Fisheries of the Caribbean, Gulf of Mexico, and South Atlantic; Revisions to Dealer Permitting and Reporting Requirements for Species Managed by the Gulf of Mexico and South Atlantic Fishery Management Councils, 19490-19497 [2014-07983]
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Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 68 / Wednesday, April 9, 2014 / Rules and Regulations
any must be tied down; and launches
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[FR Doc. 2014–07905 Filed 4–8–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
50 CFR Part 622
[Docket No. 120405260–4258–02]
RIN 0648–BC12
Fisheries of the Caribbean, Gulf of
Mexico, and South Atlantic; Revisions
to Dealer Permitting and Reporting
Requirements for Species Managed by
the Gulf of Mexico and South Atlantic
Fishery Management Councils
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
NMFS issues this final rule to
implement a Generic Amendment to the
Fishery Management Plans (FMPs) in
the Gulf of Mexico (Gulf) and South
Atlantic Regions (Generic Dealer
Amendment). The Generic Dealer
Amendment amends the following
FMPs: Reef Fish Resources of the Gulf,
Red Drum Fishery of the Gulf, SnapperGrouper Fishery (including wreckfish)
of the South Atlantic Region, Golden
Crab Fishery of the South Atlantic
Region, Shrimp Fishery (excluding
penaeid shrimp) of the South Atlantic
Region, Dolphin and Wahoo Fishery of
the Atlantic, Coastal Migratory Pelagic
(CMP) Resources of the Gulf and South
Atlantic, and Spiny Lobster Fishery of
the Gulf and South Atlantic, as prepared
by the Gulf and South Atlantic Fishery
Management Councils (Councils). This
final rule modifies the permitting and
reporting requirements for seafood
dealers who first receive species
managed by the Councils through the
previously mentioned FMPs. These
revisions create a single dealer permit
for dealers who first receive fish
managed by the Councils, require both
purchase and non-purchase reports to
be submitted online on a weekly basis,
prohibit dealers from first receiving fish
from federally permitted vessels if they
are delinquent in submitting reports,
and change the sale and purchase
provisions based on the new dealer
permitting requirements. This rule also
adds regulatory language to clarify the
bag limit for private recreational vessels
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SUMMARY:
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when a trip exceeds one calendar day.
The purpose of this rule is to obtain
timelier purchase information from
dealers to better monitor annual catch
limits (ACLs) and achieve optimum
yield (OY) in accordance with the
requirements of the Magnuson-Stevens
Fishery Conservation and Management
Act (Magnuson-Stevens Act).
DATES: This rule is effective August 7,
2014.
ADDRESSES: Electronic copies of the
Generic Dealer Amendment, which
includes an environmental assessment
and a regulatory impact review, may be
obtained from the Southeast Regional
Office Web site at https://
sero.nmfs.noaa.gov.
Comments regarding the burden-hour
estimates or other aspects of the
collection-of-information requirements
contained in this rule may be submitted
in writing to Anik Clemens, Southeast
Regional Office, NMFS, 263 13th
Avenue South, St. Petersburg, FL 33701;
and OMB, by email at OIRA
Submission@omb.eop.gov, or by fax to
202–395–7285.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Rich
Malinowski, Southeast Regional Office,
NMFS, telephone 727–824–5305; email:
rich.malinowski@noaa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: NMFS and
the Councils manage the fisheries for
Gulf Reef Fish Resources, Gulf Red
Drum, South Atlantic Snapper-Grouper
(including wreckfish), South Atlantic
Golden Crab, South Atlantic Rock
Shrimp, Atlantic Dolphin and Wahoo,
Gulf and South Atlantic CMP, and Gulf
and South Atlantic Spiny Lobster under
their respective FMPs. The FMPs were
prepared by the Councils and are
implemented through regulations at 50
CFR part 622 under the authority of the
Magnuson-Stevens Act.
On December 19, 2013, NMFS
published a notice of availability for the
Generic Dealer Amendment and
requested public comment (78 FR
76807). On January 2, 2014, NMFS
published a proposed rule for the
Generic Dealer Amendment and
requested public comment (79 FR 81).
The proposed rule and the Generic
Dealer Amendment outline the rationale
for the actions contained in this final
rule. A summary of the actions
implemented by this final rule is
provided below.
This final rule modifies the current
permitting and reporting requirements
for seafood dealers who first receive fish
managed by the Councils through eight
FMPs. This final rule creates one
universal dealer permit (a Gulf and
South Atlantic dealer permit), increases
the frequency of dealer reporting,
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requires dealers to report purchases and
non-purchases electronically, prohibits
dealers from continuing to receive fish
from federally permitted vessels if they
are delinquent in submitting their
reports, and revises the sale and
purchase provisions for certain federally
managed species. Management
Measures Contained in this Final Rule
Gulf and South Atlantic Dealer Permits
This final rule creates a single dealer
permit (a Gulf and South Atlantic dealer
permit) that is required to first receive
the species currently covered by the six
dealer permits (Atlantic DolphinWahoo, Gulf Reef Fish, South Atlantic
Golden Crab, South Atlantic Rock
Shrimp, South Atlantic SnapperGrouper and South Atlantic Wreckfish),
as well as Gulf and South Atlantic CMP,
Gulf and South Atlantic spiny lobster,
and Gulf red drum. A Gulf and South
Atlantic dealer permit is not required to
first receive South Atlantic coral, South
Atlantic pelagic Sargassum, Gulf coral
and coral reef species, and Gulf and
South Atlantic penaeid shrimp species.
The Councils exempted penaeid
shrimp species from the Gulf and South
Atlantic dealer permit because ACLs
have not been established for these
species (because they have annual life
cycles). Thus, the current reporting
system is adequate for determining
catch and effort for these species and
the administrative burden of issuing
such a large number of shrimp dealer
permits outweighs the benefits of more
timely shrimp dealer reports. The
Councils did not include corals or
pelagic Sargassum because coral harvest
is limited to octocoral harvest off
Florida and does not require a Federal
harvest permit if landed in Florida, and
there is no recorded harvest of pelagic
Sargassum from Federal waters.
Frequency and Method of Dealer
Reporting
This final rule requires federally
permitted dealers to submit a detailed
electronic report of all fish first received
for a commercial purpose via the dealer
electronic trip ticket reporting system.
These electronic reports must be
submitted on a weekly basis and are due
by 11:59 p.m., local time, the Tuesday
following a reporting week. A reporting
week is defined as beginning at 12:01
a.m., local time, on Sunday and ending
at 11:59 p.m., local time, the following
Saturday. Dealers who first receive Gulf
migratory king mackerel harvested by
the run-around gillnet sector in the
southern Florida west coast subzone
must submit their dealer reports for
these species on a daily basis. These
reports must be submitted through the
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Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 68 / Wednesday, April 9, 2014 / Rules and Regulations
dealer electronic trip ticket reporting
system by 6 a.m., local time, for the
previous day’s harvest. In addition to
reporting purchases, federally permitted
dealers are also required to submit
records of no purchases via the dealer
electronic trip ticket reporting system at
the same frequency and via the same
process as records for purchases. The
Councils and NMFS allow nonpurchases to be reported up to 90 days
in advance, if such an option exists in
the state reporting system. If, after
submitting an advance no purchase
report, the dealer does receive fish, then
a purchase report must be submitted for
those fish.
Every state, except South Carolina,
requires dealers to submit reports
electronically through the dealer
electronic trip ticket reporting system.
South Carolina requires paper-based
reporting, but does allow electronic
reporting in addition to filing paper
reports. Therefore, under this final rule
dealers in South Carolina would be
required to report both by paper
(according to state regulations) and
electronically (according to Federal
regulations). These electronic trip ticket
reports would still go first to the state
trip ticket reporting system and
subsequently to NMFS. The Science and
Research Director (SRD), Southeast
Fisheries Science Center, NMFS, or the
alternate SRD, Northeast Fisheries
Science Center, NMFS (for species
harvested from Virginia through Maine)
receives all of the electronic dealer
reports within approximately 3 days of
data entry, and uses the data for ACL
monitoring. Under this final rule dealers
will continue to use their state trip
ticket reporting system.
The data elements currently reported
through the state trip ticket systems
include the trip ticket number, dealer or
processor’s name, Federal permit
number and state dealer license number,
vessel name, U.S. Coast Guard
documentation number and state
registration number, vessel trip report
number, date the vessel leaves the dock,
date the vessel offloads the catch, date
of purchase, species, amount landed,
price per unit, port and state of landing,
gear used, area fished, size category, and
condition and disposition of the catch.
During catastrophic conditions only,
this final rule allows dealers to use a
paper-based system for submitting
dealer reports. The Regional
Administrator (RA) will determine
when catastrophic conditions exist, the
duration of the catastrophic conditions,
and which participants are affected. The
RA will provide notice of a paper-based
system via notification in the Federal
Register, NOAA weather radio, fishery
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bulletins, and other appropriate means
and will authorize the use of the paperbased system for the duration of the
catastrophic conditions. The paper
forms will be available from NMFS.
Non-Reporting
This final rule stipulates that dealers
who are delinquent on submitting their
reports are prohibited from receiving
fish from federally permitted vessels
until they have submitted all required
reports. This provision will aid in
enforcement efforts to ensure dealer
reports are submitted in a timely
manner.
Revisions to Sale and Purchase
Provisions
This final rule revises the sale and
purchase requirements for federally
managed species based on changes to
the dealer permitting requirements. This
final rule allows federally managed
species harvested on board a federally
permitted vessel to be sold or
transferred to any dealer with a Gulf and
South Atlantic dealer permit, instead of
just a dealer for a specific fishery
(except for individual fishing quota
(IFQ) species which are still required to
be sold to a dealer with an IFQ dealer
endorsement). This final rule also
allows dealers with a Gulf and South
Atlantic dealer permit to first receive all
federally managed species harvested in
or from the EEZ by federally permitted
vessels (except for IFQ species, in which
case the dealer is also required to have
an IFQ dealer endorsement).
This final rule also clarifies that
federally permitted vessels may sell
federally managed species harvested in
either Federal waters or adjoining state
waters only to a dealer who has a valid
Gulf and South Atlantic dealer permit.
This provision places restrictions on
certain federally permitted vessels that
currently are able to sell their catch to
non-federally permitted dealers.
Through this rulemaking, vessels with
commercial or charter vessel/headboat
permits for CMP and vessels with
Federal commercial permits for spiny
lobster, including the Federal tailseparation permit, are allowed to sell
federally managed species (including
bag-limit caught CMP) that are
harvested in either Federal waters or
adjoining state waters only to a dealer
who has a valid Gulf and South Atlantic
dealer permit. In addition, all federally
permitted vessels that harvest CMP
species under the bag limit in Federal
waters or adjoining state waters are
required to sell those CMP species only
to a dealer who has a valid Gulf and
South Atlantic dealer permit.
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19491
Other Changes Contained in This Final
Rule
This final rule adds the following
sentence to 50 CFR 622.11(a): ‘‘Unless
specified otherwise, a person is limited
to a single bag limit for a trip lasting
longer than one calendar day,’’ to clarify
the regulations regarding how the bag
limit is determined for private
recreational vessels when a trip exceeds
one calendar day. This clarification
reflects the original intent of the
Councils. This change is not related to
the Generic Dealer Amendment.
Implementation and Compliance
Timeline for This Final Rule
In an effort to minimize the burden on
currently permitted dealers, and provide
for a smooth transition to the new Gulf
and South Atlantic dealer permit, this
final rule is effective 4 months after the
date of publication, on August 7, 2014.
