Fisheries Off West Coast States; Pacific Coast Groundfish Fishery Management Plan; Commercial Sablefish Fishing Regulations and Electronic Fish Tickets, 84419-84434 [2016-28153]
Download as PDF
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 226 / Wednesday, November 23, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
mstockstill on DSK3G9T082PROD with RULES
Streets NW., Washington, DC 20551. A
copy of the comments may also be
submitted to the OMB desk officer (1) by
mail to U.S. Office of Management and
Budget, 725 17th Street NW., 10235,
Washington, DC 20503; (2) by facsimile
to 202–395–6974; or (3) by email to:
oira_submission@omb.eop.gov,
Attention, Federal Reserve Board
Agency Desk Officer.
Proposed Revisions, With Extension for
Three Years, of the Following
Information Collections
(1) Title of Information Collection:
Applications for Subscription to,
Adjustment in Holding of, and
Cancellation of Federal Reserve Bank
Stock.
Agency Form Number: FR 2030, FR
2030a, FR 2056, FR 2086, FR 2086a, FR
2087.
OMB Control Number: 7100–0042.
Frequency of Response: On occasion.
Affected Public: Businesses or other
for-profit.
Respondents: National, State Member,
and Nonmember banks.
Abstract: These application forms are
required by the Federal Reserve Act and
Regulation I. These forms must be used
by a new or existing member bank
(including a national bank) to request
the issuance, and adjustment in, or
cancellation of Federal Reserve Bank
stock. The forms must contain certain
certifications by the applicants, as well
as certain other financial and
shareholder data that is needed by the
Federal Reserve to process the request.
Current Actions: The dividend rate to
which a Reserve Bank stockholder is
entitled under section 7 of the Federal
Reserve Act (as amended by the FAST
Act) depends on the stockholder’s ‘‘total
consolidated assets.’’ Section 209.2(a)
requires a bank to report whether its
total consolidated assets exceed $10
billion when it applies for membership
in the Federal Reserve System. Section
209.3(d)(3) requires a bank to report
whether its total consolidated assets
exceed $10 billion when it applies for
additional capital stock after merging
with another entity. The Board is
proposing to revise FR 2030, FR 2030a,
and FR 2056 to require that a bank
report whether its total consolidated
assets exceed $10 billion when it
applies to join the Federal Reserve
System or applies for additional capital
stock after merging with another entity.
The proposed revisions would increase
the estimated average hours per
response for FR 2030 and FR 2030a by
half an hour. The proposed revisions
would increase the estimated average
hours per response for FR 2056 by one
quarter of an hour. The Board is not
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:26 Nov 22, 2016
Jkt 241001
proposing to revise FR 2086, FR 2086A,
and FR 2087. The draft reporting forms
are available on the Board’s public Web
site at https://www.federalreserve.gov/
apps/reportforms/review.aspx.
Estimated annual reporting hours: FR
2030: 4 hours; FR 2030a: 2 hours; FR
2056: 1,000 hours; FR 2086: 5 hours; FR
2086a: 40 hours; FR 2087: 1 hour.
Estimated average hours per response:
FR 2030: 1 hour; FR 2030a: 1 hour; FR
2056: 0.75 hours; FR 2086: 0.5 hours; FR
2086a: 0.5 hours; FR 2087: 0.5 hours.
Number of respondents: FR 2030: 4;
FR 2030a: 2; FR 2056: 1,333; FR 2086:
10; FR 2086a: 79; FR 2087: 1.
(2) Title of Information Collection:
Application for Membership in the
Federal Reserve System.
Agency Form Number: FR 2083, FR
2083A, FR 2083B, and FR 2083C.
OMB Control Number: 7100–0046.
Frequency of Response: On occasion.
Affected Public: Businesses or other
for-profit.
Respondents: Newly organized banks
that seek to become state member banks,
or existing banks or savings institutions
that seek to convert to state member
bank status.
Abstract: The application for
membership is a required one-time
submission that collects the information
necessary for the Federal Reserve to
evaluate the statutory criteria for
admission of a new or existing state
bank into membership in the Federal
Reserve System. The application
collects managerial, financial, and
structural data.
Current Actions: The dividend rate to
which a Reserve Bank stockholder is
entitled under Section 7 of the Federal
Reserve Act (as amended by the FAST
Act) depends on the stockholder’s ‘‘total
consolidated assets.’’ Section 209.2(a)
requires a bank to report whether its
total consolidated assets exceed $10
billion when it applies for membership
in the Federal Reserve System. The
Board is proposing to revise FR 2083A
and FR 2083B to require that a bank
report whether its total consolidated
assets exceed $10 billion when it
applies to join the Federal Reserve
System. The proposed revisions would
increase the estimated average hours per
response by half an hour. The Board is
not proposing to revise FR 2083 or FR
2083C. The draft reporting forms are
available on the Board’s public Web site
at https://www.federalreserve.gov/apps/
reportforms/review.aspx. The estimated
annual reporting hours listed below,
and the estimated average hours per
response, are cumulative totals for FR
2083, FR 2083A, FR 2083B, and FR
2083C.
PO 00000
Frm 00031
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
84419
Estimated annual reporting hours:
207 hours.
Estimated average hours per response:
4.5 hours.
Number of respondents: 46.
List of Subjects in 12 CFR Part 209
Banks and banking, Federal Reserve
System, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Securities.
PART 209—FEDERAL RESERVE BANK
CAPITAL STOCK (REGULATION I)
Accordingly, the interim final rule
amending 12 CFR part 209, which was
published at 81 FR 9082 on February 24,
2016, is adopted as a final rule without
change.
By order of the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System, November 18, 2016.
Robert deV. Frierson,
Secretary of the Board.
[FR Doc. 2016–28231 Filed 11–22–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6210–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
15 CFR Part 902
50 CFR Part 660
[Docket No. 140905757–6999–02]
RIN 0648–BE42
Fisheries Off West Coast States;
Pacific Coast Groundfish Fishery
Management Plan; Commercial
Sablefish Fishing Regulations and
Electronic Fish Tickets
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
This final rule revises fishery
monitoring and equipment requirements
for all commercial groundfish fisheries.
In particular, it establishes a
requirement for submitting electronic
fish tickets (EFT) in the limited entry
fixed gear fisheries and open access
fisheries. This final rule also: revises
administrative procedures for limited
entry permits, providing greater
flexibility and efficiencies for limited
entry groundfish fishery participants;
requires vessels registered to Vessel
Monitoring Systems (VMS) to make an
initial declaration report; and makes
administrative changes and clarifying
edits to improve consistency of the
regulations with past Pacific Fishery
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\23NOR1.SGM
23NOR1
84420
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 226 / Wednesday, November 23, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
mstockstill on DSK3G9T082PROD with RULES
Management Council (Council) actions
and with the Pacific Coast Groundfish
Fishery Management Plan (FMP). This
action improves monitoring and
administration of the limited entry
sablefish primary fishery, and addresses
unforeseen issues arising out of the
evolution of commercial sablefish
fisheries and subsequent regulations.
DATES: This rule is effective December
23, 2016, except for the amendments to
§ 660.212(a)(3) through (5) and
§ 660.312(a)(3) through (5), which will
be effective January 1, 2017.
ADDRESSES: Background information
and documents are available at the
Pacific Fishery Management Council’s
Web site at https://www.pcouncil.org/.
NMFS prepared a Final Regulatory
Flexibility Analysis (FRFA), which is
summarized in the Classification section
of this final rule. Copies of the FRFA
and the Small Entity Compliance Guide
are available from William W. Stelle, Jr.,
Regional Administrator, West Coast
Region, NMFS, 7600 Sand Point Way
NE., Seattle, WA 98115–0070; or by
phone at 206–526–6150. Copies of the
Small Entity Compliance Guide are also
available on the West Coast Regional
Office Web site at https://
www.westcoast.fisheries.noaa.gov/.
Written comments regarding the
burden-hour estimates or other aspects
of the collection-of-information
requirements contained in this final rule
may be submitted to William W. Stelle,
Jr., Regional Administrator, West Coast
Region, NMFS, 7600 Sand Point Way
NE., Seattle, WA 98115–0070, and to
OMB by email to OIRA_Submission@
omb.eop.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Gretchen Hanshew, 206–526–6147,
gretchen.hanshew@noaa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Summary of Major Actions
This final rule improves the
timeliness and accuracy of sablefish
catch reporting in the limited entry
fixed gear fisheries and open access
fisheries, provides more flexibility and
efficiencies for harvesters in the
Shorebased Individual Fishing Quota
(IFQ) Program and limited entry fixed
gear fisheries, and implements several
administrative and clarifying changes to
monitoring and permitting provisions of
regulations for all of the limited entry
and open access commercial groundfish
fisheries on the West Coast.
This final rule contains eight major
actions, along with related minor
clarifications and non-substantive
changes. The first action is a new
requirement for electronic fish tickets to
be submitted for all commercial
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:26 Nov 22, 2016
Jkt 241001
landings of sablefish delivered to
Washington, Oregon and California fish
buyers. The second action provides
qualified vessel owners an opportunity
to apply for an exemption to the
ownership limitation of three permits in
the limited entry sablefish primary
fishery. The third action allows a single
vessel to be simultaneously (jointly)
registered to multiple limited entry
permits, one of which may have a trawl
gear endorsement. The fourth action
prohibits vessels that have been granted
an at-sea processing exemption for
sablefish in the limited entry fixed gear
fishery from processing sablefish at sea
when that vessel is participating in the
Shorebased IFQ Program. The fifth
action clarifies that, consistent with
FMP Amendment 6, sablefish catch in
incidental open access fisheries is
counted against the open access
allocation, and is not deducted from the
commercial harvest guideline. The sixth
action requires any vessel that has a
VMS registered with NMFS Office of
Law Enforcement (OLE) to submit a
declaration report with OLE. The
seventh action updates and simplifies
equipment requirements for electronic
fish tickets. The eighth action clarifies
existing regulatory language prohibiting
the retention of groundfish species
taken in the limited entry fixed gear
fishery beyond the allowable quota. In
addition, the action includes
housekeeping changes that are intended
to better align the regulations with
defined terms, and to provide clarity
and consistency between paragraphs.
Background
The groundfish fisheries in the
exclusive economic zone (EEZ) off the
west coast of the United States are
managed under the FMP. The FMP was
prepared by the Pacific Fishery
Management Council (Council) under
the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery
Conservation and Management Act
(Magnuson-Stevens Act) as amended by
the Consolidated Appropriations Act of
2004 (Pub. L. 108–199, section 801).
Regulations implementing provisions of
the FMP are located at 50 CFR part 660,
subparts C through G.
This final rule includes several
actions that revise regulations for
commercial fisheries that harvest
sablefish. These regulatory changes
apply to the Shorebased IFQ Program,
the limited entry fixed gear fishery,
which includes the limited entry
sablefish primary fishery and the daily
trip limit (DTL) fishery, and the open
access fishery. A more detailed
description of the fisheries affected by
this rulemaking, and the major
provisions of this action, is contained in
PO 00000
Frm 00032
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
the June 1, 2016, proposed rule (81 FR
34947).
1. Electronic Fish Ticket Requirement
This final rule includes a Federal
electronic fish ticket submittal
requirement for all commercial
groundfish deliveries that include
sablefish. An electronic fish ticket is a
web-based form used to send groundfish
landing data to the Pacific States Marine
Fisheries Commission (PSMFC).
Electronic fish tickets are used to collect
information similar to the information
required in state fish receiving tickets or
landing receipts (henceforth referred to
as paper tickets), but do not replace or
change any state requirements. This
requirement will improve the timeliness
and accuracy of catch data for
monitoring harvest relative to applicable
tier limits in the limited entry fixed gear
sablefish fishery and trip limits in the
limited entry fixed gear and open access
DTL fisheries. Electronic fish tickets
have been required for IFQ species since
the start of the Shorebased IFQ Program
in 2011, and have allowed vessel
owners/operators, buyers and dealers,
and fishery managers timely access to
catch information. This final rule
expands the use of electronic fish tickets
to the limited entry fixed gear and open
access fisheries, and is expected to have
similar benefits regarding timely access
to catch data.
2. Exemption to Limited Entry Sablefish
Permit Ownership Limitation
Regulations (§ 660.25(b)(3)(iv)(C))
state that no individual person,
partnership, or corporation in
combination may have ownership
interest in or hold more than three
permits with sablefish endorsements
either simultaneously or cumulatively
over the primary season (hereby referred
to as ‘‘ownership limitation’’). This
ownership limitation was intended to
prevent concentration of harvest
privileges in the Pacific coast sablefish
primary fishery. However, this
restriction has led to unforeseen
complications because many persons,
partnerships and corporations have
harvest privileges in both the Alaska
IFQ sablefish fishery and the Pacific
coast sablefish fishery. Under the
existing regulations, Alaska IFQ holders
are required to have a partial ownership
interest in a vessel that fishes for their
IFQ. These IFQ holders are deemed to
hold any Pacific Coast permits with
sablefish endorsements associated with
a vessel in which they have an
ownership interest. This has resulted in
Alaska IFQ holders being ‘‘limited out’’
in the Pacific Coast sablefish primary
fishery, even though they do not benefit
E:\FR\FM\23NOR1.SGM
23NOR1
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 226 / Wednesday, November 23, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
mstockstill on DSK3G9T082PROD with RULES
from the permits associated with the
vessels in which they have an interest.
The Council recommended, and NMFS
is implementing through this final rule,
a process by which vessel owners who
meet certain qualifying criteria may
petition NMFS for a limited exemption
to the ownership limitation, as
described in detail in the preamble to
the proposed rule
3. Joint Registration
Originally, the license limitation
program (LLP), implemented through
Amendment 6 to the FMP (57 FR 54001,
November 16, 1992, see also the EA
under ADDRESSES for more information
on the LLP), allowed vessels to register
both a trawl and fixed gear (longline and
fishpot) endorsed permit at the same
time. Subsequently, regulations were
modified and no longer allow vessels to
register multiple limited entry permits
unless the permits are sablefishendorsed and stacked for use in the
limited entry fixed gear sablefish
primary fishery. This restriction was put
in place to keep trawl and fixed gear
fisheries temporally separated to meet
enforcement and monitoring needs. In
2004, a vessel monitoring program was
implemented that allowed vessels to
identify which fishery they were
participating in through a declaration
system, which eliminated the need for
temporal separation. As part of FMP
Amendment 20 trailing actions, in April
2012 the Council recommended that
vessels registered to a limited entry
trawl permit be allowed to
simultaneously register to a limited
entry fixed gear permit, also called
‘‘joint registration.’’ This final rule
implements joint registration and
clarifies how fishery-specific regulations
still apply to vessels that are jointly
registered. Joint registration is permitted
in one of two configurations, which are
described in additional detail in the
June 1, 2016, proposed rule (81 FR
34947):
(1) Configuration A: One trawl permit
and one, two, or three sablefish
endorsed permits.
(2) Configuration B: One trawl permit
and one limited entry fixed gear permit.
Registering a vessel to a limited entry
permit with a specific endorsement
often triggers certain requirements in
the groundfish regulations. Joint
registration is not intended to change
fishing operations of groundfish
fisheries or change requirements that are
applicable to vessels because of the type
of the endorsement(s) on the limited
entry permit to which they are
registered, unless otherwise described
above and in the June 1, 2016, proposed
rule (81 FR 34947).
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:26 Nov 22, 2016
Jkt 241001
4. Restrictions on At-Sea Processing of
Sablefish
Processing of groundfish at-sea is
prohibited for vessels fishing in the
Shorebased IFQ Program or limited
entry fixed gear fishery, unless
exempted from that prohibition. One
such exemption applies to certain
vessels fishing in the limited entry fixed
gear sablefish primary fishery. Those
exempted vessels may freeze sablefish
at-sea during the limited entry fixed
gear sablefish primary fishery.
When trawl rationalization was
implemented in 2011, the Council
recommended that at-sea processing of
groundfish in the Shorebased IFQ
Program be prohibited, with limited
exemptions. Regulations at § 660.112
(b)(1)(xii) prohibit at-sea processing of
groundfish, and also list the exemptions
that have been granted to date,
including an exemption from the
prohibition of at-sea processing that
applies in the sablefish primary fishery.
As written, those regulations grant
vessels with an exemption from the
prohibition of at-sea processing in the
sablefish primary fishery when fishing
in the Shorebased IFQ Program.
However, regulations at § 660.25(b)(6)(i)
only allow the sablefish at-sea
processing exemption when the vessel
is registered to a sablefish-endorsed
limited entry permit.
Currently, because vessels cannot be
registered to a sablefish-endorsed
limited entry permit and a trawlendorsed permit at the same time,
Shorebased IFQ vessels cannot take
advantage of the sablefish at-sea
processing exemption. However, this
rule’s joint registration provisions
would allow a vessel to register to a
trawl endorsed and a sablefish endorsed
limited entry permit simultaneously. If
the exemption at § 660.112(b)(1)(xii)(B)
is not removed, joint registration could
allow vessels with an exemption from
the at-sea processing prohibition for the
sablefish primary fishery to also process
sablefish at sea in the Shorebased IFQ
Program. Consistent with the Council’s
recommendation, this rule removes the
exemption to the prohibition of at-sea
processing (at § 660.112(b)(1)(xii)(B))
that extended the limited entry fixed
gear exemption in § 660.25(b)(6)(i) to
vessels fishing sablefish in the
Shorebased IFQ Program. Also, in light
of joint registration, a clarifying
sentence is added to § 660.25(b)(6)(i),
stating that the at-sea processing
exemption only applies to at-sea
processing of sablefish caught in the
limited entry fixed gear sablefish
primary fishery.
PO 00000
Frm 00033
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
84421
During development of this rule,
NMFS noted that a similar situation as
the one described above may occur with
the exemption from the processing-atsea prohibition for non-whiting
groundfish. When a vessel with a nonwhiting exemption from that
prohibition in the Shorebased IFQ
Program is jointly registered, it could
utilize that exemption when fishing in
non-IFQ fisheries. NMFS proposed a
clarifying sentence at § 660.25(b)(6)(ii),
stating that the exemption only applies
to processing non-whiting groundfish
caught in the Shorebased IFQ Program,
which is consistent with the Council’s
recommendation under joint registration
with regards to the sablefish at-sea
processing exemption. NMFS requested
public comment on this issue, and
received none. Therefore, the clarifying
addition to § 660.25(b)(6)(ii) is included
in this final rule. This final rule
implements joint registration and does
not allow at-sea processing of nonwhiting groundfish in non-IFQ fisheries,
as the exemption was granted to vessels
participating in the Shorebased IFQ
Program.
5. Sablefish Allocations North of 36° N.
lat.
The allocation structure for sablefish
north of 36° N. lat. was established in
FMP Amendment 6. In April 2009, the
Council recommended final preferred
intersector allocations for groundfish
species under Amendment 21. The
Council and NMFS recommended that
no change be made to the Amendment
6 allocation structure for sablefish.
However, FMP Amendment 21 and its
implementing regulations slightly
changed the process for allocating
sablefish north of 36° N. lat. (75 FR
60868, October 1, 2010). This final rule
includes regulations aligning sablefish
north of 36° N. lat. allocations with the
Amendment 6 allocation structure, as
recommended by the Council in 2009,
and as described in the June 1, 2016
proposed rule (81 FR 34947).
6. Declaration Reports for Vessels
Registered to a VMS Unit
In 2004, the Council and NMFS
implemented a vessel monitoring
program. Since 2004, all commercial
fishing vessels that take and retain
groundfish in federal waters, or transit
through federal waters with groundfish
on board, are required to have a working
VMS. The VMS, along with a system of
fishing declaration reporting
requirements, allows for monitoring and
enforcement of areas closed to fishing.
With this 2004 program, NMFS typeapproved hardware and software, or
‘‘units,’’ were installed on vessels in
E:\FR\FM\23NOR1.SGM
23NOR1
84422
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 226 / Wednesday, November 23, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
order to meet these new program
requirements for the groundfish fishery.
When a VMS unit is installed on a
vessel, it is registered with NMFS OLE
and catalogued.
There are a number of VMS units that
have registered with OLE but those
vessels have never made a declaration
report. This final rule includes
regulation changes at § 660.13(d) that
require all vessels registered to a VMS
unit to submit a declaration report.
Vessels registered to a VMS unit are
required to submit a declaration report,
regardless of fishing activities.
Obtaining a declaration report from
these vessels will give OLE the
information necessary to monitor the
activities of these vessels relative to the
applicable regulations. This final rule
also revises fisher declarations at
§ 660.13(d)(5)(iv)(A)(24) to include
‘‘other.’’ This category will include onthe-water activities that may not be
fishing (e.g., scientific research
activities). NMFS anticipates vessels
may make a declaration of ‘‘other’’ if
they are not fishing.
mstockstill on DSK3G9T082PROD with RULES
7. Equipment Requirements for
Electronic Fish Tickets
As described in the proposed rule, a
new interface has been developed that
uses the internet for both entry and
submission of electronic fish ticket data.
The changes to regulations at
§ 660.15(d) in this rule reflect the move
to a web-based electronic fish ticket for
all first receivers. Note that an internet
connection is necessary for all steps for
completion of an electronic fish ticket,
from creating the new ticket through
submission. To reflect these changes,
the definition of ‘‘electronic fish ticket’’
at § 660.11 is also revised to reflect the
web-based form used to send electronic
fish ticket information to the PSMFC.
8. Prohibitions Regarding ‘‘Take and
Retain’’
NMFS is replacing ‘‘taking, retaining’’
with ‘‘taking and retaining,’’ consistent
with the Council’s recommendations
under PCGFMP Amendment 14 and
described in the 2016 proposed rule.
With the exception of the sablefish
primary fishery, in commercial
groundfish fisheries vessels may ‘‘take’’
more than a single cumulative trip limit
of a species while fishing for other
species, but they may not retain any
species above its cumulative trip limit.
The phrase ‘‘taking, retaining’’ in this
context is not clear. Therefore, to better
align prohibitions for enforcing trip
limits with the definition of ‘‘trip limit,’’
to improve enforceability of trip limit
prohibitions, and to bring consistency to
regulations that apply to commercial
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:26 Nov 22, 2016
Jkt 241001
groundfish fisheries, prohibitions at
§§ 660.12(a)(6), 660.212(a)(2), and
660.212(d)(1) and (2) are revised from
‘‘take, retain’’ to ‘‘take and retain.’’
9. Related Minor Clarifications and
Non-Substantive Changes
There are several outdated
regulations, mis-specified crossreferences, inconsistencies in
terminology, and areas in need of
clarification throughout the groundfish
regulations that pertain to commercial
sablefish fishing. For the reasons stated
in the proposed rule, this rule
implements all of the updates,
corrections, clarifications and nonsubstantive edits described in the
proposed rule.
Response to Comments
During the comment period of the
proposed rule, NMFS received two
comment letters from participants in the
fishing industry in support of the
proposed regulation changes to allow
joint registration of trawl and non-trawl
permits and the limited exemption from
ownership limitation restrictions. NMFS
also received a letter of comment
regarding VMS equipment requirements
on board fishing vessels, which are not
revised in this rule, are outside the
scope of this action, and, therefore, are
not discussed further here. NMFS
addresses other comments below:
Comment 1: Information on an
electronic fish ticket will not
immediately become available to quota
managers because the data will need to
be entered by data entry personnel who
do not work over the weekend.
Response: This is an automated
system, and availability of submitted
electronic fish ticket data does not rely
on action by system administrators.
Upon submission of the electronic fish
ticket by first receivers, catch
information is immediately available to
vessel operators, enforcement, and
federal and state fishery managers.
Comment 2: The time requirement for
submitting a fish ticket under the new
regulation is inconsistent with some
California state fish ticket and transport
ticket regulations.
Response: California Department of
Fish and Wildlife is in the process of
developing a monitoring system that
incorporates electronic tickets. While
the electronic fish tickets required by
this provision contain similar
information as submitted on state
tickets, it does not replace or change the
state requirements (§ 660.11).
Furthermore, any vessels participating
in federal fisheries are subject to federal
regulations (§ 660.2).
