Fisheries of the Northeastern United States; Atlantic Bluefish Fishery; 2014 Atlantic Bluefish Specifications, 20161-20164 [2014-08202]
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Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 70 / Friday, April 11, 2014 / Proposed Rules
affect small governments, as described
in the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
of 1995 (Public Law 104–4);
• does not have Federalism
implications as specified in Executive
Order 13132 (64 FR 43255, August 10,
1999);
• is not an economically significant
regulatory action based on health or
safety risks subject to Executive Order
13045 (62 FR 19885, April 23, 1997);
• is not a significant regulatory action
subject to Executive Order 13211 (66 FR
28355, May 22, 2001);
• is not subject to requirements of
Section 12(d) of the National
Technology Transfer and Advancement
Act of 1995 (15 U.S.C. 272 note) because
application of those requirements would
be inconsistent with the CAA; and
• does not provide EPA with the
discretionary authority to address, as
appropriate, disproportionate human
health or environmental effects, using
practicable and legally permissible
methods, under Executive Order 12898
(59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994).
In addition, this rule, in which EPA
is proposing approval of the
redesignation requests and maintenance
plans for the Delaware portion of the
Philadelphia Area for the 1997 annual
and 2006 24-hour PM2.5 NAAQS and the
2008 comprehensive emissions
inventory for the 2006 24-hour PM2.5
NAAQS, does not have tribal
implications as specified by Executive
Order 13175 (65 FR 67249, November 9,
2000), because the SIP is not approved
to apply in Indian country located in the
state, and EPA notes that it will not
impose substantial direct costs on tribal
governments or preempt tribal law.
List of Subjects
40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air
pollution control, Nitrogen oxides,
Particulate matter, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Sulfur
oxides, Volatile organic compounds.
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
40 CFR Part 81
Air pollution control, National parks,
and Wilderness areas.
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
Dated: April 2, 2014.
Shawn M. Garvin,
Regional Administrator, Region III.
[FR Doc. 2014–08246 Filed 4–10–14; 8:45 am]
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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
50 CFR Part 648
[Docket No. 140214138–4138–01]
RIN 0648–XD139
Fisheries of the Northeastern United
States; Atlantic Bluefish Fishery; 2014
Atlantic Bluefish Specifications
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Proposed specifications; request
for comments.
AGENCY:
NMFS proposes specifications
for the 2014 Atlantic bluefish fishery,
including an annual catch limit, total
allowable landings, a commercial quota
and recreational harvest limit, and a
recreational possession limit. The intent
of this action is to establish the
allowable 2014 harvest levels and other
management measures to achieve the
target fishing mortality rate, consistent
with the Atlantic Bluefish Fishery
Management Plan.
DATES: Comments must be received on
or before April 28, 2014.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments,
identified by NOAA–NMFS–2014–0026,
by any one of the following methods:
• Electronic Submissions: Submit all
electronic public comments via the
Federal e-Rulemaking portal. Go to
www.regulations.gov/
#!docketDetail;D=NOAA-NMFS-20140026, click the ‘‘Comment Now!’’ icon,
complete the required fields, and enter
or attach your comments.
• Mail: Submit written comments to
John Bullard, Regional Administrator,
NMFS, Greater Atlantic Regional
Fisheries Office, 55 Great Republic
Drive, Gloucester, MA 01930.
Instructions: Comments sent by any
other method, to any other address or
individual, or received after the end of
the comment period, may not be
considered by NMFS. All comments
received are a part of the public record
and will generally be posted for public
viewing on www.regulations.gov
without change. All personal identifying
information (e.g., name, address, etc.),
confidential business information, or
otherwise sensitive information
submitted voluntarily by the sender will
be publically accessible. NMFS will
accept anonymous comments (enter
‘‘N/A’’ in the required fields if you wish
to remain anonymous). Attachments to
electronic comments will be accepted in
SUMMARY:
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Microsoft Word, Excel, or Adobe PDF
file formats only.
Copies of the specifications
document, including the supplemental
Environmental Assessment and Initial
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (EA/
IRFA) and other supporting documents
for the specifications, are available from
Dr. Christopher M. Moore, Executive
Director, Mid-Atlantic Fishery
Management Council, Suite 201, 800 N.
State Street, Dover, DE 19901. The
specifications document is also
accessible via the Internet at: https://
www.nero.noaa.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Carly Bari, Fishery Management
Specialist, (978) 281–9224.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
The Atlantic bluefish fishery is
managed cooperatively by the MidAtlantic Fishery Management Council
(Council) and the Atlantic States Marine
Fisheries Commission (Commission).
The management unit for bluefish
specified in the Atlantic Bluefish
Fishery Management Plan (FMP) is U.S.
waters of the western Atlantic Ocean.
Regulations implementing the FMP
appear at 50 CFR part 648, subparts A
and J. The regulations requiring annual
specifications are found at § 648.162.