Upon publication of the final rule, on
April 9, 2014, dealers that currently do
not have a valid Federal dealer permit
for any Gulf or South Atlantic fishery
may submit an application for a Gulf
and South Atlantic dealer permit. Gulf
and South Atlantic dealer permits will
be issued within 30 days of receipt of
a completed dealer permit application,
so applicants should submit their
application at least 30 days prior to the
date upon which they need the permit
to be effective. However, the Gulf and
South Atlantic dealer permit
requirement, and the associated
reporting and recordkeeping
requirements contained in this final
rule, are not effective until August 7,
2014. Therefore, dealers issued Gulf and
South Atlantic dealer permits before
August 7, 2014 will be required to
continue to purchase Gulf and South
Atlantic species under existing Federal
permitting requirements and are not
allowed to operate under the Gulf and
South Atlantic permit until August 7,
2014. Likewise, these dealers will not be
required to report until August 7, 2014.
For those dealers who already have a
valid Federal dealer permit for any Gulf
or South Atlantic fishery, NMFS will
treat their current permit as a Gulf and
South Atlantic dealer permit as of
August 7, 2014. These dealers will not
be required to apply for a new Gulf and
South Atlantic dealer permit until their
existing permit(s) expire at some point
after August 7, 2014. This means that
dealers who currently have a valid
Federal dealer permit for any Gulf or
South Atlantic fishery may begin to first
receive all species covered under the
Gulf and South Atlantic dealer permit
on August 7, 2014, and must comply
with all reporting and recordkeeping
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requirements contained in this rule as of
August 7, 2014. Therefore, all federally
permitted dealers (those with a current
valid Federal dealer permit for any Gulf
or South Atlantic fishery, and those
with a new Gulf and South Atlantic
dealer permit), must comply with the
dealer reporting and recordkeeping
requirements contained in this final rule
as of August 7, 2014.
Comments and Responses
NMFS received five comment
submissions on the Generic Dealer
Amendment and the proposed rule; two
from seafood dealers, one from a nonprofit environmental organization, and
two from fishing organizations. The
non-profit environmental organization
expressed general support for the
actions contained in the Generic Dealer
Amendment and the proposed rule,
including the timely transmission of
accurate dealer purchase information
(including both reports of fish landings
and/or of a no landing reports) to
monitor ACLs. A summary of the
comments and NMFS’ responses to
those comments appears below.
Comment 1: NMFS should send an
automated response and time stamp to
dealers when a purchase form is
received.
Response: All data are initially
submitted to the states via the trip ticket
reporting systems in place. A time
stamp is generated by the trip ticket
software to indicate when the data were
submitted by the dealer. This time
stamp is accessible to the dealer if the
dealer requests it from the state trip
ticket reporting system. NMFS does not
have authority over the state trip ticket
reporting system, and therefore cannot
send automated responses to dealers
after they submit information to statecontrolled reporting systems; however,
dealers may work with the states to get
the information they need for their
businesses.
Comment 2: NMFS should contact
dealers if a dealer is out of compliance
with the reporting deadline (for both
purchase and non-purchase reports)
before suspending the dealer’s ability to
purchase product.
Response: It is the dealer’s
responsibility to ensure compliance
with all Federal reporting deadlines.
Nonetheless, NMFS is investigating the
creation of an email notification system
to let dealers know when they become
out of compliance with the reporting
requirements implemented in this final
rule. If NMFS implements such a system
in the future, NMFS will notify dealers
of this capability.
Comment 3: There is no provision in
this amendment or rule in the event a
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computer hardware, software, or
internet access problem occurs. The rule
would shut down a business for not
submitting electronic reports on time.
Response: In the event of technical
issues with a dealer’s computer
equipment or internet access, the dealer
will need to utilize other computer
resources for timely submission of the
electronic reports, such as a mobile
device or public access computer.
NMFS will allow paper based reporting
in the event of catastrophic conditions
only. The RA will determine when
catastrophic conditions exist, the
duration of the catastrophic conditions,
and which participants are affected. The
RA will provide notice of a paper-based
system via notification in the Federal
Register, NOAA weather radio, fishery
bulletins, and other appropriate means
and will authorize the use of the paperbased system for the duration of the
catastrophic conditions. The paper
forms will be available from NMFS.
Comment 4: Increasing regulations
and reporting frequencies are
economically detrimental to smaller
businesses. The impacts of reporting
were not thoroughly considered, such as
the additional cost of computer
maintenance. In addition, the
assessment understated the significance
of the economic effects of the proposed
rule on small entities.
Response: NMFS agrees that
increasing regulations may have adverse
economic effects on businesses and the
significance of these effects may be
greater for smaller businesses; however,
NMFS disagrees that the economic
effects of the proposed rule on small
entities were understated. As stated in
the analysis provided in the proposed
rule, none of the requirements
contained in this final rule require
special professional skills and all
affected small entities are expected to
already have staff with the appropriate
skills to meet these requirements. The
analysis also provided an estimate of the
permitting requirement for entities that
do not currently have a Federal permit
($74.42 per entity), the expected cost of
a computer (less than $750), and the
expected cost of internet access (less
than $100 per month) for any entities
that do not currently have a computer
or internet service. The average annual
computer maintenance cost is unknown,
but is not expected to increase as a
result of the requirements in this rule.
Although these expenses may be
burdensome to some dealers, overall the
requirements are not expected to
adversely affect a substantial number of
small entities because the use of
computers and the internet has become
commonplace and a vital tool in
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business management and, according to
the SBA, in 2010, approximately 94
percent of businesses used computers
and 95 percent of these had internet
service. Additionally, all affected
entities currently operate in states that
require electronic reporting, except
South Carolina, and South Carolina
allows electronic reporting. The
estimated number of entities in South
Carolina that will be affected by this
rule is 38, or approximately 4 percent of
the total number of small businesses
expected to be affected. Thus, even if
none of the small businesses in South
Carolina have elected to report
electronically, only approximately 4
percent of the affected entities would
incur any of the additional reporting
costs associated with computer
purchase, maintenance, and internet
access. For all affected entities,
satisfying the reporting frequency
requirements of this final rule will only
require more frequent submission of the
same quantity and quality of data that
is already being reported. As a result,
because at least 96 percent of the small
businesses affected by this rule are
expected to already have the required
skill, hardware, and internet access to
meet state and common general
business operational requirements, this
final rule will not have a significant
impact on a substantial number of small
entities.
Classification
The Regional Administrator,
Southeast Region, NMFS, has
determined that this final rule is
necessary for the management of Gulf
reef fish, Gulf red drum, South Atlantic
snapper-grouper (including wreckfish),
South Atlantic golden crab, South
Atlantic rock shrimp, Atlantic dolphin
and wahoo, Gulf and South Atlantic
CMP, and Gulf and South Atlantic spiny
lobster and is consistent with the
Generic Dealer Amendment, the FMP,
the Magnuson-Stevens Act and other
applicable laws.
This final rule has been determined to
be not significant for purposes of
Executive Order 12866.
The Chief Counsel for Regulation of
the Department of Commerce certified
to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the
Small Business Administration during
the proposed rule stage that this rule
would not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities. The factual basis for this
determination was published in the
proposed rule and is not repeated here.
Comments on the economic analysis are
addressed in the comments and
responses section of this final rule. No
changes to the final rule were made in
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response to these comments. As a result,
a final regulatory flexibility analysis was
not required and none was prepared.
This final rule contains collection-ofinformation requirements subject to the
requirements of the Paperwork
Reduction Act (PRA), which have been
approved by OMB under control
numbers 0648–0013 and 0648–0205.
NMFS estimates the requirement for
dealers to report electronically will
decrease the overall dealer reporting
burden under OMB control number
0648–0013, because dealers will report
all species through the electronic dealer
trip ticket reporting system offered in
each state, and NMFS will receive these
data from the states. This eliminates a
duplication of effort on the dealers who
were reporting similar information to
the states and to NMFS (except for
South Carolina, which still requires
paper reporting).
NMFS estimates the requirement for
dealers to report more frequently
(weekly instead of semi-monthly or
monthly) will not create more burden
on dealers, because the dealers will still
be reporting the same amount of
information, they will just be submitting
the same quantity of data more
frequently.
NMFS estimates the reporting burden
under OMB control number 0648–0205
will increase because more dealers will
be required to apply for a Federal dealer
permit through this rulemaking
(approximately 1,000 entities, including
300 current dealers and 700 new
dealers). NMFS estimates the
requirement for dealers to complete the
Federal Permit Application for an
Annual Dealer Permit to obtain a Gulf
and South Atlantic Dealer Permit will
average 20 minutes per response (for
new permits and renewals). NMFS
estimates the requirement to complete
‘‘doing business as’’ (DBA) names and
check a box indicating whether or not
a business is active with respect to its
secretary of state on the Federal Permit
Application for an Annual Dealer
Permit under OMB control number
0648–0205 will average 1 minute per
response.
Finally, NMFS estimates the
requirement for dealers to complete
their email address on the Federal
Permit Application for an Annual
Dealer Permit under OMB control
number 0648–0205 will average 1
minute per response. These estimates of
the public reporting burden include the
time for reviewing instructions,
gathering and maintaining the data
needed, and completing and reviewing
the collection-of-information.
Notwithstanding any other provision of
law, no person is required to respond to,
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nor shall a person be subject to a
penalty for failure to comply with, a
collection-of-information subject to the
requirements of the PRA, unless that
collection-of-information displays a
currently valid OMB control number.
List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 622
Dealer, Fisheries, Fishing, Gulf of
Mexico, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, South Atlantic.
Dated: April 4, 2014.
Samuel D. Rauch III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for
Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
For the reasons set out in the
preamble, 50 CFR part 622 is amended
as follows:
PART 622—FISHERIES OF THE
CARIBBEAN, GULF OF MEXICO, AND
SOUTH ATLANTIC
1. The authority citation for part 622
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
2. In § 622.2, the definition ‘‘reporting
week’’ is added in alphabetical order to
read as follows:
■
§ 622.2
Definitions and acronyms.
*
*
*
*
*
Reporting week means the period of
time beginning at 12:01 a.m., local time,
on Sunday and ending at 11:59 p.m.,
local time, the following Saturday.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 3. In § 622.4, the third sentence in
paragraph (h) is revised to read as
follows:
§ 622.4
Permits and fees—general.
*
*
*
*
*
(h) * * * In addition, a copy of the
dealer’s permit must accompany each
vehicle that is used to pick up from a
fishing vessel fish harvested from the
EEZ. * * *
*
*
*
*
*
■ 4. In § 622.5, paragraph (c) is added to
read as follows:
§ 622.5 Recordkeeping and reporting—
general.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Dealers—(1) Permitted Gulf and
South Atlantic dealers. (i) A person
issued a Gulf and South Atlantic dealer
permit must submit a detailed electronic
report of all fish first received for a
commercial purpose within the time
period specified in this paragraph, via
the dealer electronic trip ticket reporting
system. These electronic reports must be
submitted at weekly intervals via the
dealer electronic trip ticket reporting
system by 11:59 p.m., local time, the
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Tuesday following a reporting week. If
no fish were received during a reporting
week, an electronic report so stating
must be submitted for that reporting
week. Dealers must submit electronic
reports for Gulf migratory group king
mackerel harvested by the run-around
gillnet sector in the southern Florida
west coast subzone daily via the dealer
electronic trip ticket reporting system by
6 a.m., local time, for the previous day’s
harvest. Until the commercial ACL
(commercial quota) for the run-around
gillnet sector for Gulf migratory group
king mackerel is reached, if no king
mackerel were received, an electronic
report so stating must be submitted for
that day.
(ii) Dealers must retain either the
paper forms or electronic reports for at
least 1 year after the submittal date and
must provide such records for
inspection upon the request of an
authorized officer or the SRD.
(iii) During catastrophic conditions
only, the ACL monitoring program
provides for use of paper-based
components for basic required functions
as a backup. The RA will determine
when catastrophic conditions exist, the
duration of the catastrophic conditions,
and which participants or geographic
areas are deemed affected by the
catastrophic conditions. The RA will
provide timely notice to affected
participants via publication of
notification in the Federal Register,
NOAA weather radio, fishery bulletins,
and other appropriate means and will
authorize the affected participants’ use
of paper-based components for the
duration of the catastrophic conditions.
The paper forms will be available from
NMFS. During catastrophic conditions,
the RA has the authority to waive or
modify reporting time requirements.
