the middle
of the tail, as illustrated in Figure 3.13
(d) If the halibut is filleted, the entire
carcass, with head and tail connected as
a single piece, must be retained on
board the vessel until all fillets are
offloaded.14
(3) For guided sport fishing (as
referred to in 50 CFR 300.65) in
Regulatory Area 3A:
(a) The total catch allocation,
including an estimate of incidental
mortality (wastage), is 1,782,270 pounds
(808.4 metric tons).
(b) No person on board a charter
vessel (as referred to in 50 CFR 300.65)
shall catch and retain more than two
halibut per calendar day.
(c) At least one of the retained halibut
must have a head-on length of no more
than 29 inches (73.7 cm) as measured in
a straight line, passing over the pectoral
fin from the tip of the lower jaw with
mouth closed, to the extreme end of the
middle of the tail, as illustrated in
Figure 4.13 If a person sport fishing on
a charter vessel in Area 3A retains only
one halibut in a calendar day, that
halibut may be of any length.
(d) If the size-restricted halibut is
filleted, the entire carcass, with head
and tail connected as a single piece,
must be retained on board the vessel
until all fillets are offloaded.14
(e) A charter vessel, as defined in
section 3 (Definitions) and referred to in
50 CFR 300.65, on which one or more
anglers catch and retain halibut, may
only make one charter vessel fishing trip
per calendar day. A charter vessel
fishing trip is defined at 50 CFR 300.61
as the time period between the first
deployment of fishing gear in to the
water from a vessel after any charter
vessel angler (as defined at 50 CFR
300.61) is on board and the offloading
of one or more charter vessel anglers or
any halibut from that vessel.
29. Previous Regulations Superseded
These Regulations shall supersede all
previous regulations of the Commission,
and these Regulations shall be effective
each succeeding year until superseded.
14 For halibut caught and retained as GAF, the
charter vessel guide must immediately remove the
tips of the upper and lower lobes of the caudal (tail)
fin, and if the halibut is filleted, the entire carcass,
with head and tail connected as a single piece, must
be retained on board the vessel until all fillets are
offloaded (50 CFR 300.65(c)(5)(iv)(G)). Additional
regulations governing use of GAF are at 50 CFR
300.65.
E:\FR\FM\12MRR1.SGM
12MRR1
13918
Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 48 / Wednesday, March 12, 2014 / Rules and Regulations
Classification
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with RULES
IPHC Regulations
These IPHC annual management
measures are a product of an agreement
between the United States and Canada
and are published in the Federal
Register to provide notice of their
effectiveness and content. Pursuant to
section 4 of the Northern Pacific Halibut
Act of 1982, 16 U.S.C. 773c, the
Secretary of State, with the concurrence
of the Secretary of Commerce, may
‘‘accept or reject’’ but not modify these
recommendations of the IPHC. The
VerDate Mar<15>2010
16:15 Mar 11, 2014
Jkt 232001
otherwise applicable notice-andcomment and delay-in-effectiveness
date provisions of the Administrative
Procedure Act (APA), 5 U.S.C. 553(c)
and (d), are inapplicable to IPHC
management measures because this
regulation involves a foreign affairs
function of the United States, 5 U.S.C.
553(a)(1). The additional time necessary
to comply with the notice-and-comment
and delay-in-effectiveness requirements
of the APA would disrupt coordinated
international conservation and
management of the halibut fishery
PO 00000
Frm 00046
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
pursuant to the Convention.
Furthermore, no other law requires prior
notice and public comment for this rule.
Because prior notice and an opportunity
for public comment are not required to
be provided for these portions of this
rule by 5 U.S.C. 553, or any other law,
the analytical requirements of the
Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C. 601
et seq., are not applicable. Accordingly,
no Regulatory Flexibility Analysis is
required for this portion of the rule and
none has been prepared.
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
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E:\FR\FM\12MRR1.SGM
45°N
12MRR1
180°
1700 W
1600 W
1500 W
1400W
130<1W
Figure 1. Regulatory areas for the P·aciflc halibut fishery.
Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 48 / Wednesday, March 12, 2014 / Rules and Regulations
1
16:15 Mar 11, 2014
13919
ER12MR14.000
65°N
13920
Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 48 / Wednesday, March 12, 2014 / Rules and Regulations
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ER12MR14.001
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c:
.-.
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E:\FR\FM\12MRR1.SGM
.....
,
12MRR1
with head on
Figure 3. Recreational reverse slot limit for halibut on board a charter vessel referred to in 50 CFR 300.65 and fishing in Regulatory
Area 2C (see Section 28 paragraph 2(c)).
Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 48 / Wednesday, March 12, 2014 / Rules and Regulations
16:15 Mar 11, 2014
Less than or equal to 44 inches (111.8 em) or
Greater than or equal to 76 inches (194.0 em)
13921
ER12MR14.002
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13922
VerDate Mar<15>2010
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....
,.
12MRR1
Figure 4. Recreational maximum size limit for one fish in two-fish bag limit for halibut on board a charter vessel referred to in 50 CFR
300.65 and fishing in Regulatory Area 3A (see Section 28 paragraph 3(c)). If only one halibut is retained, it may be of any size.
ER12MR14.003
Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 48 / Wednesday, March 12, 2014 / Rules and Regulations
16:15 Mar 11, 2014
Less than or equal to 29 inches (73.7 em)
with head on
Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 48 / Wednesday, March 12, 2014 / Rules and Regulations
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 773 et seq.
Dated: March 6, 2014.
Samuel D. Rauch III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for
Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2014–05339 Filed 3–7–14; 4:15 pm]
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13923
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 79, Number 48 (Wednesday, March 12, 2014)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 13906-13923]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2014-05339]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
50 CFR Part 300
[Docket No. 131213999-4208-02]
RIN 0648-BD82
Pacific Halibut Fisheries; Catch Sharing Plan
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Assistant Administrator (AA) for Fisheries, National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), on behalf of the
International Pacific Halibut Commission (IPHC), publishes annual
management measures adopted as regulations by the IPHC and accepted by
the Secretary of State governing the Pacific halibut fishery. These
actions are intended to enhance the conservation of Pacific halibut and
further the goals and objectives of the North Pacific Fishery
Management Council (NPFMC).
DATES: The IPHC's 2014 annual management measures are effective March
7, 2014. The 2014 management measures are effective until superseded.
ADDRESSES: Additional requests for information regarding this action
may be obtained by contacting the International Pacific Halibut
Commission, 2320 W. Commodore Way, Suite 300, Seattle, WA 98199-1287;
or Sustainable Fisheries Division, NMFS Alaska Region, P.O. Box 21668,
Juneau, AK 99802, Attn: Ellen Sebastian, Records Officer; or
Sustainable Fisheries Division, NMFS West Coast Region, 7600 Sand Point
Way NE., Seattle, WA 98115. This final rule also is accessible via the
Internet at the Federal eRulemaking portal at https://www.regulations.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For waters off Alaska, Glenn Merrill
or Julie Scheurer, 907-586-7228; or, for waters off the U.S. West
Coast, Sarah Williams, 206-526-4646.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
The IPHC has adopted regulations governing the Pacific halibut
fishery in 2014, pursuant to the Convention between Canada and the
United States for the Preservation of the Halibut Fishery of the North
Pacific Ocean and Bering Sea (Convention), signed at Ottawa, Ontario,
on March 2, 1953, as amended by a Protocol Amending the Convention
(signed at Washington, DC, on March 29, 1979).
As provided by the Northern Pacific Halibut Act of 1982 (Halibut
Act) at 16 U.S.C. 773b, the Secretary of State, with the concurrence of
the Secretary of Commerce, may accept or reject, on behalf of the
United States, regulations adopted by the IPHC in accordance with the
Convention (Halibut Act, Sections 773-773k). The Secretary of State of
the United States, with the concurrence of the Secretary of Commerce,
accepted the 2014 IPHC regulations as provided by the Halibut Act at 16
U.S.C. 773-773k.
The Halibut Act provides the Secretary of Commerce with the
authority and general responsibility to carry out the requirements of
the Convention and the Halibut Act. The Regional Fishery Management
Councils may develop, and the Secretary of Commerce may implement,
regulations governing harvesting privileges among U.S. fishermen in
U.S. waters that are in addition to, and not in conflict with, approved
IPHC regulations. The NPFMC has exercised this authority most notably
in developing halibut management programs for three fisheries that
harvest halibut in Alaska: the subsistence, sport, and commercial
fisheries.
Subsistence and sport halibut fishery regulations are codified at
50 CFR part 300. Commercial halibut fisheries in Alaska are subject to
the Individual Fishing Quota (IFQ) Program and Community Development
Quota (CDQ) Program (50 CFR part 679), and the area-specific catch
sharing plans.
The NPFMC implemented a CSP among commercial IFQ and CDQ halibut
fisheries in IPHC Areas 4C, 4D and 4E (Area 4, Western Alaska) through
rulemaking, and the Secretary approved the plan on March 20, 1996 (61
FR 11337). The Area 4 CSP regulations were codified at 50 CFR 300.65,
and were amended on March 17, 1998 (63 FR 13000). New annual
regulations pertaining to the Area 4 CSP also may be implemented
through IPHC action, subject to acceptance by the Secretary of State.
The NPFMC recommended and NMFS implemented through rulemaking a CSP
among guided sport (charter) and commercial IFQ halibut fisheries in
IPHC Area 2C (Southeast Alaska) and Area 3A (Southcentral Alaska) on
January 13, 2014 (78 FR 75844, December 12, 2013). The CSP replaces the
guideline harvest level (GHL) program that had been in place in these
regulatory areas since 2004. The Area 2C and 3A CSP regulations are
codified at 50 CFR 300.65. The CSP defines an annual process for
allocating halibut between the commercial and charter fisheries so that
each sector's allocation varies in proportion to halibut abundance;
specifies a public process for setting annual management measures; and
authorizes limited annual leases of commercial IFQ for use in the
charter fishery. The CSP also authorizes supplemental individual
transfers of commercial halibut IFQ as guided angler fish (GAF) to
qualified charter halibut permit holders for harvest by charter vessel
anglers in Areas 2C and 3A. Through the GAF program, qualified charter
halibut permit holders may offer charter vessel anglers the opportunity
to retain halibut up to the limit for unguided anglers when the charter
management measure in place would limit charter vessel anglers to a
more restrictive harvest limit. In other words, a charter vessel angler
may retain a halibut as GAF that exceeds the daily bag limit and length
restrictions in place for charter anglers only to the extent that the
angler's halibut retained under the charter halibut management measure
plus halibut retained as GAF do not exceed daily bag limit and length
restrictions imposed on unguided anglers. Federal regulations for the
GAF program are at 50 CFR 300.65.