The FMP requires the Council to
recommend, on an annual basis, the
annual catch limit (ACL), annual catch
target (ACT), and total allowable
landings (TAL) that will control fishing
mortality (F). An estimate of annual
discards is deducted from the ACT to
calculate the TAL that can be harvested
during the year by the commercial and
recreational fishing sectors. The FMP
requires that 17 percent of the ACT be
allocated to the commercial fishery,
with the remaining 83 percent allocated
to the recreational fishery. The Council
may also recommend a research setaside (RSA) quota, which is deducted
from the bluefish TAL (after any
applicable transfer) in an amount
proportional to the percentage of the
overall TAL as allocated to the
commercial and recreational sectors.
The annual review process for
bluefish requires that the Council’s
Bluefish Monitoring Committee and
Scientific and Statistical Committee
(SSC) review and make
recommendations based on the best
available scientific information,
including, but not limited to,
commercial and recreational catch/
landing statistics, current estimates of
fishing mortality, stock abundance,
discards for the recreational fishery, and
juvenile recruitment. Based on the
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recommendations of the Monitoring
Committee and SSC, the Council makes
a recommendation to the NMFS Greater
Atlantic Regional Administrator.
Because this FMP is a joint plan, the
Commission also meets during the
annual specification process to adopt
complementary measures.
The Council’s recommendations must
include supporting documentation
concerning the environmental,
economic, and social impacts of the
recommendations. NMFS is responsible
for reviewing these recommendations to
ensure that they achieve the FMP
objectives, and may modify them if they
do not. NMFS then publishes proposed
specifications in the Federal Register,
and after considering public comment,
NMFS will publish final specifications
in the Federal Register.
follows: (1) An estimated stock biomass
for 2012, B2012 = 277.359 million lb
(125,808 mt); and (2) an estimated
fishing mortality rate for 2012, F2012 =
0.097. Based on the updated 2012
estimate of bluefish stock biomass, the
bluefish stock is not considered
overfished: B2012 is slightly less than
BMSY, but well above the minimum
biomass threshold, 1⁄2 BMSY , of 162
million lb (73,526 mt). Estimates of F
have declined from 0.41 in 1991 to
0.097 in 2012. The updated model
results also conclude that the Atlantic
bluefish stock is not experiencing
overfishing; i.e., the most recent F (F2012
= 0.097) is less than the maximum F
overfishing threshold specified by SARC
41 (FMSY = 0.19). Bluefish was declared
rebuilt in 2009.
Proposed Specifications
2014 Catch Limits
Updated Model Estimates
According to Amendment 1 to the
FMP, overfishing for bluefish occurs
when fishing mortality exceeds the
fishing mortality rate that allows
maximum sustainable yield (FMSY), or
the maximum F threshold to be
achieved. The stock is considered
overfished if the biomass (B) falls below
the minimum biomass threshold, which
is defined as 1⁄2 BMSY. Amendment 1
also established that the long-term target
F is 90 percent of FMSY (FMSY = 0.19;
therefore Ftarget = 90 percent of FMSY, or
0.17), and the long-term target B is BMSY
= 324 million lb (147,052 mt).
An age-structured assessment
program (ASAP) model for bluefish was
approved by the 41st Stock Assessment
Review Committee (SARC 41) in 2005 to
estimate F and annual biomass. In
September 2013, the ASAP model was
updated in order to estimate the current
status of the bluefish stock (i.e., 2012
biomass and F estimates) and enable the
Monitoring Committee and SSC to
recommend 2014 specifications using
landings information and survey indices
through the 2012 fishing year. The
results of the assessment update were as
Following the framework
implemented by the Council’s ACL
Omnibus Amendment, the Council
recommended that ACL be set to
acceptable biological catch (ABC) for
2014 (24.432 million lb, 11,082 mt). No
deductions were recommended to
account for management uncertainty;
therefore, ABC=ACL=ACT. The ACT is
initially allocated between the
recreational fishery (83 percent) and the
commercial fishery (17 percent). After
deducting an estimate of recreational
discards (commercial discards are
considered negligible), the recreational
harvest limit (RHL) would be 16.927
million lb (7,678 mt) and the
commercial quota would be 4.153
million lb (1,884 mt).
The FMP specifies that, if 17 percent
of the TAL is less than 10.5 million lb,
and the recreational fishery is not
projected to land its harvest limit for the
upcoming year, the commercial fishery
may be allocated up to 10.5 million lb
as its quota, provided that the
combination of the projected
recreational landings and the
commercial quota does not exceed the
TAL. The RHL would then be adjusted
downward so that the TAL would be
unchanged.
The Council projected an estimated
annual recreational harvest for 2014 of
13.179 million lb (5,978 mt). As such, it
is expected that a transfer of up to 3.340
million lb (1,515 mt) from the
recreational sector to the commercial
sector could be approved. This option
represents the preferred alternative
recommended by the Council in its
specifications document. The actual
transfer amount in the final rule, if any,
will depend on the final 2013
recreational landings data.