(iv) Gulf and South Atlantic dealers
are not authorized to first receive Gulf
reef fish, Gulf red drum, South Atlantic
golden crab, South Atlantic snappergrouper, South Atlantic wreckfish,
South Atlantic rock shrimp, coastal
migratory pelagic fish, spiny lobster, or
Atlantic dolphin or wahoo from a
federally permitted vessel if the
required reports have not been
submitted and received by NMFS
according to the reporting requirements
under this section. Delinquent reports
automatically result in a Gulf and South
Atlantic dealer becoming ineligible to
first receive such fish, regardless of any
notification to dealers by NMFS. Gulf
and South Atlantic dealers who become
ineligible to receive such fish due to
delinquent reports are authorized to first
receive such fish only after all required
and delinquent reports have been
submitted and received by NMFS
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according to the reporting requirements
under this section.
(2) Non-permitted dealers. See
§ 622.51 for a person who purchases
Gulf shrimp from a vessel, or person,
that fishes for shrimp in the Gulf EEZ
or in adjoining state waters, or that
lands shrimp in an adjoining state.
■ 5. In § 622.11, a sentence is added
after the second sentence in paragraph
(a)(1) to read as follows:
§ 622.11 Bag and possession limits—
general applicability.
*
*
*
*
*
(a) * * *
(1) * * * Unless specified otherwise,
a person is limited to a single bag limit
for a trip lasting longer than one
calendar day. * * *
*
*
*
*
*
■ 6. In § 622.13, paragraph (h) is added
to read as follows:
§ 622.13
Prohibitions—general.
*
*
*
*
*
(h) First receive fish from federally
permitted vessels if the required reports
have not been submitted in accordance
with § 622.5(c).
*
*
*
*
*
■ 7. In § 622.20, paragraph (c)(1) is
revised to read as follows:
§ 622.20
Permits and endorsements.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(1) Permits. For a dealer to first
receive Gulf reef fish harvested in or
from the EEZ, a Gulf and South Atlantic
dealer permit must be issued to the
dealer.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 8. In § 622.21, paragraph (b)(2) is
revised to read as follows:
§ 622.21 Individual fishing quota (IFQ
program) for Gulf red snapper.
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(2) Gulf IFQ dealer endorsements. In
addition to the requirement for a Gulf
and South Atlantic dealer permit as
specified in § 622.20(c)(1), for a dealer
to first receive red snapper subject to the
IFQ program for Gulf red snapper, as
specified in paragraph (a)(1) of this
section, or for a person aboard a vessel
with a Gulf IFQ vessel account to sell
such red snapper directly to an entity
other than a dealer, such persons must
also have a Gulf IFQ dealer
endorsement. A dealer with a Gulf and
South Atlantic dealer permit can
download a Gulf IFQ dealer
endorsement from the NMFS IFQ Web
site at ifq.sero.nmfs.noaa.gov. If such
persons do not have an IFQ online
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account, they must first contact IFQ
Customer Service at 1–866–425–7627 to
obtain information necessary to access
the IFQ Web site and establish an IFQ
online account. There is no fee for
obtaining this endorsement. The
endorsement remains valid as long as
the Gulf and South Atlantic dealer
permit remains valid and the dealer is
in compliance with all Gulf reef fish and
IFQ reporting requirements, has paid all
IFQ fees required, and is not subject to
any sanctions under 15 CFR part 904.
The endorsement is not transferable.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 9. In § 622.22, paragraph (b)(2) is
revised to read as follows:
§ 622.22 Individual fishing quota (IFQ
program) for Gulf groupers and tilefishes.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(2) Gulf IFQ dealer endorsements. In
addition to the requirement for a Gulf
and South Atlantic dealer permit as
specified in § 622.20(c)(1), for a dealer
to first receive groupers and tilefishes
subject to the IFQ program for groupers
and tilefishes, as specified in paragraph
(a)(1) of this section, or for a person
aboard a vessel with a Gulf IFQ vessel
account to sell such groupers and
tilefishes directly to an entity other than
a dealer, such persons must also have a
Gulf IFQ dealer endorsement. A dealer
with a Gulf and South Atlantic dealer
permit can download a Gulf IFQ dealer
endorsement from the NMFS IFQ Web
site at ifq.sero.nmfs.noaa.gov. If such
persons do not have an IFQ online
account, they must first contact IFQ
Customer Service at 1–866–425–7627 to
obtain information necessary to access
the IFQ Web site and establish an IFQ
online account. There is no fee for
obtaining this endorsement. The
endorsement remains valid as long as
the Gulf and South Atlantic dealer
permit remains valid and the dealer is
in compliance with all Gulf reef fish and
IFQ reporting requirements, has paid all
IFQ fees required, and is not subject to
any sanctions under 15 CFR part 904.
The endorsement is not transferable.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 10. Section 622.25 is revised to read
as follows:
is exempt from the following
requirements and limitations for the
vessel’s unsorted catch of Gulf reef fish:
(1) The requirement for a valid
commercial vessel permit for Gulf reef
fish in order to sell Gulf reef fish.
(2) Minimum size limits for Gulf reef
fish.
(3) Bag limits for Gulf reef fish.
(4) The prohibition on sale of Gulf
reef fish after a quota or ACL closure.
(b) Other provisions of this part
notwithstanding, a dealer in a Gulf state
is exempt from the requirement for a
Gulf and South Atlantic dealer permit to
receive Gulf reef fish harvested from the
Gulf EEZ by a vessel trawling for Gulf
groundfish.
11. In § 622.26, paragraph (c) is
revised to read as follows:
■
§ 622.26
Recordkeeping and reporting.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Dealers. (1) A dealer who first
receives Gulf reef fish must maintain
records and submit information as
specified in § 622.5(c).
(2) The operator of a vehicle that is
used to pick up from a fishing vessel
Gulf reef fish must maintain a record
containing the name of each fishing
vessel from which reef fish on the
vehicle have been received. The vehicle
operator must provide such record for
inspection upon the request of an
authorized officer.
12. In § 622.40, paragraphs (b) and (c)
are revised to read as follows:
■
§ 622.40
Restrictions on sale/purchase.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) A Gulf reef fish harvested in or
from the EEZ or adjoining state waters
by a vessel that has a valid commercial
vessel permit for Gulf reef fish may be
sold or transferred only to a dealer who
has a valid Gulf and South Atlantic
dealer permit, as required under
§ 622.20(c)(1).
(c) A Gulf reef fish harvested in or
from the EEZ may be first received by
a dealer who has a valid Gulf and South
Atlantic dealer permit, as required
under § 622.20(c)(1), only from a vessel
that has a valid commercial vessel
permit for Gulf reef fish.
§ 622.25 Exemptions for Gulf groundfish
trawling.
■
Gulf groundfish trawling means
fishing in the Gulf EEZ by a vessel that
uses a bottom trawl, the unsorted catch
of which is ground up for animal feed
or industrial products.
(a) Other provisions of this part
notwithstanding, the owner or operator
of a vessel trawling for Gulf groundfish
Subpart E—Red Drum Fishery of the Gulf of
Mexico
Sec.
622.90 Permits.
622.91 Recordkeeping and reporting.
622.92 Prohibited species.
622.93 Adjustment of management
measures.
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13. Subpart E is revised to read as
follows:
E:\FR\FM\09APR1.SGM
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Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 68 / Wednesday, April 9, 2014 / Rules and Regulations
Subpart E—Red Drum Fishery of the
Gulf of Mexico
§ 622.90
Permits.
(a) Dealer permits and conditions—(1)
Permits. For a dealer to first receive Gulf
red drum harvested in or from the EEZ,
a Gulf and South Atlantic dealer permit
must be issued to the dealer.
(2) State license and facility
requirements. To obtain a dealer permit,
the applicant must have a valid state
wholesaler’s license in the state(s)
where the dealer operates, if required by
such state(s), and must have a physical
facility at a fixed location in such
state(s).
(b) Permit procedures. See § 622.4 for
information regarding general permit
procedures including, but not limited to
application, fees, duration, transfer,
renewal, display, sanctions and denials,
and replacement.
§ 622.91
Recordkeeping and reporting.
(a) Dealers. A dealer who first receives
Gulf red drum must maintain records
and submit information as specified in
§ 622.5(c).
(b) [Reserved]
§ 622.92
Prohibited species.
(a) General. The harvest and
possession restrictions of this section
apply without regard to whether the
species is harvested by a vessel
operating under a commercial vessel
permit. The operator of a vessel that
fishes in the EEZ is responsible for the
limit applicable to that vessel.
(b) Red drum. Red drum may not be
harvested or possessed in or from the
Gulf EEZ. Such fish caught in the Gulf
EEZ must be released immediately with
a minimum of harm.
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES
§ 622.93 Adjustment of management
measures.
In accordance with the framework
procedures of the FMP for the Red Drum
Fishery of the Gulf of Mexico, the RA
may establish or modify the following
items:
(a) Reporting and monitoring
requirements, permitting requirements,
bag and possession limits (including a
bag limit of zero), size limits, vessel trip
limits, closed seasons or areas and
reopenings, annual catch limits (ACLs),
annual catch targets (ACTs), quotas
(including a quota of zero),
accountability measures (AMs), MSY (or
proxy), OY, TAC, management
parameters such as overfished and
overfishing definitions, gear restrictions
(ranging from regulation to complete
prohibition), gear markings and
identification, vessel markings and
identification, ABC and ABC control
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rules, rebuilding plans, sale and
purchase restrictions, transfer at sea
provisions, and restrictions relative to
conditions of harvested fish
(maintaining fish in whole condition,
use as bait).
(b) [Reserved]
■ 14. In § 622.170, paragraph (c)(1) is
revised to read as follows:
§ 622.170
Permits and endorsements.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(1) Permits. For a dealer to first
receive South Atlantic snapper-grouper
(including wreckfish) harvested in or
from the EEZ, a Gulf and South Atlantic
dealer permit must be issued to the
dealer.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 15. In § 622.172, paragraphs (b), (c)(6),
(c)(7), and (d)(4) are revised to read as
follows:
§ 622.172 Wreckfish individual
transferable quota (ITQ) system.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) List of wreckfish shareholders.
Annually, on or about March 1, the RA
will provide each wreckfish shareholder
with a list of all wreckfish shareholders
and their percentage shares, reflecting
share transactions on forms received
through February 15.
(c) * * *
(6) The ‘‘Fish House’’ part of each
such coupon must be given to the dealer
to whom the wreckfish are transferred
in amounts totaling the eviscerated
weight of the wreckfish transferred to
that dealer. Wreckfish may be
transferred only to a Gulf and South
Atlantic dealer permit holder, as
required under § 622.170(c)(1).
(7) A dealer may first receive
wreckfish only from a vessel for which
a commercial permit for wreckfish has
been issued, as required under
§ 622.170(a)(2). A dealer must receive
the ‘‘Fish House’’ part of ITQ coupons
in amounts totaling the eviscerated
weight of the wreckfish received; enter
the permit number of the vessel from
which the wreckfish were received,
enter the date the wreckfish were
received, enter the dealer’s permit
number, and sign each such ‘‘Fish
House’’ part; and submit all such parts
with the electronic dealer reports
required by § 622.5(c).
*
*
*
*
*
(d) * * *
(4) If a wreckfish harvested by a vessel
that has been issued a commercial
vessel permit for South Atlantic
snapper-grouper and a commercial
vessel permit for wreckfish is to be
offloaded at a location other than a fixed
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19495
facility of a dealer who holds a Gulf and
South Atlantic dealer permit, as
required under § 622.170(c)(1), the
wreckfish shareholder or the vessel
operator must advise the NMFS Office
for Law Enforcement, Southeast Region,
St. Petersburg, FL, by telephone (727–
824–5344), of the location not less than
24 hours prior to offloading.
16. In § 622.176, paragraph (c) is
revised to read as follows:
■
§ 622.176
Recordkeeping and reporting.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Dealers. (1) A dealer who first
receives South Atlantic snapper-grouper
(including wreckfish) must maintain
records and submit information as
specified in § 622.5(c).