The IPHC held its annual meeting in Seattle, Washington, January
13-17, 2014, and adopted a number of changes to the previous IPHC
regulations (78 FR 16423, March 15, 2013). The Secretary of State
accepted the annual management measures, including the
[[Page 13907]]
following changes to the previous IPHC regulations for 2014:
1. New halibut catch limits in all regulatory areas in Section 11;
2. New commercial halibut fishery opening and closing dates in
Section 8;
3. New license due dates and the separation of the directed
commercial and incidental sablefish licenses for Area 2A in Section 4;
and
4. New management measures for Area 2C and Area 3A guided sport
fisheries.
Pursuant to regulations at 50 CFR 300.62, the 2014 IPHC annual
management measures are published in the Federal Register to provide
notice of their immediate regulatory effectiveness and to inform
persons subject to the regulations of their restrictions and
requirements. Because NMFS publishes the regulations applicable to the
entire Convention area, these regulations include some provisions
relating to and affecting Canadian fishing and fisheries. NMFS could
implement more restrictive regulations for the sport fishery for
halibut or components of it; therefore, anglers are advised to check
the current Federal or IPHC regulations prior to fishing.
Catch Limits
The IPHC recommended to the governments of Canada and the United
States catch limits for 2014 totaling 27,515,000 lb (12,481 mt), which
should achieve a lower coastwide harvest rate compared to 2013 catch
limits, based on the most recent coast-wide stock assessment. The IPHC
adopted area-specific catch limits for 2014 that were lower than 2013
in all of its management areas except Area 2C. A description of the
process the IPHC used to set these catch limits follows.
During 2012, IPHC staff conducted a full review of the data and the
general approach used to assess the stock in recent years. A
retrospective bias in recent assessments was found to occur because the
model did not correctly account for variation in the availability of
different sizes of fish in different areas. As a result of this
retrospective bias, actual historical harvest rates were higher than
the rates the IPHC used to inform its stock assessments. A peer review
team, including the U.S. and Canadian Science Advisors, agreed that the
more flexible model structure developed by the IPHC staff for use in
the 2012 assessment could correct the retrospective bias. The 2012
assessment results are more consistent with observed fishery and survey
results than past assessments. Based on the results derived from the
new model, estimates of recent recruitment are lower than previously
thought.
During 2013, IPHC staff analysts completed a thorough exploration
of all available data sources. This analysis provided several new
avenues for stock assessment modeling. This evaluation improved the
2013 assessment, and will be used to help structure the 2014
assessment. For the 2013 stock assessment, an ensemble of three
alternative models was developed to produce the stock biomass
estimates. This resulted in estimates of stock size and management
reference points that are substantially more robust to current or
future technical changes to the underlying models. The 2013 stock
assessment indicates that the Pacific halibut stock has been declining
continuously over the last decade, with recruitment strengths that are
much smaller than those observed through the 1980s and 1990s, and more
typical of those seen during the last century. The 2013 stock
assessment notes that decreasing size at age may also contribute to
lower biomass. In recent years, the estimated female spawning biomass
appears to have stabilized near 200 million pounds.
As in 2013, and as part of an ongoing effort to provide
Commissioners with greater flexibility when selecting catch limits, in
January 2014 IPHC staff provided a decision table that estimates the
consequences to stock and fishery status and trends from different
levels of harvest. This decision table more fully reflects uncertainty
and allowed the Commissioners to weigh the risk and benefits of
management choices as they set the annual catch limits. The row in the
decision table that results in the current harvest rate policy of the
IPHC is the ``Blue Line'' and the application of the apportionment
process determines the catch limit for each regulatory area.
After considering harvest advice for 2014 from its scientific
staff, Canadian and U.S. harvesters and processors, and other fishery
agencies, the IPHC recommended catch limits for 2014 to the U.S. and
Canadian governments (see Table 1 below). The IPHC recommended catch
limits slightly higher than the Blue Line apportionment for areas 2A
and 2B because the stock assessment survey and fishery weight per unit
effort (WPUE) estimates indicate a stable and upward trend in
exploitable biomass in these areas. However, despite apportionments
above the Blue Line, catch limits for areas 2A and 2B are reduced from
2013, in response to concerns about the coastwide stock status. For
Area 2C, although exploitable biomass and WPUE in the survey and
commercial fishery show upward trends, the IPHC was precautionary and
recommended the Blue Line apportionment. Area 2C is the only regulatory
area for which the IPHC recommended an increase in its commercial catch
limit from 2013. The IPHC recommended the Blue Line apportionments for
areas 3A, 3B, and 4A citing concerns about the downward trends in
exploitable biomass and WPUE in these areas. Catch limits decreased in
these three areas from 2013 levels. Exploitable biomass has shown a
downward trend over the past five years in Area 4B, but because of
concerns about the negative socioeconomic effects of a full reduction
in catch to the Blue Line apportionment, the IPHC recommended a stair-
step reduction in the catch limit to half way between the 2013 catch
limit and the Blue Line apportionment. Likewise, indicators show a
downward trend in areas 4CDE, but the Commission did not recommend the
full reduction in catch limits to the Blue Line apportionment. Instead,
the IPHC recommended a catch limit that it determined to be
precautionary, while still providing sufficient allocation for the
directed fishery to occur.
Table 1--Percent Change in Catch Limits From 2013 to 2014 by IPHC Regulatory Area
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2014 IPHC 2014 Blue Line
Regulatory area Recommended catch apportionment 2013 Catch limit Percent change
limit (lb) (lb) (lb) from 2013
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2A \1\.............................. 960,000 720,000 990,000 -3.0
2B \2\.............................. 6,850,000 4,980,000 7,038,000 -2.7
2C \3\.............................. 4,160,000 4,160,000 2,970,000 +11.7
3A \3\.............................. 9,430,000 9,430,000 11,030,000 -33.7
3B.................................. 2,840,000 2,840,000 4,290,000 -33.8
4A.................................. 850,000 850,000 1,330,000 -36.1
[[Page 13908]]
4B.................................. 1,140,000 820,000 1,450,000 -21.4
4CDE................................ 1,285,000 640,000 1,930,000 -33.4
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Coastwide....................... 27,515,000 ................. 31,028,000 n/a
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Area 2A catch limit includes sport, commercial, and tribal catch limits.
\2\ Area 2B catch limit includes sport and commercial catch limits.
\3\ Shown is the combined commercial and charter allocation under the new Area 2C and Area 3A CSP. This value is
not directly comparable to the 2013 catch limit because it also includes allocations to the charter sector,
and an amount for commercial wastage. The commercial catch limits after deducting wastage are 3,318,720 lb in
Area 2C and 7,317,730 lb in Area 3A. These are the values that were used to calculate the percent change from
the 2013 catch limits.
Commercial Halibut Fishery Opening Dates
The opening date for the tribal commercial fishery in Area 2A and
for the commercial halibut fisheries in Areas 2B through 4E is March 8,
2014. The date takes into account a number of factors, including the
timing of halibut migration and spawning, marketing for seasonal
holidays, and interest in getting product to processing plants before
the herring season opens. The closing date for the halibut fisheries is
November 7, 2014. This date takes into account the anticipated time
required to fully harvest the commercial halibut catch limits while
providing adequate time for IPHC staff to review the complete record of
2014 commercial catch data for use in the 2015 stock assessment
process.
In the Area 2A directed fishery, each fishing period shall begin at
0800 hours and terminate at 1800 hours local time on June 25, July 9,
July 23, August 6, August 20, September 3, and September 17, 2014,
unless the IPHC specifies otherwise. These 10-hour openings will occur
until the quota is taken and the fishery is closed.
Area 2A Catch Sharing Plan
The NMFS West Coast Region published a proposed rule for changes to
the Pacific Halibut Catch Sharing Plan for Area 2A off Washington,
Oregon, and California on February 6, 2014 (79 FR 7156), with public
comments accepted through February 21, 2014. A separate final rule will
be published to approve changes to the Area 2A CSP and to implement the
portions of the CSP and management measures that are not implemented
through the IPHC annual management measures that are published in this
final rule. These measures include the sport fishery allocations and
management measures for Area 2A.
Catch Sharing Plan for Area 2C and Area 3A
On January 13, 2014, NMFS implemented a CSP for Area 2C and Area
3A. The final rule for the CSP was published on December 12, 2013 (78
FR 75844). The CSP replaces the Guideline Harvest Level (GHL) program
implemented in 2003 (68 FR 47256, August 8, 2003), defines an annual
process for allocating halibut between the charter and commercial
fisheries in Area 2C and Area 3A, and establishes allocations for each
fishery. The commercial fishery will continue to be managed under the
Individual Fishing Quota system. To allow flexibility for individual
commercial and charter fishery participants, the CSP also authorizes
annual transfers of commercial halibut IFQ to charter halibut permit
holders for harvest in the charter fishery. Under the CSP, the IPHC
will adopt combined catch limits (CCLs) for the charter and commercial
halibut fisheries in Area 2C and Area 3A. The CCL will include
estimates of discard mortality (wastage) for each fishery. This action
was necessary to achieve the halibut fishery management goals of the
NPFMC. More information about the CSP is provided in the proposed rule
for the CSP (78 FR 39122, June, 28, 2013) and in the final rule
implementing the CSP. Implementing regulations for the CSP are at 50
CFR 300.65. The Area 2C and Area 3A CSP allocation tables are Tables 1
through 4 of subpart E of 50 CFR part 300. The IPHC adopted a CCL of
4,160,000 lb (1,886.9 mt) for Area 2C. Following the CSP allocations in
Tables 1 and 3 of subpart E of 50 CFR part 300, the commercial fishery
is allocated 81.7 percent or 3,398,720 lb (1,541.6 mt), and the charter
fishery is allocated 18.3 percent or 761,280 lb (345.3 mt) of the CCL.