PO 00000
Frm 00034
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
Comment 3: NMFS should
acknowledge that interruption of
internet service, equipment failures, etc.
may make electronic fish tickets
impractical.
Response: NMFS has implemented a
system in which a web browser on any
electronic device can be used to create
and submit electronic fish tickets.
Therefore, even allowing for possible,
temporary interruptions in service or
equipment problems, 24 hours is
deemed an appropriate amount of time
to complete the fish ticket.
Comment 4: In some situations, the
fish have been both landed and
transported by the vessel operator, and
no paperwork has been completed
because the fish buyer has not yet taken
possession of them.
Response: The trigger for written
documentation of the landing is not the
point at which the fish buyer or the first
receiver takes possession of the fish.
Written documentation of the fish
offloaded from a vessel is required once
the fish are removed from the vessel.
Any fish removed from a vessel is
considered a ‘‘landing,’’ per the
definition at § 660.11. If the fish
removed from the vessel will not have
an electronic fish ticket submitted prior
to transport, the fish must be
accompanied by a dock ticket (or a
transportation ticket for vessels landing
into California) with the information
needed to complete the electronic fish
ticket, per regulations at §§ 660.213 and
660.313. It is the responsibility of the
vessel operator or other person taking
possession of the fish upon landing to
comply with the requirements to
complete the dock ticket or
transportation ticket.
Comment 5: Regulations for the
landing of fish and requirements of the
new rule will unfairly impact first
receivers that are not located at a
processing plant.
Response: Regulations implemented
in this rule were explicitly drafted to
address the fact that some first receivers
are not located at processing plants, by
allowing for use of dock tickets. If the
first receiver is taking possession of fish
outside of regular business hours, a cosigned dock ticket meets the need for
documentation of agreement between
the first receiver and vessel operator
regarding the specifics of the landing.
The dock ticket must include the
electronic fish ticket number, which can
be generated remotely via any device
with a web browser and internet
connection (e.g., mobile phone), and the
rest of the fish ticket can be completed
and submitted from dock ticket data
within 24 hours.
E:\FR\FM\23NOR1.SGM
23NOR1
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 226 / Wednesday, November 23, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
mstockstill on DSK3G9T082PROD with RULES
Comment 6: The requirement of
electronic fish tickets will cause
hardship to first receivers that must
purchase and maintain the hardware
and software needed to submit
electronic fish tickets.
Response: The improved timeliness of
catch data will increase the ability to
manage the fishery to the benefit of all
participants, offsetting the cost of
equipment needed to complete
electronic fish tickets. The electronic
ticket portal is web-based, and can be
accessed from any electronic device
(such as a computer, tablet, or mobile
phone) with an internet browser,
allowing for increased accessibility with
multiple ways to meet reporting
requirements. NMFS notes that
requirements for electronic fish ticket
submission will include the ability of
first receivers to request a temporary
waiver from these requirements,
enabling them to submit paper tickets
on a temporary basis. Temporary
waivers will be granted on a case-bycase basis by NMFS, per regulations at
§§ 660.213 and 660.313.
Comment 7: Those responsible for
filling out fish tickets may not have the
training and technical knowledge to do
so, and may be assisted by fishermen or
others as is currently done for paper
tickets.
Response: NMFS is providing a
written compliance guide, and PSMFC
staff will be available to provide training
to help ensure that all first receivers are
able to perform the duties required in
this rule. See ADDRESSES for details on
where to find these materials. Also,
even though the first receiver must sign
the fish ticket, regulations implemented
in this final rule do not prohibit a first
receiver from seeking technical
assistance from a third party.
Changes From the Proposed Rule
The electronic fish ticket
requirements in the proposed and final
rule offer a new, more flexible option
that allows for vessels fishing in the
sablefish primary fishery to apportion
their sablefish from a single landing
against multiple tier limits (if the vessel
is registered to multiple sablefish
endorsed permits), or against their the
remainder of their tier limit(s) and
applicable daily trip limits. During
development of the proposed rule, it
was thought that the electronic fish
ticket system requirements were such
that, in these situations, separate and
distinct electronic fish tickets would
need to be filled out and submitted for
each part of the landing. For example,
the first ticket for the delivery would
document the sablefish pounds
counting toward ‘‘Permit 13, Tier 2’’ and
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:26 Nov 22, 2016
Jkt 241001
a second ticket for the same delivery
would document the sablefish pounds
counting toward ‘‘Permit 21, Tier 3.’’
Therefore, if a vessel operator chose to
apportion their sablefish as described
above, proposed regulations required
multiple fish tickets to be filled out.
Each fish ticket is estimated to take
approximately 10 minutes to complete
and submit.
Since publication of the proposed
rule, there has been further exploration
of how to document portions of a single
sablefish delivery against either
multiple tier limits or against both tier
limits and DTL limits without having to
duplicate some of the information by
requiring submittal of multiple
electronic fish tickets. A mechanism has
been developed that allows catch of
sablefish to be apportioned within a
single electronic fish ticket when a
vessel operator wishes to take advantage
of the flexibility to apportion sablefish
catch between permits (i.e., among
sablefish tiers associated with the
permits registered for use with the
vessel) or between fisheries (i.e., among
sablefish tiers harvested in the sablefish
primary fishery and the DTL fishery).
Utilizing this updated approach in the
electronic fish ticket system, the
requirement included in the proposed
rule at § 660.213(e)(2)(iii) to submit
multiple electronic fish tickets for a
single delivery is unnecessary.
Therefore, in this final rule, NMFS is
removing the requirement at
§ 660.213(e)(2)(iii) to submit multiple
electronic fish tickets when a vessel
operator wishes to take advantage of the
flexibility to apportion sablefish catch
between permits or between fisheries (as
described above). This final rule
provides vessel operators with the same
flexibilities and gives fishery managers
the same permit and landing
information as the proposed regulations.
However, the regulations at
§ 660.213(e)(2)(iii) in this final rule are
anticipated to relieve first receivers of
some of the recordkeeping and reporting
burden by slightly reducing the total
number of electronic fish tickets
required. As noted above, it is unknown
how many vessel operators in the
sablefish primary fishery will elect to
use this new flexibility, therefore it is
not possible to estimate exactly how
much time may be saved by first
receivers. However, this change from
the proposed rule relieves a restriction,
and is anticipated to benefit vessel
operators and first receivers.
The second change from the proposed
rule pertains to the definition of
‘‘sablefish landing’’ included in that
rule at §§ 660.211 and 660.311. The
proposed rule would have required
PO 00000
Frm 00035
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
84423
electronic fish tickets be submitted by
first receivers of all the groundfish on
board the vessel if that groundfish
included any amount of sablefish.
During development of the final rule, it
became apparent that given the
definition of ‘‘sablefish landing’’ the
proposed rule language could be
interpreted as requiring a first receiver
of fish from a landing that included
sablefish to submit an electronic fish
ticket regardless of whether that first
receiver was buying any sablefish. If a
scenario arose where the sablefish
landing were divided, all of the
sablefish were sold to one first receiver,
and the rest of the groundfish were sold
to a second first receiver, the second
first receiver, who did not take
possession of any sablefish, would be
required to submit an electronic fish
ticket for those non-sablefish groundfish
species. This would be because as
proposed, the electronic fish ticket
requirement would have applied to any
‘‘sablefish landing,’’ or any landing that
includes any amount of sablefish
harvested in the limited entry fixed gear
fishery. ‘‘Landing’’ is defined at § 660.11
and means the transfer or offloading of
fish from any vessel. Once transfer of
fish begins, all fish aboard the vessel are
counted as part of the landing.
Therefore, all the fish on board the
vessel, even if sold to multiple first
receivers, are all counted as part of the
same landing. Therefore, a vessel meets
the definition of having a ‘‘sablefish
landing’’ when they have any amount of
sablefish on board and begins the
transfer of any fish from the vessel. In
the above described situation, under
proposed electronic fish ticket
regulations and the definition of
‘‘sablefish landing,’’ both of the first
receivers of fish from the sablefish
landing would be required to submit an
electronic fish ticket, regardless of
whether the first receiver is taking
possession of any amount of sablefish.
The Council’s recommendation was to
capture all of the landings of sablefish
for more accurate and timely accounting
of sablefish harvest against applicable
limits in the limited entry fixed gear and
open access fisheries. Implementing an
electronic fish ticket requirement for
first receivers of non-sablefish
groundfish deliveries was not intended
and does not meet this purpose.
Therefore, the proposed definitions of
‘‘sablefish landing’’ (as included in the
proposed rule at §§ 660.211 and
660.311) are not included in this final
rule.
Instead, regulations at §§ 660.212 and
660.312 are revised to clarify that, if the
landing is split, only the portion of the
landing (or a delivery/offload) that
E:\FR\FM\23NOR1.SGM
23NOR1
84424
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 226 / Wednesday, November 23, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
includes some amount of sablefish must
be reported on an electronic fish ticket.
With this revision, first receivers of a
delivery that includes any amount of
sablefish must report that entire
delivery (both sablefish and nonsablefish groundfish) on an electronic
fish ticket. First receivers of a delivery
that does not include any sablefish
would not be required to report via
electronic fish ticket. These revisions
better align with the Council’s intent to
improve the timeliness of sablefish
catch data.
mstockstill on DSK3G9T082PROD with RULES
Classification
NMFS has determined that this action
is consistent with the FMP, the
Magnuson Stevens Conservation and
Management Act, and other applicable
laws.
The Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) has determined that this action
is not significant for purposes of
Executive Order 12866.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
A final regulatory flexibility analysis
(FRFA) was prepared and incorporates
the initial regulatory flexibility analysis
(IRFA). A summary of the significant
issues raised by the public comments in
response to the IRFA, and NMFS
responses to those comments, and a
summary of the analyses completed to
support the action are included below.
NMFS also prepared a Regulatory
Impact Review (RIR) for this action. A
copy of the RIR/FRFA is available from
NMFS (see ADDRESSES). A summary of
the FRFA, per the requirements of 5
U.S.C. 604(a) follows:
The Small Business Administration
(SBA) has established size criteria for all
major industry sectors in the US,
including fish harvesting and fish
processing businesses. A business
primarily involved in finfish harvesting
is classified as a small business if it is
independently owned and operated, is
not dominant in its field of operation
(including its affiliates), and has
combined annual receipts not in excess
of $20.5 million for all its affiliated
operations worldwide (13 CFR part 121;
August 17, 2015). For commercial
shellfish harvesters, the other qualifiers
apply and the receipts threshold is $5.5
million. For other commercial marine
harvesters, for-hire businesses, and
marinas, the other qualifiers apply and
the receipts threshold is $7.5 million. A
business primarily involved in seafood
processing is classified as a small
business if it is independently owned
and operated, is not dominant in its
field of operation (including its
affiliates), and has combined annual
employment not in excess of 500
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:26 Nov 22, 2016
Jkt 241001
employees for all its affiliated
operations worldwide. For seafood
dealers/wholesalers, the other qualifiers
apply and the employment threshold is
100 employees. A small organization is
any not-for-profit enterprise which is
independently owned and operated and
is not dominant in its field. Small
governmental jurisdictions are
governments of cities, counties, towns,
townships, villages, school districts, or
special districts, with populations less
than 50,000.
On December 29, 2015, NMFS issued
a final rule establishing a small business
size standard of $11 million in annual
gross receipts for all businesses
primarily engaged in the commercial
fishing industry (North American
Industry Classification System or NAICS
11411) for Regulatory Flexibility Act
(RFA) compliance purposes only (80 FR
81194, December 29, 2015). The $11
million standard became effective on
July 1, 2016, and is to be used in all
NMFS rules subject to the RFA after July
1, 2016, in place of the U.S. SBA
standards (described above) of $20.5
million, $5.5 million, and $7.5 million
for the finfish (NAICS 114111), shellfish
(NAICS 114112), and other marine
fishing (NAICS 114119) sectors of the
U.S. commercial fishing industry.
Pursuant to the RFA, and prior to July
1, 2016, an initial regulatory flexibility
analysis was developed for this
regulatory action using SBA’s size
standards. NMFS has reviewed the
analyses prepared for this regulatory
action in light of the new size standard.
All of the harvesting entities directly
regulated by this regulatory action were
considered small under the SBA’s size
standards, and continue to be
considered small under the new NMFS
standard. Thus, NMFS has determined
that the new size standard does not
affect analyses prepared for this
regulatory action.
No significant issues were raised
during public comment, and no changes
were made as a result of public
comments.
An estimated 99 entities are
potentially impacted by this rule,
including 77 receivers and up to 22
vessels/permit holding entities. All of
these entities are considered small
according to both the SBA guidelines
and the new NMFS standards described
above. This rule is not anticipated to
have a substantial or significant
economic impact on small entities, or
place small entities at a disadvantage to
large entities.
Addition of an exemption to the
ownership limitation and joint
registration are expected to positively
benefit directly impacted small entities.
PO 00000
Frm 00036
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
It is assumed that all first receivers
have access to a personal computer or
other hardware/device. However, to
reduce the potential impacts on first
receivers should there be a system
failure, a waiver may be granted by
NMFS that temporarily exempts a first
receiver from the reporting requirements
and allow reasonable time to resolve the
electronic fish ticket system problem.
The duration of the waiver will be
determined on a case-by-case basis. First
receivers that are granted a temporary
waiver from the requirement to submit
electronic fish tickets must submit on
paper the same data as are required on
electronic fish tickets within 24 hours of
the date received during the period that
the waiver is in effect.
Implementation of an electronic fish
ticket improves the accuracy and
timeliness of landing data and provides
managers with the real time data
necessary to do inseason management of
the primary and daily trip limit (DTL)
fisheries. It also provides enforcement
with the permit-specific landings data
necessary to monitor overages in the
primary (tier) and DTL sablefish
fisheries, and could aid in enforcement
of the owner-on-board requirement.
There are no significant alternatives to
the rule that accomplish the stated
objectives of applicable statutes and that
minimize any of the significant
economic impact of the final rule on
small entities. However, Section 212 of
the Small Business Regulatory
Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996 states
that, for each rule or group of related
rules for which an agency is required to
prepare a FRFA, the agency shall
publish one or more guides to assist
small entities in complying with the
rule. The agency shall explain the
actions a small entity is required to take
to comply with a rule or group of rules.
As part of this rulemaking process, a
small entity compliance guide will be
sent to all limited entry permit owners
and holders, and all persons and entities
that have requested information on
groundfish management actions (i.e.,
persons and entities on the West Coast
groundfish email list serve), and will be
posted on the NMFS West Coast Region
Web site at https://
www.westcoast.fisheries.noaa.gov/.
With regards to new electronic fish
ticket requirements, outreach and
compliance guidance will also be
available through the Pacific States
Marine Fisheries Commission at https://
pacfin.psmfc.org/.
Paperwork Reduction Act
This final rule contains the
implementation of a Federal
requirement for an electronic fish ticket
E:\FR\FM\23NOR1.SGM
23NOR1
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 226 / Wednesday, November 23, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
to capture essential fishery catch data
for commercial non-trawl sablefish
fisheries (every commercial fishery
landing that includes any amount of
sablefish) in a timely manner, which is
a collection-of-information requirement
subject to review and approval by OMB
under the Paperwork Reduction Act
(PRA). With regards to electronic fish
tickets, this requirement has been
approved by OMB as a new OMB
collection (OMB collection 0648–0738).
The public reporting burden is
estimated to average 10 minutes per
response. With regards to the ownership
limitation exemption, this requirement
has been approved by OMB as OMB
collection 0648–0737. The public
reporting burden is estimated to be 45
minutes per response. Send comments
on the burden estimates or any other
aspects of the collection of information
to West Coast Region at the
ADDRESSES above, by email to OIRA_
Submission@omb.eop.gov, or by fax to
(202) 395–7285.
Notwithstanding any other provision
of the law, no person is required to
respond to, and no person shall be
subject to 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.
The PRA (44 U.S.C. 3507) requires
that agencies inventory and display a
current control number assigned by the
Director, Office of Management and
Budget (OMB), for each agency
information collection. § 902.1(b)
identifies the location of NOAA
regulations for which OMB approval
numbers have been issued. Because this
final rule adds requirements for scale
test report recording and maintenance,
§ 902.1(b) is revised to reference
correctly the section resulting from this
final rule.
List of Subjects
Title 15—Commerce and Foreign Trade
PART 902—NOAA INFORMATION
COLLECTION REQUIREMENTS UNDER
THE PAPERWORK REDUCTION ACT:
OMB CONTROL NUMBERS
1. The authority citation for part 902
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.
2. In § 902.1, in the table in paragraph
(b), under the entry ‘‘50 CFR’’, revise the
entries for ‘‘660.13’’, ‘‘660.15’’,
‘‘660.17’’, ‘‘660.25’’, ‘‘660.113’’, and
‘‘660.140’’ to read as follows:
■
§ 902.1 OMB control numbers assigned
pursuant to the Paperwork Reduction Act.
*
*
*
(b) * * *
*
*
CFR part or section
where the information
collection requirement
is located
*
50 CFR:
*
Current OMB
control No.
(all numbers begin
with 0648–)
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
660.13 .................... –0573, –0619, and
–0738.
*
*
*
*
*
660.15 .................... –0619 and –0738.
*
*
*
*
*
660.17 .................... –0619 and –0738.
*
*
*
*
*
660.25 .................... –0203, –0620, and
–0737.
*
*
*
*
*
660.113 .................. –0271, –0573, –0618,
–0619, and –0737.
*
*
*
*
*
660.140 .................. –0593, –0619, –0620,
and –0737.
*
*
*
*
*
Title 50—Wildlife and Fisheries
15 CFR Part 902
PART 660—FISHERIES OFF WEST
COAST STATES
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
1. The authority citation for part 660
continues to read as follows:
■
50 CFR Part 660
mstockstill on DSK3G9T082PROD with RULES
Fisheries, Fishing, and Indian
fisheries.
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq., 16 U.S.C.
773 et seq., and 16 U.S.C. 7001 et seq.
Dated: November 15, 2016.
Samuel D. Rauch III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for
Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
■
■
For the reasons set out in the
preamble, 15 CFR part 902 and 50 CFR
part 660 are amended as follows:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:26 Nov 22, 2016
Jkt 241001
2. In § 660.11:
a. Revise the definitions for ‘‘Base
permit’’ and ‘‘Electronic fish ticket’’;
■ b. Add in alphabetical order the
definition for ‘‘Joint registration’’;
■ c. Remove the definition for
‘‘Stacking’’; and
■ d. Add in alphabetical order the
definition for ‘‘Stacking or stacked’’.
PO 00000
Frm 00037
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
84425
The revisions and additions read as
follows:
§ 660.11
General definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
Base permit means a sablefishendorsed limited entry permit described
at § 660.25(b)(3)(i), subpart C, registered
for use with a vessel that meets the
permit length endorsement
requirements appropriate to that vessel,
as described at § 660.25(b)(3)(iii),
subpart C.
*
*
*
*
*
Electronic fish ticket means a webbased form that is used to send landing
data to the Pacific States Marine
Fisheries Commission. Electronic fish
tickets are used to collect information
similar to the information required in
state fish receiving tickets or landing
receipts, but do not replace or change
any state requirements.
*
*
*
*
*
Joint registration or jointly registered
means simultaneously registering both
trawl-endorsed and longline or trap/potendorsed limited entry permits for use
with a single vessel in one of the
configurations described at
§ 660.25(b)(4)(iv).
*
*
*
*
*
Stacking or stacked means registering
more than one sablefish-endorsed
limited entry permit for use with a
single vessel (See § 660.25(b)(4)(iii),
subpart C).
*
*
*
*
*
■ 3. In § 660.12, revise paragraph (a)(6)
to read as follows:
§ 660.12
General groundfish prohibitions.
*
*
*
*
*
(a) * * *
(6) Take and retain, possess, or land
more than a single cumulative limit of
a particular species, per vessel, per
applicable cumulative limit period,
except for sablefish taken in the primary
limited entry, fixed gear sablefish
season from a vessel authorized to fish
in that season, as described at § 660.231,
subpart E.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 4. In § 660.13, revise paragraph (d)
introductory text and paragraphs
(d)(5)(ii) and (iii) and (d)(5)(iv)(A)(24) to
read as follows:
§ 660.13
Recordkeeping and reporting.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) Declaration reporting
requirements—When the operator of a
vessel registers a VMS unit with NMFS
OLE, the vessel operator must provide
NMFS with a declaration report as
specified at paragraph (d)(5)(iv) of this
section. The operator of any vessel that
E:\FR\FM\23NOR1.SGM
23NOR1
84426
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 226 / Wednesday, November 23, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
has already registered a VMS unit with
NMFS OLE but has not yet made a
declaration, as specified at paragraph
(d)(5)(iv) of this section, must provide
NMFS with a declaration report upon
request from NMFS OLE.
(5) * * *
(ii) A declaration report will be valid
until another declaration report revising
the existing gear or fishery declaration
is received by NMFS OLE. The vessel
operator must send a new declaration
report before leaving port on a trip that
meets one of the following criteria:
(A) A gear type that is different from
the gear type most recently declared for
the vessel will be used, or
(B) A vessel will fish in a fishery other
than the fishery most recently declared.
(iii) During the period of time that a
vessel has a valid declaration report on
file with NMFS OLE, it cannot fish with
a gear other than a gear type declared by
the vessel or fish in a fishery other than
the fishery most recently declared.
(iv) * * *
(A) * * *
(24) Other, or
*
*
*
*
*
■ 5. In § 660.15, revise paragraphs (a)
and (d) to read as follows:
mstockstill on DSK3G9T082PROD with RULES
§ 660.15
Equipment requirements.
(a) Applicability. This section
contains the equipment and operational
requirements for scales used to weigh
catch at sea, scales used to weigh catch
at IFQ first receivers, hardware and
software for electronic fish tickets, and
computer hardware for electronic
logbook software. Unless otherwise
specified by regulation, the operator or
manager must retain, for 3 years, a copy
of all records described in this section
and make the records available upon
request to NMFS staff or an authorized
officer.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) Electronic fish tickets. First
receivers are required to meet the
hardware and software requirements
below.
(1) Hardware and software
requirements. A personal computer
system, tablet, mobile device, or other
device that has software (e.g. web
browser) capable of submitting
information over the internet, such that
submission to Pacific States Marine
Fisheries Commission can be executed
effectively.
(2) Internet access. The first receiver
is responsible for maintaining internet
access sufficient to access the web-based
interface and submit completed
electronic fish ticket forms.
(3) Maintenance. The first receiver is
responsible for ensuring that all
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:26 Nov 22, 2016
Jkt 241001
hardware and software required under
this subsection are fully operational and
functional whenever they receive,
purchase, or take custody, control, or
possession of groundfish species for
which an electronic fish ticket is
required. ‘‘Functional’’ means that the
software requirements and minimum
hardware requirements described at
paragraphs (d)(1) and (2) of this section
are met and submission to Pacific States
Marine Fisheries Commission can be
executed effectively by the equipment.
(4) Improving data quality. Vessel
owners and operators, first receivers, or
shoreside processor owners, or
managers may contact NMFS to request
assistance in improving data quality and
resolving issues. Requests may be
submitted to: Attn: Electronic Fish
Ticket Monitoring, National Marine
Fisheries Service, West Coast Region,
Sustainable Fisheries Division, 7600
Sand Point Way, NE., Seattle, WA
98115.
■ 6. In § 660.25:
■ a. Revise paragraph (b)(1)(v);
■ b. Remove paragraph (b)(3)(iv)(B);
■ c. Redesignate paragraph (b)(3)(iv)(C)
as (b)(3)(iv)(B);
■ d. Revise newly redesignated
paragraphs (b)(3)(iv)(B)(3) and (4);
■ e. Add new paragraph (b)(3)(iv)(C);
■ f. Revise paragraphs (b)(3)(v), (b)(4)
introductory text, (b)(4)(i)(D), and
(b)(4)(iii);
■ g. Redesignate paragraphs (b)(4)(iv)
through (b)(4)(ix) as (b)(4)(v) through
(b)(4)(x);
■ h. Add a new paragraph (b)(4)(iv);
■ i. Revise newly redesignated
paragraphs (b)(4)(v)(A) and (B),
(b)(4)(vi)(A) and (B), and (b)(4)(vii)(A);
and
■ j. Revise (b)(6).