(2) On demand, a dealer who has been
issued a Gulf and South Atlantic dealer
permit, as required under
§ 622.170(c)(1), must make available to
an authorized officer all records of
offloadings, purchases, or sales of South
Atlantic snapper-grouper (including
wreckfish).
*
*
*
*
*
17. In § 622.192, paragraphs (b) and
(c) are revised to read as follows:
■
§ 622.192
Restrictions on sale/purchase.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) South Atlantic snapper-grouper
harvested in or from the EEZ or
adjoining state waters by a vessel that
has a valid commercial vessel permit for
South Atlantic snapper-grouper may be
sold or transferred only to a dealer who
has a valid Gulf and South Atlantic
dealer permit, as required under
§ 622.170(c)(1).
(c) South Atlantic snapper-grouper
harvested in or from the EEZ may be
first received by a dealer who has a
valid Gulf and South Atlantic dealer
permit, as required under § 622.170(a),
only from a vessel that has a valid
commercial permit for South Atlantic
snapper-grouper.
*
*
*
*
*
18. In § 622.200, the heading of
paragraph (c) and paragraph (c)(1) are
revised to read as follows:
■
§ 622.200
Permits.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Dealer permits and conditions—(1)
Permits. For a dealer to first receive
South Atlantic rock shrimp harvested in
or from the EEZ, a Gulf and South
Atlantic dealer permit must be issued to
the dealer.
*
*
*
*
*
19. In § 622.203, paragraph (b) is
revised to read as follows:
■
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Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 68 / Wednesday, April 9, 2014 / Rules and Regulations
Recordkeeping and reporting.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) South Atlantic rock shrimp
dealers. (1) A dealer who first receives
South Atlantic rock shrimp must
maintain records and submit
information as specified in § 622.5(c).
(2) On demand, a dealer who has been
issued a Gulf and South Atlantic dealer
permit, as required under
§ 622.200(c)(1), must make available to
an authorized officer all records of
offloadings, purchases, or sales of rock
shrimp.
■ 20. In § 622.209, paragraphs (a)(2) and
(3) are revised to read as follows:
§ 622.209
Restrictions on sale/purchase.
(a) * * *
(2) Rock shrimp harvested in or from
the EEZ or adjoining state waters by a
vessel that has a valid commercial
vessel permit for South Atlantic rock
shrimp may be sold or transferred only
to a dealer who has a valid Gulf and
South Atlantic dealer permit, as
required under § 622.200(c)(1).
(3) Rock shrimp harvested in or from
the EEZ may be first received by a
dealer who has a valid Gulf and South
Atlantic dealer permit, as required
under § 622.200(c)(1), only from a vessel
that has a valid commercial vessel
permit for rock shrimp.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 21. In § 622.240, paragraph (b)(1) is
revised to read as follows:
§ 622.240
Permits.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(1) Permits. For a dealer to first
receive South Atlantic golden crab
harvested in or from the EEZ, a Gulf and
South Atlantic dealer permit must be
issued to the dealer.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 22. In § 622.242, paragraph (b) is
revised to read as follows:
§ 622.242
Recordkeeping and reporting.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) Dealers. A dealer who first
receives South Atlantic golden crab
must maintain records and submit
information as specified in § 622.5(c).
■ 23. In § 622.250, paragraphs (c) and
(d) are revised to read as follows:
§ 622.250
Restrictions on sale/purchase.
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES
*
*
*
*
*
(c) A golden crab harvested in or from
the EEZ or adjoining state waters by a
vessel that has a valid commercial
vessel permit for South Atlantic golden
crab may be sold or transferred only to
a dealer who has a valid Gulf and South
Atlantic dealer permit, as required
under § 622.240(b)(1).
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(d) A golden crab harvested in or from
the EEZ may be first received by a
dealer who has a valid Gulf and South
Atlantic dealer permit, as required
under § 622.240(b)(1), only from a vessel
that has a valid commercial vessel
permit for golden crab.
■ 24. In § 622.270, the heading of
paragraph (d) and paragraph (d)(1) are
revised to read as follows:
§ 622.270
Permits.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) Dealer permits and conditions—
(1) Permits. For a dealer to first receive
Atlantic dolphin or wahoo harvested in
or from the EEZ, a Gulf and South
Atlantic dealer permit must be issued to
the dealer.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 25. In § 622.271, paragraph (c) is
revised to read as follows:
§ 622.271
Recordkeeping and reporting.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Dealers. (1) A dealer who first
receives Atlantic dolphin or wahoo
must maintain records and submit
information as specified in § 622.5(c).
(2) Alternate SRD. For the purpose of
§ 622.5(c), in the states from Maine
through Virginia, or in the waters off
those states, ‘‘SRD’’ means the Science
and Research Director, Northeast
Fisheries Science Center, NMFS, or a
designee.
(3) On demand, a dealer who has been
issued a Gulf and South Atlantic dealer
permit, as required under
§ 622.270(d)(1), must make available to
an authorized officer all records of
offloadings, purchases, or sales of
Atlantic dolphin or wahoo.
■ 26. Section 622.279 is revised to read
as follows:
§ 622.279
Restrictions on sale/purchase.
(a) Dolphin or wahoo harvested in or
from the Atlantic EEZ or adjoining state
waters by a vessel that has a valid
commercial vessel permit for Atlantic
dolphin and wahoo, as required under
§ 622.270(a)(1), or by a vessel authorized
a 200-lb (91-kg) trip limit for dolphin or
wahoo, as specified in § 622.278(a)(2),
may be sold or transferred only to a
dealer who has a valid Gulf and South
Atlantic dealer permit, as required
under § 622.270(d)(1).
(b) In addition to the provisions of
paragraph (a)(1) of this section, a person
may not sell dolphin or wahoo
possessed under the recreational bag
limit harvested in the Atlantic EEZ or
adjoining state waters by a vessel while
it is operating as a charter vessel or
headboat. A dolphin or wahoo
harvested or possessed by a vessel that
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Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
is operating as a charter vessel or
headboat with a Federal charter vessel/
headboat permit for Atlantic dolphin
and wahoo may not be purchased or
sold if harvested in or from the Atlantic
EEZ or adjoining state waters.
(c) Dolphin or wahoo harvested in or
from the Atlantic EEZ may be first
received only by a dealer who has a
valid Gulf and South Atlantic dealer
permit, as required under
§ 622.270(d)(1), and only from a vessel
authorized to sell dolphin and wahoo
under paragraph (a)(1) of this section.
■ 27. In § 622.370, paragraph (c) is
revised and paragraph (d) is added to
read as follows:
§ 622.370
Permits.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Dealer permits and conditions—(1)
Permits. For a dealer to first receive Gulf
or South Atlantic coastal migratory
pelagic fish harvested in or from the
EEZ, a Gulf and South Atlantic dealer
permit must be issued to the dealer.
(2) State license and facility
requirements. To obtain a dealer permit,
the applicant must have a valid state
wholesaler’s license in the state(s)
where the dealer operates, if required by
such state(s), and must have a physical
facility at a fixed location in such
state(s).
(d) Permit procedures. See § 622.4 for
information regarding general permit
procedures including, but not limited to
application, fees, duration, transfer,
renewal, display, sanctions and denials,
and replacement.
■ 28. In § 622.374, paragraph (c) is
revised to read as follows:
§ 622.374
Recordkeeping and reporting.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Dealers. (1) A dealer who first
receives Gulf or South Atlantic coastal
migratory pelagic fish must maintain
records and submit information as
specified in § 622.5(c).
(2) Alternate SRD. For the purpose of
§ 622.5(c), in the states from New York
through Virginia, or in the waters off
those states, ‘‘SRD’’ means the Science
and Research Director, Northeast
Fisheries Science Center, NMFS, or a
designee.
■ 29. In § 622.386, paragraphs (b) and
(c) are added to read as follows:
§ 622.386
Restrictions on sale/purchase.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) Coastal migratory pelagic fish
harvested in or from the EEZ or
adjoining state waters by a vessel that
has a valid Federal commercial vessel
permit or a charter vessel/headboat
permit may be sold or transferred only
to a dealer who has a valid Gulf and
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South Atlantic dealer permit, as
required under § 622.370(c)(1).
(c) Coastal migratory pelagic fish
harvested in or from the Gulf or South
Atlantic EEZ may be first received by a
dealer who has a valid Gulf and South
Atlantic dealer permit, as required
under § 622.370(c)(1), only from a vessel
that has a valid Federal commercial
vessel permit, as required under
§ 622.370(a), or a charter vessel/
headboat permit for coastal migratory
pelagic fish, as required under
§ 622.370(b).
■ 30. In § 622.400, paragraph (a)(5) is
added to read as follows:
§ 622.400
Permits and fees.
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES
(a) * * *
(5) Dealer permits and conditions—(i)
Permits. For a dealer to first receive Gulf
or South Atlantic spiny lobster
harvested in or from the EEZ, a Gulf and
South Atlantic dealer permit must be
issued to the dealer.
(ii) State license and facility
requirements. To obtain a dealer permit,
the applicant must have a valid state
wholesaler’s license in the state(s)
where the dealer operates, if required by
such state(s), and must have a physical
facility at a fixed location in such
state(s).
*
*
*
*
*
■ 31. Add § 622.401 to read as follows:
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
50 CFR Part 648
[Docket No. 120109034–2171–01]
RIN 0648–XD212
Fisheries of the Northeastern United
States; Northeast Multispecies
Fishery; Trimester Closure and Trip
Limit Adjustments for the Common
Pool Fishery
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Temporary rule; closure.
AGENCY:
We are closing the Georges
Bank cod Trimester Total Allowable
Catch Area for the remainder of
Trimester 3, through April 30, 2014.
Based on our projection, the common
pool fishery has caught 97 percent of its
Georges Bank cod Trimester 3 total
allowable catch, triggering the
regulatory requirement to close that area
for the remainder of the trimester. This
action is intended to prevent an overage
of the common pool’s Georges Bank cod
quota. Because the common pool catch
of Georges Bank cod is not limited to the
Georges Bank cod Trimester Total
§ 622.401 Recordkeeping and reporting.
Allowable Catch Area, we are reducing
(a) Dealers. A dealer who first receives
the common pool possession and trip
Gulf or South Atlantic spiny lobster
limit for the Georges Bank cod stock to
must maintain records and submit
zero, in order to prevent the overharvest
information as specified in § 622.5(c).
of the common pool’s fishing year 2013
(b) [Reserved]
allocation of Georges Bank cod. We are
■ 32. Add § 622.416 to subpart R to read
also increasing the common pool
as follows:
possession and trip limit for Southern
New England/Mid-Atlantic winter
§ 622.416 Restrictions on sale/purchase.
flounder to allow the common pool
(a) Spiny lobster harvested in or from
fishery to catch more of its quota for that
the EEZ or adjoining state waters by a
stock.
vessel that has a valid Federal
DATES: This action is effective April 9,
commercial vessel permit for spiny
2014, through April 30, 2014.
lobster, as required under
§ 622.400(a)(1), or a valid Federal tailFOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Liz
separation permit for spiny lobster, as
Sullivan, Fishery Management
required under § 622.400(a)(2), may be
Specialist, 978–282–8493.
sold or transferred only to a dealer who
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
has a valid Gulf and South Atlantic
regulations at § 648.82(n)(2)(ii) require
dealer permit, as required under
the Regional Administrator to close the
§ 622.400(a)(5).