Wastage in the amount of 80,000 lb (36.3 mt) was deducted from the
commercial allocation to obtain the commercial catch limit of 3,318,720
lb (1,505.3 mt). The charter catch limit for 2014 was reduced by 26,720
lb (12.1 mt), or 3.4 percent from the GHL of 788,000 lb (357.4 mt) in
2013. Further, an estimate of 45,677 lb (20.7 mt), or 6 percent,
wastage is assumed to occur in the charter fishery and is factored into
the management measures. To reduce Area 2C charter harvest, including
discard mortality, to the lower 2014 catch limit, and keep total
harvest in Area 2C to within the IPHC's stated harvest policy, required
a change to the management measures for the charter fishery (discussed
below).
The IPHC adopted a CCL of 9,430,000 lb (4,277.4 mt) for Area 3A.
Following the CSP allocations in Tables 2 and 4 of subpart E of 50 CFR
part 300, the commercial fishery is allocated 81.1 percent or 7,647,730
lb (3,469 mt), and the charter fishery is allocated 18.9 percent or
1,782,270 lb (808.4 mt) of the CCL. Discard mortality in the amount of
330,000 lb (149.7 mt) was deducted from the commercial allocation to
obtain the commercial catch limit of 7,317,730 lb (3,319.3 mt). The
charter catch limit was reduced by 951,730 lb (431.7 mt), or 34.8
percent from the GHL of 2,734,000 lb (1,240.1 mt) in 2013, a similar
percentage reduction as the one borne by the commercial fishery.
Further, an estimate of 89,113 lb (40.4 mt), or 5 percent, for wastage
is assumed to occur in the charter fishery and is factored into the
management measures. The reduction from the 2013 GHL to the 2014
charter catch limit required changes to the management measures for the
charter fishery to keep total harvest in Area 3A to within the IPHC's
stated harvest policy (discussed below). This is the first year that
more restrictive management measures have been implemented for charter
vessel anglers than unguided anglers in Area 3A.
[[Page 13909]]
Charter Halibut Management Measures for Area 2C and Area 3A
The NPFMC formed the Charter Halibut Management Implementation
Committee to provide it with recommendations for annual management
measures intended to limit charter harvest to the charter catch limit
while minimizing negative economic impacts to the charter fishery
participants in times of low halibut abundance. The committee is
composed of representatives from the charter fishing industry in Areas
2C and 3A. The committee selected management measures for further
analysis from a suite of more than 15 alternatives that were proposed
to the NPFMC in October 2013. After analyzing the effects of the
alternative measures on estimated charter harvest, charter businesses,
and charter anglers, the committee recommended their preferred
management measures to the NPFMC for 2014. The NPFMC adopted the
committee's preferred measures to recommend to the IPHC, and the IPHC
adopted the NPFMC's recommendations. The NPFMC has used this process to
select and recommend annual management measures to the IPHC since 2012.
The IPHC recognizes the role of the NPFMC to develop policy and
regulations that allocate the Pacific halibut resource among fishermen
in and off Alaska, and that NMFS has developed numerous regulations to
support the NPFMC's goals of limiting charter harvests over the past
several years. The IPHC concluded that additional restrictions were
necessary to limit the Area 2C and Area 3A charter halibut fisheries to
their charter catch limits under the CSP, to achieve the IPHC's overall
conservation objective to limit/maintain total halibut harvests to
established catch limits, and to meet the NPFMC's allocation objective
for these areas. The IPHC determined that limiting charter harvests by
implementing the management measures discussed below would likely meet
these objectives.
Reverse Slot Limit for Halibut Retained on a Charter Vessel Fishing in
Area 2C
This final rule amends the 2013 measures applicable to the charter
vessel fishery in Area 2C. For 2014, the IPHC adopted a management
measure that prohibits a person on board a charter vessel referred to
in 50 CFR 300.65 and fishing in Area 2C from taking or possessing any
halibut, with head on, that is greater than 44 inches (111.8 cm) and
less than 76 inches (193.0 cm), as measured in a straight line, passing
over the pectoral fin from the tip of the lower jaw with mouth closed,
to the extreme end of the middle of the tail. This type of restriction
is referred to as a ``reverse slot limit.'' The 2013 reverse slot limit
prohibited retention by charter anglers of halibut that were greater
than 45 inches (114.3 cm) and less than 68 inches (172.7 cm). The 2014
reverse slot limit is more restrictive to reduce charter harvest in
Area 2C to the reduced charter catch limit under the CSP of 761,280 lb
(345.3 mt).
Size Limits for Halibut Retained On Board and Trip Limits for Charter
Vessel Fishing in Area 3A
This final rule amends the 2013 management measures applicable to
the charter halibut fishery in Area 3A. Previously, charter vessel
anglers in Area 3A were allowed to catch and retain two halibut of any
size per person per day, the same limit as for unguided anglers. For
2014, the IPHC adopted a two-fish daily bag limit in which one of the
retained halibut may be of any size and one of the retained halibut
must be less than 29 inches (73.7 cm) total length. The NPFMC
recommended this measure to restrict charter harvest while minimizing
the negative impacts of new restrictions on charter operations and
anglers in Area 3A. A similar measure was used to reduce charter
harvest in Area 2C in 2007 and 2008, before further reductions in the
GHL required a one-fish bag limit in that area (72 FR 30714, June 4,
2007). A 29-inch halibut weighs approximately 10.3 lb (4.7 kg). In Area
3A in 2013, the average size of a halibut retained in the charter
fishery was 31 inches and 12.8 lb (5.8 kg). Therefore, assuming an
angler caught two fish of average size, this size limit would restrict
an angler's total harvest by about 2.5 lb (1.1 kg). Charter operators
in Area 3A stressed the importance of maintaining a two-fish bag limit
for charter anglers to maintain similar angling opportunities to
previous years. This management measure achieves that objective and is
projected to maintain total Area 3A charter harvest close to or below
the Area 3A charter catch limit.
Charter vessels will also be limited to one charter halibut fishing
trip in which halibut are retained per calendar day in Area 3A. If no
halibut are retained during a charter vessel fishing trip, the vessel
may take an additional trip to catch and retain halibut that day. The
trip limit applies to vessels only, not to charter halibut permits. A
charter operator may use more than one vessel to take more than one
charter vessel fishing trip using the same charter halibut permit per
day. Trip limits will affect only a small number of charter operators
and allow the size of the size-restricted fish to be maximized. Without
a trip limit, a more restrictive size or bag limit might have been
necessary to achieve harvest targets.
Areas 2C and 3A Carcass Retention
Current IPHC regulations prohibit the filleting, mutilation or
other disfigurement of sport-caught halibut that would prevent the
determination of the size or number of halibut possessed or landed. In
Southeast Alaska (Area 2C), the IPHC has not changed the current
regulation at section 28(2)(b) requiring that a person on board a
charter vessel who possesses filleted halibut must also retain the
entire carcass, with head and tail connected as a single piece, on
board the vessel until all the fillets are offloaded. The carcass
retention regulation was first implemented in Area 2C in 2011 to
facilitate enforcement of a maximum size limit and a one-fish per
angler daily bag limit. The IPHC adopted no changes to the carcass
retention requirement in 2014 to facilitate enforcement of the U44/O76
reverse slot limit in Area 2C. The IPHC also adopted the carcass
retention requirement in Area 3A to facilitate enforcement of the 29-
inch maximum size limit on one of the two fish. Anglers in Area 3A will
be required to retain only the carcass of the halibut that is less than
the 29-inch maximum size limit if two halibut are retained. If an
angler only retains one halibut in a day, the carcass does not need to
be retained.
Annual Halibut Management Measures
The following annual management measures for the 2014 Pacific
halibut fishery are those recommended by the IPHC and accepted by the
Secretary of State, with the concurrence of the Secretary.
1. Short Title
These Regulations may be cited as the Pacific Halibut Fishery
Regulations.
2. Application
(1) These Regulations apply to persons and vessels fishing for
halibut in, or possessing halibut taken from, the maritime area as
defined in Section 3.
(2) Sections 3 to 6 apply generally to all halibut fishing.
(3) Sections 7 to 20 apply to commercial fishing for halibut.
(4) Section 21 applies to tagged halibut caught by any vessel.
(5) Section 22 applies to the United States treaty Indian fishery
in Subarea 2A-1.
[[Page 13910]]
(6) Section 23 applies to customary and traditional fishing in
Alaska.
(7) Section 24 applies to Aboriginal groups fishing for food,
social and ceremonial purposes in British Columbia.
(8) Sections 25 to 28 apply to sport fishing for halibut.
(9) These Regulations do not apply to fishing operations authorized
or conducted by the Commission for research purposes.