The revisions and additions read as
follows:
§ 660.25
Permits.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(1) * * *
(v) Initial administrative
determination (IAD). SFD will make a
determination regarding permit
endorsements, renewal, replacement,
change in permit ownership and change
in vessel registration. SFD will notify
the permit owner in writing with an
explanation of any determination to
deny a permit endorsement, renewal,
replacement, change in permit
ownership or change in vessel
registration. The SFD will decline to act
on an application for permit
endorsement, renewal, replacement, or
change in registration of a limited entry
permit if the permit is subject to
sanction provisions of the Magnuson-
PO 00000
Frm 00038
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
Stevens Act at 16 U.S.C. 1858(a) and
implementing regulations at 15 CFR part
904, subpart D, apply.
*
*
*
*
*
(3) * * *
(iv) * * *
(B) * * *
(3) A partnership or corporation will
lose the exemptions provided in
paragraphs (b)(3)(iv)(B)(1) and (2) of this
section on the effective date of any
change in the corporation or partnership
from that which existed on November 1,
2000. A ‘‘change’’ in the partnership or
corporation is defined at § 660.11. A
change in the partnership or corporation
must be reported to SFD within 15
calendar days of the addition of a new
shareholder or partner.
(4) Any partnership or corporation
with any ownership interest in a limited
entry permit with a sablefish
endorsement or in the vessel registered
to the permit shall document the extent
of that ownership interest with NMFS
via the Identification of Ownership
Interest Form sent to the permit owner
through the annual permit renewal
process and whenever a change in
permit owner, vessel owner, and/or
vessel registration occurs as described at
paragraph (b)(4)(v) and (vi) of this
section. NMFS will not renew a
sablefish-endorsed limited entry permit
through the annual renewal process
described at paragraph (b)(4)(i) of this
section, or approve a change in permit
owner, vessel owner, and/or vessel
registration unless the Identification of
Ownership Interest Form has been
completed. Further, if NMFS discovers
through review of the Identification of
Ownership Interest Form that an
individual person, partnership, or
corporation owns or holds more than 3
permits and is not authorized to do so
under paragraph (b)(3)(iv)(B)(2) of this
section, the individual person,
partnership or corporation will be
notified and the permits owned or held
by that individual person, partnership,
or corporation will be void and reissued
with the vessel status as ‘‘unidentified’’
until the permit owner owns and/or
holds a quantity of permits appropriate
to the restrictions and requirements
described in paragraph (b)(3)(iv)(B)(2) of
this section. If NMFS discovers through
review of the Identification of
Ownership Interest Form that a
partnership or corporation has had a
change in membership since November
1, 2000, as described in paragraph
(b)(3)(iv)(B)(3) of this section, the
partnership or corporation will be
notified, NMFS will void any existing
permits, and reissue any permits owned
and/or held by that partnership or
E:\FR\FM\23NOR1.SGM
23NOR1
mstockstill on DSK3G9T082PROD with RULES
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 226 / Wednesday, November 23, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
corporation in ‘‘unidentified’’ status
with respect to vessel registration until
the partnership or corporation is able to
register ownership of those permits to
persons authorized under this section to
own sablefish-endorsed limited entry
permits.
*
*
*
*
*
(C) Ownership limitation exemption.
As described in (b)(3)(iv)(B) of this
section, no individual person,
partnership, or corporation in
combination may own and/or hold more
than three sablefish-endorsed permits. A
vessel owner that meets the qualifying
criteria described in paragraph
(b)(3)(iv)(C)(1) of this section may
request an exemption from the
ownership limitation.
(1) Qualifying criteria. The three
qualifying criteria for an ownership
limitation exemption are: The vessel
owner currently has no more than 20
percent ownership interest in a vessel
registered to the sablefish endorsed
permit, the vessel owner currently has
ownership interest in Alaska sablefish
individual fishing quota, and the vessel
has fished in the past 12-month period
in both the West Coast groundfish
limited entry fixed gear fishery and the
Sablefish IFQ Program in Alaska. The
best evidence of a vessel owner having
met these qualifying criteria will be
state fish tickets or landing receipts
from the West Coast states and Alaska.
The qualifying vessel owner may seek
an ownership limitation exemption for
sablefish endorsed permits registered to
no more than two vessels.
(2) Application and issuance process
for an ownership limitation exemption.
The SFD will make the qualifying
criteria and application instructions
available online at
www.westcoast.fisheries.noaa.gov/
fisheries/groundfish/. A
vessel owner who believes that they
may qualify for the ownership
limitation exemption must submit
evidence with their application showing
how their vessel has met the qualifying
criteria described at paragraph
(b)(3)(iv)(C)(1) of this section. The vessel
owner must also submit a Sablefish
Permit Ownership Limitation
Exemption Identification of Ownership
Interest form that includes disclosure of
percentage of ownership in the vessel
and disclosure of individual
shareholders in any entity. Paragraph (i)
of this section sets out the relevant
evidentiary standards and burden of
proof. Applications may be submitted at
any time to NMFS at: NMFS West Coast
Region, Sustainable Fisheries Division,
ATTN: Fisheries Permit Office—
Sablefish Ownership Limitation
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:26 Nov 22, 2016
Jkt 241001
Exemption, 7600 Sand Point Way NE.,
Seattle, WA 98115. After receipt of a
complete application, the SFD will issue
an IAD in writing to the applicant
determining whether the applicant
qualifies for the exemption. If an
applicant chooses to file an appeal of
the IAD, the applicant must follow the
appeals process outlined at paragraph
(g) of this section and, for the timing of
the appeals, at paragraph (g)(4)(ii) of this
section.
(3) Exemption status. If at any time a
change occurs relative to the qualifying
criteria described at paragraph
(b)(3)(iv)(C)(1), the vessel owner to
whom the ownership limitation
exemption applies must notify NMFS
within 30 calendar days. If such changes
mean the vessel owner no longer meets
the qualifying criteria, the ownership
limitation exemption becomes
automatically null and void 30 calendar
days after the date the vessel owner no
longer meets the qualifying criteria. At
any time, NMFS may request that the
vessel owner submit a new exemption
application. If NMFS at any time finds
the vessel owner no longer meets the
qualifying criteria described at
paragraph (b)(3)(iv)(C)(1) of this section
NMFS will issue an IAD, which may be
appealed, as described at paragraph (g)
of this section.
(v) MS/CV endorsement. An MS/CV
endorsement on a trawl limited entry
permit conveys a conditional privilege
that allows a vessel registered to it to
fish in either the coop or non-coop
fishery in the MS Coop Program
described at § 660.150, subpart D. The
provisions for the MS/CV-endorsed
limited entry permit, including
eligibility, renewal, change of permit
ownership, vessel registration,
combinations, accumulation limits, fees,
and appeals are described at § 660.150.
Each MS/CV endorsement has an
associated catch history assignment
(CHA) that is permanently linked as
originally issued by NMFS and which
cannot be divided or registered
separately to another limited entry trawl
permit. Regulations detailing this
process and MS/CV-endorsed permit
combinations are outlined in
§ 660.150(g)(2), subpart D.
*
*
*
*
*
(4) Limited entry permit actions—
renewal, combination, stacking, joint
registration, change of permit owner or
vessel owner, and change in vessel
registration—
(i) * * *
(D) Limited entry permits with
sablefish endorsements, as described at
paragraph (b)(3)(iv) of this section, will
not be renewed until SFD has received
PO 00000
Frm 00039
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
84427
complete documentation of permit
ownership as required under paragraph
(b)(3)(iv)(B)(4) of this section.
*
*
*
*
*
(iii) Stacking limited entry permits.
‘‘Stacking’’ limited entry permits, as
defined at § 660.11, refers to the practice
of registering more than one sablefishendorsed permit for use with a single
vessel. Only limited entry permits with
sablefish endorsements may be stacked.
Up to 3 limited entry permits with
sablefish endorsements may be
registered for use with a single vessel
during the sablefish primary season
described at § 660.231, subpart E.
Privileges, responsibilities, and
restrictions associated with stacking
permits to fish in the sablefish primary
fishery are described at § 660.231,
subpart E and at paragraph (b)(3)(iv) of
this section.
(iv) Joint registration of limited entry
permits—(A) General. ‘‘Joint
registration’’ of limited entry permits, as
defined at § 660.11, is the practice of
simultaneously registering both trawlendorsed and longline or trap/potendorsed limited entry permits for use
with a single vessel.
(B) Restrictions. Subject to vessel size
endorsements in paragraph (b)(3)(iii),
any limited entry permit with a trawl
endorsement and any limited entry
permit with a longline or trap/pot
endorsement may be jointly registered
for use with a single vessel but only in
one of the following configurations:
(1) a single trawl-endorsed limited
entry permit and one, two or three
sablefish-endorsed fixed gear (longline
and/or fishpot endorsed) limited entry
permits; or
(2) a single trawl-endorsed limited
entry permit and one longline-endorsed
limited entry permit for use with a
single vessel.
(v) * * *
(A) General. Change in permit owner
and/or vessel owner applications must
be submitted to NMFS with the
appropriate documentation described at
paragraphs (b)(4)(viii) and (ix) of this
section. The permit owner may convey
the limited entry permit to a different
person. The new permit owner will not
be authorized to use the permit until the
change in permit owner has been
registered with and approved by NMFS.
NMFS will not approve a change in
permit owner for a limited entry permit
with a sablefish endorsement that does
not meet the ownership requirements
for such permit described at paragraph
(b)(3)(iv)(B) of this section. NMFS will
not approve a change in permit owner
for a limited entry permit with an MS/
CV endorsement or an MS permit that
E:\FR\FM\23NOR1.SGM
23NOR1
mstockstill on DSK3G9T082PROD with RULES
84428
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 226 / Wednesday, November 23, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
does not meet the ownership
requirements for such permit described
at § 660.150(g)(3), and § 660.150(f)(3),
respectively. NMFS considers the
following as a change in permit owner
that would require registering with and
approval by NMFS, including but not
limited to: Selling the permit to another
individual or entity; adding an
individual or entity to the legal name on
the permit; or removing an individual or
entity from the legal name on the
permit. A change in vessel owner
includes any changes to the name(s) of
any or all vessel owners, as registered
with USCG or a state. The new owner(s)
of a vessel registered to a limited entry
permit must report any change in vessel
ownership to NMFS within 30 calendar
days after such change has been
registered with the USCG or a state
licensing agency.
(B) Effective date. The change in
permit ownership or change in the
vessel holding the permit will be
effective on the day the change is
approved by NMFS, unless there is a
concurrent change in the vessel
registered to the permit. Requirements
for changing the vessel registered to the
permit are described at paragraph
(b)(4)(vi) of this section.
*
*
*
*
*
(vi) * * *
(A) General. A permit may not be
used with any vessel other than the
vessel registered to that permit. For
purposes of this section, a permit
change in vessel registration occurs
when, through SFD, a permit owner
registers a limited entry permit for use
with a new vessel. Permit change in
vessel registration applications must be
submitted to SFD with the appropriate
documentation described at paragraph
(b)(4)(viii) of this section. Upon receipt
of a complete application, and following
review and approval of the application,
the SFD will reissue the permit
registered to the new vessel.
Applications to change vessel
registration on limited entry permits
with sablefish endorsements will not be
approved until SFD has received
complete documentation of permit
ownership as described at paragraph
(b)(3)(iv)(B)(4) and as required under
paragraph (b)(4)(viii) of this section.
Applications to change vessel
registration on limited entry permits
with trawl endorsements or MS permits
will not be approved until SFD has
received complete EDC forms as
required under § 660.114, subpart D.
(B) Application. Change in vessel
registration applications must be
submitted to NMFS with the
appropriate documentation described at
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:26 Nov 22, 2016
Jkt 241001
paragraphs (b)(4)(viii) and (ix) of this
section. At a minimum, a permit owner
seeking to change vessel registration of
a limited entry permit shall submit to
NMFS a signed application form and
his/her current limited entry permit
before the first day of the cumulative
limit period in which they wish to fish.
If a permit owner provides a signed
application and current limited entry
permit after the first day of a cumulative
limit period, the permit will not be
effective until the succeeding
cumulative limit period. NMFS will not
approve a change in vessel registration
until it receives a complete application,
the existing permit, a current copy of
the USCG 1270, and other required
documentation.
*
*
*
*
*
(vii) * * *
(A) General. A permit owner may
designate the vessel registration for a
permit as ‘‘unidentified,’’ meaning that
no vessel has been identified as
registered for use with that permit. No
vessel is authorized to use a permit with
the vessel registration designated as
‘‘unidentified.’’ A vessel owner who
removes a permit from his vessel and
registers that permit as ‘‘unidentified’’ is
not exempt from VMS requirements at
§ 660.14, unless specifically authorized
by that section. When a permit owner
requests that the permit’s vessel
registration be designated as
‘‘unidentified,’’ the transaction is not
considered a change in vessel
registration for purposes of this section.
Any subsequent request by a permit
owner to change from the
‘‘unidentified’’ status of the permit in
order to register the permit with a
specific vessel will be considered a
change in vessel registration and subject
to the restriction on frequency and
timing of changes in vessel registration.
*
*
*
*
*
(6) At-sea processing exemptions—(i)
Sablefish at-sea processing exemption.
No new applications for sablefish at-sea
processing exemptions will be accepted.
As specified at § 660.212(d)(3), subpart
E, vessels are prohibited from
processing sablefish at sea that were
caught in the sablefish primary fishery
without a sablefish at-sea processing
exemption. Any sablefish at-sea
processing exemptions were issued to a
particular vessel and that permit and
vessel owner who requested the
exemption. The exemption is not part of
the limited entry permit. The exemption
cannot be registered with any other
vessel, vessel owner, or permit owner
for any reason. The exemption only
applies to at-sea processing of sablefish
caught in the sablefish primary fishery.
PO 00000
Frm 00040
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
The sablefish at-sea processing
exemption will expire upon registration
of the vessel to a new owner or if the
vessel is totally lost, as defined at
§ 660.11.
(ii) Non-whiting at-sea processing
exemption. No new applications for
non-whiting at-sea processing
exemptions will be accepted. As
specified at § 660.112(b)(1)(xii), subpart
D, vessels are prohibited from
processing non-whiting groundfish at
sea that were caught in the Shorebased
IFQ Program without a non-whiting atsea processing exemption. Any nonwhiting at-sea processing exemptions
were issued to a particular vessel and
that permit and/or vessel owner who
requested the exemption. The
exemption is not part of the limited
entry permit. The exemption is not
transferable to any other vessel, vessel
owner, or permit owner for any reason.
The exemption only applies to at-sea
processing of non-whiting groundfish
caught in the Shorebased IFQ Program.
The non-whiting at-sea processing
exemption will expire upon registration
of the vessel to a new owner or if the
vessel is totally lost, as defined at
§ 660.11.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 7. In § 660.55, revise paragraph (f)
introductory text and paragraphs (h)(1)
and (2) to read as follows:
§ 660.55
Allocations.
*
*
*
*
*
(f) Catch accounting. Catch
accounting refers to how the catch in a
fishery is monitored against the
allocations described in this section. For
species with trawl/nontrawl allocations,
catch of those species are counted
against the trawl/nontrawl allocations as
explained in paragraph (f)(1) of this
section. For species with limited entry/
open access allocations in a given
biennial cycle, catch of those species are
counted against the limited entry/open
access allocations as explained in
paragraph (f)(1)(ii) of this section.
*
*
*
*
*
(h) * * *
(1) Tribal/nontribal allocation. The
sablefish allocation to Pacific coast
treaty Indian tribes is identified at
§ 660.50(f)(2). The remainder is
available to the nontribal fishery
(limited entry, open access (directed
and incidental), and research).
(2) Between the limited entry and
open access fisheries. The allocation of
sablefish after tribal deductions is
further reduced by the estimated total
mortality of sablefish in research and
recreational fisheries; the remaining
yield (commercial harvest guideline) is
E:\FR\FM\23NOR1.SGM
23NOR1
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 226 / Wednesday, November 23, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
divided between open access and
limited entry fisheries. The limited
entry fishery allocation is 90.6 percent
of the commercial harvest guideline.
The open access allocation is 9.4
percent of the commercial harvest
guideline and includes incidental catch
in non-groundfish fisheries, or
incidental open access.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 8. In § 660.60:
■ a. Revise paragraphs (h)(7)
introductory text, (h)(7)(i) introductory
text, (h)(7)(ii)(A), (h)(7)(ii)(B)(1)
introductory text, and (h)(7)(ii)(B)(2);
and
■ b. Add paragraphs (h)(7)(ii)(B)(3) and
(h)(7)(iii).
The revisions and additions read as
follows:
§ 660.60 Specifications and management
measures.
mstockstill on DSK3G9T082PROD with RULES
*
*
*
*
*
(h) * * *
*
*
*
*
*
(7) Crossover provisions. Crossover
provisions apply to three activities:
Fishing on different sides of a
management line, or fishing in both the
limited entry and open access fisheries,
or fishing in both the Shorebased IFQ
Program and the limited entry fixed gear
fishery. NMFS uses different types of
management areas for West Coast
groundfish management, such as the
north-south management areas as
defined in § 660.11. Within a
management area, a large ocean area
with northern and southern boundary
lines, trip limits, seasons, and
conservation areas follow a single
theme. Within each management area,
there may be one or more conservation
areas, defined at §§ 660.11 and 660.70
through 660.74. The provisions within
this paragraph apply to vessels fishing
in different management areas.
Crossover provisions also apply to
vessels that fish in both the limited
entry and open access fisheries, or that
use open access non-trawl gear while
registered to limited entry fixed gear
permits. Crossover provisions also apply
to vessels that are jointly registered, as
defined at § 660.11, fishing in both the
Shorebased IFQ Program and the
limited entry fixed gear fishery during
the same cumulative limit period.
Fishery specific crossover provisions
can be found in subparts D through F of
this part.
(i) Fishing in management areas with
different trip limits. Trip limits for a
species or a species group may differ in
different management areas along the
coast. The following crossover
provisions apply to vessels fishing in
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:26 Nov 22, 2016
Jkt 241001
different geographical areas that have
different cumulative or ‘‘per trip’’ trip
limits for the same species or species
group, with the following exceptions.
Such crossover provisions do not apply
to: IFQ species (defined at § 660.140(c),
subpart D) for vessels that are declared
into the Shorebased IFQ Program (see
§ 660.13(d)(5)(iv)(A), for valid
Shorebased IFQ Program declarations);
species that are subject only to daily trip
limits; or to trip limits for black rockfish
off Washington, as described at
§§ 660.230(e) and 660.330(e).
*
*
*
*
*
(ii) * * *
(A) Fishing in limited entry and open
access fisheries with different trip limits.
Open access trip limits apply to any
fishing conducted with open access
gear, even if the vessel has a valid
limited entry permit with an
endorsement for another type of gear.
Except such provisions do not apply to
IFQ species (defined at § 660.140(c),
subpart D) for vessels that are declared
into the Shorebased IFQ Program (see
§ 660.13(d)(5)(iv)(A) for valid
Shorebased IFQ Program declarations).
A vessel that fishes in both the open
access and limited entry fisheries is not
entitled to two separate trip limits for
the same species. If a vessel has a
limited entry permit registered to it at
any time during the trip limit period
and uses open access gear, but the open
access limit is smaller than the limited
entry limit, the open access limit may
not be exceeded and counts toward the
limited entry limit. If a vessel has a
limited entry permit registered to it at
any time during the trip limit period
and uses open access gear, but the open
access limit is larger than the limited
entry limit, the smaller limited entry
limit applies, even if taken entirely with
open access gear.
(B) * * *
(1) Vessel registered to a limited entry
trawl permit. To fish with open access
gear, defined at § 660.11, a vessel
registered to a limited entry trawl
permit must make the appropriate
fishery declaration, as specified at
§ 660.14(d)(5)(iv)(A). In addition, a
vessel registered to a limit entry trawl
permit must remove the permit from
their vessel, as specified at
§ 660.25(b)(4)(vi), unless the vessel will
be fishing in the open access fishery
under one of the following declarations
specified at § 660.13(d):
*
*
*
*
*
(2) Vessel registered to a limited entry
fixed gear permit(s). To fish with open
access gear, defined at § 660.11, subpart
C, a vessel registered to a limit entry
fixed gear permit must make the
PO 00000
Frm 00041
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
84429
appropriate open access declaration, as
specified at § 660.14(d)(5)(iv)(A).
Vessels registered to a sablefishendorsed permit(s) fishing in the
sablefish primary season (described at
§ 660.231, subpart E) may only fish with
the gear(s) endorsed on their sablefishendorsed permit(s) against those limits.
(3) Vessel jointly registered to more
than one limited entry permit. Vessels
jointly registered (under the provisions
at § 660.25(b)(4)(iv)(B)) may fish with
open access gear (defined at § 660.11) if
they meet the requirements of both
paragraphs (h)(7)(ii)(B)(1) and (2) of this
section.
(iii) Fishing in both the Shorebased
IFQ Program and the limited entry fixed
gear fishery for vessels that are jointly
registered.
(A) Fishing in the Shorebased IFQ
Program and limited entry fixed gear
fishery with different trip limits. If a
vessel fishes in both the Shorebased IFQ
Program and the limited entry fixed gear
fishery during a cumulative limit
period, they are subject to the most
restrictive trip limits for non-IFQ
species.
(B) Fishing in the Shorebased IFQ
Program and the limited entry fixed gear
sablefish primary fishery with different
trip limits. If a vessel is jointly registered
and one or more of the limited entry
permits is sablefish endorsed, any
sablefish landings made by a vessel
declared into the limited entry fixed
gear fishery after the start of the
sablefish primary fishery count towards
the tier limit(s), per regulations at
§ 660.232(a)(2), subpart E. Any sablefish
landings made by a vessel declared into
the Shorebased IFQ Program must be
covered by quota pounds, per
regulations at § 660.112(b), subpart D,
and will not count towards the tier
limit(s).
■ 9. In § 660.112:
■ a. Revise paragraphs (a)(3)(i) and (ii);
■ b. Remove paragraph (b)(1)(xii)(B);
and
■ c. Redesignate paragraph (b)(1)(xii)(C)
as (b)(1)(xii)(B).
The revisions read as follows:
§ 660.112
Trawl fishery—prohibitions.
*
*
*
*
*
(a) * * *
(3) * * *
(i) Fail to comply with all
recordkeeping and reporting
requirements at § 660.13, subpart C;
including failure to submit information,
or submission of inaccurate or false
information on any report required at
§ 660.13(d), subpart C, and § 660.113.
(ii) Falsify or fail to make and/or file,
retain or make available any and all
reports of groundfish landings,
E:\FR\FM\23NOR1.SGM
23NOR1
84430
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 226 / Wednesday, November 23, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
containing all data, and in the exact
manner, required by the regulation at
§ 660.13, subpart C, or § 660.113.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 10. In § 660.113:
■ a. Revise paragraphs (a)(2) and
(b)(4)(ii)(A);
■ b. Remove paragraphs (b)(4)(ii)(B) and
(C) and redesignate paragraphs
(b)(4)(ii)(D) through (F) as (b)(4)(ii)(B)
through (D);
■ c. Revise newly redesignated
paragraphs (b)(4)(ii)(C)(5) introductory
text and (b)(4)(ii)(C)(6); and
■ d. Revise paragraphs (b)(4)(iii) and (v).
The revisions read as follows:
§ 660.113 Trawl fishery—recordkeeping
and reporting.
mstockstill on DSK3G9T082PROD with RULES
*
*
*
*
*
(a) * * *
(2) All records used in the preparation
of records or reports specified in this
section or corrections to these reports
must be maintained for a period of not
less than three years after the date of
landing and must be immediately
available upon request for inspection by
NMFS or authorized officers or others as
specifically authorized by NMFS.