Trimester Total Allowable Catch (TAC)
(b) Spiny lobster harvested in or from Area for a stock when 90 percent of the
the EEZ may be first received by a
Trimester TAC is projected to be caught.
dealer who has a valid Gulf and South
The fishing year (FY) 2013 common
Atlantic dealer permit, as required
pool quota for Georges Bank (GB) cod is
under § 622.400(a)(5), only from a vessel 32 mt, which is divided into Trimester
that has a valid Federal commercial
TACs. The Trimester 3 TAC is 18.2 mt
vessel permit for spiny lobster or a valid (revised due to underages from
Federal tail-separation permit for spiny
Trimesters 1 and 2). Based on the most
lobster.
recent data, which include vessel trip
[FR Doc. 2014–07983 Filed 4–8–14; 8:45 am]
reports (VTRs), dealer-reported
landings, and vessel monitoring system
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
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SUMMARY:
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Sfmt 4700
19497
(VMS) information, we estimate that 97
percent of the Trimester 3 TAC for GB
cod has been caught. Therefore,
effective April 9, 2014, the GB cod
Trimester TAC Area is closed for the
remainder of Trimester 3, through April
30, 2014, to all owners or operators of
common pool vessels fishing with trawl
gear, sink gillnet gear, and longline/
hook gear. The GB cod Trimester TAC
Area includes statistical areas 521, 522,
525, and 561. The GB cod Trimester
TAC Area will reopen to common pool
vessels fishing with trawl, sink gillnet,
or longline/hook gear at the beginning of
FY 2014, on May 1, 2014.
The regulations at § 648.86(o)
authorize the Regional Administrator to
adjust the possession and trip limits for
common pool vessels to prevent the
overharvest or underharvest of the
common pool quotas. Based on data
reported through March 25, 2014, the
common pool fishery has caught
approximately 98 percent of its GB cod
sub-annual catch limit (sub-ACL) for FY
2013. Despite the GB cod Trimester TAC
Area closure described above, recent
analysis shows that catch from outside
the Trimester TAC Area would likely
cause the common pool to exceed its
allocation for GB cod if further action is
not taken. Therefore, the possession and
trip limit for GB cod, defined as cod
caught outside the Gulf of Maine
Regulated Mesh Area (as defined in
§ 648.80(a)(1)), is set to zero for all
common pool vessels, effective April 9,
2014, through April 30, 2014.
Common pool groundfish vessels that
have declared their trip through the
VMS or IVR system, and crossed the
VMS demarcation line prior to April 9,
2014, may complete their trip in part, or
all, in the GB cod Trimester TAC Area.
Additionally, such vessels will not be
subject to the new possession and trip
limit for that trip.
The regulations at § 648.86(o)
authorize the Regional Administrator to
adjust the possession limits for common
pool vessels in order to prevent the
overharvest or underharvest of the
common pool quotas. As of March 25,
2014, the common pool has caught 81
percent of its sub-ACL of Southern New
England/Mid-Atlantic (SNE/MA) winter
flounder. To allow the common pool
fishery to catch more of its quota for that
stock, effective April 9, 2014, the
possession and trip limit of SNE/MA
winter flounder, defined as winter
flounder caught within the Inshore GB
and SNE/MA Broad Stock Areas (as
defined in § 648.10(k)(3)(ii) and (iv)) for
all common pool vessels, per day-at-sea,
is increased from 300 lb (0.14 mt) to
1,000 lb (0.45 mt), with a maximum trip
limit of 2,000 lb (0.9 mt). We estimate
E:\FR\FM\09APR1.SGM
09APR1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 79, Number 68 (Wednesday, April 9, 2014)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 19490-19497]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2014-07983]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
50 CFR Part 622
[Docket No. 120405260-4258-02]
RIN 0648-BC12
Fisheries of the Caribbean, Gulf of Mexico, and South Atlantic;
Revisions to Dealer Permitting and Reporting Requirements for Species
Managed by the Gulf of Mexico and South Atlantic Fishery Management
Councils
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: NMFS issues this final rule to implement a Generic Amendment
to the Fishery Management Plans (FMPs) in the Gulf of Mexico (Gulf) and
South Atlantic Regions (Generic Dealer Amendment). The Generic Dealer
Amendment amends the following FMPs: Reef Fish Resources of the Gulf,
Red Drum Fishery of the Gulf, Snapper-Grouper Fishery (including
wreckfish) of the South Atlantic Region, Golden Crab Fishery of the
South Atlantic Region, Shrimp Fishery (excluding penaeid shrimp) of the
South Atlantic Region, Dolphin and Wahoo Fishery of the Atlantic,
Coastal Migratory Pelagic (CMP) Resources of the Gulf and South
Atlantic, and Spiny Lobster Fishery of the Gulf and South Atlantic, as
prepared by the Gulf and South Atlantic Fishery Management Councils
(Councils). This final rule modifies the permitting and reporting
requirements for seafood dealers who first receive species managed by
the Councils through the previously mentioned FMPs. These revisions
create a single dealer permit for dealers who first receive fish
managed by the Councils, require both purchase and non-purchase reports
to be submitted online on a weekly basis, prohibit dealers from first
receiving fish from federally permitted vessels if they are delinquent
in submitting reports, and change the sale and purchase provisions
based on the new dealer permitting requirements. This rule also adds
regulatory language to clarify the bag limit for private recreational
vessels when a trip exceeds one calendar day. The purpose of this rule
is to obtain timelier purchase information from dealers to better
monitor annual catch limits (ACLs) and achieve optimum yield (OY) in
accordance with the requirements of the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery
Conservation and Management Act (Magnuson-Stevens Act).
DATES: This rule is effective August 7, 2014.
ADDRESSES: Electronic copies of the Generic Dealer Amendment, which
includes an environmental assessment and a regulatory impact review,
may be obtained from the Southeast Regional Office Web site at https://sero.nmfs.noaa.gov.
Comments regarding the burden-hour estimates or other aspects of
the collection-of-information requirements contained in this rule may
be submitted in writing to Anik Clemens, Southeast Regional Office,
NMFS, 263 13th Avenue South, St. Petersburg, FL 33701; and OMB, by
email at OIRA Submission@omb.eop.gov, or by fax to 202-395-7285.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Rich Malinowski, Southeast Regional
Office, NMFS, telephone 727-824-5305; email: rich.malinowski@noaa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: NMFS and the Councils manage the fisheries
for Gulf Reef Fish Resources, Gulf Red Drum, South Atlantic Snapper-
Grouper (including wreckfish), South Atlantic Golden Crab, South
Atlantic Rock Shrimp, Atlantic Dolphin and Wahoo, Gulf and South
Atlantic CMP, and Gulf and South Atlantic Spiny Lobster under their
respective FMPs. The FMPs were prepared by the Councils and are
implemented through regulations at 50 CFR part 622 under the authority
of the Magnuson-Stevens Act.
On December 19, 2013, NMFS published a notice of availability for
the Generic Dealer Amendment and requested public comment (78 FR
76807). On January 2, 2014, NMFS published a proposed rule for the
Generic Dealer Amendment and requested public comment (79 FR 81). The
proposed rule and the Generic Dealer Amendment outline the rationale
for the actions contained in this final rule. A summary of the actions
implemented by this final rule is provided below.
This final rule modifies the current permitting and reporting
requirements for seafood dealers who first receive fish managed by the
Councils through eight FMPs. This final rule creates one universal
dealer permit (a Gulf and South Atlantic dealer permit), increases the
frequency of dealer reporting, requires dealers to report purchases and
non-purchases electronically, prohibits dealers from continuing to
receive fish from federally permitted vessels if they are delinquent in
submitting their reports, and revises the sale and purchase provisions
for certain federally managed species. Management Measures Contained in
this Final Rule
Gulf and South Atlantic Dealer Permits
This final rule creates a single dealer permit (a Gulf and South
Atlantic dealer permit) that is required to first receive the species
currently covered by the six dealer permits (Atlantic Dolphin-Wahoo,
Gulf Reef Fish, South Atlantic Golden Crab, South Atlantic Rock Shrimp,
South Atlantic Snapper-Grouper and South Atlantic Wreckfish), as well
as Gulf and South Atlantic CMP, Gulf and South Atlantic spiny lobster,
and Gulf red drum. A Gulf and South Atlantic dealer permit is not
required to first receive South Atlantic coral, South Atlantic pelagic
Sargassum, Gulf coral and coral reef species, and Gulf and South
Atlantic penaeid shrimp species.
The Councils exempted penaeid shrimp species from the Gulf and
South Atlantic dealer permit because ACLs have not been established for
these species (because they have annual life cycles). Thus, the current
reporting system is adequate for determining catch and effort for these
species and the administrative burden of issuing such a large number of
shrimp dealer permits outweighs the benefits of more timely shrimp
dealer reports. The Councils did not include corals or pelagic
Sargassum because coral harvest is limited to octocoral harvest off
Florida and does not require a Federal harvest permit if landed in
Florida, and there is no recorded harvest of pelagic Sargassum from
Federal waters.
Frequency and Method of Dealer Reporting
This final rule requires federally permitted dealers to submit a
detailed electronic report of all fish first received for a commercial
purpose via the dealer electronic trip ticket reporting system. These
electronic reports must be submitted on a weekly basis and are due by
11:59 p.m., local time, the Tuesday following a reporting week. A
reporting week is defined as beginning at 12:01 a.m., local time, on
Sunday and ending at 11:59 p.m., local time, the following Saturday.
Dealers who first receive Gulf migratory king mackerel harvested by the
run-around gillnet sector in the southern Florida west coast subzone
must submit their dealer reports for these species on a daily basis.
These reports must be submitted through the
[[Page 19491]]
dealer electronic trip ticket reporting system by 6 a.m., local time,
for the previous day's harvest. In addition to reporting purchases,
federally permitted dealers are also required to submit records of no
purchases via the dealer electronic trip ticket reporting system at the
same frequency and via the same process as records for purchases. The
Councils and NMFS allow non-purchases to be reported up to 90 days in
advance, if such an option exists in the state reporting system. If,
after submitting an advance no purchase report, the dealer does receive
fish, then a purchase report must be submitted for those fish.
Every state, except South Carolina, requires dealers to submit
reports electronically through the dealer electronic trip ticket
reporting system. South Carolina requires paper-based reporting, but
does allow electronic reporting in addition to filing paper reports.
Therefore, under this final rule dealers in South Carolina would be
required to report both by paper (according to state regulations) and
electronically (according to Federal regulations). These electronic
trip ticket reports would still go first to the state trip ticket
reporting system and subsequently to NMFS. The Science and Research
Director (SRD), Southeast Fisheries Science Center, NMFS, or the
alternate SRD, Northeast Fisheries Science Center, NMFS (for species
harvested from Virginia through Maine) receives all of the electronic
dealer reports within approximately 3 days of data entry, and uses the
data for ACL monitoring. Under this final rule dealers will continue to
use their state trip ticket reporting system.
The data elements currently reported through the state trip ticket
systems include the trip ticket number, dealer or processor's name,
Federal permit number and state dealer license number, vessel name,
U.S. Coast Guard documentation number and state registration number,
vessel trip report number, date the vessel leaves the dock, date the
vessel offloads the catch, date of purchase, species, amount landed,
price per unit, port and state of landing, gear used, area fished, size
category, and condition and disposition of the catch.
During catastrophic conditions only, this final rule allows dealers
to use a paper-based system for submitting dealer reports. The Regional
Administrator (RA) will determine when catastrophic conditions exist,
the duration of the catastrophic conditions, and which participants are
affected. The RA will provide notice of a paper-based system via
notification in the Federal Register, NOAA weather radio, fishery
bulletins, and other appropriate means and will authorize the use of
the paper-based system for the duration of the catastrophic conditions.
The paper forms will be available from NMFS.
Non-Reporting
This final rule stipulates that dealers who are delinquent on
submitting their reports are prohibited from receiving fish from
federally permitted vessels until they have submitted all required
reports. This provision will aid in enforcement efforts to ensure
dealer reports are submitted in a timely manner.
Revisions to Sale and Purchase Provisions
This final rule revises the sale and purchase requirements for
federally managed species based on changes to the dealer permitting
requirements. This final rule allows federally managed species
harvested on board a federally permitted vessel to be sold or
transferred to any dealer with a Gulf and South Atlantic dealer permit,
instead of just a dealer for a specific fishery (except for individual
fishing quota (IFQ) species which are still required to be sold to a
dealer with an IFQ dealer endorsement). This final rule also allows
dealers with a Gulf and South Atlantic dealer permit to first receive
all federally managed species harvested in or from the EEZ by federally
permitted vessels (except for IFQ species, in which case the dealer is
also required to have an IFQ dealer endorsement).