RSA
The Council preliminarily approved
two research projects that would utilize
bluefish RSA quota and forwarded them
to NOAA’s Grants Management
Division. The Council preliminarily
approved 632,418 lb (287 mt) of RSA
quota for use by these projects during
2014. Proportional adjustments of these
amounts to the commercial and
recreational allocations would result in
a final commercial quota of 7.269
million lb (3,297 mt), and a final RHL
of 13.179 million lb (5,978 mt). NMFS
staff will update the commercial and
recreational allocations based on the
final 2014 RSA awards as part of the
final rule for the 2014 specifications.
Proposed Recreational Possession Limit
The Council recommended, and
NMFS proposes, to maintain the current
recreational possession limit of up to 15
fish per person to achieve the RHL for
2014.
Proposed State Commercial Allocations
The proposed state commercial
allocations for the recommended 2014
commercial quota are shown in Table 1,
based on the percentages specified in
the FMP. These quotas do not reflect
any adjustments for quota overages that
may have occurred in some states in
2013. Any potential deductions for
states that exceeded their quota in 2013
will be accounted for in the final rule.
TABLE 1—PROPOSED BLUEFISH COMMERCIAL STATE-BY-STATE ALLOCATIONS FOR 2014 (INCLUDING RSA DEDUCTIONS)
Percent share
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State
ME ................................................................................................................................................
NH ................................................................................................................................................
MA ................................................................................................................................................
RI .................................................................................................................................................
CT ................................................................................................................................................
NY ................................................................................................................................................
NJ .................................................................................................................................................
DE ................................................................................................................................................
MD ...............................................................................................................................................
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2014 CouncilProposed
commercial
quota (lb)
2014 CouncilProposed
commercial
quota (kg)
0.6685
0.4145
6.7167
6.8081
1.2663
10.3851
14.8162
1.8782
3.0018
48,593
30,130
488,233
494,877
92,047
754,888
1,076,980
136,525
218,199
22,041
13,667
221,459
224,472
41,752
342,411
488,510
61,927
98,973
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TABLE 1—PROPOSED BLUEFISH COMMERCIAL STATE-BY-STATE ALLOCATIONS FOR 2014 (INCLUDING RSA
DEDUCTIONS)—Continued
Percent share
2014 CouncilProposed
commercial
quota (lb)
2014 CouncilProposed
commercial
quota (kg)
VA ................................................................................................................................................
NC ................................................................................................................................................
SC ................................................................................................................................................
GA ................................................................................................................................................
FL .................................................................................................................................................
11.8795
32.0608
0.0352
0.0095
10.0597
863,514
2,330,480
2,559
691
731,233
391,683
1,057,088
1,161
313
331,682
Total ......................................................................................................................................
100.0001
7,268,949
3,297,140
State
Classification
Pursuant to section 304(b)(1)(A) of the
Magnuson-Stevens Fishery
Conservation and Management Act
(Magnuson-Stevens Act), the NMFS
Assistant Administrator has determined
that this proposed rule is consistent
with the Atlantic Bluefish FMP, other
provisions of the Magnuson-Stevens
Act, and other applicable law, subject to
further consideration after public
comment.
These proposed specifications are
exempt from review under Executive
Order 12866.
An IRFA was prepared, as required by
section 603 of the Regulatory Flexibility
Act (RFA), which describes the
economic impact this proposed rule, if
adopted, would have on small entities.
Description of the Reasons Why Action
by the Agency Is Being Considered
A description of the action and why
it is being considered are contained at
the beginning of this preamble and in
the SUMMARY.
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Statement of the Objective of, and Legal
Basis for, This Proposed Rule
The statement of the objective and the
legal basis for this action are contained
at the beginning of this preamble and in
the SUMMARY.
Description and Estimate of the Number
of Small Entities to Which This
Proposed Rule Would Apply
An active participant in the
commercial sector was defined as any
vessel that reported having landed 1 or
more pound (0.45 kg) in the Atlantic
bluefish fishery in 2011. The active
participants in the commercial sector
were defined using two sets of data. The
Northeast seafood dealer reports were
used to identify 742 vessels that landed
bluefish in states from Maine through
North Carolina in 2011. However, the
Northeast dealer database does not
provide information about fishery
participation in South Carolina, Georgia,
or Florida. South Atlantic Trip Ticket
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reports were used to identify 768 vessels
that landed bluefish in North Carolina
and 791 vessels that landed bluefish on
Florida’s east coast in 2011.1 Bluefish
landings in South Carolina and Georgia
were near zero in 2011, representing a
negligible proportion of the total
bluefish landings along the Atlantic
Coast. Therefore, this analysis assumed
that no vessel activity for these two
states took place in 2011. In recent
years, approximately 2,000 party/charter
vessels may have been active in the
bluefish fishery and/or have caught
bluefish.