Records used in the preparation of
required reports specified in this section
or corrections to these reports that are
required to be kept include, but are not
limited to, any written, recorded,
graphic, electronic, or digital materials
as well as other information stored in or
accessible through a computer or other
information retrieval system;
worksheets; weight slips; preliminary,
interim, and final tally sheets; receipts;
checks; ledgers; notebooks; diaries;
spreadsheets; diagrams; graphs; charts;
tapes; disks; or computer printouts. All
relevant records used in the preparation
of electronic fish ticket reports or
corrections to these reports, including
dock tickets, must be maintained for a
period of not less than three years after
the date of landing and must be
immediately available upon request for
inspection by NMFS or authorized
officers or others as specifically
authorized by NMFS.
(b) * * *
(4) * * *
(ii) * * *
(A) Include, as part of each electronic
fish ticket submission, the actual scale
weight for each groundfish species as
specified by requirements at § 660.15(c),
and the vessel identification number.
Use, and maintain in good working
order, hardware, software, and internet
access as specified at § 660.15(d).
*
*
*
*
*
(C) * * *
(5) Prior to submittal, three copies of
the printed, signed, electronic fish ticket
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:26 Nov 22, 2016
Jkt 241001
must be produced by the IFQ first
receiver and a copy provided to each of
the following:
*
*
*
*
*
(6) After review and signature, the
electronic fish ticket must be submitted
within 24 hours of the completion of the
offload, as specified in paragraph
(b)(4)(ii)(B) of this section.
*
*
*
*
*
(iii) Revising a submission. In the
event that a data error is found,
electronic fish ticket submissions must
be revised by resubmitting the revised
form electronically. Electronic fish
tickets are to be used for the submission
of final data. Preliminary data,
including estimates of fish weights or
species composition, shall not be
submitted on electronic fish tickets.
*
*
*
*
*
(v) Reporting requirements when a
temporary waiver has been granted. IFQ
first receivers that have been granted a
temporary waiver from the requirement
to submit electronic fish tickets must
submit on paper the same data as is
required on electronic fish tickets
within 24 hours of the date received
during the period that the waiver is in
effect. Paper fish tickets must be sent by
facsimile to NMFS, West Coast Region,
Sustainable Fisheries Division, 206–
526–6736 or by delivering it in person
to 7600 Sand Point Way NE., Seattle,
WA 98115. The requirements for
submissions of paper tickets in this
paragraph are separate from, and in
addition to existing state requirements
for landing receipts or fish receiving
tickets.
*
*
*
*
*
§ 660.114
[Amended]
11. Amend § 660.114(b) by removing
the words ‘‘§ 660.25(b)(4)(v)’’ wherever
they appear and adding in their place
the words ‘‘§ 660.25(b)(4)(vi)’’.
■ 12. In § 660.212, revise paragraph
(a)(2), add paragraphs (a)(3) through (5),
and revise paragraphs (b) and (d)(1) and
(2) to read as follows:
■
§ 660.212
Fixed gear fishery—prohibitions.
*
*
*
*
*
(a) * * *
(2) Take and retain, possess, or land
more than a single cumulative limit of
a particular species, per vessel, per
applicable cumulative limit period,
except for sablefish taken in the limited
entry fixed gear sablefish primary
season from a vessel authorized to fish
in that season, as described at § 660.231
and except for IFQ species taken in the
Shorebased IFQ Program from a vessel
authorized under gear switching
provisions as described at § 660.140(k).
PO 00000
Frm 00042
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
(3) Transport fish, if that fish includes
any amount of sablefish, away from the
point of landing before being sorted and
weighed by federal groundfish species
or species group, and recorded for
submission on an electronic fish ticket
under § 660.213(e). (If fish will be
transported to a different location for
processing, all sorting and weighing to
federal groundfish species groups must
occur before transporting the fish away
from the point of landing).
(4) Mix fish from more than one
landing, where one or more of the
landings includes any sablefish, prior to
the fish being sorted and weighed for
reporting on an electronic fish ticket
under § 660.213(e).
(5) Process, sell, or discard any fish,
if that fish includes any amount of
sablefish, that has not been accounted
for on an electronic fish ticket under
§ 660.213(e).
(b) Recordkeeping and reporting. (1)
Fail to comply with all recordkeeping
and reporting requirements at § 660.13,
subpart C; including failure to submit
information, or submission of inaccurate
or false information on any report
required at § 660.13(d), subpart C, and
§ 660.213.
(2) Falsify or fail to make and/or file,
retain or make available any and all
reports of groundfish landings that
include sablefish, containing all data,
and in the exact manner, required by the
regulation at § 660.13, subpart C, or
§ 660.213.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) Sablefish fisheries. (1) Take and
retain, possess or land sablefish under
the tier limits provided for the limited
entry, fixed gear sablefish primary
season, described in § 660.231(b)(3),
from a vessel that is not registered to a
limited entry permit with a sablefish
endorsement.
(2) Take and retain, possess or land
sablefish in the sablefish primary
season, described at § 660.231(b), unless
the owner of the limited entry permit
registered for use with that vessel and
authorizing the vessel to fish in the
sablefish primary season is on board
that vessel. Exceptions to this
prohibition are provided at
§ 660.231(b)(4)(i) and (ii).
*
*
*
*
*
■ 13. In § 660.213, revise paragraph
(d)(1) and add paragraph (e) to read as
follows:
§ 660.213 Fixed gear fishery—
recordkeeping and reporting.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) * * *
(1) Any person landing groundfish
must retain on board the vessel from
E:\FR\FM\23NOR1.SGM
23NOR1
mstockstill on DSK3G9T082PROD with RULES
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 226 / Wednesday, November 23, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
which groundfish are landed, and
provide to an authorized officer upon
request, copies of any and all reports of
groundfish landings containing all data,
and in the exact manner, required by the
applicable state law throughout the
cumulative limit period during which a
landing occurred and for 15 days
thereafter. All relevant records used in
the preparation of electronic fish ticket
reports or corrections to these reports,
including dock tickets, must be
maintained for a period of not less than
three years after the date of landing and
must be immediately available upon
request for inspection by NMFS or
authorized officers or others as
specifically authorized by NMFS.
*
*
*
*
*
(e) Electronic fish ticket. The first
receiver, as defined at § 660.11, subpart
C, of fish, if that fish includes any
amount of sablefish, from a limited
entry fixed gear vessel, is responsible for
compliance with all reporting
requirements described in this
paragraph. Per requirements at
§ 660.212(a), all fish, if that fish
includes any amount of sablefish, must
be reported via electronic fish ticket.
When used in this paragraph, submit
means to transmit final electronic fish
ticket information via web-based form
or, if a waiver is granted, by paper form.
When used in this paragraph, record
means the action of documenting
electronic fish ticket information in any
written format.
(1) Required information. All first
receivers must provide the following
types of information: Date of landing,
vessel that made the landing, vessel
identification number, limited entry
permit number(s), name of the vessel
operator, gear type used, receiver, actual
weights of species landed listed by
species or species group including
species with no value, condition landed,
number of salmon by species, number of
Pacific halibut, ex-vessel value of the
landing by species, fish caught inside/
outside 3 miles or both, and any other
information deemed necessary by the
Regional Administrator (or designee) as
specified on the appropriate electronic
fish ticket form.
(2) Submissions. The first receiver
must:
(i) Include, as part of each electronic
fish ticket submission, the actual scale
weight for each groundfish species as
specified by requirements at § 660.15(c),
the vessel identification number, and
the limited entry permit number. Use
and maintain, for the purposes of
submitting electronic fish tickets,
equipment as specified at § 660.15(d).
(ii) Submit a completed electronic fish
ticket(s) no later than 24 hours after the
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:26 Nov 22, 2016
Jkt 241001
date of landing, unless a waiver of this
requirement has been granted under
provisions specified at paragraph (e)(4)
of this section.
(iii) Sablefish from a single landing in
the limited entry fixed gear sablefish
primary fishery may be counted against
more than one stacked permit, or against
a tier limit(s) and the cumulative trip
limit in the DTL fishery. For vessels
with stacked limited entry sablefish
permits, defined at § 660.12, sablefish
may be divided for the purposes of
apportioning the sablefish amongst the
remaining tier limits associated with
each of the stacked permits; in that
instance the electronic fish ticket(s)
must record all pertinent limited entry
permit numbers and apportion sablefish
landed against each tier limit. Per
regulations at § 660.232(a)(2) a vessel
may apportion sablefish catch between
the remainder of its tier limit(s) and
against the applicable DTL limits; in
that instance the electronic fish ticket
must be used to apportion sablefish
landed against the tier(s) from the
sablefish landed against cumulative trip
limits of the DTL fishery. If sablefish is
apportioned in either of the ways
described in this paragraph, the
electronic fish ticket must meet the
process and submittal requirements
specified in paragraphs (e)(iv) and (v) of
this section. In addition, the owner-onboard, unless exempted under
regulations at § 660.231(a)(4), must
review and sign documentation of the
landing, as described in paragraphs
(e)(2)(iv) and (v) of this section.
(iv) If electronic fish tickets will be
submitted prior to processing or
transport, follow these process and
submittal requirements:
(A) After completing the landing, the
electronic fish ticket information must
be recorded immediately.
(B) Prior to submittal of the electronic
fish ticket, the information recorded for
the electronic fish ticket must be
reviewed by the vessel operator who
delivered the fish and the port sampler,
if one is present. If required by
regulations at § 660.231(a)(4), the
owner-on-board must also review the
information recorded on the electronic
fish ticket prior to submittal.
(C) After review, the receiver and the
vessel operator must sign a printed hard
copy of the electronic fish ticket or, if
the landing occurs outside of business
hours, the original dock ticket. If
required by regulations at
§ 660.231(a)(4), the owner-on-board
must also sign a printed copy of the
electronic fish ticket or, if the landing
occurs outside of business hours, the
original dock ticket.
PO 00000
Frm 00043
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
84431
(D) Prior to submittal, three copies of
the signed electronic fish ticket must be
produced by the receiver and a copy
provided to each of the following:
(1) The vessel operator and/or the
owner-on-board,
(2) The state of origin if required by
state regulations, and
(3) The first receiver.
(E) After review and signature, the
electronic fish ticket must be submitted
within 24 hours after the date of
landing, as specified in paragraph
(e)(2)(ii) of this section.
(v) If electronic fish tickets will be
submitted after transport, follow these
process and submittal requirements:
(A) The vessel name, limited entry
permit number, and the electronic fish
ticket number must be recorded on each
dock ticket related to that landing.
(B) Upon completion of the dock
ticket, but prior to transfer of the
landing to another location, the dock
ticket information that will be used to
complete the electronic fish ticket must
be reviewed by the vessel operator who
delivered the fish. If the electronic fish
ticket will report landings of sablefish in
the sablefish primary fishery, the owneron-board, unless exempted under
regulations at § 660.231(a)(4), must
review the information recorded on the
dock ticket prior to transfer of the
landing to another location.
(C) After review, the first receiver and
the vessel operator must sign the
original copy of each dock ticket related
to that landing. If a dock ticket includes
landings of sablefish in the sablefish
primary fishery, the owner-on-board,
unless exempted under regulations at
§ 660.231(a)(4), must sign the original
copy of that dock ticket.
(D) Prior to submittal of the electronic
fish ticket, three copies of the signed
dock ticket must be produced by the
first receiver and a copy provided to
each of the following:
(1) The vessel operator and/or the
owner-on-board,
(2) The state of origin if required by
state regulations, and
(3) The first receiver.
(E) Based on the information
contained in the signed dock ticket, the
electronic fish ticket must be completed
and submitted within 24 hours of the
completion of the landing, as specified
in paragraph (e)(2)(ii) of this section.
(F) Three copies of the electronic fish
ticket must be produced by the first
receiver and a copy provided to each of
the following:
(1) The vessel operator and/or the
owner-on-board,
(2) The state of origin if required by
state regulations, and
(3) The first receiver.
E:\FR\FM\23NOR1.SGM
23NOR1
84432
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 226 / Wednesday, November 23, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
(3) Revising a submission. In the event
that a data error is found, electronic fish
ticket submissions must be revised by
resubmitting the revised form
electronically. Electronic fish tickets are
to be used for the submission of final
data. Preliminary data, including
estimates of fish weights or species
composition, shall not be submitted on
electronic fish tickets.
(4) Waivers for submission. On a caseby-case basis, a temporary written
waiver of the requirement to submit
electronic fish tickets may be granted by
the Assistant Regional Administrator or
designee if he/she determines that
circumstances beyond the control of a
receiver would result in inadequate data
submissions using the electronic fish
ticket system. The duration of the
waiver will be determined on a case-bycase basis.
(5) Reporting requirements when a
temporary waiver has been granted.
Receivers that have been granted a
temporary waiver from the requirement
to submit electronic fish tickets must
submit on paper the same data as is
required on electronic fish tickets
within 24 hours of the date received
during the period that the waiver is in
effect. Paper fish tickets must be sent by
facsimile to NMFS, West Coast Region,
Sustainable Fisheries Division, 206–
526–6736 or by delivering it in person
to 7600 Sand Point Way NE., Seattle,
WA 98115. The requirements for
submissions of paper tickets in this
paragraph are separate from, and in
addition to existing state requirements
for landing receipts or fish receiving
tickets.
■ 14. In § 660.231, revise paragraphs (a),
(b)(1) through (3), and (b)(4)
introductory text to read as follows:
§ 660.231 Limited entry fixed gear
sablefish primary fishery.
mstockstill on DSK3G9T082PROD with RULES
*
*
*
*
*
(a) Sablefish endorsement. In addition
to requirements pertaining to fishing in
the limited entry fixed gear fishery
(described in subparts C and E), a vessel
may not fish in the sablefish primary
season for the limited entry fixed gear
fishery, unless at least one limited entry
permit with both a gear endorsement for
longline or trap (or pot) gear and a
sablefish endorsement is registered for
use with that vessel. Permits with
sablefish endorsements are assigned to
one of three tiers, as described at
§ 660.25(b)(3)(iv), subpart C.
(b) * * *
(1) Season dates. North of 36° N. lat.,
the sablefish primary season for the
limited entry, fixed gear, sablefishendorsed vessels begins at 12 noon local
time on April 1 and closes at 12 noon
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:26 Nov 22, 2016
Jkt 241001
local time on October 31, or closes for
an individual vessel owner when the
tier limit for the sablefish endorsed
permit(s) registered to the vessel has
been reached, whichever is earlier,
unless otherwise announced by the
Regional Administrator through the
routine management measures process
described at § 660.60(c).
(2) Gear type. During the primary
season, when fishing against primary
season cumulative limits, each vessel
authorized to fish in that season under
paragraph (a) of this section may fish for
sablefish with any of the gear types,
except trawl gear, endorsed on at least
one of the sablefish endorsed permits
registered for use with that vessel.
(3) Cumulative limits. (i) A vessel
fishing in the primary season will be
constrained by the sablefish cumulative
limit associated with each of the
sablefish endorsed permits registered for
use with that vessel. During the primary
season, each vessel authorized to fish in
that season under paragraph (a) of this
section may take, retain, possess, and
land sablefish, up to the cumulative
limits for each of the sablefish endorsed
permits registered for use with that
vessel. If a vessel is stacking permits,
that vessel may land up to the total of
all cumulative limits announced in this
paragraph for the tiers for those permits,
except as limited by paragraph (b)(3)(ii)
of this section. Up to 3 sablefish
endorsed permits may be stacked for use
with a single vessel during the primary
season; thus, a single vessel may not
take and retain, possess or land more
than 3 primary season sablefish
cumulative limits in any one year. Per
regulations at § 660.12(a)(6), subpart C,
all other groundfish landings are subject
to per vessel trip limits. In 2015, the
following annual limits are in effect:
Tier 1 at 41,175 (18,677 kg), Tier 2 at
18,716 lb (8,489 kg), and Tier 3 at
10,695 lb (4,851 kg). For 2016 and
beyond, the following annual limits are
in effect: Tier 1 at 45,053 lb (20,436 kg),
Tier 2 at 20,479 lb (9,289 kg), and Tier
3 at 11,702 lb (5,308 kg).
(ii) If a sablefish endorsed permit is
registered to more than one vessel
during the primary season in a single
year, the second vessel may only take
the portion of the cumulative limit for
that permit that has not been harvested
by the first vessel to which the permit
was registered. The combined primary
season sablefish landings for all vessels
registered to that permit may not exceed
the cumulative limit for the tier
associated with that permit.
(iii) A cumulative trip limit is the
maximum amount of sablefish that may
be taken and retained, possessed, or
landed per vessel in a specified period
PO 00000
Frm 00044
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
of time, with no limit on the number of
landings or trips.
(iv) Incidental Pacific halibut
retention north of Pt. Chehalis, WA
(46°53.30′ N. lat.). From April 1 through
October 31, vessels authorized to
participate in the sablefish primary
fishery, licensed by the International
Pacific Halibut Commission for
commercial fishing in Area 2A (waters
off Washington, Oregon, California), and
fishing with longline gear north of Pt.
Chehalis, WA (46°53.30′ N. lat.) may
possess and land up to the following
cumulative limits: 110 lb (50 kg) dressed
weight of Pacific halibut for every 1,000
pounds (454 kg) dressed weight of
sablefish landed and up to 2 additional
Pacific halibut in excess of the 110pounds-per-1,000-pound ratio per
landing. ‘‘Dressed’’ Pacific halibut in
this area means halibut landed
eviscerated with their heads on. Pacific
halibut taken and retained in the
sablefish primary fishery north of Pt.
Chehalis may only be landed north of
Pt. Chehalis and may not be possessed
or landed south of Pt. Chehalis.
(4) Owner-on-board requirement. Any
person who owns or has ownership
interest in a limited entry permit with
a sablefish endorsement, as described at
§ 660.25(b)(3), subpart C, must be on
board the vessel registered for use with
that permit at any time that the vessel
has sablefish on board the vessel that
count toward that permit’s cumulative
sablefish landing limit. This person
must carry government issued photo
identification while aboard the vessel.
This person must review and sign a
printed copy of the electronic fish
ticket(s) or dock ticket, as described at
§ 660.213(d), unless this person
qualified for the owner-on-board
exemption. A permit owner is qualified
for the owner-on-board exemption and
not obligated to be on board the vessel
registered for use with the sablefishendorsed limited entry permit during
the sablefish primary season if:
*
*
*
*
*
■ 15. Section 660.232 is revised to read
as follows:
§ 660.232 Limited entry daily trip limit
(DTL) fishery for sablefish.
(a) Limited entry DTL fisheries both
north and south of 36° N. lat. (1) Before
the start of the sablefish primary season,
all sablefish landings made by a vessel
declared into the limited entry fixed
gear fishery and authorized by
§ 660.231(a) to fish in the sablefish
primary season will be subject to the
restrictions and limits of the limited
entry DTL fishery for sablefish specified
in this section and which is governed by
E:\FR\FM\23NOR1.SGM
23NOR1
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 226 / Wednesday, November 23, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
routine management measures imposed
under § 660.60(c), subpart C.
(2) Following the start of the primary
season, all sablefish landings made by a
vessel declared into the limited entry
fixed gear fishery and authorized by
§ 660.231(a) to fish in the primary
season will count against the primary
season cumulative limit(s) associated
with the sablefish-endorsed permit(s)
registered for use with that vessel. A
vessel that is eligible to fish in the
sablefish primary season may fish in the
DTL fishery for sablefish once that
vessels’ primary season sablefish
limit(s) have been landed, or after the
close of the primary season, whichever
occurs earlier (as described at
§ 660.231(b)(1). If the vessel continues
to fish in the limited entry fixed gear
fishery for any part of the remaining
fishing year, any subsequent sablefish
landings by that vessel will be subject
to the restrictions and limits of the
limited entry DTL fishery for sablefish.
(3) Vessels registered for use with a
limited entry fixed gear permit that does
not have a sablefish endorsement may
fish in the limited entry DTL fishery,
consistent with regulations at § 660.230,
for as long as that fishery is open during
the fishing year, subject to routine
management measures imposed under
§ 660.60(c), Subpart C. DTL limits for
the limited entry fishery north and
south of 36° N. lat. are provided in
Tables 2 (North) and 2 (South) of this
subpart.
(b) A vessel that is jointly registered,
and has participated or will participate
in both the limited entry fixed gear
fishery and the Shorebased IFQ Program
during the fishing year, is subject to
crossover provisions described at
§ 660.60(h)(7), subpart C.
■ 16. In § 660.312:
■ a. Add paragraphs (a)(3) through (5);
■ b. Redesignate paragraphs (b) and (c)
as (c) and (d); and
■ c. Add a new paragraph (b).
The additions read as follows:
§ 660.312 Open access fishery—
prohibitions.
mstockstill on DSK3G9T082PROD with RULES
*
*
*
*
*
(a) * * *
(3) Transport fish, if that fish includes
any amount of sablefish, away from the
point of landing before being sorted and
weighed by federal groundfish species
or species group, and recorded for
submission on an electronic fish ticket
under § 660.313(f). (If fish will be
transported to a different location for
processing, all sorting and weighing to
federal groundfish species groups must
occur before transporting the fish away
from the point of landing).
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:26 Nov 22, 2016
Jkt 241001
(4) Mix fish from more than one
landing, where one or more of the
landings includes any amount of
sablefish, prior to the fish being sorted
and weighed for reporting on an
electronic fish ticket under § 660.313(f).
(5) Process, sell, or discard any fish if
that fish includes any amount of
sablefish, that has not been accounted
for on an electronic fish ticket under
§ 660.313(f).
(b) Recordkeeping and reporting. (1)
Fail to comply with all recordkeeping
and reporting requirements at § 660.13,
subpart C, including failure to submit
information, or submission of inaccurate
or false information on any report
required at § 660.13(d), subpart C, and
§ 660.313.
(2) Falsify or fail to make and/or file,
retain or make available any and all
reports of groundfish landings that
include sablefish, containing all data,
and in the exact manner, required by the
regulation at § 660.13, subpart C, or
§ 660.313.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 17. Section 660.313 is revised to read
as follows:
§ 660.313 Open access fishery—
recordkeeping and reporting.
(a) General. General reporting
requirements specified at § 660.13(a)
through (c), subpart C, apply to the open
access fishery.
(b) Declaration reports for vessels
using nontrawl gear. Declaration
reporting requirements for open access
vessels using nontrawl gear (all types of
open access gear other than nongroundfish trawl gear) are specified at
§ 660.13(d), subpart C.
(c) Declaration reports for vessels
using non-groundfish trawl gear.
Declaration reporting requirements for
open access vessels using nongroundfish trawl gear are specified at
§ 660.13(d), subpart C.
(d) VMS requirements for open access
fishery vessels. VMS requirements for
open access fishery vessels are specified
at § 660.14, subpart C.
(e) Retention of records. Any person
landing groundfish must retain on board
the vessel from which groundfish is
landed, and provide to an authorized
officer upon request, copies of any and
all reports of groundfish landings
containing all data, and in the exact
manner, required by the applicable state
law throughout the cumulative limit
period during which a landing occurred
and for 15 days thereafter. All relevant
records used in the preparation of
electronic fish ticket reports or
corrections to these reports, including
dock tickets, must be maintained for a
period of not less than three years after
PO 00000
Frm 00045
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
84433
the date of landing and must be
immediately available upon request for
inspection by NMFS or authorized
officers or others as specifically
authorized by NMFS.
(f) Electronic fish ticket. The first
receiver, as defined at § 660.11, subpart
C, of fish, if that fish includes any
amount of sablefish, from an open
access vessel, is responsible for
compliance with all reporting
requirements described in this
paragraph. Per requirements at
§ 660.312(a), all fish, if that fish
includes any amount of sablefish, must
be reported via electronic fish ticket.
When used in this paragraph, submit
means to transmit final electronic fish
ticket information via web-based form
or, if a waiver is granted, by paper form.
When used in this paragraph, record
means the action of documenting
electronic fish ticket information in any
written format.