This final rule also clarifies that federally permitted vessels may
sell federally managed species harvested in either Federal waters or
adjoining state waters only to a dealer who has a valid Gulf and South
Atlantic dealer permit. This provision places restrictions on certain
federally permitted vessels that currently are able to sell their catch
to non-federally permitted dealers. Through this rulemaking, vessels
with commercial or charter vessel/headboat permits for CMP and vessels
with Federal commercial permits for spiny lobster, including the
Federal tail-separation permit, are allowed to sell federally managed
species (including bag-limit caught CMP) that are harvested in either
Federal waters or adjoining state waters only to a dealer who has a
valid Gulf and South Atlantic dealer permit. In addition, all federally
permitted vessels that harvest CMP species under the bag limit in
Federal waters or adjoining state waters are required to sell those CMP
species only to a dealer who has a valid Gulf and South Atlantic dealer
permit.
Other Changes Contained in This Final Rule
This final rule adds the following sentence to 50 CFR 622.11(a):
``Unless specified otherwise, a person is limited to a single bag limit
for a trip lasting longer than one calendar day,'' to clarify the
regulations regarding how the bag limit is determined for private
recreational vessels when a trip exceeds one calendar day. This
clarification reflects the original intent of the Councils. This change
is not related to the Generic Dealer Amendment.
Implementation and Compliance Timeline for This Final Rule
In an effort to minimize the burden on currently permitted dealers,
and provide for a smooth transition to the new Gulf and South Atlantic
dealer permit, this final rule is effective 4 months after the date of
publication, on August 7, 2014. Upon publication of the final rule, on
April 9, 2014, dealers that currently do not have a valid Federal
dealer permit for any Gulf or South Atlantic fishery may submit an
application for a Gulf and South Atlantic dealer permit. Gulf and South
Atlantic dealer permits will be issued within 30 days of receipt of a
completed dealer permit application, so applicants should submit their
application at least 30 days prior to the date upon which they need the
permit to be effective. However, the Gulf and South Atlantic dealer
permit requirement, and the associated reporting and recordkeeping
requirements contained in this final rule, are not effective until
August 7, 2014. Therefore, dealers issued Gulf and South Atlantic
dealer permits before August 7, 2014 will be required to continue to
purchase Gulf and South Atlantic species under existing Federal
permitting requirements and are not allowed to operate under the Gulf
and South Atlantic permit until August 7, 2014. Likewise, these dealers
will not be required to report until August 7, 2014.
For those dealers who already have a valid Federal dealer permit
for any Gulf or South Atlantic fishery, NMFS will treat their current
permit as a Gulf and South Atlantic dealer permit as of August 7, 2014.
These dealers will not be required to apply for a new Gulf and South
Atlantic dealer permit until their existing permit(s) expire at some
point after August 7, 2014. This means that dealers who currently have
a valid Federal dealer permit for any Gulf or South Atlantic fishery
may begin to first receive all species covered under the Gulf and South
Atlantic dealer permit on August 7, 2014, and must comply with all
reporting and recordkeeping
[[Page 19492]]
requirements contained in this rule as of August 7, 2014. Therefore,
all federally permitted dealers (those with a current valid Federal
dealer permit for any Gulf or South Atlantic fishery, and those with a
new Gulf and South Atlantic dealer permit), must comply with the dealer
reporting and recordkeeping requirements contained in this final rule
as of August 7, 2014.
Comments and Responses
NMFS received five comment submissions on the Generic Dealer
Amendment and the proposed rule; two from seafood dealers, one from a
non-profit environmental organization, and two from fishing
organizations. The non-profit environmental organization expressed
general support for the actions contained in the Generic Dealer
Amendment and the proposed rule, including the timely transmission of
accurate dealer purchase information (including both reports of fish
landings and/or of a no landing reports) to monitor ACLs. A summary of
the comments and NMFS' responses to those comments appears below.
Comment 1: NMFS should send an automated response and time stamp to
dealers when a purchase form is received.
Response: All data are initially submitted to the states via the
trip ticket reporting systems in place. A time stamp is generated by
the trip ticket software to indicate when the data were submitted by
the dealer. This time stamp is accessible to the dealer if the dealer
requests it from the state trip ticket reporting system. NMFS does not
have authority over the state trip ticket reporting system, and
therefore cannot send automated responses to dealers after they submit
information to state-controlled reporting systems; however, dealers may
work with the states to get the information they need for their
businesses.
Comment 2: NMFS should contact dealers if a dealer is out of
compliance with the reporting deadline (for both purchase and non-
purchase reports) before suspending the dealer's ability to purchase
product.
Response: It is the dealer's responsibility to ensure compliance
with all Federal reporting deadlines. Nonetheless, NMFS is
investigating the creation of an email notification system to let
dealers know when they become out of compliance with the reporting
requirements implemented in this final rule. If NMFS implements such a
system in the future, NMFS will notify dealers of this capability.
Comment 3: There is no provision in this amendment or rule in the
event a computer hardware, software, or internet access problem occurs.
The rule would shut down a business for not submitting electronic
reports on time.
Response: In the event of technical issues with a dealer's computer
equipment or internet access, the dealer will need to utilize other
computer resources for timely submission of the electronic reports,
such as a mobile device or public access computer. NMFS will allow
paper based reporting in the event of catastrophic conditions only. The
RA will determine when catastrophic conditions exist, the duration of
the catastrophic conditions, and which participants are affected. The
RA will provide notice of a paper-based system via notification in the
Federal Register, NOAA weather radio, fishery bulletins, and other
appropriate means and will authorize the use of the paper-based system
for the duration of the catastrophic conditions. The paper forms will
be available from NMFS.
Comment 4: Increasing regulations and reporting frequencies are
economically detrimental to smaller businesses. The impacts of
reporting were not thoroughly considered, such as the additional cost
of computer maintenance. In addition, the assessment understated the
significance of the economic effects of the proposed rule on small
entities.
Response: NMFS agrees that increasing regulations may have adverse
economic effects on businesses and the significance of these effects
may be greater for smaller businesses; however, NMFS disagrees that the
economic effects of the proposed rule on small entities were
understated. As stated in the analysis provided in the proposed rule,
none of the requirements contained in this final rule require special
professional skills and all affected small entities are expected to
already have staff with the appropriate skills to meet these
requirements. The analysis also provided an estimate of the permitting
requirement for entities that do not currently have a Federal permit
($74.42 per entity), the expected cost of a computer (less than $750),
and the expected cost of internet access (less than $100 per month) for
any entities that do not currently have a computer or internet service.
The average annual computer maintenance cost is unknown, but is not
expected to increase as a result of the requirements in this rule.
Although these expenses may be burdensome to some dealers, overall the
requirements are not expected to adversely affect a substantial number
of small entities because the use of computers and the internet has
become commonplace and a vital tool in business management and,
according to the SBA, in 2010, approximately 94 percent of businesses
used computers and 95 percent of these had internet service.
Additionally, all affected entities currently operate in states that
require electronic reporting, except South Carolina, and South Carolina
allows electronic reporting. The estimated number of entities in South
Carolina that will be affected by this rule is 38, or approximately 4
percent of the total number of small businesses expected to be
affected. Thus, even if none of the small businesses in South Carolina
have elected to report electronically, only approximately 4 percent of
the affected entities would incur any of the additional reporting costs
associated with computer purchase, maintenance, and internet access.
For all affected entities, satisfying the reporting frequency
requirements of this final rule will only require more frequent
submission of the same quantity and quality of data that is already
being reported. As a result, because at least 96 percent of the small
businesses affected by this rule are expected to already have the
required skill, hardware, and internet access to meet state and common
general business operational requirements, this final rule will not
have a significant impact on a substantial number of small entities.
Classification
The Regional Administrator, Southeast Region, NMFS, has determined
that this final rule is necessary for the management of Gulf reef fish,
Gulf red drum, South Atlantic snapper-grouper (including wreckfish),
South Atlantic golden crab, South Atlantic rock shrimp, Atlantic
dolphin and wahoo, Gulf and South Atlantic CMP, and Gulf and South
Atlantic spiny lobster and is consistent with the Generic Dealer
Amendment, the FMP, the Magnuson-Stevens Act and other applicable laws.
This final rule has been determined to be not significant for
purposes of Executive Order 12866.
The Chief Counsel for Regulation of the Department of Commerce
certified to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small Business
Administration during the proposed rule stage that this rule would not
have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small
entities. The factual basis for this determination was published in the
proposed rule and is not repeated here. Comments on the economic
analysis are addressed in the comments and responses section of this
final rule. No changes to the final rule were made in
[[Page 19493]]
response to these comments. As a result, a final regulatory flexibility
analysis was not required and none was prepared.
This final rule contains collection-of-information requirements
subject to the requirements of the Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA), which
have been approved by OMB under control numbers 0648-0013 and 0648-
0205. NMFS estimates the requirement for dealers to report
electronically will decrease the overall dealer reporting burden under
OMB control number 0648-0013, because dealers will report all species
through the electronic dealer trip ticket reporting system offered in
each state, and NMFS will receive these data from the states. This
eliminates a duplication of effort on the dealers who were reporting
similar information to the states and to NMFS (except for South
Carolina, which still requires paper reporting).
NMFS estimates the requirement for dealers to report more
frequently (weekly instead of semi-monthly or monthly) will not create
more burden on dealers, because the dealers will still be reporting the
same amount of information, they will just be submitting the same
quantity of data more frequently.
NMFS estimates the reporting burden under OMB control number 0648-
0205 will increase because more dealers will be required to apply for a
Federal dealer permit through this rulemaking (approximately 1,000
entities, including 300 current dealers and 700 new dealers). NMFS
estimates the requirement for dealers to complete the Federal Permit
Application for an Annual Dealer Permit to obtain a Gulf and South
Atlantic Dealer Permit will average 20 minutes per response (for new
permits and renewals). NMFS estimates the requirement to complete
``doing business as'' (DBA) names and check a box indicating whether or
not a business is active with respect to its secretary of state on the
Federal Permit Application for an Annual Dealer Permit under OMB
control number 0648-0205 will average 1 minute per response.
Finally, NMFS estimates the requirement for dealers to complete
their email address on the Federal Permit Application for an Annual
Dealer Permit under OMB control number 0648-0205 will average 1 minute
per response. These estimates of the public reporting burden include
the time for reviewing instructions, gathering and maintaining the data
needed, and completing and reviewing the collection-of-information.
Notwithstanding any other provision of law, no person is required to
respond to, nor shall a person be subject to a penalty for failure to
comply with, a collection-of-information subject to the requirements of
the PRA, unless that collection-of-information displays a currently
valid OMB control number.
List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 622
Dealer, Fisheries, Fishing, Gulf of Mexico, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, South Atlantic.
Dated: April 4, 2014.
Samuel D. Rauch III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
For the reasons set out in the preamble, 50 CFR part 622 is amended
as follows:
PART 622--FISHERIES OF THE CARIBBEAN, GULF OF MEXICO, AND SOUTH
ATLANTIC
0
1. The authority citation for part 622 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
0
2. In Sec. 622.2, the definition ``reporting week'' is added in
alphabetical order to read as follows:
Sec. 622.2 Definitions and acronyms.
* * * * *
Reporting week means the period of time beginning at 12:01 a.m.,
local time, on Sunday and ending at 11:59 p.m., local time, the
following Saturday.
* * * * *
0
3. In Sec. 622.4, the third sentence in paragraph (h) is revised to
read as follows:
Sec. 622.4 Permits and fees--general.
* * * * *
(h) * * * In addition, a copy of the dealer's permit must accompany
each vehicle that is used to pick up from a fishing vessel fish
harvested from the EEZ. * * *
* * * * *
0
4. In Sec. 622.5, paragraph (c) is added to read as follows:
Sec. 622.5 Recordkeeping and reporting--general.