Description of the Projected Reporting,
Recordkeeping, and Other Compliance
Requirements of This Proposed Rule
There are no new reporting or
recordkeeping requirements contained
in any of the alternatives considered for
this action.
Federal Rule Which May Duplicate,
Overlap, or Conflict With This Proposed
Rule
NMFS is not aware of any relevant
Federal rules that may duplicate,
overlap, or conflict with this proposed
rule.
Description of Significant Alternatives
to the Proposed Action Which
Accomplish the Stated Objectives of
Applicable Statues and Which Minimize
Any Significant Economic Impact on
Small Entities
Small businesses operating in
commercial and recreational (i.e., party
and charter vessel operations) finfish
fisheries have been defined by the Small
Business Administration as firms with
gross revenues of up to $19.0 and $7.0
million, respectively. The categories of
small entities likely to be affected by
this action include commercial and
charter/party vessel owners holding an
active Federal permit for Atlantic
1 Some of these vessels were also identified in the
Northeast dealer data; therefore, double counting is
possible.
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bluefish, as well as owners of vessels
that fish for Atlantic bluefish in state
waters. All federally permitted vessels
fall into the definition of small
businesses; thus, there would be no
disproportionate impacts between large
and small entities as a result of the
proposed rule.
When the 2014 specifications were set
last year, there were three alternatives
considered in the IRFA of the Original
EA. Since the bluefish stock was
updated in 2013, the Council
recommended an additional alternative
to be considered for the 2014
specifications through a supplement to
the Original EA. The IRFA in the Draft
Supplemental EA for this action
addresses two alternatives (including a
no action/status quo alternative) for the
2014 Atlantic bluefish fishing year. No
additional alternatives are considered in
this action because there is no other
alternative that would both achieve the
stated goals and objectives of the FMP
and minimize cost to the fishery. Any
other alternative considered would need
to be more restrictive than the proposed
action due to the specifications process
and the National Standard 1 guideline
requirement that catch limits cannot
exceed the SSC’s recommended ABC.
Both quota alternatives considered in
this analysis are based on various
commercial harvest levels for bluefish (a
low and medium level of harvest). For
analysis of impacts of both alternatives,
the maximum potential RSA quota of 3
percent of the TAL (703,385 lb (319 mt)
for the No Action Alternative and
632,418 lb (287 mt) for the Preferred
Action Alternative) was used. For
analysis of impacts of the No Action
Alternative, the recommended transfer
of 4.342 million lb (1,970 mt) from the
recreational sector to the commercial
sector was used. For analysis of impacts
of the Preferred Action Alternative, the
transfer of 3.340 million lb (1,515 mt)
from the recreational sector to the
commercial sector was used.
The No Action Alternative would
implement a TAL of 23.446 million lb
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applicable transfer described earlier in
the preamble and after deduction of the
RSA quota. The Preferred Action
Alternative (Council’s preferred) would
allocate 7.269 million lb (3,297 mt) to
the commercial sector, and 13.179
million lb (5,978 mt) to the recreational
(10,635 mt). The Preferred Action
Alternative would implement a TAL of
21.081 million lb (9,562 mt). The
proposed 2014 Atlantic bluefish
specification alternatives are shown in
Table 2, along with the resulting
commercial quota and RHL after any
sector for 2014. The No Action
Alternative would allocate 8.674 million
lb (3,934 mt) to the commercial sector
and leave 14.069 million lb (6,381 mt)
available to the recreational sector.
TABLE 2—PROPOSED 2014 ATLANTIC BLUEFISH SPECIFICATION ALTERNATIVES FOR TAL, COMMERCIAL QUOTA, AND RHL
Year
Alternatives
2014 ............
TAL
(million lb)
No Action ........................
Preferred Action ..............
23.446
21.081
Commercial Fishery Impacts
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To assess the impact of the
alternatives on commercial fisheries, the
Council conducted a threshold analysis
and analysis of potential changes in exvessel gross revenue that would result
from each alternative, using Northeast
dealer reports and South Atlantic Trip
Ticket reports.
Under the No Action Alternative, nine
vessels were projected to incur revenue
losses of more than 5 percent, while 147
vessels would incur revenue losses of
less than 5 percent, and 586 vessels
would incur no revenue losses. The
Preferred Action Alternative would
likely result in quota reductions for
vessels in New York and Massachusetts,
which could have negative economic
impacts. Under the Preferred Action
Alternative, 69 vessels were projected to
incur revenue losses of more than 5
percent, 594 vessels would incur losses
of less than 5 percent, and 79 vessels
would see no revenue changes. The
majority of vessels with greater than 5
percent of revenue losses had gross sales
of $10,000 or less, which may indicate
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Commercial
quota
(million lb)
TAL
(mt)
10,635
9,562
8.674
7.269
that the dependence on fishing for some
of these vessels is small. If commercial
quota is transferred from a state or states
that do not land their entire bluefish
quota for 2014, as was done in 2011 and
frequently in previous years, the
number of affected entities could
change, thus changing the adverse
economic impact on vessels landing in
the state(s) receiving quota transfers for
both alternatives.