3. Definitions
(1) In these Regulations,
(a) ``authorized officer'' means any State, Federal, or Provincial
officer authorized to enforce these Regulations including, but not
limited to, the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), Canada's
Department of Fisheries and Oceans (DFO), Alaska Wildlife Troopers
(AWT), United States Coast Guard (USCG), Washington Department of Fish
and Wildlife (WDFW), and the Oregon State Police (OSP);
(b) ``authorized clearance personnel'' means an authorized officer
of the United States, a representative of the Commission, or a
designated fish processor;
(c) ``charter vessel'' means a vessel used for hire in sport
fishing for halibut, but not including a vessel without a hired
operator;
(d) ``commercial fishing'' means fishing, the resulting catch of
which is sold or bartered; or is intended to be sold or bartered, other
than (i) sport fishing, (ii) treaty Indian ceremonial and subsistence
fishing as referred to in section 22, (iii) customary and traditional
fishing as referred to in section 23 and defined by and regulated
pursuant to NMFS regulations published at 50 CFR Part 300, and (iv)
Aboriginal groups fishing in British Columbia as referred to in section
24;
(e) ``Commission'' means the International Pacific Halibut
Commission;
(f) ``daily bag limit'' means the maximum number of halibut a
person may take in any calendar day from Convention waters;
(g) ``fishing'' means the taking, harvesting, or catching of fish,
or any activity that can reasonably be expected to result in the
taking, harvesting, or catching of fish, including specifically the
deployment of any amount or component part of setline gear anywhere in
the maritime area;
(h) ``fishing period limit'' means the maximum amount of halibut
that may be retained and landed by a vessel during one fishing period;
(i) ``land'' or ``offload'' with respect to halibut, means the
removal of halibut from the catching vessel;
(j) ``license'' means a halibut fishing license issued by the
Commission pursuant to section 4;
(k) ``maritime area'', in respect of the fisheries jurisdiction of
a Contracting Party, includes without distinction areas within and
seaward of the territorial sea and internal waters of that Party;
(l) ``net weight'' of a halibut means the weight of halibut that is
without gills and entrails, head-off, washed, and without ice and
slime. If a halibut is weighed with the head on or with ice and slime,
the required conversion factors for calculating net weight are a 2
percent deduction for ice and slime and a 10 percent deduction for the
head;
(m) ``operator'', with respect to any vessel, means the owner and/
or the master or other individual on board and in charge of that
vessel;
(n) ``overall length'' of a vessel means the horizontal distance,
rounded to the nearest foot, between the foremost part of the stem and
the aftermost part of the stern (excluding bowsprits, rudders, outboard
motor brackets, and similar fittings or attachments);
(o) ``person'' includes an individual, corporation, firm, or
association;
(p) ``regulatory area'' means an area referred to in section 6;
(q) ``setline gear'' means one or more stationary, buoyed, and
anchored lines with hooks attached;
(r) ``sport fishing'' means all fishing other than (i) commercial
fishing, (ii) treaty Indian ceremonial and subsistence fishing as
referred to in section 22, (iii) customary and traditional fishing as
referred to in section 23 and defined in and regulated pursuant to NMFS
regulations published in 50 CFR Part 300, and (iv) Aboriginal groups
fishing in British Columbia as referred to in section 24;
(s) ``tender'' means any vessel that buys or obtains fish directly
from a catching vessel and transports it to a port of landing or fish
processor;
(t) ``VMS transmitter'' means a NMFS-approved vessel monitoring
system transmitter that automatically determines a vessel's position
and transmits it to a NMFS-approved communications service provider.\1\
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\1\ Call NOAA Enforcement Division, Alaska Region, at 907-586-
7225 between the hours of 0800 and 1600 local time for a list of
NMFS-approved VMS transmitters and communications service providers.
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(2) In these Regulations, all bearings are true and all positions
are determined by the most recent charts issued by the United States
National Ocean Service or the Canadian Hydrographic Service.
4. Licensing Vessels for Area 2A
(1) No person shall fish for halibut from a vessel, nor possess
halibut on board a vessel, used either for commercial fishing or as a
charter vessel in Area 2A, unless the Commission has issued a license
valid for fishing in Area 2A in respect of that vessel.
(2) A license issued for a vessel operating in Area 2A shall be
valid only for operating either as a charter vessel or a commercial
vessel, but not both.
(3) A vessel with a valid Area 2A commercial license cannot be used
to sport fish for Pacific halibut in Area 2A.
(4) A license issued for a vessel operating in the commercial
fishery in Area 2A shall be valid for one of the following:
(a) The directed commercial fishery during the fishing periods
specified in paragraph (2) of section 8 and the incidental commercial
fishery during the sablefish fishery specified in paragraph (3) of
section 8;
(b) the incidental catch fishery during the sablefish fishery
specified in paragraph (3) of section 8; or
(c) the incidental catch fishery during the salmon troll fishery
specified in paragraph (4) of section 8.
(5) No person may apply for or be issued a license for a vessel
operating in the incidental catch fishery during the salmon troll
fishery in paragraph (4)(c), if that vessel was previously issued a
license for either the directed commercial fishery in paragraph (4)(a)
or the incidental catch fishery during the sablefish fishery in
paragraph (4)(b).
(6) A license issued in respect to a vessel referred to in
paragraph (1) of this section must be carried on board that vessel at
all times and the vessel operator shall permit its inspection by any
authorized officer.
(7) The Commission shall issue a license in respect to a vessel,
without fee, from its office in Seattle, Washington, upon receipt of a
completed, written, and signed ``Application for Vessel License for the
Halibut Fishery'' form.
(8) A vessel operating in the directed commercial fishery in Area
2A must have its ``Application for Vessel License for the Halibut
Fishery'' form postmarked no later than 11:59 p.m. on April 30, or on
the first weekday in May if April 30 is a Saturday or Sunday.
(9) A vessel operating in the incidental catch fishery during the
sablefish fishery in Area 2A must have its ``Application for Vessel
License for the Halibut Fishery'' form postmarked no later than 11:59
p.m. on March 15, or the next weekday in March if March 15 is a
Saturday or Sunday.
[[Page 13911]]
(10) A vessel operating in the incidental catch fishery during the
salmon troll fishery in Area 2A must have its ``Application for Vessel
License for the Halibut Fishery'' form postmarked no later than 11:59
p.m. on March 15, or the next weekday in March if March 15 is a
Saturday or Sunday.
(11) Application forms may be obtained from any authorized officer
or from the Commission.
(12) Information on ``Application for Vessel License for the
Halibut Fishery'' form must be accurate.
(13) The ``Application for Vessel License for the Halibut Fishery''
form shall be completed and signed by the vessel owner.
(14) Licenses issued under this section shall be valid only during
the year in which they are issued.
(15) A new license is required for a vessel that is sold,
transferred, renamed, or the documentation is changed.
(16) The license required under this section is in addition to any
license, however designated, that is required under the laws of the
United States or any of its States.
(17) The United States may suspend, revoke, or modify any license
issued under this section under policies and procedures in Title 15,
CFR Part 904.
5. In-Season Actions
(1) The Commission is authorized to establish or modify regulations
during the season after determining that such action:
(a) Will not result in exceeding the catch limit established
preseason for each regulatory area;
(b) is consistent with the Convention between Canada and the United
States of America for the Preservation of the Halibut Fishery of the
Northern Pacific Ocean and Bering Sea, and applicable domestic law of
either Canada or the United States; and
(c) is consistent, to the maximum extent practicable, with any
domestic catch sharing plans or other domestic allocation programs
developed by the United States or Canadian governments.
(2) In-season actions may include, but are not limited to,
establishment or modification of the following:
(a) Closed areas;
(b) fishing periods;
(c) fishing period limits;
(d) gear restrictions;
(e) recreational bag limits;
(f) size limits; or
(g) vessel clearances.
(3) In-season changes will be effective at the time and date
specified by the Commission.
(4) The Commission will announce in-season actions under this
section by providing notice to major halibut processors; Federal,
State, United States treaty Indian, and Provincial fishery officials;
and the media.
6. Regulatory Areas
The following areas shall be regulatory areas (see Figure 1) for
the purposes of the Convention:
(1) Area 2A includes all waters off the states of California,
Oregon, and Washington;
(2) Area 2B includes all waters off British Columbia;
(3) Area 2C includes all waters off Alaska that are east of a line
running 340[deg] true from Cape Spencer Light (58[deg]11'56'' N.
latitude, 136[deg]38'26'' W. longitude) and south and east of a line
running 205[deg] true from said light;
(4) Area 3A includes all waters between Area 2C and a line
extending from the most northerly point on Cape Aklek (57[deg]41'15''
N. latitude, 155[deg]35'00'' W. longitude) to Cape Ikolik
(57[deg]17'17'' N. latitude, 154[deg]47'18'' W. longitude), then along
the Kodiak Island coastline to Cape Trinity (56[deg]44'50'' N.
latitude, 154[deg]08'44'' W. longitude), then 140[deg] true;
(5) Area 3B includes all waters between Area 3A and a line
extending 150[deg] true from Cape Lutke (54[deg]29'00'' N. latitude,
164[deg]20'00'' W. longitude) and south of 54[deg]49'00'' N. latitude
in Isanotski Strait;
(6) Area 4A includes all waters in the Gulf of Alaska west of Area
3B and in the Bering Sea west of the closed area defined in section 10
that are east of 172[deg]00'00'' W. longitude and south of
56[deg]20'00'' N. latitude;
(7) Area 4B includes all waters in the Bering Sea and the Gulf of
Alaska west of Area 4A and south of 56[deg]20'00'' N. latitude;
(8) Area 4C includes all waters in the Bering Sea north of Area 4A
and north of the closed area defined in section 10 which are east of
171[deg]00'00'' W. longitude, south of 58[deg]00'00'' N. latitude, and
west of 168[deg]00'00'' W. longitude;
(9) Area 4D includes all waters in the Bering Sea north of Areas 4A
and 4B, north and west of Area 4C, and west of 168[deg]00'00'' W.
longitude; and
(10) Area 4E includes all waters in the Bering Sea north and east
of the closed area defined in section 10, east of 168[deg]00'00'' W.
longitude, and south of 65[deg]34'00'' N. latitude.
7. Fishing in Regulatory Area 4E and 4D
(1) Section 7 applies only to any person fishing, or vessel that is
used to fish for, Area 4E Community Development Quota (CDQ) or Area 4D
CDQ halibut, provided that the total annual halibut catch of that
person or vessel is landed at a port within Area 4E or 4D.
(2) A person may retain halibut taken with setline gear in Area 4E
CDQ and 4D CDQ fishery that are smaller than the size limit specified
in section 13, provided that no person may sell or barter such halibut.
(3) The manager of a CDQ organization that authorizes persons to
harvest halibut in the Area 4E or 4D CDQ fisheries must report to the
Commission the total number and weight of undersized halibut taken and
retained by such persons pursuant to section 7, paragraph (2). This
report, which shall include data and methodology used to collect the
data, must be received by the Commission prior to November 1 of the
year in which such halibut were harvested.
8. Fishing Periods
(1) The fishing periods for each regulatory area apply where the
catch limits specified in section 11 have not been taken.
