Plan for Periodic Review of Regulations, 26419-26422 [2017-11815]
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Federal Register / Vol. 82, No. 108 / Wednesday, June 7, 2017 / Proposed Rules
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Notice; request for comments.
small governmental jurisdictions. The
intended effect of this document is to
inform the public of the rules under
review, to outline NMFS’ review
process, and to provide an opportunity
to comment. In addition, information
compiled through this routine action
will be relevant to the regulatory
reviews required under Executive Order
13771, ‘‘Reducing Regulation and
Controlling Regulatory Costs,’’ and
Executive Order 13777, ‘‘Enforcing the
Regulatory Reform Agenda.’’
DATES: Written comments must be
received by July 7, 2017.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments
on this document, identified by NOAA–
NMFS–2017–0054, by either of the
following methods:
• Electronic Submission: Submit all
electronic public comments via the
Federal e-Rulemaking Portal. Go to
https://www.regulations.gov/
#!docketDetail;D=NOAA-NMFS-20170054, click the ‘‘Comment Now!’’ icon,
complete the required fields, and enter
or attach your comments.
• Mail: Submit written comments to
Kelly Denit, National Marine Fisheries
Service, NOAA, Office of Sustainable
Fisheries, 1315 East-West Highway,
Silver Spring, MD 20910 (mark outside
of envelope ‘‘Comments on 610
Review’’).
Instructions: Comments must be
submitted by one of the above methods
to ensure that the comments are
received, documented, and considered
by NMFS. Comments sent by any other
method, to any other address or
individual, or received after the end of
the comment period, may not be
considered. All comments received are
a part of the public record and will
generally be posted for public viewing
on www.regulations.gov without change.
All personal identifying information
(e.g., name, address, etc.) submitted
voluntarily by the sender will be
publicly accessible. Do not submit
confidential business information, or
otherwise sensitive or protected
information. NMFS will accept
anonymous comments (enter ‘‘N/A’’ in
the required fields if you wish to remain
anonymous).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Tara
Scott, (301) 427–8579 or Heather Sagar,
(301) 427–8019.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
NMFS announces the existing
rules that it is reviewing, as required,
under section 610 of the Regulatory
Flexibility Act, which had, or will have
a significant impact on a substantial
number of small entities, such as small
businesses, small organizations, and
Background
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA),
5 U.S.C. 601 et seq., requires that
Federal agencies including NMFS take
into account how their regulations affect
‘‘small entities,’’ including small
businesses, small Governmental
(2) Label the petition with the
following: ‘‘Petition for Rulemaking’’ or
‘‘Rulemaking Petition’’;
(3) Set forth the substance of the rule
or amendment proposed or specify the
rule sought to be repealed or amended;
(4) Explain the interest of the
petitioner in support of the action
sought; and
(5) Set forth all data and arguments
available to the petitioner in support of
the action sought.
(b) No public procedures will be held
directly on the petition before its
disposition. If the Administrator finds
that the petition contains adequate
justification, a rulemaking proceeding
will be initiated or a final rule will be
issued as appropriate. If the
Administrator finds that the petition
does not contain adequate justification,
the petition will be denied by letter or
other notice, with a brief statement of
the ground for denial.
The Administrator may consider new
evidence at any time; however, FEMA
will not consider repetitious petitions
for rulemaking.
§ 1.9
Petitions for reconsideration.
Petitions for reconsideration of a final
rule will not be considered. Such
petitions, if filed, will be treated as
petitions for rulemaking in accordance
with § 1.8 of this part.
Dated: May 30, 2017.
Robert Fenton,
Senior Official Performing the Duties of the
Administrator, Federal Emergency
Management Agency.
[FR Doc. 2017–11559 Filed 6–6–17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 9111–19–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
50 CFR Chapters II, III, IV, V, and VI
RIN 0648–XF326
Plan for Periodic Review of
Regulations
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AGENCY:
SUMMARY:
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jurisdictions, and small organizations.
Under the RFA, we must either prepare
a Regulatory Flexibility Analysis or
certify that the regulation, if put in
place, will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities for any
regulation proposed after January 1,
1981. Section 602 of the RFA requires
that NMFS issue an Agenda of
Regulations identifying rules under
development that are likely to have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
Section 610 of the RFA requires
Federal agencies to review existing
regulations. It requires that NMFS
publish a plan in the Federal Register
explaining how it will review its
existing regulations which have or will
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities.