(1) Required information. All first
receivers must provide the following
types of information: Date of landing,
vessel that made the landing, vessel
identification number, name of the
vessel operator, gear type used, receiver,
actual weights of species landed listed
by species or species group including
species with no value, condition landed,
number of salmon by species, number of
Pacific halibut, ex-vessel value of the
landing by species, fish caught inside/
outside 3 miles or both, and any other
information deemed necessary by the
Regional Administrator (or designee) as
specified on the appropriate electronic
fish ticket form.
(2) Submissions. The first receiver
must:
(i) Include, as part of each electronic
fish ticket submission, the actual scale
weight for each groundfish species as
specified by requirements at § 660.15(c)
and the vessel identification number.
Use and maintain, for the purposes of
submitting electronic fish tickets,
equipment as specified at § 660.15(d).
(ii) Submit a completed electronic fish
ticket no later than 24 hours after the
date of landing, unless a waiver of this
requirement has been granted under
provisions specified at paragraph (f)(4)
of this section.
(iii) If electronic fish tickets will be
submitted prior to processing or
transport, follow these process and
submittal requirements:
(A) After completing the landing, the
electronic fish ticket information must
be recorded immediately.
(B) Prior to submittal of the electronic
fish ticket, the information recorded for
the electronic fish ticket must be
reviewed by the vessel operator who
E:\FR\FM\23NOR1.SGM
23NOR1
mstockstill on DSK3G9T082PROD with RULES
84434
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 226 / Wednesday, November 23, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
delivered the fish and the port sampler,
if one is present.
(C) After review, the receiver and the
vessel operator must sign a printed hard
copy of the electronic fish ticket or, if
the landing occurs outside of business
hours, the original dock ticket.
(D) Prior to submittal, three copies of
the signed electronic fish ticket must be
produced by the receiver and a copy
provided to each of the following:
(1) The vessel operator,
(2) The state of origin if required by
state regulations, and
(3) The first receiver.
(E) After review and signature, the
electronic fish ticket must be submitted
within 24 hours after the date of
landing, as specified in paragraph
(f)(2)(ii) of this section.
(iv) If electronic fish tickets will be
submitted after transport, follow these
process and submittal requirements:
(A) The vessel name and the
electronic fish ticket number must be
recorded on each dock ticket related to
that landing.
(C) Upon completion of the dock
ticket, but prior to transfer of the offload
to another location, the dock ticket
information that will be used to
complete the electronic fish ticket must
be reviewed by the vessel operator who
delivered the fish.
(D) After review, the first receiver and
the vessel operator must sign the
original copy of each dock ticket related
to that landing.
(E) Prior to submittal of the electronic
fish ticket, three copies of the signed
dock ticket must be produced by the
first receiver and a copy provided to
each of the following:
(1) The vessel operator,
(2) The state of origin if required by
state regulations, and
(3) The first receiver.
(F) Based on the information
contained in the signed dock ticket, the
electronic fish ticket must be completed
and submitted within 24 hours of the
date of landing, as specified in
paragraph (f)(2)(ii) of this section.
(G) Three copies of the electronic fish
ticket must be produced by the first
receiver and a copy provided to each of
the following:
(1) The vessel operator,
(2) The state of origin if required by
state regulations, and
(3) The first receiver.
(3) Revising a submission. In the event
that a data error is found, electronic fish
ticket submissions must be revised by
resubmitting the revised form
electronically. Electronic fish tickets are
to be used for the submission of final
data. Preliminary data, including
estimates of fish weights or species
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:26 Nov 22, 2016
Jkt 241001
composition, shall not be submitted on
electronic fish tickets.
(4) Waivers for submission. On a caseby-case basis, a temporary written
waiver of the requirement to submit
electronic fish tickets may be granted by
the Assistant Regional Administrator or
designee if he/she determines that
circumstances beyond the control of a
receiver would result in inadequate data
submissions using the electronic fish
ticket system. The duration of the
waiver will be determined on a case-bycase basis.
(5) Reporting requirements when a
temporary waiver has been granted.
Receivers that have been granted a
temporary waiver from the requirement
to submit electronic fish tickets must
submit on paper the same data as is
required on electronic fish tickets
within 24 hours of the date of landing
during the period that the waiver is in
effect. Paper fish tickets must be sent by
facsimile to NMFS, West Coast Region,
Sustainable Fisheries Division, 206–
526–6736 or by delivering it in person
to 7600 Sand Point Way NE., Seattle,
WA 98115. The requirements for
submissions of paper tickets in this
paragraph are separate from, and in
addition to existing state requirements
for landing receipts or fish receiving
tickets.
[FR Doc. 2016–28153 Filed 11–22–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
15 CFR Part 902
50 CFR Part 679
[Docket No. 151113999–6999–02]
RIN 0648–BF54
Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic
Zone Off Alaska; Bering Sea and
Aleutian Islands Management Area;
American Fisheries Act; Amendment
113
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
NMFS issues this final rule to
implement Amendment 113 to the
Fishery Management Plan for
Groundfish of the Bering Sea and
Aleutian Islands Management Area
(FMP). This final rule modifies the
management of Bering Sea and Aleutian
SUMMARY:
PO 00000
Frm 00046
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
Islands (BSAI) Pacific cod fishery to set
aside a portion of the Aleutian Islands
Pacific cod total allowable catch for
harvest by vessels directed fishing for
Aleutian Islands Pacific cod and
delivering their catch for processing to
a shoreside processor located on land
west of 170° W. longitude in the
Aleutian Islands (‘‘Aleutian Islands
shoreplant’’). The harvest set-aside
applies only if specific notification and
performance requirements are met, and
only during the first few months of the
fishing year. This harvest set-aside
provides the opportunity for vessels,
Aleutian Islands shoreplants, and the
communities where Aleutian Islands
shoreplants are located to receive
benefits from a portion of the Aleutian
Islands Pacific cod fishery. The
notification and performance
requirements preserve an opportunity
for the complete harvest of the BSAI
Pacific cod resource if the set-aside is
not fully harvested. This final rule is
intended to promote the goals and
objectives of Amendment 113, the FMP,
the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery
Conservation and Management Act, and
other applicable laws.
DATES: Effective on November 23, 2016.
ADDRESSES: Electronic copies of
Amendment 113 to the FMP, the
Environmental Assessment (EA),
Regulatory Impact Review (RIR), Initial
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (IRFA),
and Finding of No Significant Impact
(FONSI) prepared for this action,
collectively ‘‘the Analysis,’’ and the
proposed rule may be obtained from
https://www.regulations.gov or from the
NMFS Alaska Region Web site at https://
alaskafisheries.noaa.gov.
Written comments regarding the
burden-hour estimates or other aspects
of the collection-of-information
requirements contained in this rule may
be submitted to NMFS Alaska Region,
P.O. Box 21668, Juneau, AK 99802–
1668, Attn: Ellen Sebastian, Records
Officer; in person at NMFS Alaska
Region, 709 West 9th Street, Room
420A, Juneau, AK; by email to OIRA_
Submission@omb.eop.gov; or by fax to
(202) 395–5806.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Julie
Scheurer, 907–586–7228.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
NMFS manages the groundfish and
Pacific cod fisheries in the Exclusive
Economic Zone of the BSAI under the
FMP. The North Pacific Fishery
Management Council (Council)
prepared, and the Secretary of
Commerce approved, the FMP pursuant
to the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery
E:\FR\FM\23NOR1.SGM
23NOR1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 226 (Wednesday, November 23, 2016)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 84419-84434]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2016-28153]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
15 CFR Part 902
50 CFR Part 660
[Docket No. 140905757-6999-02]
RIN 0648-BE42
Fisheries Off West Coast States; Pacific Coast Groundfish Fishery
Management Plan; Commercial Sablefish Fishing Regulations and
Electronic Fish Tickets
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This final rule revises fishery monitoring and equipment
requirements for all commercial groundfish fisheries. In particular, it
establishes a requirement for submitting electronic fish tickets (EFT)
in the limited entry fixed gear fisheries and open access fisheries.
This final rule also: revises administrative procedures for limited
entry permits, providing greater flexibility and efficiencies for
limited entry groundfish fishery participants; requires vessels
registered to Vessel Monitoring Systems (VMS) to make an initial
declaration report; and makes administrative changes and clarifying
edits to improve consistency of the regulations with past Pacific
Fishery
[[Page 84420]]
Management Council (Council) actions and with the Pacific Coast
Groundfish Fishery Management Plan (FMP). This action improves
monitoring and administration of the limited entry sablefish primary
fishery, and addresses unforeseen issues arising out of the evolution
of commercial sablefish fisheries and subsequent regulations.
DATES: This rule is effective December 23, 2016, except for the
amendments to Sec. 660.212(a)(3) through (5) and Sec. 660.312(a)(3)
through (5), which will be effective January 1, 2017.
ADDRESSES: Background information and documents are available at the
Pacific Fishery Management Council's Web site at https://www.pcouncil.org/. NMFS prepared a Final Regulatory Flexibility
Analysis (FRFA), which is summarized in the Classification section of
this final rule. Copies of the FRFA and the Small Entity Compliance
Guide are available from William W. Stelle, Jr., Regional
Administrator, West Coast Region, NMFS, 7600 Sand Point Way NE.,
Seattle, WA 98115-0070; or by phone at 206-526-6150. Copies of the
Small Entity Compliance Guide are also available on the West Coast
Regional Office Web site at https://www.westcoast.fisheries.noaa.gov/.
Written comments regarding the burden-hour estimates or other
aspects of the collection-of-information requirements contained in this
final rule may be submitted to William W. Stelle, Jr., Regional
Administrator, West Coast Region, NMFS, 7600 Sand Point Way NE.,
Seattle, WA 98115-0070, and to OMB by email to
OIRA_Submission@omb.eop.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Gretchen Hanshew, 206-526-6147,
gretchen.hanshew@noaa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Summary of Major Actions
This final rule improves the timeliness and accuracy of sablefish
catch reporting in the limited entry fixed gear fisheries and open
access fisheries, provides more flexibility and efficiencies for
harvesters in the Shorebased Individual Fishing Quota (IFQ) Program and
limited entry fixed gear fisheries, and implements several
administrative and clarifying changes to monitoring and permitting
provisions of regulations for all of the limited entry and open access
commercial groundfish fisheries on the West Coast.
This final rule contains eight major actions, along with related
minor clarifications and non-substantive changes. The first action is a
new requirement for electronic fish tickets to be submitted for all
commercial landings of sablefish delivered to Washington, Oregon and
California fish buyers. The second action provides qualified vessel
owners an opportunity to apply for an exemption to the ownership
limitation of three permits in the limited entry sablefish primary
fishery. The third action allows a single vessel to be simultaneously
(jointly) registered to multiple limited entry permits, one of which
may have a trawl gear endorsement. The fourth action prohibits vessels
that have been granted an at-sea processing exemption for sablefish in
the limited entry fixed gear fishery from processing sablefish at sea
when that vessel is participating in the Shorebased IFQ Program. The
fifth action clarifies that, consistent with FMP Amendment 6, sablefish
catch in incidental open access fisheries is counted against the open
access allocation, and is not deducted from the commercial harvest
guideline. The sixth action requires any vessel that has a VMS
registered with NMFS Office of Law Enforcement (OLE) to submit a
declaration report with OLE. The seventh action updates and simplifies
equipment requirements for electronic fish tickets. The eighth action
clarifies existing regulatory language prohibiting the retention of
groundfish species taken in the limited entry fixed gear fishery beyond
the allowable quota. In addition, the action includes housekeeping
changes that are intended to better align the regulations with defined
terms, and to provide clarity and consistency between paragraphs.
Background
The groundfish fisheries in the exclusive economic zone (EEZ) off
the west coast of the United States are managed under the FMP. The FMP
was prepared by the Pacific Fishery Management Council (Council) under
the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act (Magnuson-
Stevens Act) as amended by the Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2004
(Pub. L. 108-199, section 801). Regulations implementing provisions of
the FMP are located at 50 CFR part 660, subparts C through G.
This final rule includes several actions that revise regulations
for commercial fisheries that harvest sablefish. These regulatory
changes apply to the Shorebased IFQ Program, the limited entry fixed
gear fishery, which includes the limited entry sablefish primary
fishery and the daily trip limit (DTL) fishery, and the open access
fishery. A more detailed description of the fisheries affected by this
rulemaking, and the major provisions of this action, is contained in
the June 1, 2016, proposed rule (81 FR 34947).
1. Electronic Fish Ticket Requirement
This final rule includes a Federal electronic fish ticket submittal
requirement for all commercial groundfish deliveries that include
sablefish. An electronic fish ticket is a web-based form used to send
groundfish landing data to the Pacific States Marine Fisheries
Commission (PSMFC). Electronic fish tickets are used to collect
information similar to the information required in state fish receiving
tickets or landing receipts (henceforth referred to as paper tickets),
but do not replace or change any state requirements. This requirement
will improve the timeliness and accuracy of catch data for monitoring
harvest relative to applicable tier limits in the limited entry fixed
gear sablefish fishery and trip limits in the limited entry fixed gear
and open access DTL fisheries. Electronic fish tickets have been
required for IFQ species since the start of the Shorebased IFQ Program
in 2011, and have allowed vessel owners/operators, buyers and dealers,
and fishery managers timely access to catch information. This final
rule expands the use of electronic fish tickets to the limited entry
fixed gear and open access fisheries, and is expected to have similar
benefits regarding timely access to catch data.
2. Exemption to Limited Entry Sablefish Permit Ownership Limitation
Regulations (Sec. 660.25(b)(3)(iv)(C)) state that no individual
person, partnership, or corporation in combination may have ownership
interest in or hold more than three permits with sablefish endorsements
either simultaneously or cumulatively over the primary season (hereby
referred to as ``ownership limitation''). This ownership limitation was
intended to prevent concentration of harvest privileges in the Pacific
coast sablefish primary fishery. However, this restriction has led to
unforeseen complications because many persons, partnerships and
corporations have harvest privileges in both the Alaska IFQ sablefish
fishery and the Pacific coast sablefish fishery. Under the existing
regulations, Alaska IFQ holders are required to have a partial
ownership interest in a vessel that fishes for their IFQ. These IFQ
holders are deemed to hold any Pacific Coast permits with sablefish
endorsements associated with a vessel in which they have an ownership
interest. This has resulted in Alaska IFQ holders being ``limited out''
in the Pacific Coast sablefish primary fishery, even though they do not
benefit
[[Page 84421]]
from the permits associated with the vessels in which they have an
interest. The Council recommended, and NMFS is implementing through
this final rule, a process by which vessel owners who meet certain
qualifying criteria may petition NMFS for a limited exemption to the
ownership limitation, as described in detail in the preamble to the
proposed rule
3. Joint Registration
Originally, the license limitation program (LLP), implemented
through Amendment 6 to the FMP (57 FR 54001, November 16, 1992, see
also the EA under ADDRESSES for more information on the LLP), allowed
vessels to register both a trawl and fixed gear (longline and fishpot)
endorsed permit at the same time. Subsequently, regulations were
modified and no longer allow vessels to register multiple limited entry
permits unless the permits are sablefish-endorsed and stacked for use
in the limited entry fixed gear sablefish primary fishery. This
restriction was put in place to keep trawl and fixed gear fisheries
temporally separated to meet enforcement and monitoring needs. In 2004,
a vessel monitoring program was implemented that allowed vessels to
identify which fishery they were participating in through a declaration
system, which eliminated the need for temporal separation. As part of
FMP Amendment 20 trailing actions, in April 2012 the Council
recommended that vessels registered to a limited entry trawl permit be
allowed to simultaneously register to a limited entry fixed gear
permit, also called ``joint registration.'' This final rule implements
joint registration and clarifies how fishery-specific regulations still
apply to vessels that are jointly registered. Joint registration is
permitted in one of two configurations, which are described in
additional detail in the June 1, 2016, proposed rule (81 FR 34947):
(1) Configuration A: One trawl permit and one, two, or three
sablefish endorsed permits.
(2) Configuration B: One trawl permit and one limited entry fixed
gear permit.
Registering a vessel to a limited entry permit with a specific
endorsement often triggers certain requirements in the groundfish
regulations. Joint registration is not intended to change fishing
operations of groundfish fisheries or change requirements that are
applicable to vessels because of the type of the endorsement(s) on the
limited entry permit to which they are registered, unless otherwise
described above and in the June 1, 2016, proposed rule (81 FR 34947).
4. Restrictions on At-Sea Processing of Sablefish
Processing of groundfish at-sea is prohibited for vessels fishing
in the Shorebased IFQ Program or limited entry fixed gear fishery,
unless exempted from that prohibition. One such exemption applies to
certain vessels fishing in the limited entry fixed gear sablefish
primary fishery. Those exempted vessels may freeze sablefish at-sea
during the limited entry fixed gear sablefish primary fishery.
When trawl rationalization was implemented in 2011, the Council
recommended that at-sea processing of groundfish in the Shorebased IFQ
Program be prohibited, with limited exemptions. Regulations at Sec.
660.112 (b)(1)(xii) prohibit at-sea processing of groundfish, and also
list the exemptions that have been granted to date, including an
exemption from the prohibition of at-sea processing that applies in the
sablefish primary fishery. As written, those regulations grant vessels
with an exemption from the prohibition of at-sea processing in the
sablefish primary fishery when fishing in the Shorebased IFQ Program.
However, regulations at Sec. 660.25(b)(6)(i) only allow the sablefish
at-sea processing exemption when the vessel is registered to a
sablefish-endorsed limited entry permit.
Currently, because vessels cannot be registered to a sablefish-
endorsed limited entry permit and a trawl-endorsed permit at the same
time, Shorebased IFQ vessels cannot take advantage of the sablefish at-
sea processing exemption. However, this rule's joint registration
provisions would allow a vessel to register to a trawl endorsed and a
sablefish endorsed limited entry permit simultaneously. If the
exemption at Sec. 660.112(b)(1)(xii)(B) is not removed, joint
registration could allow vessels with an exemption from the at-sea
processing prohibition for the sablefish primary fishery to also
process sablefish at sea in the Shorebased IFQ Program. Consistent with
the Council's recommendation, this rule removes the exemption to the
prohibition of at-sea processing (at Sec. 660.112(b)(1)(xii)(B)) that
extended the limited entry fixed gear exemption in Sec.
660.25(b)(6)(i) to vessels fishing sablefish in the Shorebased IFQ
Program. Also, in light of joint registration, a clarifying sentence is
added to Sec. 660.25(b)(6)(i), stating that the at-sea processing
exemption only applies to at-sea processing of sablefish caught in the
limited entry fixed gear sablefish primary fishery.
During development of this rule, NMFS noted that a similar
situation as the one described above may occur with the exemption from
the processing-at-sea prohibition for non-whiting groundfish. When a
vessel with a non-whiting exemption from that prohibition in the
Shorebased IFQ Program is jointly registered, it could utilize that
exemption when fishing in non-IFQ fisheries. NMFS proposed a clarifying
sentence at Sec. 660.25(b)(6)(ii), stating that the exemption only
applies to processing non-whiting groundfish caught in the Shorebased
IFQ Program, which is consistent with the Council's recommendation
under joint registration with regards to the sablefish at-sea
processing exemption. NMFS requested public comment on this issue, and
received none. Therefore, the clarifying addition to Sec.
660.25(b)(6)(ii) is included in this final rule. This final rule
implements joint registration and does not allow at-sea processing of
non-whiting groundfish in non-IFQ fisheries, as the exemption was
granted to vessels participating in the Shorebased IFQ Program.
5. Sablefish Allocations North of 36[hairsp][deg] N. lat.
The allocation structure for sablefish north of 36[deg] N. lat. was
established in FMP Amendment 6. In April 2009, the Council recommended
final preferred intersector allocations for groundfish species under
Amendment 21. The Council and NMFS recommended that no change be made
to the Amendment 6 allocation structure for sablefish. However, FMP
Amendment 21 and its implementing regulations slightly changed the
process for allocating sablefish north of 36[deg] N. lat. (75 FR 60868,
October 1, 2010). This final rule includes regulations aligning
sablefish north of 36[deg] N. lat. allocations with the Amendment 6
allocation structure, as recommended by the Council in 2009, and as
described in the June 1, 2016 proposed rule (81 FR 34947).
6. Declaration Reports for Vessels Registered to a VMS Unit
In 2004, the Council and NMFS implemented a vessel monitoring
program. Since 2004, all commercial fishing vessels that take and
retain groundfish in federal waters, or transit through federal waters
with groundfish on board, are required to have a working VMS. The VMS,
along with a system of fishing declaration reporting requirements,
allows for monitoring and enforcement of areas closed to fishing. With
this 2004 program, NMFS type-approved hardware and software, or
``units,'' were installed on vessels in
[[Page 84422]]
order to meet these new program requirements for the groundfish
fishery. When a VMS unit is installed on a vessel, it is registered
with NMFS OLE and catalogued.
There are a number of VMS units that have registered with OLE but
those vessels have never made a declaration report. This final rule
includes regulation changes at Sec. 660.13(d) that require all vessels
registered to a VMS unit to submit a declaration report. Vessels
registered to a VMS unit are required to submit a declaration report,
regardless of fishing activities. Obtaining a declaration report from
these vessels will give OLE the information necessary to monitor the
activities of these vessels relative to the applicable regulations.
This final rule also revises fisher declarations at Sec.
660.13(d)(5)(iv)(A)(24) to include ``other.'' This category will
include on-the-water activities that may not be fishing (e.g.,
scientific research activities). NMFS anticipates vessels may make a
declaration of ``other'' if they are not fishing.
7. Equipment Requirements for Electronic Fish Tickets
As described in the proposed rule, a new interface has been
developed that uses the internet for both entry and submission of
electronic fish ticket data. The changes to regulations at Sec.
660.15(d) in this rule reflect the move to a web-based electronic fish
ticket for all first receivers. Note that an internet connection is
necessary for all steps for completion of an electronic fish ticket,
from creating the new ticket through submission. To reflect these
changes, the definition of ``electronic fish ticket'' at Sec. 660.11
is also revised to reflect the web-based form used to send electronic
fish ticket information to the PSMFC.
8. Prohibitions Regarding ``Take and Retain''
NMFS is replacing ``taking, retaining'' with ``taking and
retaining,'' consistent with the Council's recommendations under PCGFMP
Amendment 14 and described in the 2016 proposed rule. With the
exception of the sablefish primary fishery, in commercial groundfish
fisheries vessels may ``take'' more than a single cumulative trip limit
of a species while fishing for other species, but they may not retain
any species above its cumulative trip limit. The phrase ``taking,
retaining'' in this context is not clear. Therefore, to better align
prohibitions for enforcing trip limits with the definition of ``trip
limit,'' to improve enforceability of trip limit prohibitions, and to
bring consistency to regulations that apply to commercial groundfish
fisheries, prohibitions at Sec. Sec. 660.12(a)(6), 660.212(a)(2), and
660.212(d)(1) and (2) are revised from ``take, retain'' to ``take and
retain.''
9. Related Minor Clarifications and Non-Substantive Changes
There are several outdated regulations, mis-specified cross-
references, inconsistencies in terminology, and areas in need of
clarification throughout the groundfish regulations that pertain to
commercial sablefish fishing. For the reasons stated in the proposed
rule, this rule implements all of the updates, corrections,
clarifications and non-substantive edits described in the proposed
rule.
Response to Comments
During the comment period of the proposed rule, NMFS received two
comment letters from participants in the fishing industry in support of
the proposed regulation changes to allow joint registration of trawl
and non-trawl permits and the limited exemption from ownership
limitation restrictions. NMFS also received a letter of comment
regarding VMS equipment requirements on board fishing vessels, which
are not revised in this rule, are outside the scope of this action,
and, therefore, are not discussed further here. NMFS addresses other
comments below:
Comment 1: Information on an electronic fish ticket will not
immediately become available to quota managers because the data will
need to be entered by data entry personnel who do not work over the
weekend.
Response: This is an automated system, and availability of
submitted electronic fish ticket data does not rely on action by system
administrators. Upon submission of the electronic fish ticket by first
receivers, catch information is immediately available to vessel
operators, enforcement, and federal and state fishery managers.
Comment 2: The time requirement for submitting a fish ticket under
the new regulation is inconsistent with some California state fish
ticket and transport ticket regulations.