(2) Each fishing period in the Area 2A directed commercial fishery
\2\ shall begin at 0800 hours and terminate at 1800 hours local time on
June 25, July 9, July 23, August 6, August 20, September 3, and
September 17 unless the Commission specifies otherwise.
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\2\ The directed fishery is restricted to waters that are south
of Point Chehalis, Washington (46[deg]53'18'' N. latitude) under
regulations promulgated by NMFS and published in the Federal
Register.
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(3) Notwithstanding paragraph (7) of section 11, an incidental
catch fishery \3\ is authorized during the sablefish seasons in Area 2A
in accordance with regulations promulgated by NMFS. This fishery will
occur between 1200 hours local time on March 8 and 1200 hours local
time on November 7.
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\3\ The incidental fishery during the directed, fixed gear
sablefish season is restricted to waters that are north of Point
Chehalis, Washington (46[deg]53'18'' N. latitude) under regulations
promulgated by NMFS at 50 CFR 300.63. Landing restrictions for
halibut retention in the fixed gear sablefish fishery can be found
at 50 CFR 660.231.
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(4) Notwithstanding paragraph (2), and paragraph (7) of section 11,
an incidental catch fishery is authorized during salmon troll seasons
in Area 2A in accordance with regulations promulgated by NMFS. This
fishery will occur between 1200 hours local time on March 8 and 1200
hours local time on November 7.
(5) The fishing period in Areas 2B, 2C, 3A, 3B, 4A, 4B, 4C, 4D, and
4E shall begin at 1200 hours local time on March 8 and terminate at
1200 hours local time on November 7, unless the Commission specifies
otherwise.
[[Page 13912]]
(6) All commercial fishing for halibut in Areas 2A, 2B, 2C, 3A, 3B,
4A, 4B, 4C, 4D, and 4E shall cease at 1200 hours local time on November
7.
9. Closed Periods
(1) No person shall engage in fishing for halibut in any regulatory
area other than during the fishing periods set out in section 8 in
respect of that area.
(2) No person shall land or otherwise retain halibut caught outside
a fishing period applicable to the regulatory area where the halibut
was taken.
(3) Subject to paragraphs (7), (8), (9), and (10) of section 19,
these Regulations do not prohibit fishing for any species of fish other
than halibut during the closed periods.
(4) Notwithstanding paragraph (3), no person shall have halibut in
his/her possession while fishing for any other species of fish during
the closed periods.
(5) No vessel shall retrieve any halibut fishing gear during a
closed period if the vessel has any halibut on board.
(6) A vessel that has no halibut on board may retrieve any halibut
fishing gear during the closed period after the operator notifies an
authorized officer or representative of the Commission prior to that
retrieval.
(7) After retrieval of halibut gear in accordance with paragraph
(6), the vessel shall submit to a hold inspection at the discretion of
the authorized officer or representative of the Commission.
(8) No person shall retain any halibut caught on gear retrieved in
accordance with paragraph (6).
(9) No person shall possess halibut on board a vessel in a
regulatory area during a closed period unless that vessel is in
continuous transit to or within a port in which that halibut may be
lawfully sold.
10. Closed Area
All waters in the Bering Sea north of 55[deg]00'00'' N. latitude in
Isanotski Strait that are enclosed by a line from Cape Sarichef Light
(54[deg]36'00'' N. latitude, 164[deg]55'42'' W. longitude) to a point
at 56[deg]20'00'' N. latitude, 168[deg]30'00'' W. longitude; thence to
a point at 58[deg]21'25'' N. latitude, 163[deg]00'00'' W. longitude;
thence to Strogonof Point (56[deg]53'18'' N. latitude, 158[deg]50'37''
W. longitude); and then along the northern coasts of the Alaska
Peninsula and Unimak Island to the point of origin at Cape Sarichef
Light are closed to halibut fishing and no person shall fish for
halibut therein or have halibut in his/her possession while in those
waters, except in the course of a continuous transit across those
waters. All waters in Isanotski Strait between 55[deg]00'00'' N.
latitude and 54[deg]49'00'' N. latitude are closed to halibut fishing.
11. Catch Limits
(1) The total allowable catch of halibut to be taken during the
halibut fishing periods specified in section 8 shall be limited to the
net weights expressed in pounds or metric tons shown in the following
table:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Catch limit--net weight
Regulatory area -------------------------------------
Pounds Metric tons
------------------------------------------------------------------------
2A: Directed commercial, and 197,808 89.7
incidental commercial catch
during salmon troll fishery......
2A: Incidental commercial during 14,274 6.5
sablefish fishery................
2B \4\............................ 6,850,000 3,107.1
2C \5\............................ 3,318,720 1,505.3
3A \6\............................ 7,317,730 3,319.3
3B................................ 2,840,000 1,288.2
4A................................ 850,000 385.6
4B................................ 1,140,000 517.1
4C................................ 596,600 270.6
4D................................ 596,600 270.6
4E................................ 91,800 41.6
------------------------------------------------------------------------
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\4\ Area 2B includes combined commercial and sport catch limits
that will be allocated by DFO. See section 27 for sport fishing
regulations.
\5\ For the commercial fishery in Area 2C, in addition to the
catch limit, the estimate of incidental mortality from the
commercial fishery is 80,000 pounds. This amount is included in the
combined commercial and guided sport sector catch limit set by IPHC
and allocated by NMFS by a catch sharing plan.
\6\ For the commercial fishery in Area 3A, in addition to the
catch limit, the estimate of incidental mortality from the
commercial fishery is 330,000 pounds. This amount is included in the
combined commercial and guided sport sector catch limit set by IPHC
and allocated by NMFS by a catch sharing plan.
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(2) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), regulations pertaining to the
division of the Area 2A catch limit between the directed commercial
fishery and the incidental catch fishery as described in paragraph (4)
of section 8 will be promulgated by NMFS and published in the Federal
Register.
(3) The Commission shall determine and announce to the public the
date on which the catch limit for Area 2A will be taken.
(4) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), the commercial fishing in Area
2B will close only when all Individual Vessel Quotas (IVQs) assigned by
DFO are taken, or November 7, whichever is earlier.
(5) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), Areas 2C, 3A, 3B, 4A, 4B, 4C,
4D, and 4E will each close only when all Individual Fishing Quotas
(IFQ) and all CDQs issued by NMFS have been taken, or November 7,
whichever is earlier.
(6) If the Commission determines that the catch limit specified for
Area 2A in paragraph (1) would be exceeded in an unrestricted 10-hour
fishing period as specified in paragraph (2) of section 8, the catch
limit for that area shall be considered to have been taken unless
fishing period limits are implemented.
(7) When under paragraphs (2), (3), and (6) the Commission has
announced a date on which the catch limit for Area 2A will be taken, no
person shall fish for halibut in that area after that date for the rest
of the year, unless the Commission has announced the reopening of that
area for halibut fishing.
(8) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), the total allowable catch of
halibut that may be taken in the Area 4E directed commercial fishery is
equal to the combined annual catch limits specified for the Area 4D and
Area 4E CDQ fisheries. The annual Area 4D CDQ catch limit will decrease
by the equivalent amount of halibut CDQ taken in Area 4E in excess of
the annual Area 4E CDQ catch limit.
(9) Notwithstanding paragraph (1), the total allowable catch of
halibut that may be taken in the Area 4D directed commercial fishery is
equal to the combined annual catch limits specified
[[Page 13913]]
for Area 4C and Area 4D. The annual Area 4C catch limit will decrease
by the equivalent amount of halibut taken in Area 4D in excess of the
annual Area 4D catch limit.
Area 2B includes combined commercial and sport catch limits that
will be allocated by DFO.
12. Fishing Period Limits
(1) It shall be unlawful for any vessel to retain more halibut than
authorized by that vessel's license in any fishing period for which the
Commission has announced a fishing period limit.
(2) The operator of any vessel that fishes for halibut during a
fishing period when fishing period limits are in effect must, upon
commencing an offload of halibut to a commercial fish processor,
completely offload all halibut on board said vessel to that processor
and ensure that all halibut is weighed and reported on State fish
tickets.
(3) The operator of any vessel that fishes for halibut during a
fishing period when fishing period limits are in effect must, upon
commencing an offload of halibut other than to a commercial fish
processor, completely offload all halibut on board said vessel and
ensure that all halibut are weighed and reported on State fish tickets.
(4) The provisions of paragraph (3) are not intended to prevent
retail over-the-side sales to individual purchasers so long as all the
halibut on board is ultimately offloaded and reported.
(5) When fishing period limits are in effect, a vessel's maximum
retainable catch will be determined by the Commission based on:
(a) The vessel's overall length in feet and associated length
class;
(b) the average performance of all vessels within that class; and
(c) the remaining catch limit.
(6) Length classes are shown in the following table:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Vessel
Overall length (in feet) class
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1-25......................................................... A
26-30........................................................ B
31-35........................................................ C
36-40........................................................ D
41-45........................................................ E
46-50........................................................ F
51-55........................................................ G
56+.......................................................... H
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(7) Fishing period limits in Area 2A apply only to the directed
halibut fishery referred to in paragraph (2) of section 8.
13. Size Limits
(1) No person shall take or possess any halibut that:
(a) With the head on, is less than 32 inches (81.3 cm) as measured
in a straight line, passing over the pectoral fin from the tip of the
lower jaw with the mouth closed, to the extreme end of the middle of
the tail, as illustrated in Figure 2; or
(b) with the head removed, is less than 24 inches (61.0 cm) as
measured from the base of the pectoral fin at its most anterior point
to the extreme end of the middle of the tail, as illustrated in Figure
2.
(2) No person on board a vessel fishing for, or tendering, halibut
caught in Area 2A shall possess any halibut that has had its head
removed.
14. Careful Release of Halibut
(1) All halibut that are caught and are not retained shall be
immediately released outboard of the roller and returned to the sea
with a minimum of injury by:
(a) Hook straightening;
(b) cutting the gangion near the hook; or
(c) carefully removing the hook by twisting it from the halibut
with a gaff.
(2) Except that paragraph (1) shall not prohibit the possession of
halibut on board a vessel that has been brought aboard to be measured
to determine if the minimum size limit of the halibut is met and, if
sublegal-sized, is promptly returned to the sea with a minimum of
injury.