* * * * *
(c) Dealers--(1) Permitted Gulf and South Atlantic dealers. (i) A
person issued a Gulf and South Atlantic dealer permit must submit a
detailed electronic report of all fish first received for a commercial
purpose within the time period specified in this paragraph, via the
dealer electronic trip ticket reporting system. These electronic
reports must be submitted at weekly intervals via the dealer electronic
trip ticket reporting system by 11:59 p.m., local time, the Tuesday
following a reporting week. If no fish were received during a reporting
week, an electronic report so stating must be submitted for that
reporting week. Dealers must submit electronic reports for Gulf
migratory group king mackerel harvested by the run-around gillnet
sector in the southern Florida west coast subzone daily via the dealer
electronic trip ticket reporting system by 6 a.m., local time, for the
previous day's harvest. Until the commercial ACL (commercial quota) for
the run-around gillnet sector for Gulf migratory group king mackerel is
reached, if no king mackerel were received, an electronic report so
stating must be submitted for that day.
(ii) Dealers must retain either the paper forms or electronic
reports for at least 1 year after the submittal date and must provide
such records for inspection upon the request of an authorized officer
or the SRD.
(iii) During catastrophic conditions only, the ACL monitoring
program provides for use of paper-based components for basic required
functions as a backup. The RA will determine when catastrophic
conditions exist, the duration of the catastrophic conditions, and
which participants or geographic areas are deemed affected by the
catastrophic conditions. The RA will provide timely notice to affected
participants via publication of notification in the Federal Register,
NOAA weather radio, fishery bulletins, and other appropriate means and
will authorize the affected participants' use of paper-based components
for the duration of the catastrophic conditions. The paper forms will
be available from NMFS. During catastrophic conditions, the RA has the
authority to waive or modify reporting time requirements.
(iv) Gulf and South Atlantic dealers are not authorized to first
receive Gulf reef fish, Gulf red drum, South Atlantic golden crab,
South Atlantic snapper-grouper, South Atlantic wreckfish, South
Atlantic rock shrimp, coastal migratory pelagic fish, spiny lobster, or
Atlantic dolphin or wahoo from a federally permitted vessel if the
required reports have not been submitted and received by NMFS according
to the reporting requirements under this section. Delinquent reports
automatically result in a Gulf and South Atlantic dealer becoming
ineligible to first receive such fish, regardless of any notification
to dealers by NMFS. Gulf and South Atlantic dealers who become
ineligible to receive such fish due to delinquent reports are
authorized to first receive such fish only after all required and
delinquent reports have been submitted and received by NMFS
[[Page 19494]]
according to the reporting requirements under this section.
(2) Non-permitted dealers. See Sec. 622.51 for a person who
purchases Gulf shrimp from a vessel, or person, that fishes for shrimp
in the Gulf EEZ or in adjoining state waters, or that lands shrimp in
an adjoining state.
0
5. In Sec. 622.11, a sentence is added after the second sentence in
paragraph (a)(1) to read as follows:
Sec. 622.11 Bag and possession limits--general applicability.
* * * * *
(a) * * *
(1) * * * Unless specified otherwise, a person is limited to a
single bag limit for a trip lasting longer than one calendar day. * * *
* * * * *
0
6. In Sec. 622.13, paragraph (h) is added to read as follows:
Sec. 622.13 Prohibitions--general.
* * * * *
(h) First receive fish from federally permitted vessels if the
required reports have not been submitted in accordance with Sec.
622.5(c).
* * * * *
0
7. In Sec. 622.20, paragraph (c)(1) is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 622.20 Permits and endorsements.
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(1) Permits. For a dealer to first receive Gulf reef fish harvested
in or from the EEZ, a Gulf and South Atlantic dealer permit must be
issued to the dealer.
* * * * *
0
8. In Sec. 622.21, paragraph (b)(2) is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 622.21 Individual fishing quota (IFQ program) for Gulf red
snapper.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(2) Gulf IFQ dealer endorsements. In addition to the requirement
for a Gulf and South Atlantic dealer permit as specified in Sec.
622.20(c)(1), for a dealer to first receive red snapper subject to the
IFQ program for Gulf red snapper, as specified in paragraph (a)(1) of
this section, or for a person aboard a vessel with a Gulf IFQ vessel
account to sell such red snapper directly to an entity other than a
dealer, such persons must also have a Gulf IFQ dealer endorsement. A
dealer with a Gulf and South Atlantic dealer permit can download a Gulf
IFQ dealer endorsement from the NMFS IFQ Web site at
ifq.sero.nmfs.noaa.gov. If such persons do not have an IFQ online
account, they must first contact IFQ Customer Service at 1-866-425-7627
to obtain information necessary to access the IFQ Web site and
establish an IFQ online account. There is no fee for obtaining this
endorsement. The endorsement remains valid as long as the Gulf and
South Atlantic dealer permit remains valid and the dealer is in
compliance with all Gulf reef fish and IFQ reporting requirements, has
paid all IFQ fees required, and is not subject to any sanctions under
15 CFR part 904. The endorsement is not transferable.
* * * * *
0
9. In Sec. 622.22, paragraph (b)(2) is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 622.22 Individual fishing quota (IFQ program) for Gulf groupers
and tilefishes.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(2) Gulf IFQ dealer endorsements. In addition to the requirement
for a Gulf and South Atlantic dealer permit as specified in Sec.
622.20(c)(1), for a dealer to first receive groupers and tilefishes
subject to the IFQ program for groupers and tilefishes, as specified in
paragraph (a)(1) of this section, or for a person aboard a vessel with
a Gulf IFQ vessel account to sell such groupers and tilefishes directly
to an entity other than a dealer, such persons must also have a Gulf
IFQ dealer endorsement. A dealer with a Gulf and South Atlantic dealer
permit can download a Gulf IFQ dealer endorsement from the NMFS IFQ Web
site at ifq.sero.nmfs.noaa.gov. If such persons do not have an IFQ
online account, they must first contact IFQ Customer Service at 1-866-
425-7627 to obtain information necessary to access the IFQ Web site and
establish an IFQ online account. There is no fee for obtaining this
endorsement. The endorsement remains valid as long as the Gulf and
South Atlantic dealer permit remains valid and the dealer is in
compliance with all Gulf reef fish and IFQ reporting requirements, has
paid all IFQ fees required, and is not subject to any sanctions under
15 CFR part 904. The endorsement is not transferable.
* * * * *
0
10. Section 622.25 is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 622.25 Exemptions for Gulf groundfish trawling.
Gulf groundfish trawling means fishing in the Gulf EEZ by a vessel
that uses a bottom trawl, the unsorted catch of which is ground up for
animal feed or industrial products.
(a) Other provisions of this part notwithstanding, the owner or
operator of a vessel trawling for Gulf groundfish is exempt from the
following requirements and limitations for the vessel's unsorted catch
of Gulf reef fish:
(1) The requirement for a valid commercial vessel permit for Gulf
reef fish in order to sell Gulf reef fish.
(2) Minimum size limits for Gulf reef fish.
(3) Bag limits for Gulf reef fish.
(4) The prohibition on sale of Gulf reef fish after a quota or ACL
closure.
(b) Other provisions of this part notwithstanding, a dealer in a
Gulf state is exempt from the requirement for a Gulf and South Atlantic
dealer permit to receive Gulf reef fish harvested from the Gulf EEZ by
a vessel trawling for Gulf groundfish.
0
11. In Sec. 622.26, paragraph (c) is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 622.26 Recordkeeping and reporting.
* * * * *
(c) Dealers. (1) A dealer who first receives Gulf reef fish must
maintain records and submit information as specified in Sec. 622.5(c).
(2) The operator of a vehicle that is used to pick up from a
fishing vessel Gulf reef fish must maintain a record containing the
name of each fishing vessel from which reef fish on the vehicle have
been received. The vehicle operator must provide such record for
inspection upon the request of an authorized officer.
0
12. In Sec. 622.40, paragraphs (b) and (c) are revised to read as
follows:
Sec. 622.40 Restrictions on sale/purchase.
* * * * *
(b) A Gulf reef fish harvested in or from the EEZ or adjoining
state waters by a vessel that has a valid commercial vessel permit for
Gulf reef fish may be sold or transferred only to a dealer who has a
valid Gulf and South Atlantic dealer permit, as required under Sec.
622.20(c)(1).
(c) A Gulf reef fish harvested in or from the EEZ may be first
received by a dealer who has a valid Gulf and South Atlantic dealer
permit, as required under Sec. 622.20(c)(1), only from a vessel that
has a valid commercial vessel permit for Gulf reef fish.
0
13. Subpart E is revised to read as follows:
Subpart E--Red Drum Fishery of the Gulf of Mexico
Sec.
622.90 Permits.
622.91 Recordkeeping and reporting.
622.92 Prohibited species.
622.93 Adjustment of management measures.
[[Page 19495]]
Subpart E--Red Drum Fishery of the Gulf of Mexico
Sec. 622.90 Permits.
(a) Dealer permits and conditions--(1) Permits. For a dealer to
first receive Gulf red drum harvested in or from the EEZ, a Gulf and
South Atlantic dealer permit must be issued to the dealer.
(2) State license and facility requirements. To obtain a dealer
permit, the applicant must have a valid state wholesaler's license in
the state(s) where the dealer operates, if required by such state(s),
and must have a physical facility at a fixed location in such state(s).
(b) Permit procedures. See Sec. 622.4 for information regarding
general permit procedures including, but not limited to application,
fees, duration, transfer, renewal, display, sanctions and denials, and
replacement.
Sec. 622.91 Recordkeeping and reporting.
(a) Dealers. A dealer who first receives Gulf red drum must
maintain records and submit information as specified in Sec. 622.5(c).
(b) [Reserved]
Sec. 622.92 Prohibited species.
(a) General. The harvest and possession restrictions of this
section apply without regard to whether the species is harvested by a
vessel operating under a commercial vessel permit. The operator of a
vessel that fishes in the EEZ is responsible for the limit applicable
to that vessel.
(b) Red drum. Red drum may not be harvested or possessed in or from
the Gulf EEZ. Such fish caught in the Gulf EEZ must be released
immediately with a minimum of harm.
Sec. 622.93 Adjustment of management measures.
In accordance with the framework procedures of the FMP for the Red
Drum Fishery of the Gulf of Mexico, the RA may establish or modify the
following items:
(a) Reporting and monitoring requirements, permitting requirements,
bag and possession limits (including a bag limit of zero), size limits,
vessel trip limits, closed seasons or areas and reopenings, annual
catch limits (ACLs), annual catch targets (ACTs), quotas (including a
quota of zero), accountability measures (AMs), MSY (or proxy), OY, TAC,
management parameters such as overfished and overfishing definitions,
gear restrictions (ranging from regulation to complete prohibition),
gear markings and identification, vessel markings and identification,
ABC and ABC control rules, rebuilding plans, sale and purchase
restrictions, transfer at sea provisions, and restrictions relative to
conditions of harvested fish (maintaining fish in whole condition, use
as bait).
(b) [Reserved]
0
14. In Sec. 622.170, paragraph (c)(1) is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 622.170 Permits and endorsements.
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(1) Permits. For a dealer to first receive South Atlantic snapper-
grouper (including wreckfish) harvested in or from the EEZ, a Gulf and
South Atlantic dealer permit must be issued to the dealer.
* * * * *
0
15. In Sec. 622.172, paragraphs (b), (c)(6), (c)(7), and (d)(4) are
revised to read as follows:
Sec. 622.172 Wreckfish individual transferable quota (ITQ) system.
* * * * *
(b) List of wreckfish shareholders. Annually, on or about March 1,
the RA will provide each wreckfish shareholder with a list of all
wreckfish shareholders and their percentage shares, reflecting share
transactions on forms received through February 15.
(c) * * *
(6) The ``Fish House'' part of each such coupon must be given to
the dealer to whom the wreckfish are transferred in amounts totaling
the eviscerated weight of the wreckfish transferred to that dealer.