Response: California Department of Fish and Wildlife is in the
process of developing a monitoring system that incorporates electronic
tickets. While the electronic fish tickets required by this provision
contain similar information as submitted on state tickets, it does not
replace or change the state requirements (Sec. 660.11). Furthermore,
any vessels participating in federal fisheries are subject to federal
regulations (Sec. 660.2).
Comment 3: NMFS should acknowledge that interruption of internet
service, equipment failures, etc. may make electronic fish tickets
impractical.
Response: NMFS has implemented a system in which a web browser on
any electronic device can be used to create and submit electronic fish
tickets. Therefore, even allowing for possible, temporary interruptions
in service or equipment problems, 24 hours is deemed an appropriate
amount of time to complete the fish ticket.
Comment 4: In some situations, the fish have been both landed and
transported by the vessel operator, and no paperwork has been completed
because the fish buyer has not yet taken possession of them.
Response: The trigger for written documentation of the landing is
not the point at which the fish buyer or the first receiver takes
possession of the fish. Written documentation of the fish offloaded
from a vessel is required once the fish are removed from the vessel.
Any fish removed from a vessel is considered a ``landing,'' per the
definition at Sec. 660.11. If the fish removed from the vessel will
not have an electronic fish ticket submitted prior to transport, the
fish must be accompanied by a dock ticket (or a transportation ticket
for vessels landing into California) with the information needed to
complete the electronic fish ticket, per regulations at Sec. Sec.
660.213 and 660.313. It is the responsibility of the vessel operator or
other person taking possession of the fish upon landing to comply with
the requirements to complete the dock ticket or transportation ticket.
Comment 5: Regulations for the landing of fish and requirements of
the new rule will unfairly impact first receivers that are not located
at a processing plant.
Response: Regulations implemented in this rule were explicitly
drafted to address the fact that some first receivers are not located
at processing plants, by allowing for use of dock tickets. If the first
receiver is taking possession of fish outside of regular business
hours, a co-signed dock ticket meets the need for documentation of
agreement between the first receiver and vessel operator regarding the
specifics of the landing. The dock ticket must include the electronic
fish ticket number, which can be generated remotely via any device with
a web browser and internet connection (e.g., mobile phone), and the
rest of the fish ticket can be completed and submitted from dock ticket
data within 24 hours.
[[Page 84423]]
Comment 6: The requirement of electronic fish tickets will cause
hardship to first receivers that must purchase and maintain the
hardware and software needed to submit electronic fish tickets.
Response: The improved timeliness of catch data will increase the
ability to manage the fishery to the benefit of all participants,
offsetting the cost of equipment needed to complete electronic fish
tickets. The electronic ticket portal is web-based, and can be accessed
from any electronic device (such as a computer, tablet, or mobile
phone) with an internet browser, allowing for increased accessibility
with multiple ways to meet reporting requirements. NMFS notes that
requirements for electronic fish ticket submission will include the
ability of first receivers to request a temporary waiver from these
requirements, enabling them to submit paper tickets on a temporary
basis. Temporary waivers will be granted on a case-by-case basis by
NMFS, per regulations at Sec. Sec. 660.213 and 660.313.
Comment 7: Those responsible for filling out fish tickets may not
have the training and technical knowledge to do so, and may be assisted
by fishermen or others as is currently done for paper tickets.
Response: NMFS is providing a written compliance guide, and PSMFC
staff will be available to provide training to help ensure that all
first receivers are able to perform the duties required in this rule.
See ADDRESSES for details on where to find these materials. Also, even
though the first receiver must sign the fish ticket, regulations
implemented in this final rule do not prohibit a first receiver from
seeking technical assistance from a third party.
Changes From the Proposed Rule
The electronic fish ticket requirements in the proposed and final
rule offer a new, more flexible option that allows for vessels fishing
in the sablefish primary fishery to apportion their sablefish from a
single landing against multiple tier limits (if the vessel is
registered to multiple sablefish endorsed permits), or against their
the remainder of their tier limit(s) and applicable daily trip limits.
During development of the proposed rule, it was thought that the
electronic fish ticket system requirements were such that, in these
situations, separate and distinct electronic fish tickets would need to
be filled out and submitted for each part of the landing. For example,
the first ticket for the delivery would document the sablefish pounds
counting toward ``Permit 13, Tier 2'' and a second ticket for the same
delivery would document the sablefish pounds counting toward ``Permit
21, Tier 3.'' Therefore, if a vessel operator chose to apportion their
sablefish as described above, proposed regulations required multiple
fish tickets to be filled out. Each fish ticket is estimated to take
approximately 10 minutes to complete and submit.
Since publication of the proposed rule, there has been further
exploration of how to document portions of a single sablefish delivery
against either multiple tier limits or against both tier limits and DTL
limits without having to duplicate some of the information by requiring
submittal of multiple electronic fish tickets. A mechanism has been
developed that allows catch of sablefish to be apportioned within a
single electronic fish ticket when a vessel operator wishes to take
advantage of the flexibility to apportion sablefish catch between
permits (i.e., among sablefish tiers associated with the permits
registered for use with the vessel) or between fisheries (i.e., among
sablefish tiers harvested in the sablefish primary fishery and the DTL
fishery). Utilizing this updated approach in the electronic fish ticket
system, the requirement included in the proposed rule at Sec.
660.213(e)(2)(iii) to submit multiple electronic fish tickets for a
single delivery is unnecessary.
Therefore, in this final rule, NMFS is removing the requirement at
Sec. 660.213(e)(2)(iii) to submit multiple electronic fish tickets
when a vessel operator wishes to take advantage of the flexibility to
apportion sablefish catch between permits or between fisheries (as
described above). This final rule provides vessel operators with the
same flexibilities and gives fishery managers the same permit and
landing information as the proposed regulations. However, the
regulations at Sec. 660.213(e)(2)(iii) in this final rule are
anticipated to relieve first receivers of some of the recordkeeping and
reporting burden by slightly reducing the total number of electronic
fish tickets required. As noted above, it is unknown how many vessel
operators in the sablefish primary fishery will elect to use this new
flexibility, therefore it is not possible to estimate exactly how much
time may be saved by first receivers. However, this change from the
proposed rule relieves a restriction, and is anticipated to benefit
vessel operators and first receivers.
The second change from the proposed rule pertains to the definition
of ``sablefish landing'' included in that rule at Sec. Sec. 660.211
and 660.311. The proposed rule would have required electronic fish
tickets be submitted by first receivers of all the groundfish on board
the vessel if that groundfish included any amount of sablefish. During
development of the final rule, it became apparent that given the
definition of ``sablefish landing'' the proposed rule language could be
interpreted as requiring a first receiver of fish from a landing that
included sablefish to submit an electronic fish ticket regardless of
whether that first receiver was buying any sablefish. If a scenario
arose where the sablefish landing were divided, all of the sablefish
were sold to one first receiver, and the rest of the groundfish were
sold to a second first receiver, the second first receiver, who did not
take possession of any sablefish, would be required to submit an
electronic fish ticket for those non-sablefish groundfish species. This
would be because as proposed, the electronic fish ticket requirement
would have applied to any ``sablefish landing,'' or any landing that
includes any amount of sablefish harvested in the limited entry fixed
gear fishery. ``Landing'' is defined at Sec. 660.11 and means the
transfer or offloading of fish from any vessel. Once transfer of fish
begins, all fish aboard the vessel are counted as part of the landing.
Therefore, all the fish on board the vessel, even if sold to multiple
first receivers, are all counted as part of the same landing.
Therefore, a vessel meets the definition of having a ``sablefish
landing'' when they have any amount of sablefish on board and begins
the transfer of any fish from the vessel. In the above described
situation, under proposed electronic fish ticket regulations and the
definition of ``sablefish landing,'' both of the first receivers of
fish from the sablefish landing would be required to submit an
electronic fish ticket, regardless of whether the first receiver is
taking possession of any amount of sablefish.
The Council's recommendation was to capture all of the landings of
sablefish for more accurate and timely accounting of sablefish harvest
against applicable limits in the limited entry fixed gear and open
access fisheries. Implementing an electronic fish ticket requirement
for first receivers of non-sablefish groundfish deliveries was not
intended and does not meet this purpose. Therefore, the proposed
definitions of ``sablefish landing'' (as included in the proposed rule
at Sec. Sec. 660.211 and 660.311) are not included in this final rule.
Instead, regulations at Sec. Sec. 660.212 and 660.312 are revised
to clarify that, if the landing is split, only the portion of the
landing (or a delivery/offload) that
[[Page 84424]]
includes some amount of sablefish must be reported on an electronic
fish ticket. With this revision, first receivers of a delivery that
includes any amount of sablefish must report that entire delivery (both
sablefish and non-sablefish groundfish) on an electronic fish ticket.
First receivers of a delivery that does not include any sablefish would
not be required to report via electronic fish ticket. These revisions
better align with the Council's intent to improve the timeliness of
sablefish catch data.
Classification
NMFS has determined that this action is consistent with the FMP,
the Magnuson Stevens Conservation and Management Act, and other
applicable laws.
The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) has determined that this
action is not significant for purposes of Executive Order 12866.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
A final regulatory flexibility analysis (FRFA) was prepared and
incorporates the initial regulatory flexibility analysis (IRFA). A
summary of the significant issues raised by the public comments in
response to the IRFA, and NMFS responses to those comments, and a
summary of the analyses completed to support the action are included
below. NMFS also prepared a Regulatory Impact Review (RIR) for this
action. A copy of the RIR/FRFA is available from NMFS (see ADDRESSES).
A summary of the FRFA, per the requirements of 5 U.S.C. 604(a) follows:
The Small Business Administration (SBA) has established size
criteria for all major industry sectors in the US, including fish
harvesting and fish processing businesses. A business primarily
involved in finfish harvesting is classified as a small business if it
is independently owned and operated, is not dominant in its field of
operation (including its affiliates), and has combined annual receipts
not in excess of $20.5 million for all its affiliated operations
worldwide (13 CFR part 121; August 17, 2015). For commercial shellfish
harvesters, the other qualifiers apply and the receipts threshold is
$5.5 million. For other commercial marine harvesters, for-hire
businesses, and marinas, the other qualifiers apply and the receipts
threshold is $7.5 million. A business primarily involved in seafood
processing is classified as a small business if it is independently
owned and operated, is not dominant in its field of operation
(including its affiliates), and has combined annual employment not in
excess of 500 employees for all its affiliated operations worldwide.
For seafood dealers/wholesalers, the other qualifiers apply and the
employment threshold is 100 employees. A small organization is any not-
for-profit enterprise which is independently owned and operated and is
not dominant in its field. Small governmental jurisdictions are
governments of cities, counties, towns, townships, villages, school
districts, or special districts, with populations less than 50,000.
On December 29, 2015, NMFS issued a final rule establishing a small
business size standard of $11 million in annual gross receipts for all
businesses primarily engaged in the commercial fishing industry (North
American Industry Classification System or NAICS 11411) for Regulatory
Flexibility Act (RFA) compliance purposes only (80 FR 81194, December
29, 2015). The $11 million standard became effective on July 1, 2016,
and is to be used in all NMFS rules subject to the RFA after July 1,
2016, in place of the U.S. SBA standards (described above) of $20.5
million, $5.5 million, and $7.5 million for the finfish (NAICS 114111),
shellfish (NAICS 114112), and other marine fishing (NAICS 114119)
sectors of the U.S. commercial fishing industry.
Pursuant to the RFA, and prior to July 1, 2016, an initial
regulatory flexibility analysis was developed for this regulatory
action using SBA's size standards. NMFS has reviewed the analyses
prepared for this regulatory action in light of the new size standard.
All of the harvesting entities directly regulated by this regulatory
action were considered small under the SBA's size standards, and
continue to be considered small under the new NMFS standard. Thus, NMFS
has determined that the new size standard does not affect analyses
prepared for this regulatory action.
No significant issues were raised during public comment, and no
changes were made as a result of public comments.
An estimated 99 entities are potentially impacted by this rule,
including 77 receivers and up to 22 vessels/permit holding entities.
All of these entities are considered small according to both the SBA
guidelines and the new NMFS standards described above. This rule is not
anticipated to have a substantial or significant economic impact on
small entities, or place small entities at a disadvantage to large
entities.
Addition of an exemption to the ownership limitation and joint
registration are expected to positively benefit directly impacted small
entities.
It is assumed that all first receivers have access to a personal
computer or other hardware/device. However, to reduce the potential
impacts on first receivers should there be a system failure, a waiver
may be granted by NMFS that temporarily exempts a first receiver from
the reporting requirements and allow reasonable time to resolve the
electronic fish ticket system problem. The duration of the waiver will
be determined on a case-by-case basis. First receivers that are granted
a temporary waiver from the requirement to submit electronic fish
tickets must submit on paper the same data as are required on
electronic fish tickets within 24 hours of the date received during the
period that the waiver is in effect.
Implementation of an electronic fish ticket improves the accuracy
and timeliness of landing data and provides managers with the real time
data necessary to do inseason management of the primary and daily trip
limit (DTL) fisheries. It also provides enforcement with the permit-
specific landings data necessary to monitor overages in the primary
(tier) and DTL sablefish fisheries, and could aid in enforcement of the
owner-on-board requirement.
There are no significant alternatives to the rule that accomplish
the stated objectives of applicable statutes and that minimize any of
the significant economic impact of the final rule on small entities.
However, Section 212 of the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement
Fairness Act of 1996 states that, for each rule or group of related
rules for which an agency is required to prepare a FRFA, the agency
shall publish one or more guides to assist small entities in complying
with the rule. The agency shall explain the actions a small entity is
required to take to comply with a rule or group of rules. As part of
this rulemaking process, a small entity compliance guide will be sent
to all limited entry permit owners and holders, and all persons and
entities that have requested information on groundfish management
actions (i.e., persons and entities on the West Coast groundfish email
list serve), and will be posted on the NMFS West Coast Region Web site
at https://www.westcoast.fisheries.noaa.gov/. With regards to new
electronic fish ticket requirements, outreach and compliance guidance
will also be available through the Pacific States Marine Fisheries
Commission at https://pacfin.psmfc.org/.
Paperwork Reduction Act
This final rule contains the implementation of a Federal
requirement for an electronic fish ticket
[[Page 84425]]
to capture essential fishery catch data for commercial non-trawl
sablefish fisheries (every commercial fishery landing that includes any
amount of sablefish) in a timely manner, which is a collection-of-
information requirement subject to review and approval by OMB under the
Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA). With regards to electronic fish tickets,
this requirement has been approved by OMB as a new OMB collection (OMB
collection 0648-0738). The public reporting burden is estimated to
average 10 minutes per response. With regards to the ownership
limitation exemption, this requirement has been approved by OMB as OMB
collection 0648-0737. The public reporting burden is estimated to be 45
minutes per response. Send comments on the burden estimates or any
other aspects of the collection of information to West Coast Region at
the ADDRESSES above, by email to OIRA_Submission@omb.eop.gov, or by fax
to (202) 395-7285.
Notwithstanding any other provision of the law, no person is
required to respond to, and no person shall be subject to 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.
The PRA (44 U.S.C. 3507) requires that agencies inventory and
display a current control number assigned by the Director, Office of
Management and Budget (OMB), for each agency information collection.
Sec. 902.1(b) identifies the location of NOAA regulations for which
OMB approval numbers have been issued. Because this final rule adds
requirements for scale test report recording and maintenance, Sec.
902.1(b) is revised to reference correctly the section resulting from
this final rule.
List of Subjects
15 CFR Part 902
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
50 CFR Part 660
Fisheries, Fishing, and Indian fisheries.
Dated: November 15, 2016.
Samuel D. Rauch III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
For the reasons set out in the preamble, 15 CFR part 902 and 50 CFR
part 660 are amended as follows:
Title 15--Commerce and Foreign Trade
PART 902--NOAA INFORMATION COLLECTION REQUIREMENTS UNDER THE
PAPERWORK REDUCTION ACT: OMB CONTROL NUMBERS
0
1. The authority citation for part 902 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.
0
2. In Sec. 902.1, in the table in paragraph (b), under the entry ``50
CFR'', revise the entries for ``660.13'', ``660.15'', ``660.17'',
``660.25'', ``660.113'', and ``660.140'' to read as follows:
Sec. 902.1 OMB control numbers assigned pursuant to the Paperwork
Reduction Act.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Current OMB control No.
CFR part or section where the information (all numbers begin with 0648-
collection requirement is located )
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * *
50 CFR: ............................
* * * * *
660.13.................................. -0573, -0619, and -0738.
* * * * *
660.15.................................. -0619 and -0738.
* * * * *
660.17.................................. -0619 and -0738.
* * * * *
660.25.................................. -0203, -0620, and -0737.
* * * * *
660.113................................. -0271, -0573, -0618, -0619,
and -0737.
* * * * *
660.140................................. -0593, -0619, -0620, and -
0737.
* * * * *
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Title 50--Wildlife and Fisheries
PART 660--FISHERIES OFF WEST COAST STATES
0
1. The authority citation for part 660 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq., 16 U.S.C. 773 et seq., and 16
U.S.C. 7001 et seq.
0
2. In Sec. 660.11:
0
a. Revise the definitions for ``Base permit'' and ``Electronic fish
ticket'';
0
b. Add in alphabetical order the definition for ``Joint registration'';
0
c. Remove the definition for ``Stacking''; and
0
d. Add in alphabetical order the definition for ``Stacking or
stacked''.
The revisions and additions read as follows:
Sec. 660.11 General definitions.
* * * * *
Base permit means a sablefish-endorsed limited entry permit
described at Sec. 660.25(b)(3)(i), subpart C, registered for use with
a vessel that meets the permit length endorsement requirements
appropriate to that vessel, as described at Sec. 660.25(b)(3)(iii),
subpart C.
* * * * *
Electronic fish ticket means a web-based form that is used to send
landing data to the Pacific States Marine Fisheries Commission.
Electronic fish tickets are used to collect information similar to the
information required in state fish receiving tickets or landing
receipts, but do not replace or change any state requirements.
* * * * *
Joint registration or jointly registered means simultaneously
registering both trawl-endorsed and longline or trap/pot-endorsed
limited entry permits for use with a single vessel in one of the
configurations described at Sec. 660.25(b)(4)(iv).
* * * * *
Stacking or stacked means registering more than one sablefish-
endorsed limited entry permit for use with a single vessel (See Sec.
660.25(b)(4)(iii), subpart C).
* * * * *
0
3. In Sec. 660.12, revise paragraph (a)(6) to read as follows:
Sec. 660.12 General groundfish prohibitions.
* * * * *
(a) * * *
(6) Take and retain, possess, or land more than a single cumulative
limit of a particular species, per vessel, per applicable cumulative
limit period, except for sablefish taken in the primary limited entry,
fixed gear sablefish season from a vessel authorized to fish in that
season, as described at Sec. 660.231, subpart E.
* * * * *
0
4. In Sec. 660.13, revise paragraph (d) introductory text and
paragraphs (d)(5)(ii) and (iii) and (d)(5)(iv)(A)(24) to read as
follows:
Sec. 660.13 Recordkeeping and reporting.
* * * * *
(d) Declaration reporting requirements--When the operator of a
vessel registers a VMS unit with NMFS OLE, the vessel operator must
provide NMFS with a declaration report as specified at paragraph
(d)(5)(iv) of this section. The operator of any vessel that
[[Page 84426]]
has already registered a VMS unit with NMFS OLE but has not yet made a
declaration, as specified at paragraph (d)(5)(iv) of this section, must
provide NMFS with a declaration report upon request from NMFS OLE.
(5) * * *
(ii) A declaration report will be valid until another declaration
report revising the existing gear or fishery declaration is received by
NMFS OLE. The vessel operator must send a new declaration report before
leaving port on a trip that meets one of the following criteria:
(A) A gear type that is different from the gear type most recently
declared for the vessel will be used, or
(B) A vessel will fish in a fishery other than the fishery most
recently declared.
(iii) During the period of time that a vessel has a valid
declaration report on file with NMFS OLE, it cannot fish with a gear
other than a gear type declared by the vessel or fish in a fishery
other than the fishery most recently declared.
(iv) * * *
(A) * * *
(24) Other, or
* * * * *
0
5. In Sec. 660.15, revise paragraphs (a) and (d) to read as follows:
Sec. 660.15 Equipment requirements.
(a) Applicability. This section contains the equipment and
operational requirements for scales used to weigh catch at sea, scales
used to weigh catch at IFQ first receivers, hardware and software for
electronic fish tickets, and computer hardware for electronic logbook
software. Unless otherwise specified by regulation, the operator or
manager must retain, for 3 years, a copy of all records described in
this section and make the records available upon request to NMFS staff
or an authorized officer.
* * * * *
(d) Electronic fish tickets. First receivers are required to meet
the hardware and software requirements below.
(1) Hardware and software requirements. A personal computer system,
tablet, mobile device, or other device that has software (e.g. web
browser) capable of submitting information over the internet, such that
submission to Pacific States Marine Fisheries Commission can be
executed effectively.
(2) Internet access. The first receiver is responsible for
maintaining internet access sufficient to access the web-based
interface and submit completed electronic fish ticket forms.
(3) Maintenance. The first receiver is responsible for ensuring
that all hardware and software required under this subsection are fully
operational and functional whenever they receive, purchase, or take
custody, control, or possession of groundfish species for which an
electronic fish ticket is required. ``Functional'' means that the
software requirements and minimum hardware requirements described at
paragraphs (d)(1) and (2) of this section are met and submission to
Pacific States Marine Fisheries Commission can be executed effectively
by the equipment.
(4) Improving data quality. Vessel owners and operators, first
receivers, or shoreside processor owners, or managers may contact NMFS
to request assistance in improving data quality and resolving issues.
Requests may be submitted to: Attn: Electronic Fish Ticket Monitoring,
National Marine Fisheries Service, West Coast Region, Sustainable
Fisheries Division, 7600 Sand Point Way, NE., Seattle, WA 98115.
0
6. In Sec. 660.25:
0
a. Revise paragraph (b)(1)(v);
0
b. Remove paragraph (b)(3)(iv)(B);
0
c. Redesignate paragraph (b)(3)(iv)(C) as (b)(3)(iv)(B);
0
d. Revise newly redesignated paragraphs (b)(3)(iv)(B)(3) and (4);
0
e. Add new paragraph (b)(3)(iv)(C);
0
f. Revise paragraphs (b)(3)(v), (b)(4) introductory text, (b)(4)(i)(D),
and (b)(4)(iii);
0
g. Redesignate paragraphs (b)(4)(iv) through (b)(4)(ix) as (b)(4)(v)
through (b)(4)(x);
0
h. Add a new paragraph (b)(4)(iv);
0
i. Revise newly redesignated paragraphs (b)(4)(v)(A) and (B),
(b)(4)(vi)(A) and (B), and (b)(4)(vii)(A); and
0
j. Revise (b)(6).
The revisions and additions read as follows:
Sec. 660.25 Permits.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(1) * * *
(v) Initial administrative determination (IAD). SFD will make a
determination regarding permit endorsements, renewal, replacement,
change in permit ownership and change in vessel registration. SFD will
notify the permit owner in writing with an explanation of any
determination to deny a permit endorsement, renewal, replacement,
change in permit ownership or change in vessel registration. The SFD
will decline to act on an application for permit endorsement, renewal,
replacement, or change in registration of a limited entry permit if the
permit is subject to sanction provisions of the Magnuson-Stevens Act at
16 U.S.C. 1858(a) and implementing regulations at 15 CFR part 904,
subpart D, apply.
* * * * *
(3) * * *
(iv) * * *
(B) * * *
(3) A partnership or corporation will lose the exemptions provided
in paragraphs (b)(3)(iv)(B)(1) and (2) of this section on the effective
date of any change in the corporation or partnership from that which
existed on November 1, 2000. A ``change'' in the partnership or
corporation is defined at Sec. 660.11. A change in the partnership or
corporation must be reported to SFD within 15 calendar days of the
addition of a new shareholder or partner.