15. Vessel Clearance in Area 4
(1) The operator of any vessel that fishes for halibut in Areas 4A,
4B, 4C, or 4D must obtain a vessel clearance before fishing in any of
these areas, and before the landing of any halibut caught in any of
these areas, unless specifically exempted in paragraphs (10), (13),
(14), (15), or (16).
(2) An operator obtaining a vessel clearance required by paragraph
(1) must obtain the clearance in person from the authorized clearance
personnel and sign the IPHC form documenting that a clearance was
obtained, except that when the clearance is obtained via VHF radio
referred to in paragraphs (5), (8), and (9), the authorized clearance
personnel must sign the IPHC form documenting that the clearance was
obtained.
(3) The vessel clearance required under paragraph (1) prior to
fishing in Area 4A may be obtained only at Nazan Bay on Atka Island,
Dutch Harbor or Akutan, Alaska, from an authorized officer of the
United States, a representative of the Commission, or a designated fish
processor.
(4) The vessel clearance required under paragraph (1) prior to
fishing in Area 4B may only be obtained at Nazan Bay on Atka Island or
Adak, Alaska, from an authorized officer of the United States, a
representative of the Commission, or a designated fish processor.
(5) The vessel clearance required under paragraph (1) prior to
fishing in Area 4C or 4D may be obtained only at St. Paul or St.
George, Alaska, from an authorized officer of the United States, a
representative of the Commission, or a designated fish processor by VHF
radio and allowing the person contacted to confirm visually the
identity of the vessel.
(6) The vessel operator shall specify the specific regulatory area
in which fishing will take place.
(7) Before unloading any halibut caught in Area 4A, a vessel
operator may obtain the clearance required under paragraph (1) only in
Dutch Harbor or Akutan, Alaska, by contacting an authorized officer of
the United States, a representative of the Commission, or a designated
fish processor.
(8) Before unloading any halibut caught in Area 4B, a vessel
operator may obtain the clearance required under paragraph (1) only in
Nazan Bay on Atka Island or Adak, by contacting an authorized officer
of the United States, a representative of the Commission, or a
designated fish processor by VHF radio or in person.
(9) Before unloading any halibut caught in Area 4C and 4D, a vessel
operator may obtain the clearance required under paragraph (1) only in
St. Paul, St. George, Dutch Harbor, or Akutan, Alaska, either in person
or by contacting an authorized officer of the United States, a
representative of the Commission, or a designated fish processor. The
clearances obtained in St. Paul or St. George, Alaska, can be obtained
by VHF radio and allowing the person contacted to confirm visually the
identity of the vessel.
(10) Any vessel operator who complies with the requirements in
section 18 for possessing halibut on board a vessel that was caught in
more than one regulatory area in Area 4 is exempt from the clearance
requirements of paragraph (1) of this section, provided that:
(a) The operator of the vessel obtains a vessel clearance prior to
fishing in Area 4 in either Dutch Harbor, Akutan, St. Paul, St. George,
Adak, or Nazan Bay on Atka Island by contacting an authorized officer
of the United States, a representative of the Commission, or a
designated fish processor. The clearance obtained in St. Paul, St.
George, Adak, or Nazan Bay on Atka Island can be obtained by VHF radio
[[Page 13914]]
and allowing the person contacted to confirm visually the identity of
the vessel. This clearance will list the areas in which the vessel will
fish; and
(b) before unloading any halibut from Area 4, the vessel operator
obtains a vessel clearance from Dutch Harbor, Akutan, St. Paul, St.
George, Adak, or Nazan Bay on Atka Island by contacting an authorized
officer of the United States, a representative of the Commission, or a
designated fish processor. The clearance obtained in St. Paul or St.
George can be obtained by VHF radio and allowing the person contacted
to confirm visually the identity of the vessel. The clearance obtained
in Adak or Nazan Bay on Atka Island can be obtained by VHF radio.
(11) Vessel clearances shall be obtained between 0600 and 1800
hours, local time.
(12) No halibut shall be on board the vessel at the time of the
clearances required prior to fishing in Area 4.
(13) Any vessel that is used to fish for halibut only in Area 4A
and lands its total annual halibut catch at a port within Area 4A is
exempt from the clearance requirements of paragraph (1).
(14) Any vessel that is used to fish for halibut only in Area 4B
and lands its total annual halibut catch at a port within Area 4B is
exempt from the clearance requirements of paragraph (1).
(15) Any vessel that is used to fish for halibut only in Area 4C or
4D or 4E and lands its total annual halibut catch at a port within Area
4C, 4D, 4E, or the closed area defined in section 10, is exempt from
the clearance requirements of paragraph (1).
(16) Any vessel that carries a transmitting VMS transmitter while
fishing for halibut in Area 4A, 4B, 4C, or 4D and until all halibut
caught in any of these areas is landed, is exempt from the clearance
requirements of paragraph (1) of this section, provided that:
(a) The operator of the vessel complies with NMFS' vessel
monitoring system regulations published at 50 CFR sections
679.28(f)(3), (4) and (5); and
(b) the operator of the vessel notifies NOAA Fisheries Office for
Law Enforcement at 800-304-4846 (select option 1 to speak to an
Enforcement Data Clerk) between the hours of 0600 and 0000 (midnight)
local time within 72 hours before fishing for halibut in Area 4A, 4B,
4C, or 4D and receives a VMS confirmation number.
16. Logs
(1) The operator of any U.S. vessel fishing for halibut that has an
overall length of 26 feet (7.9 meters) or greater shall maintain an
accurate log of halibut fishing operations. The operator of a vessel
fishing in waters in and off Alaska must use one of the following
logbooks: The Groundfish/IFQ Daily Fishing Longline and Pot Gear
Logbook provided by NMFS; the Alaska hook-and-line logbook provided by
Petersburg Vessel Owners Association or Alaska Longline Fisherman's
Association; the Alaska Department of Fish and Game (ADF&G) longline-
pot logbook; or the logbook provided by IPHC. The operator of a vessel
fishing in Area 2A must use either the Washington Department of Fish
and Wildlife (WDFW) Voluntary Sablefish Logbook, Oregon Department of
Fish and Wildlife (ODFW) Fixed Gear Logbook, or the logbook provided by
IPHC.
(2) The logbook referred to in paragraph (1) must include the
following information:
(a) The name of the vessel and the State (ADF&G, WDFW, ODFW, or
California Department of Fish and Game) or Tribal vessel number;
(b) the date(s) upon which the fishing gear is set or retrieved;
(c) the latitude and longitude coordinates or a direction and
distance from a point of land for each set or day;
(d) the number of skates deployed or retrieved, and number of
skates lost; and
(e) the total weight or number of halibut retained for each set or
day.
(3) The logbook referred to in paragraph (1) shall be:
(a) Maintained on board the vessel;
(b) updated not later than 24 hours after 0000 (midnight) local
time for each day fished and prior to the offloading or sale of halibut
taken during that fishing trip;
(c) retained for a period of two years by the owner or operator of
the vessel;
(d) open to inspection by an authorized officer or any authorized
representative of the Commission upon demand; and
(e) kept on board the vessel when engaged in halibut fishing,
during transits to port of landing, and until the offloading of all
halibut is completed.
(4) The log referred to in paragraph (1) does not apply to the
incidental halibut fishery during the salmon troll season in Area 2A
defined in paragraph (4) of section 8.
(5) The operator of any Canadian vessel fishing for halibut shall
maintain an accurate log recorded in the British Columbia Integrated
Groundfish Fishing Log provided by DFO.
(6) The logbook referred to in paragraph (5) must include the
following information:
(a) The name of the vessel and the DFO vessel registration number;
(b) the date(s) upon which the fishing gear is set and retrieved;
(c) the latitude and longitude coordinates for each set;
(d) the number of skates deployed or retrieved, and number of
skates lost; and
(e) the total weight or number of halibut retained for each set.
(7) The logbook referred to in paragraph (5) shall be:
(a) Maintained on board the vessel;
(b) retained for a period of two years by the owner or operator of
the vessel;
(c) open to inspection by an authorized officer or any authorized
representative of the Commission upon demand;
(d) kept on board the vessel when engaged in halibut fishing,
during transits to port of landing, and until the offloading of all
halibut is completed;
(e) mailed to the DFO (white copy) within seven days of offloading;
and
(f) mailed to the Commission (yellow copy) within seven days of the
final offload if not collected by a Commission employee.
(8) No person shall make a false entry in a log referred to in this
section.
17. Receipt and Possession of Halibut
(1) No person shall receive halibut caught in Area 2A from a United
States vessel that does not have on board the license required by
section 4.
(2) No person shall possess on board a vessel a halibut other than
whole or with gills and entrails removed, except that this paragraph
shall not prohibit the possession on board a vessel of:
(a) Halibut cheeks cut from halibut caught by persons authorized to
process the halibut on board in accordance with NMFS regulations
published at 50 CFR Part 679;
(b) fillets from halibut offloaded in accordance with section 17
that are possessed on board the harvesting vessel in the port of
landing up to 1800 hours local time on the calendar day following the
offload; \7\ and
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ DFO has more restrictive regulations; therefore, section 17
paragraph (2)(b) does not apply to fish caught in Area 2B or landed
in British Columbia.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
(c) halibut with their heads removed in accordance with section 13.
(3) No person shall offload halibut from a vessel unless the gills
and entrails have been removed prior to offloading.
(4) It shall be the responsibility of a vessel operator who lands
halibut to continuously and completely offload at a single offload site
all halibut on board the vessel.
(5) A registered buyer (as that term is defined in regulations
promulgated by NMFS and codified at 50 CFR Part 679) who receives
halibut harvested in IFQ and CDQ fisheries in Areas 2C, 3A, 3B,
[[Page 13915]]
4A, 4B, 4C, 4D, and 4E, directly from the vessel operator that
harvested such halibut must weigh all the halibut received and record
the following information on Federal catch reports: Date of offload;
name of vessel; vessel number (State, Tribal or Federal, not IPHC
vessel number); scale weight obtained at the time of offloading,
including the scale weight (in pounds) of halibut purchased by the
registered buyer, the scale weight (in pounds) of halibut offloaded in
excess of the IFQ or CDQ, the scale weight of halibut (in pounds)
retained for personal use or for future sale, and the scale weight (in
pounds) of halibut discarded as unfit for human consumption.