Regulations that became effective after
January 1, 1981, must be reviewed
within 10 years of the publication date
of the final rule. Section 610(c) requires
that we annually publish a list of final
rules we will review during the
succeeding 12 months in the Federal
Register. The list must describe, explain
the need for, and provide the legal basis
for the rules being reviewed, as well as
invite public comment on the rule.
In addition, information compiled
through this routine action under
Section 610 of the RFA will be relevant
to the regulatory reviews required under
Executive Order 13771, ‘‘Reducing
Regulation and Controlling Regulatory
Costs,’’ and Executive Order 13777,
‘‘Enforcing the Regulatory Reform
Agenda.’’
Criteria for Review of Existing
Regulations
The purpose of the review is to
determine whether existing rules should
be left unchanged, or whether they
should be revised or rescinded to
minimize significant economic impacts
on a substantial number of small
entities, consistent with the objectives
of other applicable statutes. In deciding
whether change is necessary, the RFA
establishes five factors that NMFS must
consider:
(1) Whether the rule is still needed;
(2) What type of complaints or
comments were received concerning the
rule from the public;
(3) The complexity of the rule;
(4) How much the rule overlaps,
duplicates or conflicts with other
Federal rules, and, to the extent feasible,
with State and local governmental rules;
and
(5) How long it has been since the rule
has been evaluated or how much the
technology, economic conditions, or
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other factors have changed in the area
affected by the rule.
Plan for Periodic Review of Rules
Below is the list of rules and their
summaries issued in 2010 that we will
review by December 31, 2017,
consistent with RFA Section 610. This
list includes rules issues in 2010 for
which initial and final regulatory
flexibility analyses were completed.
1. Pacific Halibut Fisheries; Limited
Access for Guided Sport Charter. RIN
0648–AW92 (75 FR 553; January 5,
2010). NMFS issued regulations creating
a limited access system for charter
vessels in the guided sport fishery for
Pacific halibut in waters of International
Pacific Halibut Commission Regulatory
Areas 2C (Southeast Alaska) and 3A
(Central Gulf of Alaska). This limited
access system limited the number of
charter vessels that may participate in
the guided sport fishery for halibut in
these areas. NMFS issued a charter
halibut permit to a licensed charter
fishing business owner based on his or
her past participation in the charter
halibut fishery and to a Community
Quota Entity representing specific rural
communities. All charter halibut permit
holders were subject to limits on the
number of permits they may hold and
on the number of charter vessel anglers
who may catch and retain halibut on
permitted charter vessels. This action
was necessary to achieve the approved
halibut fishery management goals of the
North Pacific Fishery Management
Council. The intended effect was to
curtail growth of fishing capacity in the
guided sport fishery for halibut. This
action was conducted by NMFS under
authority of the Northern Pacific Halibut
Act of 1982.
2. International Fisheries; Western
and Central Pacific Fisheries for Highly
Migratory Species; Initial
Implementation of the Western and
Central Pacific Fisheries Convention.
RIN 0648–AV63 (75 FR 3335; January
21, 2010). NMFS issued regulations
under authority of the Western and
Central Pacific Fisheries Convention
Implementation Act, which authorized
the Secretary of Commerce to
promulgate regulations needed to carry
out the obligations of the U.S. under the
Convention on the Conservation and
Management of Highly Migratory Fish
Stocks in the Western and Central
Pacific Ocean, including implementing
the decisions of the Commission for the
Conservation and Management of
Highly Migratory Fish Stocks in the
Western and Central Pacific Ocean. The
regulations included requirements
related to permitting, vessel monitoring
systems, vessel observers, vessel
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markings, reporting and recordkeeping,
at-sea transshipment, and boarding and
inspection on the high seas, among
others. NMFS has determined that this
action was necessary for the United
States to satisfy its international
obligations under the Convention, to
which it is a Contracting Party. It has
the effect of requiring that all relevant
U.S. fishing vessels were operated in
conformance with the provisions of the
Convention.
3. Taking of Marine Mammals
Incidental to Commercial Fishing
Operations; Harbor Porpoise Take
Reduction Plan Regulations. RIN 0648–
AW51 (75 FR 7383; February 19, 2010).
NMFS issued this final rule to amend
the regulations implementing the
Harbor Porpoise Take Reduction Plan to
address the increased incidental
mortality and serious injury of the Gulf
of Maine/Bay of Fundy stock of harbor
porpoises (Phocoena phocoena) in
gillnet fisheries throughout the stock’s
U.S. range. This action was conducted
by NMFS under the authority of the
Marine Mammal Protection Act.
