Pacific Island Fisheries; 2016-17 Annual Catch Limit and Accountability Measures; Main Hawaiian Islands Deep 7 Bottomfish, 5429-5430 [2017-00622]
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Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 11 / Wednesday, January 18, 2017 / Rules and Regulations
periods for contract(s) beginning on or
after July 1, 2017 through rating periods
for contract(s) beginning on or after July
1, 2021, may continue to require passthrough payments to physicians or
nursing facilities under the MCO, PIHP,
or PAHP contract of no more than the
total dollar amount of pass-through
payments to physicians or nursing
facilities, respectively, identified in the
managed care contract(s) and rate
certification(s) used to meet the
requirement of paragraph (d)(1)(i) of this
section. For rating periods for
contract(s) beginning on or after July 1,
2022, the State cannot require passthrough payments for physicians or
nursing facilities under a MCO, PIHP, or
PAHP contract.
Dated: January 3, 2017.
Andrew M. Slavitt,
Acting Administrator, Centers for Medicare
& Medicaid Services.
Dated: January 10, 2017.
Sylvia M. Burwell,
Secretary, Department of Health and Human
Services.
[FR Doc. 2017–00916 Filed 1–17–17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
50 CFR Part 665
[Docket No. 160811726–6999–02]
RIN 0648–XE809
Pacific Island Fisheries; 2016–17
Annual Catch Limit and Accountability
Measures; Main Hawaiian Islands Deep
7 Bottomfish
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Final specifications.
AGENCY:
In this final rule, NMFS
specifies an annual catch limit (ACL) of
318,000 lb of Deep 7 bottomfish in the
main Hawaiian Islands (MHI) for the
2016–17 fishing year. As an
accountability measure (AM), if the ACL
is projected to be reached, NMFS would
close the commercial and noncommercial fisheries for MHI Deep 7
bottomfish for the remainder of the
fishing year. The ACL and AM support
the long-term sustainability of Hawaii
bottomfish.
mstockstill on DSK3G9T082PROD with RULES
SUMMARY:
The final specifications are
effective from February 17, 2017,
through August 31, 2017.
DATES:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:39 Jan 17, 2017
Jkt 241001
The environmental
assessment and finding of no significant
impact for this action, identified as
NOAA–NMFS–2016–0112, is available
at www.regulations.gov, or from Michael
D. Tosatto, Regional Administrator,
NMFS Pacific Islands Region (PIR), 1845
Wasp Blvd. Bldg. 176, Honolulu, HI
96818.
The Fishery Ecosystem Plan for the
Hawaiian Archipelago is available from
the Western Pacific Fishery
Management Council (Council), 1164
Bishop St., Suite 1400, Honolulu, HI
96813, tel 808–522–8220, fax 808–522–
8226, or www.wpcouncil.org.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Sarah Ellgen, NMFS PIR Sustainable
Fisheries, 808–725–5173.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Through
this action, NMFS is specifying an ACL
of 318,000 lb of Deep 7 bottomfish in
the MHI for the 2016–17 fishing year.
The fishing year began September 1,
2016, and ends on August 31, 2017. The
Council recommended this ACL, based
on the best available scientific,
commercial, and other information,
taking into account the associated risk
of overfishing. This ACL is 8,000 lb
lower than the ACL that NMFS
specified for the 2015–16 fishing year,
and is the second annual reduction in
a phased approach to lower the ACL
incrementally over three years, as
recommended by the Council.
The MHI Management Subarea is the
portion of U.S. Exclusive Economic
Zone around the Hawaiian Archipelago
east of 161°20′ W. The Deep 7
bottomfish are onaga (Etelis coruscans),
ehu (E. carbunculus), gindai
(Pristipomoides zonatus), kalekale (P.
sieboldii), opakapaka (P. filamentosus),
lehi (Aphareus rutilans), and hapuupuu
(Hyporthodus quernus).
The MHI bottomfish fishing year
started September 1, 2016, and is
currently open. NMFS will monitor the
fishery and, if we project that the fishery
will reach the ACL before August 31,
2017, we would, as an AM authorized
in 50 CFR 665.4(f), close the noncommercial and commercial fisheries
for Deep 7 bottomfish in Federal waters
through August 31, 2017. During a
fishery closure for Deep 7 bottomfish,
no person may fish for, possess, or sell
any of these fish in the MHI
Management Subarea. There is no
prohibition on fishing for, possessing, or
selling other (non-Deep 7) bottomfish
during such a closure. All other
management measures continue to
apply in the MHI bottomfish fishery. If
NMFS and the Council determine that
the final 2016–17 Deep 7 bottomfish
catch exceeds the ACL, NMFS would
ADDRESSES:
PO 00000
Frm 00095
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
5429
reduce the Deep 7 bottomfish ACL for
2017–18 by the amount of the overage.