(6) The first recipient, commercial fish processor, or buyer in the
United States who purchases or receives halibut directly from the
vessel operator that harvested such halibut must weigh and record all
halibut received and record the following information on State fish
tickets: The date of offload; vessel number (State, Tribal or Federal,
not IPHC vessel number); total weight obtained at the time of offload
including the weight (in pounds) of halibut purchased; the weight (in
pounds) of halibut offloaded in excess of the IFQ, CDQ, or fishing
period limits; the weight of halibut (in pounds) retained for personal
use or for future sale; and the weight (in pounds) of halibut discarded
as unfit for human consumption.
(7) The individual completing the State fish tickets for the Area
2A fisheries as referred to in paragraph (6) must additionally record
whether the halibut weight is of head-on or head-off fish.
(8) For halibut landings made in Alaska, the requirements as listed
in paragraph (5) and (6) can be met by recording the information in the
Interagency Electronic Reporting Systems, eLandings in accordance with
NMFS regulation published at 50 CFR Part 679.
(9) The master or operator of a Canadian vessel that was engaged in
halibut fishing must weigh and record all halibut on board said vessel
at the time offloading commences and record on Provincial fish tickets
or Federal catch reports the date; locality; name of vessel; the
name(s) of the person(s) from whom the halibut was purchased; and the
scale weight obtained at the time of offloading of all halibut on board
the vessel including the pounds purchased, pounds in excess of IVQs,
pounds retained for personal use, and pounds discarded as unfit for
human consumption.
(10) No person shall make a false entry on a State or Provincial
fish ticket or a Federal catch or landing report referred to in
paragraphs (5), (6), and (9) of section 17.
(11) A copy of the fish tickets or catch reports referred to in
paragraphs (5), (6), and (9) shall be:
(a) Retained by the person making them for a period of three years
from the date the fish tickets or catch reports are made; and
(b) open to inspection by an authorized officer or any authorized
representative of the Commission.
(12) No person shall possess any halibut taken or retained in
contravention of these Regulations.
(13) When halibut are landed to other than a commercial fish
processor, the records required by paragraph (6) shall be maintained by
the operator of the vessel from which that halibut was caught, in
compliance with paragraph (11).
(14) No person shall tag halibut unless the tagging is authorized
by IPHC permit or by a Federal or State agency.
18. Fishing Multiple Regulatory Areas
(1) Except as provided in this section, no person shall possess at
the same time on board a vessel halibut caught in more than one
regulatory area.
(2) Halibut caught in more than one of the Regulatory Areas 2C, 3A,
or 3B may be possessed on board a vessel at the same time, provided the
operator of the vessel:
(a) Has a NMFS-certified observer on board when required by NMFS
regulations \8\ published at 50 CFR 679.7(f)(4); and
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ Without an observer, a vessel cannot have on board more
halibut than the IFQ for the area that is being fished, even if some
of the catch occurred earlier in a different area.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
(b) can identify the regulatory area in which each halibut on board
was caught by separating halibut from different areas in the hold,
tagging halibut, or by other means.
(3) Halibut caught in more than one of the Regulatory Areas 4A, 4B,
4C, or 4D may be possessed on board a vessel at the same time, provided
the operator of the vessel:
(a) Has a NMFS-certified observer on board the vessel as required
by NMFS regulations published at 50 CFR 679.7(f)(4); or has an
operational VMS on board actively transmitting in all regulatory areas
fished and does not possess at any time more halibut on board the
vessel than the IFQ permit holders on board the vessel have
cumulatively available for any single Area 4 regulatory area fished;
and
(b) can identify the regulatory area in which each halibut on board
was caught by separating halibut from different areas in the hold,
tagging halibut, or by other means.
(4) If halibut from Area 4 are on board the vessel, the vessel can
have halibut caught in Regulatory Areas 2C, 3A, and 3B on board if in
compliance with paragraph (2).
19. Fishing Gear
(1) No person shall fish for halibut using any gear other than hook
and line gear, except that vessels licensed to catch sablefish in Area
2B using sablefish trap gear as defined in the Condition of Sablefish
Licence can retain halibut caught as bycatch under regulations
promulgated by the Canadian Department of Fisheries and Oceans.
(2) No person shall possess halibut taken with any gear other than
hook and line gear, except that vessels licensed to catch sablefish in
Area 2B using sablefish trap gear as defined by the Condition of
Sablefish Licence can retain halibut caught as bycatch under
regulations promulgated by the Canadian Department of Fisheries and
Oceans.
(3) No person shall possess halibut while on board a vessel
carrying any trawl nets or fishing pots capable of catching halibut,
except that in Areas 2C, 3A, 3B, 4A, 4B, 4C, 4D, or 4E, halibut heads,
skin, entrails, bones or fins for use as bait may be possessed on board
a vessel carrying pots capable of catching halibut, provided that a
receipt documenting purchase or transfer of these halibut parts is on
board the vessel.
(4) All setline or skate marker buoys carried on board or used by
any United States vessel used for halibut fishing shall be marked with
one of the following:
(a) The vessel's State license number; or
(b) the vessel's registration number.
(5) The markings specified in paragraph (4) shall be in characters
at least four inches in height and one-half inch in width in a
contrasting color visible above the water and shall be maintained in
legible condition.
(6) All setline or skate marker buoys carried on board or used by a
Canadian vessel used for halibut fishing shall be:
(a) floating and visible on the surface of the water; and
(b) legibly marked with the identification plate number of the
vessel engaged in commercial fishing from which that setline is being
operated.
(7) No person on board a vessel used to fish for any species of
fish anywhere
[[Page 13916]]
in Area 2A during the 72-hour period immediately before the fishing
period for the directed commercial fishery shall catch or possess
halibut anywhere in those waters during that halibut fishing period
unless, prior to the start of the halibut fishing period, the vessel
has removed its gear from the water and has either:
(a) Made a landing and completely offloaded its catch of other
fish; or
(b) submitted to a hold inspection by an authorized officer.
(8) No vessel used to fish for any species of fish anywhere in Area
2A during the 72-hour period immediately before the fishing period for
the directed commercial fishery may be used to catch or possess halibut
anywhere in those waters during that halibut fishing period unless,
prior to the start of the halibut fishing period, the vessel has
removed its gear from the water and has either:
(a) Made a landing and completely offloaded its catch of other
fish; or
(b) submitted to a hold inspection by an authorized officer.
(9) No person on board a vessel from which setline gear was used to
fish for any species of fish anywhere in Areas 2B, 2C, 3A, 3B, 4A, 4B,
4C, 4D, or 4E during the 72-hour period immediately before the opening
of the halibut fishing season shall catch or possess halibut anywhere
in those areas until the vessel has removed all of its setline gear
from the water and has either:
(a) Made a landing and completely offloaded its entire catch of
other fish; or
(b) submitted to a hold inspection by an authorized officer.
(10) No vessel from which setline gear was used to fish for any
species of fish anywhere in Areas 2B, 2C, 3A, 3B, 4A, 4B, 4C, 4D, or 4E
during the 72-hour period immediately before the opening of the halibut
fishing season may be used to catch or possess halibut anywhere in
those areas until the vessel has removed all of its setline gear from
the water and has either:
(a) Made a landing and completely offloaded its entire catch of
other fish; or
(b) submitted to a hold inspection by an authorized officer.
(11) Notwithstanding any other provision in these Regulations, a
person may retain, possess and dispose of halibut taken with trawl gear
only as authorized by Prohibited Species Donation regulations of NMFS.
20. Supervision of Unloading and Weighing
The unloading and weighing of halibut may be subject to the
supervision of authorized officers to assure the fulfillment of the
provisions of these Regulations.
21. Retention of Tagged Halibut
(1) Nothing contained in these Regulations prohibits any vessel at
any time from retaining and landing a halibut that bears a Commission
external tag at the time of capture, if the halibut with the tag still
attached is reported at the time of landing and made available for
examination by a representative of the Commission or by an authorized
officer.
(2) After examination and removal of the tag by a representative of
the Commission or an authorized officer, the halibut:
(a) May be retained for personal use; or
(b) may be sold only if the halibut is caught during commercial
halibut fishing and complies with the other commercial fishing
provisions of these Regulations.
(3) Externally tagged fish must count against commercial IVQs,
CDQs, IFQs, or daily bag or possession limits unless otherwise exempted
by State, Provincial, or Federal regulations.
22. Fishing by United States Treaty Indian Tribes
(1) Halibut fishing in Subarea 2A-1 by members of United States
treaty Indian tribes located in the State of Washington shall be
regulated under regulations promulgated by NMFS and published in the
Federal Register.
(2) Subarea 2A-1 includes all waters off the coast of Washington
that are north of 46[deg]53[acute]18[acute][acute] N. latitude and east
of 125[deg]44[acute]00[acute][acute] W. longitude, and all inland
marine waters of Washington.
(3) Section 13 (size limits), section 14 (careful release of
halibut), section 16 (logs), section 17 (receipt and possession of
halibut) and section 19 (fishing gear), except paragraphs (7) and (8)
of section 19, apply to commercial fishing for halibut in Subarea 2A-1
by the treaty Indian tribes.
(4) Regulations in paragraph (3) of this section that apply to
State fish tickets apply to Tribal tickets that are authorized by
Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife.
(5) Section 4 (Licensing Vessels for Area 2A) does not apply to
commercial fishing for halibut in Subarea 2A-1 by treaty Indian tribes.
(6) Commercial fishing for halibut in Subarea 2A-1 is permitted
with hook and line gear from March 8 through November 7, or until
307,500 pounds (139.5 metric tons) net weight is taken, whichever
occurs first.
(7) Ceremonial and subsistence fishing for halibut in Subarea 2A-1
is permitted with hook and line gear from January 1 through December
31, and is estimated to take 28,500 pounds (12.9 metric tons) net
weight.