Recreational Fishery Impacts
Under the No Action Alternative, the
recommended RHL for the recreational
sector (14.069 million lb, 6,381 mt) is
approximately 22 percent above the
recreational landings for 2011 (11.499
million lb, 5,216 mt). The Preferred
Action Alternative RHL (13.179 million
lb, 5,978 mt) is approximately 14
percent above the recreational landings
for 2011. It is not anticipated that the
recommend RHL will result in
decreased demand for party/charter boat
trips or affect angler participation in a
negative manner. Overall, it is not
expected that the final recreational
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Commercial
quota
(mt)
RHL
(million lb)
3,934
3,297
RHL
(mt)
14.096
13.179
6,381
5,978
management measures will affect gross
revenues of businesses providing goods
and services to anglers participating in
the party/charter boat, private/rental
boat, and shore fisheries for bluefish.
RSA Quota Impacts
For analysis of each alternative, the
maximum RSA quota amount (3 percent
of the TAL) was deducted from the
initial overall TAL adjusted 2014
commercial quotas and RHLs under
each alternative. Specifications of RSA
quota are expected to benefit all
participants in the fishery as a result of
improved data and information for
management or stock assessment
purposes.
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
Dated: April 7, 2014.
Samuel D. Rauch III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for
Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2014–08202 Filed 4–10–14; 8:45 am]
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 79, Number 70 (Friday, April 11, 2014)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 20161-20164]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2014-08202]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
50 CFR Part 648
[Docket No. 140214138-4138-01]
RIN 0648-XD139
Fisheries of the Northeastern United States; Atlantic Bluefish
Fishery; 2014 Atlantic Bluefish Specifications
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Proposed specifications; request for comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: NMFS proposes specifications for the 2014 Atlantic bluefish
fishery, including an annual catch limit, total allowable landings, a
commercial quota and recreational harvest limit, and a recreational
possession limit. The intent of this action is to establish the
allowable 2014 harvest levels and other management measures to achieve
the target fishing mortality rate, consistent with the Atlantic
Bluefish Fishery Management Plan.
DATES: Comments must be received on or before April 28, 2014.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments, identified by NOAA-NMFS-2014-0026,
by any one of the following methods:
Electronic Submissions: Submit all electronic public
comments via the Federal e-Rulemaking portal. Go to
www.regulations.gov/#!docketDetail;D=NOAA-NMFS-2014-0026, click the
``Comment Now!'' icon, complete the required fields, and enter or
attach your comments.
Mail: Submit written comments to John Bullard, Regional
Administrator, NMFS, Greater Atlantic Regional Fisheries Office, 55
Great Republic Drive, Gloucester, MA 01930.
Instructions: Comments sent by any other method, to any other
address or individual, or received after the end of the comment period,
may not be considered by NMFS. All comments received are a part of the
public record and will generally be posted for public viewing on
www.regulations.gov without change. All personal identifying
information (e.g., name, address, etc.), confidential business
information, or otherwise sensitive information submitted voluntarily
by the sender will be publically accessible. NMFS will accept anonymous
comments (enter ``N/A'' in the required fields if you wish to remain
anonymous). Attachments to electronic comments will be accepted in
Microsoft Word, Excel, or Adobe PDF file formats only.
Copies of the specifications document, including the supplemental
Environmental Assessment and Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
(EA/IRFA) and other supporting documents for the specifications, are
available from Dr. Christopher M. Moore, Executive Director, Mid-
Atlantic Fishery Management Council, Suite 201, 800 N. State Street,
Dover, DE 19901. The specifications document is also accessible via the
Internet at: https://www.nero.noaa.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Carly Bari, Fishery Management
Specialist, (978) 281-9224.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
The Atlantic bluefish fishery is managed cooperatively by the Mid-
Atlantic Fishery Management Council (Council) and the Atlantic States
Marine Fisheries Commission (Commission). The management unit for
bluefish specified in the Atlantic Bluefish Fishery Management Plan
(FMP) is U.S. waters of the western Atlantic Ocean. Regulations
implementing the FMP appear at 50 CFR part 648, subparts A and J. The
regulations requiring annual specifications are found at Sec. 648.162.
The FMP requires the Council to recommend, on an annual basis, the
annual catch limit (ACL), annual catch target (ACT), and total
allowable landings (TAL) that will control fishing mortality (F). An
estimate of annual discards is deducted from the ACT to calculate the
TAL that can be harvested during the year by the commercial and
recreational fishing sectors. The FMP requires that 17 percent of the
ACT be allocated to the commercial fishery, with the remaining 83
percent allocated to the recreational fishery. The Council may also
recommend a research set-aside (RSA) quota, which is deducted from the
bluefish TAL (after any applicable transfer) in an amount proportional
to the percentage of the overall TAL as allocated to the commercial and
recreational sectors.