You may review additional
background information on this action
in the preamble to the proposed
specifications (81 FR 75803; November
1, 2016); we do not repeat that
information here.
Comments and Responses
The comment period for the proposed
specifications ended on November 16,
2016. NMFS received comments from
four individuals, and responds, as
follows:
Comment 1: The 2016–2017 ACL
serves as a precautionary measure for
bottomfish stocks that supports healthy
fisheries. The proposed ACL is greater
than recent annual catches, so it would
not significantly inconvenience
fishermen.
Response: NMFS agrees. We assessed
the potential beneficial and adverse
impacts of the ACL and AM on the
environment, including the fishery
itself, and concluded that the action is
necessary to prevent overfishing while
supporting the long-term sustainability
of Hawaii bottomfish.
Comment 2: We need to punish
anyone who harms the ocean and any of
our waters.
Response: While the comment is not
specific to the proposed action,
violations of Federal fishery regulations
are subject to penalties pursuant to
Section 308 of the Magnuson-Stevens
Fishery Conservation and Management
Act (Magnuson-Stevens Act).
Comment 3: Legislation is needed to
reduce overfishing and to protect
marine life in Hawaiian waters.
Response: Federal laws and
regulations already protect Hawaii fish
stocks from overfishing pressure. The
Magnuson-Stevens Act includes
requirements for ACLs and AMs and
other provisions for preventing and
ending overfishing and rebuilding
fisheries. Unless exempted by law, all
fisheries in Federal waters must have
ACLs and AMs. Fishery scientists and
managers use the best scientific
information available, including catch,
fishing effort, biological information,
etc., to determine the maximum catch
that would not harm the conservation
needs of the fish stock, and ACLs must
be set at or below the levels that account
for uncertainty about the fishery
information.
AMs are management controls to
prevent ACLs from being exceeded, and
to correct or mitigate overages when
they occur. For the MHI bottomfish
fishery, one AM would close the fishery
before the scheduled end of the fishing
year to prevent exceeding the ACL, and
E:\FR\FM\18JAR1.SGM
18JAR1
5430
Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 11 / Wednesday, January 18, 2017 / Rules and Regulations
mstockstill on DSK3G9T082PROD with RULES
another AM would reduce next year’s
ACL by the amount of any overage.
These measures help to ensure
sustainable harvests.
The reader may find more information
on fishing regulations in Hawaii at
https://www.fpir.noaa.gov/SFD/SFD_
regs_index.html.
Comment 4: The MHI Deep 7
bottomfish stock assessment does not
account for fish biomass within the
State of Hawaii Bottomfish Restricted
Fishing Areas (BRFA), marine protected
areas (MPA), and the Kahoolawe Island
Reserve.
Response: The 2011 MHI Deep 7
bottomfish stock assessment, as updated
with three additional years of data,
treats the MHI as a single fishing area
and calculates the biomass required to
produce the catch and catch per unit
effort (CPUE) according to commercial
fishery data. The assessment does not
make a distinction between biomass
inside and outside of protected areas,
such as the BRFA, MPA, and Kahoolawe
Island Reserve. Nevertheless, the 2011
MHI Deep 7 bottomfish stock
assessment, as updated, represents the
best scientific information available for
this stock complex.
NMFS and the Council are working
with the State and the fishing industry
to obtain accurate information needed
for stock assessments, including data on
bottomfish distribution, relative
abundance, stock structure, size, and
age. Current efforts include working
with bottomfish fishermen to conduct
scientific surveys using standardized
fishing gears and underwater video
cameras.
Although stock assessments will
likely continue to treat the MHI as a
single fishing area, both the State and
NMFS continue to try to quantify the
effects of the BRFA, MPA, and
Kahoolawe Island Reserve on unfished
biomass for the MHI Deep 7 bottomfish
stock. In Fall 2016, with the cooperation
of the State of Hawaii and help from
cooperative research fishing partners,
NMFS sampled bottomfish inside these
protected areas as part of a scientific
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:39 Jan 17, 2017
Jkt 241001
survey. NMFS will take into account
information from this survey in future
stock assessments, as appropriate.