Wreckfish may be transferred only to a Gulf and South Atlantic dealer
permit holder, as required under Sec. 622.170(c)(1).
(7) A dealer may first receive wreckfish only from a vessel for
which a commercial permit for wreckfish has been issued, as required
under Sec. 622.170(a)(2). A dealer must receive the ``Fish House''
part of ITQ coupons in amounts totaling the eviscerated weight of the
wreckfish received; enter the permit number of the vessel from which
the wreckfish were received, enter the date the wreckfish were
received, enter the dealer's permit number, and sign each such ``Fish
House'' part; and submit all such parts with the electronic dealer
reports required by Sec. 622.5(c).
* * * * *
(d) * * *
(4) If a wreckfish harvested by a vessel that has been issued a
commercial vessel permit for South Atlantic snapper-grouper and a
commercial vessel permit for wreckfish is to be offloaded at a location
other than a fixed facility of a dealer who holds a Gulf and South
Atlantic dealer permit, as required under Sec. 622.170(c)(1), the
wreckfish shareholder or the vessel operator must advise the NMFS
Office for Law Enforcement, Southeast Region, St. Petersburg, FL, by
telephone (727-824-5344), of the location not less than 24 hours prior
to offloading.
0
16. In Sec. 622.176, paragraph (c) is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 622.176 Recordkeeping and reporting.
* * * * *
(c) Dealers. (1) A dealer who first receives South Atlantic
snapper-grouper (including wreckfish) must maintain records and submit
information as specified in Sec. 622.5(c).
(2) On demand, a dealer who has been issued a Gulf and South
Atlantic dealer permit, as required under Sec. 622.170(c)(1), must
make available to an authorized officer all records of offloadings,
purchases, or sales of South Atlantic snapper-grouper (including
wreckfish).
* * * * *
0
17. In Sec. 622.192, paragraphs (b) and (c) are revised to read as
follows:
Sec. 622.192 Restrictions on sale/purchase.
* * * * *
(b) South Atlantic snapper-grouper harvested in or from the EEZ or
adjoining state waters by a vessel that has a valid commercial vessel
permit for South Atlantic snapper-grouper may be sold or transferred
only to a dealer who has a valid Gulf and South Atlantic dealer permit,
as required under Sec. 622.170(c)(1).
(c) South Atlantic snapper-grouper harvested in or from the EEZ may
be first received by a dealer who has a valid Gulf and South Atlantic
dealer permit, as required under Sec. 622.170(a), only from a vessel
that has a valid commercial permit for South Atlantic snapper-grouper.
* * * * *
0
18. In Sec. 622.200, the heading of paragraph (c) and paragraph (c)(1)
are revised to read as follows:
Sec. 622.200 Permits.
* * * * *
(c) Dealer permits and conditions--(1) Permits. For a dealer to
first receive South Atlantic rock shrimp harvested in or from the EEZ,
a Gulf and South Atlantic dealer permit must be issued to the dealer.
* * * * *
0
19. In Sec. 622.203, paragraph (b) is revised to read as follows:
[[Page 19496]]
Sec. 622.203 Recordkeeping and reporting.
* * * * *
(b) South Atlantic rock shrimp dealers. (1) A dealer who first
receives South Atlantic rock shrimp must maintain records and submit
information as specified in Sec. 622.5(c).
(2) On demand, a dealer who has been issued a Gulf and South
Atlantic dealer permit, as required under Sec. 622.200(c)(1), must
make available to an authorized officer all records of offloadings,
purchases, or sales of rock shrimp.
0
20. In Sec. 622.209, paragraphs (a)(2) and (3) are revised to read as
follows:
Sec. 622.209 Restrictions on sale/purchase.
(a) * * *
(2) Rock shrimp harvested in or from the EEZ or adjoining state
waters by a vessel that has a valid commercial vessel permit for South
Atlantic rock shrimp may be sold or transferred only to a dealer who
has a valid Gulf and South Atlantic dealer permit, as required under
Sec. 622.200(c)(1).
(3) Rock shrimp harvested in or from the EEZ may be first received
by a dealer who has a valid Gulf and South Atlantic dealer permit, as
required under Sec. 622.200(c)(1), only from a vessel that has a valid
commercial vessel permit for rock shrimp.
* * * * *
0
21. In Sec. 622.240, paragraph (b)(1) is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 622.240 Permits.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(1) Permits. For a dealer to first receive South Atlantic golden
crab harvested in or from the EEZ, a Gulf and South Atlantic dealer
permit must be issued to the dealer.
* * * * *
0
22. In Sec. 622.242, paragraph (b) is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 622.242 Recordkeeping and reporting.
* * * * *
(b) Dealers. A dealer who first receives South Atlantic golden crab
must maintain records and submit information as specified in Sec.
622.5(c).
0
23. In Sec. 622.250, paragraphs (c) and (d) are revised to read as
follows:
Sec. 622.250 Restrictions on sale/purchase.
* * * * *
(c) A golden crab harvested in or from the EEZ or adjoining state
waters by a vessel that has a valid commercial vessel permit for South
Atlantic golden crab may be sold or transferred only to a dealer who
has a valid Gulf and South Atlantic dealer permit, as required under
Sec. 622.240(b)(1).
(d) A golden crab harvested in or from the EEZ may be first
received by a dealer who has a valid Gulf and South Atlantic dealer
permit, as required under Sec. 622.240(b)(1), only from a vessel that
has a valid commercial vessel permit for golden crab.
0
24. In Sec. 622.270, the heading of paragraph (d) and paragraph (d)(1)
are revised to read as follows:
Sec. 622.270 Permits.
* * * * *
(d) Dealer permits and conditions--(1) Permits. For a dealer to
first receive Atlantic dolphin or wahoo harvested in or from the EEZ, a
Gulf and South Atlantic dealer permit must be issued to the dealer.
* * * * *
0
25. In Sec. 622.271, paragraph (c) is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 622.271 Recordkeeping and reporting.
* * * * *
(c) Dealers. (1) A dealer who first receives Atlantic dolphin or
wahoo must maintain records and submit information as specified in
Sec. 622.5(c).
(2) Alternate SRD. For the purpose of Sec. 622.5(c), in the states
from Maine through Virginia, or in the waters off those states, ``SRD''
means the Science and Research Director, Northeast Fisheries Science
Center, NMFS, or a designee.
(3) On demand, a dealer who has been issued a Gulf and South
Atlantic dealer permit, as required under Sec. 622.270(d)(1), must
make available to an authorized officer all records of offloadings,
purchases, or sales of Atlantic dolphin or wahoo.
0
26. Section 622.279 is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 622.279 Restrictions on sale/purchase.
(a) Dolphin or wahoo harvested in or from the Atlantic EEZ or
adjoining state waters by a vessel that has a valid commercial vessel
permit for Atlantic dolphin and wahoo, as required under Sec.
622.270(a)(1), or by a vessel authorized a 200-lb (91-kg) trip limit
for dolphin or wahoo, as specified in Sec. 622.278(a)(2), may be sold
or transferred only to a dealer who has a valid Gulf and South Atlantic
dealer permit, as required under Sec. 622.270(d)(1).
(b) In addition to the provisions of paragraph (a)(1) of this
section, a person may not sell dolphin or wahoo possessed under the
recreational bag limit harvested in the Atlantic EEZ or adjoining state
waters by a vessel while it is operating as a charter vessel or
headboat. A dolphin or wahoo harvested or possessed by a vessel that is
operating as a charter vessel or headboat with a Federal charter
vessel/headboat permit for Atlantic dolphin and wahoo may not be
purchased or sold if harvested in or from the Atlantic EEZ or adjoining
state waters.
(c) Dolphin or wahoo harvested in or from the Atlantic EEZ may be
first received only by a dealer who has a valid Gulf and South Atlantic
dealer permit, as required under Sec. 622.270(d)(1), and only from a
vessel authorized to sell dolphin and wahoo under paragraph (a)(1) of
this section.
0
27. In Sec. 622.370, paragraph (c) is revised and paragraph (d) is
added to read as follows:
Sec. 622.370 Permits.
* * * * *
(c) Dealer permits and conditions--(1) Permits. For a dealer to
first receive Gulf or South Atlantic coastal migratory pelagic fish
harvested in or from the EEZ, a Gulf and South Atlantic dealer permit
must be issued to the dealer.
(2) State license and facility requirements. To obtain a dealer
permit, the applicant must have a valid state wholesaler's license in
the state(s) where the dealer operates, if required by such state(s),
and must have a physical facility at a fixed location in such state(s).
(d) Permit procedures. See Sec. 622.4 for information regarding
general permit procedures including, but not limited to application,
fees, duration, transfer, renewal, display, sanctions and denials, and
replacement.
0
28. In Sec. 622.374, paragraph (c) is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 622.374 Recordkeeping and reporting.
* * * * *
(c) Dealers. (1) A dealer who first receives Gulf or South Atlantic
coastal migratory pelagic fish must maintain records and submit
information as specified in Sec. 622.5(c).
(2) Alternate SRD. For the purpose of Sec. 622.5(c), in the states
from New York through Virginia, or in the waters off those states,
``SRD'' means the Science and Research Director, Northeast Fisheries
Science Center, NMFS, or a designee.
0
29. In Sec. 622.386, paragraphs (b) and (c) are added to read as
follows:
Sec. 622.386 Restrictions on sale/purchase.
* * * * *
(b) Coastal migratory pelagic fish harvested in or from the EEZ or
adjoining state waters by a vessel that has a valid Federal commercial
vessel permit or a charter vessel/headboat permit may be sold or
transferred only to a dealer who has a valid Gulf and
[[Page 19497]]
South Atlantic dealer permit, as required under Sec. 622.370(c)(1).
(c) Coastal migratory pelagic fish harvested in or from the Gulf or
South Atlantic EEZ may be first received by a dealer who has a valid
Gulf and South Atlantic dealer permit, as required under Sec.
622.370(c)(1), only from a vessel that has a valid Federal commercial
vessel permit, as required under Sec. 622.370(a), or a charter vessel/
headboat permit for coastal migratory pelagic fish, as required under
Sec. 622.370(b).
0
30. In Sec. 622.400, paragraph (a)(5) is added to read as follows:
Sec. 622.400 Permits and fees.
(a) * * *
(5) Dealer permits and conditions--(i) Permits. For a dealer to
first receive Gulf or South Atlantic spiny lobster harvested in or from
the EEZ, a Gulf and South Atlantic dealer permit must be issued to the
dealer.
(ii) State license and facility requirements. To obtain a dealer
permit, the applicant must have a valid state wholesaler's license in
the state(s) where the dealer operates, if required by such state(s),
and must have a physical facility at a fixed location in such state(s).
* * * * *
0
31. Add Sec. 622.401 to read as follows:
Sec. 622.401 Recordkeeping and reporting.
(a) Dealers. A dealer who first receives Gulf or South Atlantic
spiny lobster must maintain records and submit information as specified
in Sec. 622.5(c).
(b) [Reserved]
0
32. Add Sec. 622.416 to subpart R to read as follows:
Sec. 622.416 Restrictions on sale/purchase.
(a) Spiny lobster harvested in or from the EEZ or adjoining state
waters by a vessel that has a valid Federal commercial vessel permit
for spiny lobster, as required under Sec. 622.400(a)(1), or a valid
Federal tail-separation permit for spiny lobster, as required under
Sec. 622.400(a)(2), may be sold or transferred only to a dealer who
has a valid Gulf and South Atlantic dealer permit, as required under
Sec. 622.400(a)(5).
(b) Spiny lobster harvested in or from the EEZ may be first
received by a dealer who has a valid Gulf and South Atlantic dealer
permit, as required under Sec. 622.400(a)(5), only from a vessel that
has a valid Federal commercial vessel permit for spiny lobster or a
valid Federal tail-separation permit for spiny lobster.
[FR Doc. 2014-07983 Filed 4-8-14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-22-P