The annual review process for bluefish requires that the Council's
Bluefish Monitoring Committee and Scientific and Statistical Committee
(SSC) review and make recommendations based on the best available
scientific information, including, but not limited to, commercial and
recreational catch/landing statistics, current estimates of fishing
mortality, stock abundance, discards for the recreational fishery, and
juvenile recruitment. Based on the
[[Page 20162]]
recommendations of the Monitoring Committee and SSC, the Council makes
a recommendation to the NMFS Greater Atlantic Regional Administrator.
Because this FMP is a joint plan, the Commission also meets during the
annual specification process to adopt complementary measures.
The Council's recommendations must include supporting documentation
concerning the environmental, economic, and social impacts of the
recommendations. NMFS is responsible for reviewing these
recommendations to ensure that they achieve the FMP objectives, and may
modify them if they do not. NMFS then publishes proposed specifications
in the Federal Register, and after considering public comment, NMFS
will publish final specifications in the Federal Register.
Proposed Specifications
Updated Model Estimates
According to Amendment 1 to the FMP, overfishing for bluefish
occurs when fishing mortality exceeds the fishing mortality rate that
allows maximum sustainable yield (FMSY), or the maximum F
threshold to be achieved. The stock is considered overfished if the
biomass (B) falls below the minimum biomass threshold, which is defined
as \1/2\ BMSY. Amendment 1 also established that the long-
term target F is 90 percent of FMSY (FMSY = 0.19;
therefore Ftarget = 90 percent of FMSY, or 0.17),
and the long-term target B is BMSY = 324 million lb (147,052
mt).
An age-structured assessment program (ASAP) model for bluefish was
approved by the 41st Stock Assessment Review Committee (SARC 41) in
2005 to estimate F and annual biomass. In September 2013, the ASAP
model was updated in order to estimate the current status of the
bluefish stock (i.e., 2012 biomass and F estimates) and enable the
Monitoring Committee and SSC to recommend 2014 specifications using
landings information and survey indices through the 2012 fishing year.
The results of the assessment update were as follows: (1) An estimated
stock biomass for 2012, B2012 = 277.359 million lb (125,808
mt); and (2) an estimated fishing mortality rate for 2012,
F2012 = 0.097. Based on the updated 2012 estimate of
bluefish stock biomass, the bluefish stock is not considered
overfished: B2012 is slightly less than BMSY, but
well above the minimum biomass threshold, \1/2\ BMSY , of
162 million lb (73,526 mt). Estimates of F have declined from 0.41 in
1991 to 0.097 in 2012. The updated model results also conclude that the
Atlantic bluefish stock is not experiencing overfishing; i.e., the most
recent F (F2012 = 0.097) is less than the maximum F
overfishing threshold specified by SARC 41 (FMSY = 0.19).
Bluefish was declared rebuilt in 2009.
2014 Catch Limits
Following the framework implemented by the Council's ACL Omnibus
Amendment, the Council recommended that ACL be set to acceptable
biological catch (ABC) for 2014 (24.432 million lb, 11,082 mt). No
deductions were recommended to account for management uncertainty;
therefore, ABC=ACL=ACT. The ACT is initially allocated between the
recreational fishery (83 percent) and the commercial fishery (17
percent). After deducting an estimate of recreational discards
(commercial discards are considered negligible), the recreational
harvest limit (RHL) would be 16.927 million lb (7,678 mt) and the
commercial quota would be 4.153 million lb (1,884 mt).
The FMP specifies that, if 17 percent of the TAL is less than 10.5
million lb, and the recreational fishery is not projected to land its
harvest limit for the upcoming year, the commercial fishery may be
allocated up to 10.5 million lb as its quota, provided that the
combination of the projected recreational landings and the commercial
quota does not exceed the TAL. The RHL would then be adjusted downward
so that the TAL would be unchanged.
The Council projected an estimated annual recreational harvest for
2014 of 13.179 million lb (5,978 mt). As such, it is expected that a
transfer of up to 3.340 million lb (1,515 mt) from the recreational
sector to the commercial sector could be approved. This option
represents the preferred alternative recommended by the Council in its
specifications document. The actual transfer amount in the final rule,
if any, will depend on the final 2013 recreational landings data.
RSA
The Council preliminarily approved two research projects that would
utilize bluefish RSA quota and forwarded them to NOAA's Grants
Management Division. The Council preliminarily approved 632,418 lb (287
mt) of RSA quota for use by these projects during 2014. Proportional
adjustments of these amounts to the commercial and recreational
allocations would result in a final commercial quota of 7.269 million
lb (3,297 mt), and a final RHL of 13.179 million lb (5,978 mt). NMFS
staff will update the commercial and recreational allocations based on
the final 2014 RSA awards as part of the final rule for the 2014
specifications.