Comment 5: Fishing prohibitions in
BFRA and MPA result in more
concentrated fishing in unrestricted
areas, leading to decreased fish size and
lower CPUE.
Response: Because the State catch
reporting statistical area boundaries do
not match the BRFA boundaries, it is
not currently possible to determine if
concentrated fishing that may be
occurring in unrestricted areas could
lead to decreased fish size and lower
CPUE in those unrestricted areas. NMFS
continues to evaluate the effect of the
protected areas on the MHI bottomfish
stock (see response to Comment 4).
˜
Comment 6: The recent El Nino and
unpredictable winds and seas have
adversely affected the 2015–16 and
2016–17 MHI Deep 7 fishing seasons,
resulting in uncaught fish. How would
NMFS consider uncaught biomass in
future ACLs?
Response: Councils recommend ACLs
in consideration of all relevant
information and scientific
recommendations concerning stock
status. The newly revised National
Standard 1 guidelines (81 FR 71858,
October 18, 2016) allow councils to
develop an acceptable biological catch
control rule that would allow for
changes in the catch limit to account for
the carry-over of some of the unused
portion of the ACL from one year to the
next, in certain circumstances. The
2016–17 ACL of 318,000 lb is the
second annual reduction in a three-year
phased approach to prevent overfishing,
while supporting the long-term
sustainability of Hawaii bottomfish.
Therefore, in developing future ACL
recommendations, the Council could
evaluate a carry-over provision for MHI
Deep 7 bottomfish, if the Council
determines that such a provision is
appropriate and desirable.
Comment 7: The MHI Deep 7
bottomfish fishery is experiencing
ongoing problems with shark predation.
How is NMFS addressing this issue?
PO 00000
Frm 00096
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 9990
Response: This comment is beyond
the scope of the ACL and AM
specifications, and NMFS is not
currently studying shark predation in
the bottomfish fishery. Interested
persons may inquire about the
availability of fisheries research project
funding through, among other sources,
the Saltonstall-Kennedy Grant Program
(information at https://
www.fisheries.noaa.gov/mb/financial_
services/skhome.htm).
Changes From the Proposed
Specifications
There are no changes in the final
specifications from the proposed
specifications.
Classification
The Regional Administrator, NMFS
PIR, determined that this action is
necessary for the conservation and
management of MHI Deep 7 bottomfish,
and that it is consistent with the
Magnuson-Stevens Act and other
applicable laws.
The Chief Counsel for Regulation of
the Department of Commerce certified
to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the
Small Business Administration during
the proposed specification stage that
this action would not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. NMFS
published the factual basis for the
certification in the proposed
specifications, and does not repeat it
here. NMFS did not receive comments
regarding this certification. As a result,
a final regulatory flexibility analysis is
not required, and one was not prepared.
This action is exempt from review
under Executive Order 12866.
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
Dated: January 9, 2017.
Samuel D. Rauch III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for
Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2017–00622 Filed 1–17–17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
E:\FR\FM\18JAR1.SGM
18JAR1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 82, Number 11 (Wednesday, January 18, 2017)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 5429-5430]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2017-00622]
=======================================================================
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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
50 CFR Part 665
[Docket No. 160811726-6999-02]
RIN 0648-XE809
Pacific Island Fisheries; 2016-17 Annual Catch Limit and
Accountability Measures; Main Hawaiian Islands Deep 7 Bottomfish
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Final specifications.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: In this final rule, NMFS specifies an annual catch limit (ACL)
of 318,000 lb of Deep 7 bottomfish in the main Hawaiian Islands (MHI)
for the 2016-17 fishing year. As an accountability measure (AM), if the
ACL is projected to be reached, NMFS would close the commercial and
non-commercial fisheries for MHI Deep 7 bottomfish for the remainder of
the fishing year. The ACL and AM support the long-term sustainability
of Hawaii bottomfish.
DATES: The final specifications are effective from February 17, 2017,
through August 31, 2017.
ADDRESSES: The environmental assessment and finding of no significant
impact for this action, identified as NOAA-NMFS-2016-0112, is available
at www.regulations.gov, or from Michael D. Tosatto, Regional
Administrator, NMFS Pacific Islands Region (PIR), 1845 Wasp Blvd. Bldg.