23. Customary and Traditional Fishing in Alaska
(1) Customary and traditional fishing for halibut in Regulatory
Areas 2C, 3A, 3B, 4A, 4B, 4C, 4D, and 4E shall be governed pursuant to
regulations promulgated by NMFS and published in 50 CFR Part 300.
(2) Customary and traditional fishing is authorized from January 1
through December 31.
24. Aboriginal Groups Fishing for Food, Social and Ceremonial Purposes
in British Columbia
(1) Fishing for halibut for food, social and ceremonial purposes by
Aboriginal groups in Regulatory Area 2B shall be governed by the
Fisheries Act of Canada and regulations as amended from time to time.
25. Sport Fishing for Halibut--General
(1) No person shall engage in sport fishing for halibut using gear
other than a single line with no more than two hooks attached; or a
spear.
(2) Any minimum overall size limit promulgated under IPHC or NMFS
regulations shall be measured in a straight line passing over the
pectoral fin from the tip of the lower jaw with the mouth closed, to
the extreme end of the middle of the tail.
(3) Any halibut brought aboard a vessel and not immediately
returned to the sea with a minimum of injury will be included in the
daily bag limit of the person catching the halibut.
(4) No person may possess halibut on a vessel while fishing in a
closed area.
(5) No halibut caught by sport fishing shall be offered for sale,
sold, traded, or bartered.
(6) No halibut caught in sport fishing shall be possessed on board
a vessel when other fish or shellfish aboard said vessel are destined
for commercial use, sale, trade, or barter.
(7) The operator of a charter vessel shall be liable for any
violations of these Regulations committed by a passenger aboard said
vessel.
26. Sport Fishing for Halibut--Area 2A
(1) The total allowable catch of halibut shall be limited to:
(a) 214,110 pounds (97.1 metric tons) net weight in waters off
Washington; and
(b) 197,808 pounds (89.7 metric tons) net weight in waters off
California and Oregon.
[[Page 13917]]
(2) The Commission shall determine and announce closing dates to
the public for any area in which the catch limits promulgated by NMFS
are estimated to have been taken.
(3) When the Commission has determined that a subquota under
paragraph (8) of this section is estimated to have been taken, and has
announced a date on which the season will close, no person shall sport
fish for halibut in that area after that date for the rest of the year,
unless a reopening of that area for sport halibut fishing is scheduled
in accordance with the Catch Sharing Plan for Area 2A, or announced by
the Commission.
(4) In California, Oregon, or Washington, no person shall fillet,
mutilate, or otherwise disfigure a halibut in any manner that prevents
the determination of minimum size or the number of fish caught,
possessed, or landed.
(5) The possession limit on a vessel for halibut in the waters off
the coast of Washington is the same as the daily bag limit. The
possession limit on land in Washington for halibut caught in U.S.
waters off the coast of Washington is two halibut.
(6) The possession limit on a vessel for halibut caught in the
waters off the coast of Oregon is the same as the daily bag limit. The
possession limit for halibut on land in Oregon is three daily bag
limits.
(7) The possession limit on a vessel for halibut caught in the
waters off the coast of California is one halibut. The possession limit
for halibut on land in California is one halibut.
(8) The sport fishing subareas, subquotas, fishing dates, and daily
bag limits are as follows, except as modified under the in-season
actions in 50 CFR 300.63(c). All sport fishing in Area 2A is managed on
a ``port of landing'' basis, whereby any halibut landed into a port
counts toward the quota for the area in which that port is located, and
the regulations governing the area of landing apply, regardless of the
specific area of catch.
27. Sport Fishing for Halibut--Area 2B
(1) In all waters off British Columbia: 9 10
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ DFO could implement more restrictive regulations for the
sport fishery, therefore anglers are advised to check the current
Federal or Provincial regulations prior to fishing.
\10\ For regulations on the experimental recreational fishery
implement by DFO check the current Federal or Provincial
regulations.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
(a) the sport fishing season will open on February 1 unless more
restrictive regulations are in place; \10\
(b) The sport fishing season will close when the sport catch limit
allocated by DFO, is taken, or December 31, whichever is earlier;
(c) the daily bag limit is two halibut of any size per day per
person.
(2) In British Columbia, no person shall fillet, mutilate, or
otherwise disfigure a halibut in any manner that prevents the
determination of minimum size or the number of fish caught, possessed,
or landed.
(3) The possession limit for halibut in the waters off the coast of
British Columbia is three halibut.
28. Sport Fishing for Halibut--Areas 2C, 3A, 3B, 4A, 4B, 4C, 4D, 4E
(1) In Convention waters in and off Alaska: \11,*12\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ NMFS could implement more restrictive regulations for the
sport fishery or components of it, therefore, anglers are advised to
check the current Federal or State regulations prior to fishing.
\12\ Charter vessels are prohibited from harvesting halibut in
Area 2C and 3A during one charter vessel fishing trip under
regulations promulgated by NMFS at 50 CFR 300.66(v).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
(a) The sport fishing season is from February 1 to December 31.
(b) The daily bag limit is two halibut of any size per day per
person unless a more restrictive bag limit applies in Commission
regulations or Federal regulations at 50 CFR 300.65.
(c) No person may possess more than two daily bag limits.
(d) No person shall possess on board a vessel, including charter
vessels and pleasure craft used for fishing, halibut that have been
filleted, mutilated, or otherwise disfigured in any manner, except that
each halibut may be cut into no more than 2 ventral pieces, 2 dorsal
pieces, and 2 cheek pieces, with skin on all pieces.
(e) Halibut in excess of the possession limit in paragraph (1)(c)
of this section may be possessed on a vessel that does not contain
sport fishing gear, fishing rods, hand lines, or gaffs.
(2) For guided sport fishing (as referred to in 50 CFR 300.65) in
Regulatory Area 2C:
(a) The total catch allocation, including an estimate of incidental
mortality (wastage), is 761,280 pounds (345.3 metric tons).
(b) No person on board a charter vessel (as referred to in 50 CFR
300.65) shall catch and retain more than one halibut per calendar
day.\13\
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\13\ Guided angler fish (GAF), as described at 50 CFR 300.65(c),
may be used to allow a charter vessel angler to harvest additional
halibut up to the limits in place for unguided anglers.
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(c) No person aboard a charter vessel (as referred to in 50 CFR
300.65) shall take or possess any halibut that with head on that is
greater than 44 inches (111.8 cm) and less than 76 inches (194.0 cm) as
measured in a straight line, passing over the pectoral fin from the tip
of the lower jaw with mouth closed, to the extreme end of the middle of
the tail, as illustrated in Figure 3.\13\
(d) If the halibut is filleted, the entire carcass, with head and
tail connected as a single piece, must be retained on board the vessel
until all fillets are offloaded.\14\
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\14\ For halibut caught and retained as GAF, the charter vessel
guide must immediately remove the tips of the upper and lower lobes
of the caudal (tail) fin, and if the halibut is filleted, the entire
carcass, with head and tail connected as a single piece, must be
retained on board the vessel until all fillets are offloaded (50 CFR
300.65(c)(5)(iv)(G)). Additional regulations governing use of GAF
are at 50 CFR 300.65.
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(3) For guided sport fishing (as referred to in 50 CFR 300.65) in
Regulatory Area 3A:
(a) The total catch allocation, including an estimate of incidental
mortality (wastage), is 1,782,270 pounds (808.4 metric tons).
(b) No person on board a charter vessel (as referred to in 50 CFR
300.65) shall catch and retain more than two halibut per calendar day.
(c) At least one of the retained halibut must have a head-on length
of no more than 29 inches (73.7 cm) as measured in a straight line,
passing over the pectoral fin from the tip of the lower jaw with mouth
closed, to the extreme end of the middle of the tail, as illustrated in
Figure 4.\13\ If a person sport fishing on a charter vessel in Area 3A
retains only one halibut in a calendar day, that halibut may be of any
length.
(d) If the size-restricted halibut is filleted, the entire carcass,
with head and tail connected as a single piece, must be retained on
board the vessel until all fillets are offloaded.\14\
(e) A charter vessel, as defined in section 3 (Definitions) and
referred to in 50 CFR 300.65, on which one or more anglers catch and
retain halibut, may only make one charter vessel fishing trip per
calendar day. A charter vessel fishing trip is defined at 50 CFR 300.61
as the time period between the first deployment of fishing gear in to
the water from a vessel after any charter vessel angler (as defined at
50 CFR 300.61) is on board and the offloading of one or more charter
vessel anglers or any halibut from that vessel.
29. Previous Regulations Superseded
These Regulations shall supersede all previous regulations of the
Commission, and these Regulations shall be effective each succeeding
year until superseded.
[[Page 13918]]
Classification
IPHC Regulations
These IPHC annual management measures are a product of an agreement
between the United States and Canada and are published in the Federal
Register to provide notice of their effectiveness and content. Pursuant
to section 4 of the Northern Pacific Halibut Act of 1982, 16 U.S.C.
773c, the Secretary of State, with the concurrence of the Secretary of
Commerce, may ``accept or reject'' but not modify these recommendations
of the IPHC. The otherwise applicable notice-and-comment and delay-in-
effectiveness date provisions of the Administrative Procedure Act
(APA), 5 U.S.C. 553(c) and (d), are inapplicable to IPHC management
measures because this regulation involves a foreign affairs function of
the United States, 5 U.S.C. 553(a)(1). The additional time necessary to
comply with the notice-and-comment and delay-in-effectiveness
requirements of the APA would disrupt coordinated international
conservation and management of the halibut fishery pursuant to the
Convention. Furthermore, no other law requires prior notice and public
comment for this rule. Because prior notice and an opportunity for
public comment are not required to be provided for these portions of
this rule by 5 U.S.C. 553, or any other law, the analytical
requirements of the Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.,
are not applicable. Accordingly, no Regulatory Flexibility Analysis is
required for this portion of the rule and none has been prepared.
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[[Page 13923]]
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 773 et seq.
Dated: March 6, 2014.
Samuel D. Rauch III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2014-05339 Filed 3-7-14; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 3510-22-C