Proposed Recreational Possession Limit
The Council recommended, and NMFS proposes, to maintain the current
recreational possession limit of up to 15 fish per person to achieve
the RHL for 2014.
Proposed State Commercial Allocations
The proposed state commercial allocations for the recommended 2014
commercial quota are shown in Table 1, based on the percentages
specified in the FMP. These quotas do not reflect any adjustments for
quota overages that may have occurred in some states in 2013. Any
potential deductions for states that exceeded their quota in 2013 will
be accounted for in the final rule.
Table 1--Proposed Bluefish Commercial State-by-State Allocations for 2014 (Including RSA Deductions)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2014 Council- 2014 Council-
Proposed Proposed
State Percent share commercial commercial
quota (lb) quota (kg)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ME.............................................................. 0.6685 48,593 22,041
NH.............................................................. 0.4145 30,130 13,667
MA.............................................................. 6.7167 488,233 221,459
RI.............................................................. 6.8081 494,877 224,472
CT.............................................................. 1.2663 92,047 41,752
NY.............................................................. 10.3851 754,888 342,411
NJ.............................................................. 14.8162 1,076,980 488,510
DE.............................................................. 1.8782 136,525 61,927
MD.............................................................. 3.0018 218,199 98,973
[[Page 20163]]
VA.............................................................. 11.8795 863,514 391,683
NC.............................................................. 32.0608 2,330,480 1,057,088
SC.............................................................. 0.0352 2,559 1,161
GA.............................................................. 0.0095 691 313
FL.............................................................. 10.0597 731,233 331,682
-----------------------------------------------
Total....................................................... 100.0001 7,268,949 3,297,140
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Classification
Pursuant to section 304(b)(1)(A) of the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery
Conservation and Management Act (Magnuson-Stevens Act), the NMFS
Assistant Administrator has determined that this proposed rule is
consistent with the Atlantic Bluefish FMP, other provisions of the
Magnuson-Stevens Act, and other applicable law, subject to further
consideration after public comment.
These proposed specifications are exempt from review under
Executive Order 12866.
An IRFA was prepared, as required by section 603 of the Regulatory
Flexibility Act (RFA), which describes the economic impact this
proposed rule, if adopted, would have on small entities.
Description of the Reasons Why Action by the Agency Is Being Considered
A description of the action and why it is being considered are
contained at the beginning of this preamble and in the SUMMARY.
Statement of the Objective of, and Legal Basis for, This Proposed Rule
The statement of the objective and the legal basis for this action
are contained at the beginning of this preamble and in the SUMMARY.
Description and Estimate of the Number of Small Entities to Which This
Proposed Rule Would Apply
An active participant in the commercial sector was defined as any
vessel that reported having landed 1 or more pound (0.45 kg) in the
Atlantic bluefish fishery in 2011. The active participants in the
commercial sector were defined using two sets of data. The Northeast
seafood dealer reports were used to identify 742 vessels that landed
bluefish in states from Maine through North Carolina in 2011. However,
the Northeast dealer database does not provide information about
fishery participation in South Carolina, Georgia, or Florida. South
Atlantic Trip Ticket reports were used to identify 768 vessels that
landed bluefish in North Carolina and 791 vessels that landed bluefish
on Florida's east coast in 2011.\1\ Bluefish landings in South Carolina
and Georgia were near zero in 2011, representing a negligible
proportion of the total bluefish landings along the Atlantic Coast.
Therefore, this analysis assumed that no vessel activity for these two
states took place in 2011. In recent years, approximately 2,000 party/
charter vessels may have been active in the bluefish fishery and/or
have caught bluefish.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Some of these vessels were also identified in the Northeast
dealer data; therefore, double counting is possible.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Description of the Projected Reporting, Recordkeeping, and Other
Compliance Requirements of This Proposed Rule
There are no new reporting or recordkeeping requirements contained
in any of the alternatives considered for this action.
Federal Rule Which May Duplicate, Overlap, or Conflict With This
Proposed Rule
NMFS is not aware of any relevant Federal rules that may duplicate,
overlap, or conflict with this proposed rule.
Description of Significant Alternatives to the Proposed Action Which
Accomplish the Stated Objectives of Applicable Statues and Which
Minimize Any Significant Economic Impact on Small Entities
Small businesses operating in commercial and recreational (i.e.,
party and charter vessel operations) finfish fisheries have been
defined by the Small Business Administration as firms with gross
revenues of up to $19.0 and $7.0 million, respectively. The categories
of small entities likely to be affected by this action include
commercial and charter/party vessel owners holding an active Federal
permit for Atlantic bluefish, as well as owners of vessels that fish
for Atlantic bluefish in state waters. All federally permitted vessels
fall into the definition of small businesses; thus, there would be no
disproportionate impacts between large and small entities as a result
of the proposed rule.