176, Honolulu, HI 96818.
The Fishery Ecosystem Plan for the Hawaiian Archipelago is
available from the Western Pacific Fishery Management Council
(Council), 1164 Bishop St., Suite 1400, Honolulu, HI 96813, tel 808-
522-8220, fax 808-522-8226, or www.wpcouncil.org.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Sarah Ellgen, NMFS PIR Sustainable
Fisheries, 808-725-5173.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Through this action, NMFS is specifying an
ACL of 318,000 lb of Deep 7 bottomfish in the MHI for the 2016-17
fishing year. The fishing year began September 1, 2016, and ends on
August 31, 2017. The Council recommended this ACL, based on the best
available scientific, commercial, and other information, taking into
account the associated risk of overfishing. This ACL is 8,000 lb lower
than the ACL that NMFS specified for the 2015-16 fishing year, and is
the second annual reduction in a phased approach to lower the ACL
incrementally over three years, as recommended by the Council.
The MHI Management Subarea is the portion of U.S. Exclusive
Economic Zone around the Hawaiian Archipelago east of 161[deg]20' W.
The Deep 7 bottomfish are onaga (Etelis coruscans), ehu (E.
carbunculus), gindai (Pristipomoides zonatus), kalekale (P. sieboldii),
opakapaka (P. filamentosus), lehi (Aphareus rutilans), and hapuupuu
(Hyporthodus quernus).
The MHI bottomfish fishing year started September 1, 2016, and is
currently open. NMFS will monitor the fishery and, if we project that
the fishery will reach the ACL before August 31, 2017, we would, as an
AM authorized in 50 CFR 665.4(f), close the non-commercial and
commercial fisheries for Deep 7 bottomfish in Federal waters through
August 31, 2017. During a fishery closure for Deep 7 bottomfish, no
person may fish for, possess, or sell any of these fish in the MHI
Management Subarea. There is no prohibition on fishing for, possessing,
or selling other (non-Deep 7) bottomfish during such a closure. All
other management measures continue to apply in the MHI bottomfish
fishery. If NMFS and the Council determine that the final 2016-17 Deep
7 bottomfish catch exceeds the ACL, NMFS would reduce the Deep 7
bottomfish ACL for 2017-18 by the amount of the overage.
You may review additional background information on this action in
the preamble to the proposed specifications (81 FR 75803; November 1,
2016); we do not repeat that information here.
Comments and Responses
The comment period for the proposed specifications ended on
November 16, 2016. NMFS received comments from four individuals, and
responds, as follows:
Comment 1: The 2016-2017 ACL serves as a precautionary measure for
bottomfish stocks that supports healthy fisheries. The proposed ACL is
greater than recent annual catches, so it would not significantly
inconvenience fishermen.
Response: NMFS agrees. We assessed the potential beneficial and
adverse impacts of the ACL and AM on the environment, including the
fishery itself, and concluded that the action is necessary to prevent
overfishing while supporting the long-term sustainability of Hawaii
bottomfish.
Comment 2: We need to punish anyone who harms the ocean and any of
our waters.
Response: While the comment is not specific to the proposed action,
violations of Federal fishery regulations are subject to penalties
pursuant to Section 308 of the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation
and Management Act (Magnuson-Stevens Act).
Comment 3: Legislation is needed to reduce overfishing and to
protect marine life in Hawaiian waters.
Response: Federal laws and regulations already protect Hawaii fish
stocks from overfishing pressure. The Magnuson-Stevens Act includes
requirements for ACLs and AMs and other provisions for preventing and
ending overfishing and rebuilding fisheries. Unless exempted by law,
all fisheries in Federal waters must have ACLs and AMs. Fishery
scientists and managers use the best scientific information available,
including catch, fishing effort, biological information, etc., to
determine the maximum catch that would not harm the conservation needs
of the fish stock, and ACLs must be set at or below the levels that
account for uncertainty about the fishery information.
AMs are management controls to prevent ACLs from being exceeded,
and to correct or mitigate overages when they occur. For the MHI
bottomfish fishery, one AM would close the fishery before the scheduled
end of the fishing year to prevent exceeding the ACL, and
[[Page 5430]]
another AM would reduce next year's ACL by the amount of any overage.
These measures help to ensure sustainable harvests.
The reader may find more information on fishing regulations in
Hawaii at https://www.fpir.noaa.gov/SFD/SFD_regs_index.html.