(4) Any partnership or corporation with any ownership interest in a
limited entry permit with a sablefish endorsement or in the vessel
registered to the permit shall document the extent of that ownership
interest with NMFS via the Identification of Ownership Interest Form
sent to the permit owner through the annual permit renewal process and
whenever a change in permit owner, vessel owner, and/or vessel
registration occurs as described at paragraph (b)(4)(v) and (vi) of
this section. NMFS will not renew a sablefish-endorsed limited entry
permit through the annual renewal process described at paragraph
(b)(4)(i) of this section, or approve a change in permit owner, vessel
owner, and/or vessel registration unless the Identification of
Ownership Interest Form has been completed. Further, if NMFS discovers
through review of the Identification of Ownership Interest Form that an
individual person, partnership, or corporation owns or holds more than
3 permits and is not authorized to do so under paragraph
(b)(3)(iv)(B)(2) of this section, the individual person, partnership or
corporation will be notified and the permits owned or held by that
individual person, partnership, or corporation will be void and
reissued with the vessel status as ``unidentified'' until the permit
owner owns and/or holds a quantity of permits appropriate to the
restrictions and requirements described in paragraph (b)(3)(iv)(B)(2)
of this section. If NMFS discovers through review of the Identification
of Ownership Interest Form that a partnership or corporation has had a
change in membership since November 1, 2000, as described in paragraph
(b)(3)(iv)(B)(3) of this section, the partnership or corporation will
be notified, NMFS will void any existing permits, and reissue any
permits owned and/or held by that partnership or
[[Page 84427]]
corporation in ``unidentified'' status with respect to vessel
registration until the partnership or corporation is able to register
ownership of those permits to persons authorized under this section to
own sablefish-endorsed limited entry permits.
* * * * *
(C) Ownership limitation exemption. As described in (b)(3)(iv)(B)
of this section, no individual person, partnership, or corporation in
combination may own and/or hold more than three sablefish-endorsed
permits. A vessel owner that meets the qualifying criteria described in
paragraph (b)(3)(iv)(C)(1) of this section may request an exemption
from the ownership limitation.
(1) Qualifying criteria. The three qualifying criteria for an
ownership limitation exemption are: The vessel owner currently has no
more than 20 percent ownership interest in a vessel registered to the
sablefish endorsed permit, the vessel owner currently has ownership
interest in Alaska sablefish individual fishing quota, and the vessel
has fished in the past 12-month period in both the West Coast
groundfish limited entry fixed gear fishery and the Sablefish IFQ
Program in Alaska. The best evidence of a vessel owner having met these
qualifying criteria will be state fish tickets or landing receipts from
the West Coast states and Alaska. The qualifying vessel owner may seek
an ownership limitation exemption for sablefish endorsed permits
registered to no more than two vessels.
(2) Application and issuance process for an ownership limitation
exemption. The SFD will make the qualifying criteria and application
instructions available online at www.westcoast.fisheries.noaa.gov/fisheries/groundfish/. A vessel owner who believes that they
may qualify for the ownership limitation exemption must submit evidence
with their application showing how their vessel has met the qualifying
criteria described at paragraph (b)(3)(iv)(C)(1) of this section. The
vessel owner must also submit a Sablefish Permit Ownership Limitation
Exemption Identification of Ownership Interest form that includes
disclosure of percentage of ownership in the vessel and disclosure of
individual shareholders in any entity. Paragraph (i) of this section
sets out the relevant evidentiary standards and burden of proof.
Applications may be submitted at any time to NMFS at: NMFS West Coast
Region, Sustainable Fisheries Division, ATTN: Fisheries Permit Office--
Sablefish Ownership Limitation Exemption, 7600 Sand Point Way NE.,
Seattle, WA 98115. After receipt of a complete application, the SFD
will issue an IAD in writing to the applicant determining whether the
applicant qualifies for the exemption. If an applicant chooses to file
an appeal of the IAD, the applicant must follow the appeals process
outlined at paragraph (g) of this section and, for the timing of the
appeals, at paragraph (g)(4)(ii) of this section.
(3) Exemption status. If at any time a change occurs relative to
the qualifying criteria described at paragraph (b)(3)(iv)(C)(1), the
vessel owner to whom the ownership limitation exemption applies must
notify NMFS within 30 calendar days. If such changes mean the vessel
owner no longer meets the qualifying criteria, the ownership limitation
exemption becomes automatically null and void 30 calendar days after
the date the vessel owner no longer meets the qualifying criteria. At
any time, NMFS may request that the vessel owner submit a new exemption
application. If NMFS at any time finds the vessel owner no longer meets
the qualifying criteria described at paragraph (b)(3)(iv)(C)(1) of this
section NMFS will issue an IAD, which may be appealed, as described at
paragraph (g) of this section.
(v) MS/CV endorsement. An MS/CV endorsement on a trawl limited
entry permit conveys a conditional privilege that allows a vessel
registered to it to fish in either the coop or non-coop fishery in the
MS Coop Program described at Sec. 660.150, subpart D. The provisions
for the MS/CV-endorsed limited entry permit, including eligibility,
renewal, change of permit ownership, vessel registration, combinations,
accumulation limits, fees, and appeals are described at Sec. 660.150.
Each MS/CV endorsement has an associated catch history assignment (CHA)
that is permanently linked as originally issued by NMFS and which
cannot be divided or registered separately to another limited entry
trawl permit. Regulations detailing this process and MS/CV-endorsed
permit combinations are outlined in Sec. 660.150(g)(2), subpart D.
* * * * *
(4) Limited entry permit actions--renewal, combination, stacking,
joint registration, change of permit owner or vessel owner, and change
in vessel registration--
(i) * * *
(D) Limited entry permits with sablefish endorsements, as described
at paragraph (b)(3)(iv) of this section, will not be renewed until SFD
has received complete documentation of permit ownership as required
under paragraph (b)(3)(iv)(B)(4) of this section.
* * * * *
(iii) Stacking limited entry permits. ``Stacking'' limited entry
permits, as defined at Sec. 660.11, refers to the practice of
registering more than one sablefish-endorsed permit for use with a
single vessel. Only limited entry permits with sablefish endorsements
may be stacked. Up to 3 limited entry permits with sablefish
endorsements may be registered for use with a single vessel during the
sablefish primary season described at Sec. 660.231, subpart E.
Privileges, responsibilities, and restrictions associated with stacking
permits to fish in the sablefish primary fishery are described at Sec.
660.231, subpart E and at paragraph (b)(3)(iv) of this section.
(iv) Joint registration of limited entry permits--(A) General.
``Joint registration'' of limited entry permits, as defined at Sec.
660.11, is the practice of simultaneously registering both trawl-
endorsed and longline or trap/pot-endorsed limited entry permits for
use with a single vessel.
(B) Restrictions. Subject to vessel size endorsements in paragraph
(b)(3)(iii), any limited entry permit with a trawl endorsement and any
limited entry permit with a longline or trap/pot endorsement may be
jointly registered for use with a single vessel but only in one of the
following configurations:
(1) a single trawl-endorsed limited entry permit and one, two or
three sablefish-endorsed fixed gear (longline and/or fishpot endorsed)
limited entry permits; or
(2) a single trawl-endorsed limited entry permit and one longline-
endorsed limited entry permit for use with a single vessel.
(v) * * *
(A) General. Change in permit owner and/or vessel owner
applications must be submitted to NMFS with the appropriate
documentation described at paragraphs (b)(4)(viii) and (ix) of this
section. The permit owner may convey the limited entry permit to a
different person. The new permit owner will not be authorized to use
the permit until the change in permit owner has been registered with
and approved by NMFS. NMFS will not approve a change in permit owner
for a limited entry permit with a sablefish endorsement that does not
meet the ownership requirements for such permit described at paragraph
(b)(3)(iv)(B) of this section. NMFS will not approve a change in permit
owner for a limited entry permit with an MS/CV endorsement or an MS
permit that
[[Page 84428]]
does not meet the ownership requirements for such permit described at
Sec. 660.150(g)(3), and Sec. 660.150(f)(3), respectively. NMFS
considers the following as a change in permit owner that would require
registering with and approval by NMFS, including but not limited to:
Selling the permit to another individual or entity; adding an
individual or entity to the legal name on the permit; or removing an
individual or entity from the legal name on the permit. A change in
vessel owner includes any changes to the name(s) of any or all vessel
owners, as registered with USCG or a state. The new owner(s) of a
vessel registered to a limited entry permit must report any change in
vessel ownership to NMFS within 30 calendar days after such change has
been registered with the USCG or a state licensing agency.
(B) Effective date. The change in permit ownership or change in the
vessel holding the permit will be effective on the day the change is
approved by NMFS, unless there is a concurrent change in the vessel
registered to the permit. Requirements for changing the vessel
registered to the permit are described at paragraph (b)(4)(vi) of this
section.
* * * * *
(vi) * * *
(A) General. A permit may not be used with any vessel other than
the vessel registered to that permit. For purposes of this section, a
permit change in vessel registration occurs when, through SFD, a permit
owner registers a limited entry permit for use with a new vessel.
Permit change in vessel registration applications must be submitted to
SFD with the appropriate documentation described at paragraph
(b)(4)(viii) of this section. Upon receipt of a complete application,
and following review and approval of the application, the SFD will
reissue the permit registered to the new vessel. Applications to change
vessel registration on limited entry permits with sablefish
endorsements will not be approved until SFD has received complete
documentation of permit ownership as described at paragraph
(b)(3)(iv)(B)(4) and as required under paragraph (b)(4)(viii) of this
section. Applications to change vessel registration on limited entry
permits with trawl endorsements or MS permits will not be approved
until SFD has received complete EDC forms as required under Sec.
660.114, subpart D.
(B) Application. Change in vessel registration applications must be
submitted to NMFS with the appropriate documentation described at
paragraphs (b)(4)(viii) and (ix) of this section. At a minimum, a
permit owner seeking to change vessel registration of a limited entry
permit shall submit to NMFS a signed application form and his/her
current limited entry permit before the first day of the cumulative
limit period in which they wish to fish. If a permit owner provides a
signed application and current limited entry permit after the first day
of a cumulative limit period, the permit will not be effective until
the succeeding cumulative limit period. NMFS will not approve a change
in vessel registration until it receives a complete application, the
existing permit, a current copy of the USCG 1270, and other required
documentation.
* * * * *
(vii) * * *
(A) General. A permit owner may designate the vessel registration
for a permit as ``unidentified,'' meaning that no vessel has been
identified as registered for use with that permit. No vessel is
authorized to use a permit with the vessel registration designated as
``unidentified.'' A vessel owner who removes a permit from his vessel
and registers that permit as ``unidentified'' is not exempt from VMS
requirements at Sec. 660.14, unless specifically authorized by that
section. When a permit owner requests that the permit's vessel
registration be designated as ``unidentified,'' the transaction is not
considered a change in vessel registration for purposes of this
section. Any subsequent request by a permit owner to change from the
``unidentified'' status of the permit in order to register the permit
with a specific vessel will be considered a change in vessel
registration and subject to the restriction on frequency and timing of
changes in vessel registration.
* * * * *
(6) At-sea processing exemptions--(i) Sablefish at-sea processing
exemption. No new applications for sablefish at-sea processing
exemptions will be accepted. As specified at Sec. 660.212(d)(3),
subpart E, vessels are prohibited from processing sablefish at sea that
were caught in the sablefish primary fishery without a sablefish at-sea
processing exemption. Any sablefish at-sea processing exemptions were
issued to a particular vessel and that permit and vessel owner who
requested the exemption. The exemption is not part of the limited entry
permit. The exemption cannot be registered with any other vessel,
vessel owner, or permit owner for any reason. The exemption only
applies to at-sea processing of sablefish caught in the sablefish
primary fishery. The sablefish at-sea processing exemption will expire
upon registration of the vessel to a new owner or if the vessel is
totally lost, as defined at Sec. 660.11.
(ii) Non-whiting at-sea processing exemption. No new applications
for non-whiting at-sea processing exemptions will be accepted. As
specified at Sec. 660.112(b)(1)(xii), subpart D, vessels are
prohibited from processing non-whiting groundfish at sea that were
caught in the Shorebased IFQ Program without a non-whiting at-sea
processing exemption. Any non-whiting at-sea processing exemptions were
issued to a particular vessel and that permit and/or vessel owner who
requested the exemption. The exemption is not part of the limited entry
permit. The exemption is not transferable to any other vessel, vessel
owner, or permit owner for any reason. The exemption only applies to
at-sea processing of non-whiting groundfish caught in the Shorebased
IFQ Program. The non-whiting at-sea processing exemption will expire
upon registration of the vessel to a new owner or if the vessel is
totally lost, as defined at Sec. 660.11.
* * * * *
0
7. In Sec. 660.55, revise paragraph (f) introductory text and
paragraphs (h)(1) and (2) to read as follows:
Sec. 660.55 Allocations.
* * * * *
(f) Catch accounting. Catch accounting refers to how the catch in a
fishery is monitored against the allocations described in this section.
For species with trawl/nontrawl allocations, catch of those species are
counted against the trawl/nontrawl allocations as explained in
paragraph (f)(1) of this section. For species with limited entry/open
access allocations in a given biennial cycle, catch of those species
are counted against the limited entry/open access allocations as
explained in paragraph (f)(1)(ii) of this section.
* * * * *
(h) * * *
(1) Tribal/nontribal allocation. The sablefish allocation to
Pacific coast treaty Indian tribes is identified at Sec. 660.50(f)(2).
The remainder is available to the nontribal fishery (limited entry,
open access (directed and incidental), and research).
(2) Between the limited entry and open access fisheries. The
allocation of sablefish after tribal deductions is further reduced by
the estimated total mortality of sablefish in research and recreational
fisheries; the remaining yield (commercial harvest guideline) is
[[Page 84429]]
divided between open access and limited entry fisheries. The limited
entry fishery allocation is 90.6 percent of the commercial harvest
guideline. The open access allocation is 9.4 percent of the commercial
harvest guideline and includes incidental catch in non-groundfish
fisheries, or incidental open access.
* * * * *
0
8. In Sec. 660.60:
0
a. Revise paragraphs (h)(7) introductory text, (h)(7)(i) introductory
text, (h)(7)(ii)(A), (h)(7)(ii)(B)(1) introductory text, and
(h)(7)(ii)(B)(2); and
0
b. Add paragraphs (h)(7)(ii)(B)(3) and (h)(7)(iii).
The revisions and additions read as follows:
Sec. 660.60 Specifications and management measures.
* * * * *
(h) * * *
* * * * *
(7) Crossover provisions. Crossover provisions apply to three
activities: Fishing on different sides of a management line, or fishing
in both the limited entry and open access fisheries, or fishing in both
the Shorebased IFQ Program and the limited entry fixed gear fishery.
NMFS uses different types of management areas for West Coast groundfish
management, such as the north-south management areas as defined in
Sec. 660.11. Within a management area, a large ocean area with
northern and southern boundary lines, trip limits, seasons, and
conservation areas follow a single theme. Within each management area,
there may be one or more conservation areas, defined at Sec. Sec.
660.11 and 660.70 through 660.74. The provisions within this paragraph
apply to vessels fishing in different management areas. Crossover
provisions also apply to vessels that fish in both the limited entry
and open access fisheries, or that use open access non-trawl gear while
registered to limited entry fixed gear permits. Crossover provisions
also apply to vessels that are jointly registered, as defined at Sec.
660.11, fishing in both the Shorebased IFQ Program and the limited
entry fixed gear fishery during the same cumulative limit period.
Fishery specific crossover provisions can be found in subparts D
through F of this part.
(i) Fishing in management areas with different trip limits. Trip
limits for a species or a species group may differ in different
management areas along the coast. The following crossover provisions
apply to vessels fishing in different geographical areas that have
different cumulative or ``per trip'' trip limits for the same species
or species group, with the following exceptions. Such crossover
provisions do not apply to: IFQ species (defined at Sec. 660.140(c),
subpart D) for vessels that are declared into the Shorebased IFQ
Program (see Sec. 660.13(d)(5)(iv)(A), for valid Shorebased IFQ
Program declarations); species that are subject only to daily trip
limits; or to trip limits for black rockfish off Washington, as
described at Sec. Sec. 660.230(e) and 660.330(e).
* * * * *
(ii) * * *
(A) Fishing in limited entry and open access fisheries with
different trip limits. Open access trip limits apply to any fishing
conducted with open access gear, even if the vessel has a valid limited
entry permit with an endorsement for another type of gear. Except such
provisions do not apply to IFQ species (defined at Sec. 660.140(c),
subpart D) for vessels that are declared into the Shorebased IFQ
Program (see Sec. 660.13(d)(5)(iv)(A) for valid Shorebased IFQ Program
declarations). A vessel that fishes in both the open access and limited
entry fisheries is not entitled to two separate trip limits for the
same species. If a vessel has a limited entry permit registered to it
at any time during the trip limit period and uses open access gear, but
the open access limit is smaller than the limited entry limit, the open
access limit may not be exceeded and counts toward the limited entry
limit. If a vessel has a limited entry permit registered to it at any
time during the trip limit period and uses open access gear, but the
open access limit is larger than the limited entry limit, the smaller
limited entry limit applies, even if taken entirely with open access
gear.
(B) * * *
(1) Vessel registered to a limited entry trawl permit. To fish with
open access gear, defined at Sec. 660.11, a vessel registered to a
limited entry trawl permit must make the appropriate fishery
declaration, as specified at Sec. 660.14(d)(5)(iv)(A). In addition, a
vessel registered to a limit entry trawl permit must remove the permit
from their vessel, as specified at Sec. 660.25(b)(4)(vi), unless the
vessel will be fishing in the open access fishery under one of the
following declarations specified at Sec. 660.13(d):
* * * * *
(2) Vessel registered to a limited entry fixed gear permit(s). To
fish with open access gear, defined at Sec. 660.11, subpart C, a
vessel registered to a limit entry fixed gear permit must make the
appropriate open access declaration, as specified at Sec.
660.14(d)(5)(iv)(A). Vessels registered to a sablefish-endorsed
permit(s) fishing in the sablefish primary season (described at Sec.
660.231, subpart E) may only fish with the gear(s) endorsed on their
sablefish-endorsed permit(s) against those limits.
(3) Vessel jointly registered to more than one limited entry
permit. Vessels jointly registered (under the provisions at Sec.
660.25(b)(4)(iv)(B)) may fish with open access gear (defined at Sec.
660.11) if they meet the requirements of both paragraphs
(h)(7)(ii)(B)(1) and (2) of this section.
(iii) Fishing in both the Shorebased IFQ Program and the limited
entry fixed gear fishery for vessels that are jointly registered.
(A) Fishing in the Shorebased IFQ Program and limited entry fixed
gear fishery with different trip limits. If a vessel fishes in both the
Shorebased IFQ Program and the limited entry fixed gear fishery during
a cumulative limit period, they are subject to the most restrictive
trip limits for non-IFQ species.
(B) Fishing in the Shorebased IFQ Program and the limited entry
fixed gear sablefish primary fishery with different trip limits. If a
vessel is jointly registered and one or more of the limited entry
permits is sablefish endorsed, any sablefish landings made by a vessel
declared into the limited entry fixed gear fishery after the start of
the sablefish primary fishery count towards the tier limit(s), per
regulations at Sec. 660.232(a)(2), subpart E. Any sablefish landings
made by a vessel declared into the Shorebased IFQ Program must be
covered by quota pounds, per regulations at Sec. 660.112(b), subpart
D, and will not count towards the tier limit(s).
0
9. In Sec. 660.112:
0
a. Revise paragraphs (a)(3)(i) and (ii);
0
b. Remove paragraph (b)(1)(xii)(B); and
0
c. Redesignate paragraph (b)(1)(xii)(C) as (b)(1)(xii)(B).
The revisions read as follows:
Sec. 660.112 Trawl fishery--prohibitions.
* * * * *
(a) * * *
(3) * * *
(i) Fail to comply with all recordkeeping and reporting
requirements at Sec. 660.13, subpart C; including failure to submit
information, or submission of inaccurate or false information on any
report required at Sec. 660.13(d), subpart C, and Sec. 660.113.
(ii) Falsify or fail to make and/or file, retain or make available
any and all reports of groundfish landings,
[[Page 84430]]
containing all data, and in the exact manner, required by the
regulation at Sec. 660.13, subpart C, or Sec. 660.113.
* * * * *
0
10. In Sec. 660.113:
0
a. Revise paragraphs (a)(2) and (b)(4)(ii)(A);
0
b. Remove paragraphs (b)(4)(ii)(B) and (C) and redesignate paragraphs
(b)(4)(ii)(D) through (F) as (b)(4)(ii)(B) through (D);
0
c. Revise newly redesignated paragraphs (b)(4)(ii)(C)(5) introductory
text and (b)(4)(ii)(C)(6); and
0
d. Revise paragraphs (b)(4)(iii) and (v).
The revisions read as follows:
Sec. 660.113 Trawl fishery--recordkeeping and reporting.
* * * * *
(a) * * *
(2) All records used in the preparation of records or reports
specified in this section or corrections to these reports must be
maintained for a period of not less than three years after the date of
landing and must be immediately available upon request for inspection
by NMFS or authorized officers or others as specifically authorized by
NMFS. Records used in the preparation of required reports specified in
this section or corrections to these reports that are required to be
kept include, but are not limited to, any written, recorded, graphic,
electronic, or digital materials as well as other information stored in
or accessible through a computer or other information retrieval system;
worksheets; weight slips; preliminary, interim, and final tally sheets;
receipts; checks; ledgers; notebooks; diaries; spreadsheets; diagrams;
graphs; charts; tapes; disks; or computer printouts. All relevant
records used in the preparation of electronic fish ticket reports or
corrections to these reports, including dock tickets, must be
maintained for a period of not less than three years after the date of
landing and must be immediately available upon request for inspection
by NMFS or authorized officers or others as specifically authorized by
NMFS.
(b) * * *
(4) * * *
(ii) * * *
(A) Include, as part of each electronic fish ticket submission, the
actual scale weight for each groundfish species as specified by
requirements at Sec. 660.15(c), and the vessel identification number.
Use, and maintain in good working order, hardware, software, and
internet access as specified at Sec. 660.15(d).
* * * * *
(C) * * *
(5) Prior to submittal, three copies of the printed, signed,
electronic fish ticket must be produced by the IFQ first receiver and a
copy provided to each of the following:
* * * * *
(6) After review and signature, the electronic fish ticket must be
submitted within 24 hours of the completion of the offload, as
specified in paragraph (b)(4)(ii)(B) of this section.
* * * * *
(iii) Revising a submission. In the event that a data error is
found, electronic fish ticket submissions must be revised by
resubmitting the revised form electronically. Electronic fish tickets
are to be used for the submission of final data. Preliminary data,
including estimates of fish weights or species composition, shall not
be submitted on electronic fish tickets.
* * * * *
(v) Reporting requirements when a temporary waiver has been
granted. IFQ first receivers that have been granted a temporary waiver
from the requirement to submit electronic fish tickets must submit on
paper the same data as is required on electronic fish tickets within 24
hours of the date received during the period that the waiver is in
effect. Paper fish tickets must be sent by facsimile to NMFS, West
Coast Region, Sustainable Fisheries Division, 206-526-6736 or by
delivering it in person to 7600 Sand Point Way NE., Seattle, WA 98115.
The requirements for submissions of paper tickets in this paragraph are
separate from, and in addition to existing state requirements for
landing receipts or fish receiving tickets.
* * * * *
Sec. 660.114 [Amended]
0
11. Amend Sec. 660.114(b) by removing the words ``Sec.
660.25(b)(4)(v)'' wherever they appear and adding in their place the
words ``Sec. 660.25(b)(4)(vi)''.
0
12. In Sec. 660.212, revise paragraph (a)(2), add paragraphs (a)(3)
through (5), and revise paragraphs (b) and (d)(1) and (2) to read as
follows:
Sec. 660.212 Fixed gear fishery--prohibitions.