When the 2014 specifications were set last year, there were three
alternatives considered in the IRFA of the Original EA. Since the
bluefish stock was updated in 2013, the Council recommended an
additional alternative to be considered for the 2014 specifications
through a supplement to the Original EA. The IRFA in the Draft
Supplemental EA for this action addresses two alternatives (including a
no action/status quo alternative) for the 2014 Atlantic bluefish
fishing year. No additional alternatives are considered in this action
because there is no other alternative that would both achieve the
stated goals and objectives of the FMP and minimize cost to the
fishery. Any other alternative considered would need to be more
restrictive than the proposed action due to the specifications process
and the National Standard 1 guideline requirement that catch limits
cannot exceed the SSC's recommended ABC. Both quota alternatives
considered in this analysis are based on various commercial harvest
levels for bluefish (a low and medium level of harvest). For analysis
of impacts of both alternatives, the maximum potential RSA quota of 3
percent of the TAL (703,385 lb (319 mt) for the No Action Alternative
and 632,418 lb (287 mt) for the Preferred Action Alternative) was used.
For analysis of impacts of the No Action Alternative, the recommended
transfer of 4.342 million lb (1,970 mt) from the recreational sector to
the commercial sector was used. For analysis of impacts of the
Preferred Action Alternative, the transfer of 3.340 million lb (1,515
mt) from the recreational sector to the commercial sector was used.
The No Action Alternative would implement a TAL of 23.446 million
lb
[[Page 20164]]
(10,635 mt). The Preferred Action Alternative would implement a TAL of
21.081 million lb (9,562 mt). The proposed 2014 Atlantic bluefish
specification alternatives are shown in Table 2, along with the
resulting commercial quota and RHL after any applicable transfer
described earlier in the preamble and after deduction of the RSA quota.
The Preferred Action Alternative (Council's preferred) would allocate
7.269 million lb (3,297 mt) to the commercial sector, and 13.179
million lb (5,978 mt) to the recreational sector for 2014. The No
Action Alternative would allocate 8.674 million lb (3,934 mt) to the
commercial sector and leave 14.069 million lb (6,381 mt) available to
the recreational sector.
Table 2--Proposed 2014 Atlantic Bluefish Specification Alternatives for TAL, Commercial Quota, and RHL
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Commercial
Year Alternatives TAL (million TAL (mt) quota Commercial RHL (million RHL (mt)
lb) (million lb) quota (mt) lb)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2014.............................. No Action........... 23.446 10,635 8.674 3,934 14.096 6,381
Preferred Action.... 21.081 9,562 7.269 3,297 13.179 5,978
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Commercial Fishery Impacts
To assess the impact of the alternatives on commercial fisheries,
the Council conducted a threshold analysis and analysis of potential
changes in ex-vessel gross revenue that would result from each
alternative, using Northeast dealer reports and South Atlantic Trip
Ticket reports.
Under the No Action Alternative, nine vessels were projected to
incur revenue losses of more than 5 percent, while 147 vessels would
incur revenue losses of less than 5 percent, and 586 vessels would
incur no revenue losses. The Preferred Action Alternative would likely
result in quota reductions for vessels in New York and Massachusetts,
which could have negative economic impacts. Under the Preferred Action
Alternative, 69 vessels were projected to incur revenue losses of more
than 5 percent, 594 vessels would incur losses of less than 5 percent,
and 79 vessels would see no revenue changes. The majority of vessels
with greater than 5 percent of revenue losses had gross sales of
$10,000 or less, which may indicate that the dependence on fishing for
some of these vessels is small. If commercial quota is transferred from
a state or states that do not land their entire bluefish quota for
2014, as was done in 2011 and frequently in previous years, the number
of affected entities could change, thus changing the adverse economic
impact on vessels landing in the state(s) receiving quota transfers for
both alternatives.
Recreational Fishery Impacts
Under the No Action Alternative, the recommended RHL for the
recreational sector (14.069 million lb, 6,381 mt) is approximately 22
percent above the recreational landings for 2011 (11.499 million lb,
5,216 mt). The Preferred Action Alternative RHL (13.179 million lb,
5,978 mt) is approximately 14 percent above the recreational landings
for 2011. It is not anticipated that the recommend RHL will result in
decreased demand for party/charter boat trips or affect angler
participation in a negative manner. Overall, it is not expected that
the final recreational management measures will affect gross revenues
of businesses providing goods and services to anglers participating in
the party/charter boat, private/rental boat, and shore fisheries for
bluefish.
RSA Quota Impacts
For analysis of each alternative, the maximum RSA quota amount (3
percent of the TAL) was deducted from the initial overall TAL adjusted
2014 commercial quotas and RHLs under each alternative. Specifications
of RSA quota are expected to benefit all participants in the fishery as
a result of improved data and information for management or stock
assessment purposes.
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
Dated: April 7, 2014.
Samuel D. Rauch III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2014-08202 Filed 4-10-14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-22-P