Comment 4: The MHI Deep 7 bottomfish stock assessment does not
account for fish biomass within the State of Hawaii Bottomfish
Restricted Fishing Areas (BRFA), marine protected areas (MPA), and the
Kahoolawe Island Reserve.
Response: The 2011 MHI Deep 7 bottomfish stock assessment, as
updated with three additional years of data, treats the MHI as a single
fishing area and calculates the biomass required to produce the catch
and catch per unit effort (CPUE) according to commercial fishery data.
The assessment does not make a distinction between biomass inside and
outside of protected areas, such as the BRFA, MPA, and Kahoolawe Island
Reserve. Nevertheless, the 2011 MHI Deep 7 bottomfish stock assessment,
as updated, represents the best scientific information available for
this stock complex.
NMFS and the Council are working with the State and the fishing
industry to obtain accurate information needed for stock assessments,
including data on bottomfish distribution, relative abundance, stock
structure, size, and age. Current efforts include working with
bottomfish fishermen to conduct scientific surveys using standardized
fishing gears and underwater video cameras.
Although stock assessments will likely continue to treat the MHI as
a single fishing area, both the State and NMFS continue to try to
quantify the effects of the BRFA, MPA, and Kahoolawe Island Reserve on
unfished biomass for the MHI Deep 7 bottomfish stock. In Fall 2016,
with the cooperation of the State of Hawaii and help from cooperative
research fishing partners, NMFS sampled bottomfish inside these
protected areas as part of a scientific survey. NMFS will take into
account information from this survey in future stock assessments, as
appropriate.
Comment 5: Fishing prohibitions in BFRA and MPA result in more
concentrated fishing in unrestricted areas, leading to decreased fish
size and lower CPUE.
Response: Because the State catch reporting statistical area
boundaries do not match the BRFA boundaries, it is not currently
possible to determine if concentrated fishing that may be occurring in
unrestricted areas could lead to decreased fish size and lower CPUE in
those unrestricted areas. NMFS continues to evaluate the effect of the
protected areas on the MHI bottomfish stock (see response to Comment
4).
Comment 6: The recent El Ni[ntilde]o and unpredictable winds and
seas have adversely affected the 2015-16 and 2016-17 MHI Deep 7 fishing
seasons, resulting in uncaught fish. How would NMFS consider uncaught
biomass in future ACLs?
Response: Councils recommend ACLs in consideration of all relevant
information and scientific recommendations concerning stock status. The
newly revised National Standard 1 guidelines (81 FR 71858, October 18,
2016) allow councils to develop an acceptable biological catch control
rule that would allow for changes in the catch limit to account for the
carry-over of some of the unused portion of the ACL from one year to
the next, in certain circumstances. The 2016-17 ACL of 318,000 lb is
the second annual reduction in a three-year phased approach to prevent
overfishing, while supporting the long-term sustainability of Hawaii
bottomfish. Therefore, in developing future ACL recommendations, the
Council could evaluate a carry-over provision for MHI Deep 7
bottomfish, if the Council determines that such a provision is
appropriate and desirable.
Comment 7: The MHI Deep 7 bottomfish fishery is experiencing
ongoing problems with shark predation. How is NMFS addressing this
issue?
Response: This comment is beyond the scope of the ACL and AM
specifications, and NMFS is not currently studying shark predation in
the bottomfish fishery. Interested persons may inquire about the
availability of fisheries research project funding through, among other
sources, the Saltonstall-Kennedy Grant Program (information at https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/mb/financial_services/skhome.htm).
Changes From the Proposed Specifications
There are no changes in the final specifications from the proposed
specifications.
Classification
The Regional Administrator, NMFS PIR, determined that this action
is necessary for the conservation and management of MHI Deep 7
bottomfish, and that it is consistent with the Magnuson-Stevens Act and
other applicable laws.
The Chief Counsel for Regulation of the Department of Commerce
certified to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small Business
Administration during the proposed specification stage that this action
would not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of
small entities. NMFS published the factual basis for the certification
in the proposed specifications, and does not repeat it here. NMFS did
not receive comments regarding this certification. As a result, a final
regulatory flexibility analysis is not required, and one was not
prepared.
This action is exempt from review under Executive Order 12866.
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
Dated: January 9, 2017.
Samuel D. Rauch III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2017-00622 Filed 1-17-17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-22-P