* * * * *
(a) * * *
(2) Take and retain, possess, or land more than a single cumulative
limit of a particular species, per vessel, per applicable cumulative
limit period, except for sablefish taken in the limited entry fixed
gear sablefish primary season from a vessel authorized to fish in that
season, as described at Sec. 660.231 and except for IFQ species taken
in the Shorebased IFQ Program from a vessel authorized under gear
switching provisions as described at Sec. 660.140(k).
(3) Transport fish, if that fish includes any amount of sablefish,
away from the point of landing before being sorted and weighed by
federal groundfish species or species group, and recorded for
submission on an electronic fish ticket under Sec. 660.213(e). (If
fish will be transported to a different location for processing, all
sorting and weighing to federal groundfish species groups must occur
before transporting the fish away from the point of landing).
(4) Mix fish from more than one landing, where one or more of the
landings includes any sablefish, prior to the fish being sorted and
weighed for reporting on an electronic fish ticket under Sec.
660.213(e).
(5) Process, sell, or discard any fish, if that fish includes any
amount of sablefish, that has not been accounted for on an electronic
fish ticket under Sec. 660.213(e).
(b) Recordkeeping and reporting. (1) Fail to comply with all
recordkeeping and reporting requirements at Sec. 660.13, subpart C;
including failure to submit information, or submission of inaccurate or
false information on any report required at Sec. 660.13(d), subpart C,
and Sec. 660.213.
(2) Falsify or fail to make and/or file, retain or make available
any and all reports of groundfish landings that include sablefish,
containing all data, and in the exact manner, required by the
regulation at Sec. 660.13, subpart C, or Sec. 660.213.
* * * * *
(d) Sablefish fisheries. (1) Take and retain, possess or land
sablefish under the tier limits provided for the limited entry, fixed
gear sablefish primary season, described in Sec. 660.231(b)(3), from a
vessel that is not registered to a limited entry permit with a
sablefish endorsement.
(2) Take and retain, possess or land sablefish in the sablefish
primary season, described at Sec. 660.231(b), unless the owner of the
limited entry permit registered for use with that vessel and
authorizing the vessel to fish in the sablefish primary season is on
board that vessel. Exceptions to this prohibition are provided at Sec.
660.231(b)(4)(i) and (ii).
* * * * *
0
13. In Sec. 660.213, revise paragraph (d)(1) and add paragraph (e) to
read as follows:
Sec. 660.213 Fixed gear fishery--recordkeeping and reporting.
* * * * *
(d) * * *
(1) Any person landing groundfish must retain on board the vessel
from
[[Page 84431]]
which groundfish are landed, and provide to an authorized officer upon
request, copies of any and all reports of groundfish landings
containing all data, and in the exact manner, required by the
applicable state law throughout the cumulative limit period during
which a landing occurred and for 15 days thereafter. All relevant
records used in the preparation of electronic fish ticket reports or
corrections to these reports, including dock tickets, must be
maintained for a period of not less than three years after the date of
landing and must be immediately available upon request for inspection
by NMFS or authorized officers or others as specifically authorized by
NMFS.
* * * * *
(e) Electronic fish ticket. The first receiver, as defined at Sec.
660.11, subpart C, of fish, if that fish includes any amount of
sablefish, from a limited entry fixed gear vessel, is responsible for
compliance with all reporting requirements described in this paragraph.
Per requirements at Sec. 660.212(a), all fish, if that fish includes
any amount of sablefish, must be reported via electronic fish ticket.
When used in this paragraph, submit means to transmit final electronic
fish ticket information via web-based form or, if a waiver is granted,
by paper form. When used in this paragraph, record means the action of
documenting electronic fish ticket information in any written format.
(1) Required information. All first receivers must provide the
following types of information: Date of landing, vessel that made the
landing, vessel identification number, limited entry permit number(s),
name of the vessel operator, gear type used, receiver, actual weights
of species landed listed by species or species group including species
with no value, condition landed, number of salmon by species, number of
Pacific halibut, ex-vessel value of the landing by species, fish caught
inside/outside 3 miles or both, and any other information deemed
necessary by the Regional Administrator (or designee) as specified on
the appropriate electronic fish ticket form.
(2) Submissions. The first receiver must:
(i) Include, as part of each electronic fish ticket submission, the
actual scale weight for each groundfish species as specified by
requirements at Sec. 660.15(c), the vessel identification number, and
the limited entry permit number. Use and maintain, for the purposes of
submitting electronic fish tickets, equipment as specified at Sec.
660.15(d).
(ii) Submit a completed electronic fish ticket(s) no later than 24
hours after the date of landing, unless a waiver of this requirement
has been granted under provisions specified at paragraph (e)(4) of this
section.
(iii) Sablefish from a single landing in the limited entry fixed
gear sablefish primary fishery may be counted against more than one
stacked permit, or against a tier limit(s) and the cumulative trip
limit in the DTL fishery. For vessels with stacked limited entry
sablefish permits, defined at Sec. 660.12, sablefish may be divided
for the purposes of apportioning the sablefish amongst the remaining
tier limits associated with each of the stacked permits; in that
instance the electronic fish ticket(s) must record all pertinent
limited entry permit numbers and apportion sablefish landed against
each tier limit. Per regulations at Sec. 660.232(a)(2) a vessel may
apportion sablefish catch between the remainder of its tier limit(s)
and against the applicable DTL limits; in that instance the electronic
fish ticket must be used to apportion sablefish landed against the
tier(s) from the sablefish landed against cumulative trip limits of the
DTL fishery. If sablefish is apportioned in either of the ways
described in this paragraph, the electronic fish ticket must meet the
process and submittal requirements specified in paragraphs (e)(iv) and
(v) of this section. In addition, the owner-on-board, unless exempted
under regulations at Sec. 660.231(a)(4), must review and sign
documentation of the landing, as described in paragraphs (e)(2)(iv) and
(v) of this section.
(iv) If electronic fish tickets will be submitted prior to
processing or transport, follow these process and submittal
requirements:
(A) After completing the landing, the electronic fish ticket
information must be recorded immediately.
(B) Prior to submittal of the electronic fish ticket, the
information recorded for the electronic fish ticket must be reviewed by
the vessel operator who delivered the fish and the port sampler, if one
is present. If required by regulations at Sec. 660.231(a)(4), the
owner-on-board must also review the information recorded on the
electronic fish ticket prior to submittal.
(C) After review, the receiver and the vessel operator must sign a
printed hard copy of the electronic fish ticket or, if the landing
occurs outside of business hours, the original dock ticket. If required
by regulations at Sec. 660.231(a)(4), the owner-on-board must also
sign a printed copy of the electronic fish ticket or, if the landing
occurs outside of business hours, the original dock ticket.
(D) Prior to submittal, three copies of the signed electronic fish
ticket must be produced by the receiver and a copy provided to each of
the following:
(1) The vessel operator and/or the owner-on-board,
(2) The state of origin if required by state regulations, and
(3) The first receiver.
(E) After review and signature, the electronic fish ticket must be
submitted within 24 hours after the date of landing, as specified in
paragraph (e)(2)(ii) of this section.
(v) If electronic fish tickets will be submitted after transport,
follow these process and submittal requirements:
(A) The vessel name, limited entry permit number, and the
electronic fish ticket number must be recorded on each dock ticket
related to that landing.
(B) Upon completion of the dock ticket, but prior to transfer of
the landing to another location, the dock ticket information that will
be used to complete the electronic fish ticket must be reviewed by the
vessel operator who delivered the fish. If the electronic fish ticket
will report landings of sablefish in the sablefish primary fishery, the
owner-on-board, unless exempted under regulations at Sec.
660.231(a)(4), must review the information recorded on the dock ticket
prior to transfer of the landing to another location.
(C) After review, the first receiver and the vessel operator must
sign the original copy of each dock ticket related to that landing. If
a dock ticket includes landings of sablefish in the sablefish primary
fishery, the owner-on-board, unless exempted under regulations at Sec.
660.231(a)(4), must sign the original copy of that dock ticket.
(D) Prior to submittal of the electronic fish ticket, three copies
of the signed dock ticket must be produced by the first receiver and a
copy provided to each of the following:
(1) The vessel operator and/or the owner-on-board,
(2) The state of origin if required by state regulations, and
(3) The first receiver.
(E) Based on the information contained in the signed dock ticket,
the electronic fish ticket must be completed and submitted within 24
hours of the completion of the landing, as specified in paragraph
(e)(2)(ii) of this section.
(F) Three copies of the electronic fish ticket must be produced by
the first receiver and a copy provided to each of the following:
(1) The vessel operator and/or the owner-on-board,
(2) The state of origin if required by state regulations, and
(3) The first receiver.
[[Page 84432]]
(3) Revising a submission. In the event that a data error is found,
electronic fish ticket submissions must be revised by resubmitting the
revised form electronically. Electronic fish tickets are to be used for
the submission of final data. Preliminary data, including estimates of
fish weights or species composition, shall not be submitted on
electronic fish tickets.
(4) Waivers for submission. On a case-by-case basis, a temporary
written waiver of the requirement to submit electronic fish tickets may
be granted by the Assistant Regional Administrator or designee if he/
she determines that circumstances beyond the control of a receiver
would result in inadequate data submissions using the electronic fish
ticket system. The duration of the waiver will be determined on a case-
by-case basis.
(5) Reporting requirements when a temporary waiver has been
granted. Receivers that have been granted a temporary waiver from the
requirement to submit electronic fish tickets must submit on paper the
same data as is required on electronic fish tickets within 24 hours of
the date received during the period that the waiver is in effect. Paper
fish tickets must be sent by facsimile to NMFS, West Coast Region,
Sustainable Fisheries Division, 206-526-6736 or by delivering it in
person to 7600 Sand Point Way NE., Seattle, WA 98115. The requirements
for submissions of paper tickets in this paragraph are separate from,
and in addition to existing state requirements for landing receipts or
fish receiving tickets.
0
14. In Sec. 660.231, revise paragraphs (a), (b)(1) through (3), and
(b)(4) introductory text to read as follows:
Sec. 660.231 Limited entry fixed gear sablefish primary fishery.
* * * * *
(a) Sablefish endorsement. In addition to requirements pertaining
to fishing in the limited entry fixed gear fishery (described in
subparts C and E), a vessel may not fish in the sablefish primary
season for the limited entry fixed gear fishery, unless at least one
limited entry permit with both a gear endorsement for longline or trap
(or pot) gear and a sablefish endorsement is registered for use with
that vessel. Permits with sablefish endorsements are assigned to one of
three tiers, as described at Sec. 660.25(b)(3)(iv), subpart C.
(b) * * *
(1) Season dates. North of 36[deg] N. lat., the sablefish primary
season for the limited entry, fixed gear, sablefish-endorsed vessels
begins at 12 noon local time on April 1 and closes at 12 noon local
time on October 31, or closes for an individual vessel owner when the
tier limit for the sablefish endorsed permit(s) registered to the
vessel has been reached, whichever is earlier, unless otherwise
announced by the Regional Administrator through the routine management
measures process described at Sec. 660.60(c).
(2) Gear type. During the primary season, when fishing against
primary season cumulative limits, each vessel authorized to fish in
that season under paragraph (a) of this section may fish for sablefish
with any of the gear types, except trawl gear, endorsed on at least one
of the sablefish endorsed permits registered for use with that vessel.
(3) Cumulative limits. (i) A vessel fishing in the primary season
will be constrained by the sablefish cumulative limit associated with
each of the sablefish endorsed permits registered for use with that
vessel. During the primary season, each vessel authorized to fish in
that season under paragraph (a) of this section may take, retain,
possess, and land sablefish, up to the cumulative limits for each of
the sablefish endorsed permits registered for use with that vessel. If
a vessel is stacking permits, that vessel may land up to the total of
all cumulative limits announced in this paragraph for the tiers for
those permits, except as limited by paragraph (b)(3)(ii) of this
section. Up to 3 sablefish endorsed permits may be stacked for use with
a single vessel during the primary season; thus, a single vessel may
not take and retain, possess or land more than 3 primary season
sablefish cumulative limits in any one year. Per regulations at Sec.
660.12(a)(6), subpart C, all other groundfish landings are subject to
per vessel trip limits. In 2015, the following annual limits are in
effect: Tier 1 at 41,175 (18,677 kg), Tier 2 at 18,716 lb (8,489 kg),
and Tier 3 at 10,695 lb (4,851 kg). For 2016 and beyond, the following
annual limits are in effect: Tier 1 at 45,053 lb (20,436 kg), Tier 2 at
20,479 lb (9,289 kg), and Tier 3 at 11,702 lb (5,308 kg).
(ii) If a sablefish endorsed permit is registered to more than one
vessel during the primary season in a single year, the second vessel
may only take the portion of the cumulative limit for that permit that
has not been harvested by the first vessel to which the permit was
registered. The combined primary season sablefish landings for all
vessels registered to that permit may not exceed the cumulative limit
for the tier associated with that permit.
(iii) A cumulative trip limit is the maximum amount of sablefish
that may be taken and retained, possessed, or landed per vessel in a
specified period of time, with no limit on the number of landings or
trips.
(iv) Incidental Pacific halibut retention north of Pt. Chehalis, WA
(46[deg]53.30' N. lat.). From April 1 through October 31, vessels
authorized to participate in the sablefish primary fishery, licensed by
the International Pacific Halibut Commission for commercial fishing in
Area 2A (waters off Washington, Oregon, California), and fishing with
longline gear north of Pt. Chehalis, WA (46[deg]53.30' N. lat.) may
possess and land up to the following cumulative limits: 110 lb (50 kg)
dressed weight of Pacific halibut for every 1,000 pounds (454 kg)
dressed weight of sablefish landed and up to 2 additional Pacific
halibut in excess of the 110-pounds-per-1,000-pound ratio per landing.
``Dressed'' Pacific halibut in this area means halibut landed
eviscerated with their heads on. Pacific halibut taken and retained in
the sablefish primary fishery north of Pt. Chehalis may only be landed
north of Pt. Chehalis and may not be possessed or landed south of Pt.
Chehalis.
(4) Owner-on-board requirement. Any person who owns or has
ownership interest in a limited entry permit with a sablefish
endorsement, as described at Sec. 660.25(b)(3), subpart C, must be on
board the vessel registered for use with that permit at any time that
the vessel has sablefish on board the vessel that count toward that
permit's cumulative sablefish landing limit. This person must carry
government issued photo identification while aboard the vessel. This
person must review and sign a printed copy of the electronic fish
ticket(s) or dock ticket, as described at Sec. 660.213(d), unless this
person qualified for the owner-on-board exemption. A permit owner is
qualified for the owner-on-board exemption and not obligated to be on
board the vessel registered for use with the sablefish-endorsed limited
entry permit during the sablefish primary season if:
* * * * *
0
15. Section 660.232 is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 660.232 Limited entry daily trip limit (DTL) fishery for
sablefish.
(a) Limited entry DTL fisheries both north and south of 36[deg] N.
lat. (1) Before the start of the sablefish primary season, all
sablefish landings made by a vessel declared into the limited entry
fixed gear fishery and authorized by Sec. 660.231(a) to fish in the
sablefish primary season will be subject to the restrictions and limits
of the limited entry DTL fishery for sablefish specified in this
section and which is governed by
[[Page 84433]]
routine management measures imposed under Sec. 660.60(c), subpart C.
(2) Following the start of the primary season, all sablefish
landings made by a vessel declared into the limited entry fixed gear
fishery and authorized by Sec. 660.231(a) to fish in the primary
season will count against the primary season cumulative limit(s)
associated with the sablefish-endorsed permit(s) registered for use
with that vessel. A vessel that is eligible to fish in the sablefish
primary season may fish in the DTL fishery for sablefish once that
vessels' primary season sablefish limit(s) have been landed, or after
the close of the primary season, whichever occurs earlier (as described
at Sec. 660.231(b)(1). If the vessel continues to fish in the limited
entry fixed gear fishery for any part of the remaining fishing year,
any subsequent sablefish landings by that vessel will be subject to the
restrictions and limits of the limited entry DTL fishery for sablefish.
(3) Vessels registered for use with a limited entry fixed gear
permit that does not have a sablefish endorsement may fish in the
limited entry DTL fishery, consistent with regulations at Sec.
660.230, for as long as that fishery is open during the fishing year,
subject to routine management measures imposed under Sec. 660.60(c),
Subpart C. DTL limits for the limited entry fishery north and south of
36[deg] N. lat. are provided in Tables 2 (North) and 2 (South) of this
subpart.
(b) A vessel that is jointly registered, and has participated or
will participate in both the limited entry fixed gear fishery and the
Shorebased IFQ Program during the fishing year, is subject to crossover
provisions described at Sec. 660.60(h)(7), subpart C.
0
16. In Sec. 660.312:
0
a. Add paragraphs (a)(3) through (5);
0
b. Redesignate paragraphs (b) and (c) as (c) and (d); and
0
c. Add a new paragraph (b).
The additions read as follows:
Sec. 660.312 Open access fishery--prohibitions.
* * * * *
(a) * * *
(3) Transport fish, if that fish includes any amount of sablefish,
away from the point of landing before being sorted and weighed by
federal groundfish species or species group, and recorded for
submission on an electronic fish ticket under Sec. 660.313(f). (If
fish will be transported to a different location for processing, all
sorting and weighing to federal groundfish species groups must occur
before transporting the fish away from the point of landing).
(4) Mix fish from more than one landing, where one or more of the
landings includes any amount of sablefish, prior to the fish being
sorted and weighed for reporting on an electronic fish ticket under
Sec. 660.313(f).
(5) Process, sell, or discard any fish if that fish includes any
amount of sablefish, that has not been accounted for on an electronic
fish ticket under Sec. 660.313(f).
(b) Recordkeeping and reporting. (1) Fail to comply with all
recordkeeping and reporting requirements at Sec. 660.13, subpart C,
including failure to submit information, or submission of inaccurate or
false information on any report required at Sec. 660.13(d), subpart C,
and Sec. 660.313.
(2) Falsify or fail to make and/or file, retain or make available
any and all reports of groundfish landings that include sablefish,
containing all data, and in the exact manner, required by the
regulation at Sec. 660.13, subpart C, or Sec. 660.313.
* * * * *
0
17. Section 660.313 is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 660.313 Open access fishery--recordkeeping and reporting.
(a) General. General reporting requirements specified at Sec.
660.13(a) through (c), subpart C, apply to the open access fishery.
(b) Declaration reports for vessels using nontrawl gear.
Declaration reporting requirements for open access vessels using
nontrawl gear (all types of open access gear other than non-groundfish
trawl gear) are specified at Sec. 660.13(d), subpart C.
(c) Declaration reports for vessels using non-groundfish trawl
gear. Declaration reporting requirements for open access vessels using
non-groundfish trawl gear are specified at Sec. 660.13(d), subpart C.
(d) VMS requirements for open access fishery vessels. VMS
requirements for open access fishery vessels are specified at Sec.
660.14, subpart C.
(e) Retention of records. Any person landing groundfish must retain
on board the vessel from which groundfish is landed, and provide to an
authorized officer upon request, copies of any and all reports of
groundfish landings containing all data, and in the exact manner,
required by the applicable state law throughout the cumulative limit
period during which a landing occurred and for 15 days thereafter. All
relevant records used in the preparation of electronic fish ticket
reports or corrections to these reports, including dock tickets, must
be maintained for a period of not less than three years after the date
of landing and must be immediately available upon request for
inspection by NMFS or authorized officers or others as specifically
authorized by NMFS.
(f) Electronic fish ticket. The first receiver, as defined at Sec.
660.11, subpart C, of fish, if that fish includes any amount of
sablefish, from an open access vessel, is responsible for compliance
with all reporting requirements described in this paragraph. Per
requirements at Sec. 660.312(a), all fish, if that fish includes any
amount of sablefish, must be reported via electronic fish ticket. When
used in this paragraph, submit means to transmit final electronic fish
ticket information via web-based form or, if a waiver is granted, by
paper form. When used in this paragraph, record means the action of
documenting electronic fish ticket information in any written format.
(1) Required information. All first receivers must provide the
following types of information: Date of landing, vessel that made the
landing, vessel identification number, name of the vessel operator,
gear type used, receiver, actual weights of species landed listed by
species or species group including species with no value, condition
landed, number of salmon by species, number of Pacific halibut, ex-
vessel value of the landing by species, fish caught inside/outside 3
miles or both, and any other information deemed necessary by the
Regional Administrator (or designee) as specified on the appropriate
electronic fish ticket form.
(2) Submissions. The first receiver must:
(i) Include, as part of each electronic fish ticket submission, the
actual scale weight for each groundfish species as specified by
requirements at Sec. 660.15(c) and the vessel identification number.
Use and maintain, for the purposes of submitting electronic fish
tickets, equipment as specified at Sec. 660.15(d).
(ii) Submit a completed electronic fish ticket no later than 24
hours after the date of landing, unless a waiver of this requirement
has been granted under provisions specified at paragraph (f)(4) of this
section.
(iii) If electronic fish tickets will be submitted prior to
processing or transport, follow these process and submittal
requirements:
(A) After completing the landing, the electronic fish ticket
information must be recorded immediately.
(B) Prior to submittal of the electronic fish ticket, the
information recorded for the electronic fish ticket must be reviewed by
the vessel operator who
[[Page 84434]]
delivered the fish and the port sampler, if one is present.
(C) After review, the receiver and the vessel operator must sign a
printed hard copy of the electronic fish ticket or, if the landing
occurs outside of business hours, the original dock ticket.
(D) Prior to submittal, three copies of the signed electronic fish
ticket must be produced by the receiver and a copy provided to each of
the following:
(1) The vessel operator,
(2) The state of origin if required by state regulations, and
(3) The first receiver.
(E) After review and signature, the electronic fish ticket must be
submitted within 24 hours after the date of landing, as specified in
paragraph (f)(2)(ii) of this section.
(iv) If electronic fish tickets will be submitted after transport,
follow these process and submittal requirements:
(A) The vessel name and the electronic fish ticket number must be
recorded on each dock ticket related to that landing.
(C) Upon completion of the dock ticket, but prior to transfer of
the offload to another location, the dock ticket information that will
be used to complete the electronic fish ticket must be reviewed by the
vessel operator who delivered the fish.
(D) After review, the first receiver and the vessel operator must
sign the original copy of each dock ticket related to that landing.
(E) Prior to submittal of the electronic fish ticket, three copies
of the signed dock ticket must be produced by the first receiver and a
copy provided to each of the following:
(1) The vessel operator,
(2) The state of origin if required by state regulations, and
(3) The first receiver.
(F) Based on the information contained in the signed dock ticket,
the electronic fish ticket must be completed and submitted within 24
hours of the date of landing, as specified in paragraph (f)(2)(ii) of
this section.
(G) Three copies of the electronic fish ticket must be produced by
the first receiver and a copy provided to each of the following:
(1) The vessel operator,
(2) The state of origin if required by state regulations, and
(3) The first receiver.
(3) Revising a submission. In the event that a data error is found,
electronic fish ticket submissions must be revised by resubmitting the
revised form electronically. Electronic fish tickets are to be used for
the submission of final data. Preliminary data, including estimates of
fish weights or species composition, shall not be submitted on
electronic fish tickets.
(4) Waivers for submission. On a case-by-case basis, a temporary
written waiver of the requirement to submit electronic fish tickets may
be granted by the Assistant Regional Administrator or designee if he/
she determines that circumstances beyond the control of a receiver
would result in inadequate data submissions using the electronic fish
ticket system. The duration of the waiver will be determined on a case-
by-case basis.
(5) Reporting requirements when a temporary waiver has been
granted. Receivers that have been granted a temporary waiver from the
requirement to submit electronic fish tickets must submit on paper the
same data as is required on electronic fish tickets within 24 hours of
the date of landing during the period that the waiver is in effect.
Paper fish tickets must be sent by facsimile to NMFS, West Coast
Region, Sustainable Fisheries Division, 206-526-6736 or by delivering
it in person to 7600 Sand Point Way NE., Seattle, WA 98115. The
requirements for submissions of paper tickets in this paragraph are
separate from, and in addition to existing state requirements for
landing receipts or fish receiving tickets.
[FR Doc. 2016-28153 Filed 11-22-16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-22-P