4. Fisheries of the Northeastern
United States; Atlantic Mackerel, Squid,
and Butterfish Fisheries; Amendment
10. RIN 0648–AY00 (75 FR 11441;
March 11, 2010). NMFS implemented
approved measures in Amendment 10 to
the Atlantic Mackerel, Squid, and
Butterfish (MSB) Fishery Management
Plan (FMP). Amendment 10 was
developed by the Mid-Atlantic Fishery
Management Council to bring the FMP
into compliance with MagnusonStevens Act requirements by
establishing a rebuilding program that
allows the butterfish stock to rebuild
and protects the long-term health and
stability of the stock; and by minimizing
bycatch and the fishing mortality of
unavoidable bycatch, to the extent
practicable, in the MSB fisheries.
Amendment 10 increased the minimum
codend mesh size requirement for the
long fin squid fishery; established a
butterfish rebuilding program with a
butterfish mortality cap for the long fin
squid fishery; established a 72-hr trip
notification requirement for the long fin
squid fishery; and required an annual
assessment of the butterfish rebuilding
program by the Council’s Scientific and
Statistical Committee. This rule also
made minor, technical corrections to the
existing regulations. This action was
conducted by NMFS under the authority
of the Magnuson-Stevens Act.
5. Magnuson-Stevens Fishery
Conservation and Management Act
Provisions; Fisheries of the Northeastern
United States; Northeast (NE)
Multispecies Fishery; Amendment 16;
Final Rule. RIN 0648–AW72 (75 FR
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18261; April 9, 2010). NMFS issued the
final rule to implement measures
approved under Amendment 16 to the
NE Multispecies Fishery Management
Plan. Amendment 16 was developed by
the New England Fishery Management
Council as part of the biennial
adjustment process in the FMP to
update status determination criteria for
all regulated NE multispecies and ocean
pout stocks; to adopt rebuilding
programs for NE multispecies stocks
newly classified as being overfished and
subject to overfishing; and to revise
management measures, including
significant revisions to the sector
management measures, necessary to end
overfishing, rebuild overfished
regulated NE multispecies and ocean
pout stocks, and mitigate the adverse
economic impacts of increased effort
controls. This final rule also
implemented new requirements under
Amendment 16 for establishing
acceptable biological catch (ABC),
annual catch limits (ACLs), and
accountability measures (AMs) for each
stock managed under the FMP, pursuant
to the Magnuson-Stevens Act. Finally,
this action added Atlantic wolffish to
the list of species managed by the FMP.
This action was necessary to address the
results of the most recent stock
assessment, which indicate that several
additional regulated species are
overfished and subject to overfishing,
and that stocks currently classified as
overfished require additional reductions
in fishing mortality to rebuild by the
end of their rebuilding periods. This
action was conducted by NMFS under
the authority of the Magnuson-Stevens
Act
6. Fisheries of the Caribbean, Gulf of
Mexico, and South Atlantic; Reef Fish
Fishery of the Gulf of Mexico;
Amendment 31. RIN 0648–AX67. (75 FR
21512; April 26, 2010). NMFS issued
this final rule to implement Amendment
31 to the Fishery Management Plan for
the Reef Fish Resources of the Gulf of
Mexico prepared by the Gulf of Mexico
Fishery Management Council. This final
rule implemented restrictions
applicable to the bottom longline
component of the reef fish fishery in the
exclusive economic zone (EEZ) of the
eastern Gulf of Mexico. The restrictions
included a bottom longline endorsement
requirement, a seasonal closed area, and
a limitation on the number of hooks that
can be possessed and fished. The intent
of this rule was to balance the continued
operation of the bottom longline
component of the reef fish fishery in the
eastern Gulf while maintaining adequate
protective measures for sea turtles. This
action was conducted by NMFS under
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the authority of the Magnuson-Stevens
Act.
7. Atlantic Highly Migratory Species;
Atlantic Shark Management Measures;
Amendment 3; Final Rule. RIN 0648–
AW65 (75 FR 30483; June 1, 2010).
NMFS published this final rule to
implement the Final Amendment 3 to
the Consolidated Atlantic Highly
Migratory Species (HMS) Fishery
Management Plan (FMP). As it
developed Amendment 3, NMFS
examined a full range of management
alternatives available to rebuild
blacknose sharks and end overfishing of
blacknose and shortfin mako sharks,
consistent with recent stock
assessments, the Magnuson-Stevens Act,
and other applicable law, and evaluated
options for managing smooth dogfish as
a highly migratory species under the
HMS FMP. This final rule implemented
the final conservation and management
measures in Amendment 3 for
blacknose sharks, shortfin mako sharks,
and smooth dogfish. In order to reduce
confusion with spiny dogfish
regulations, this final rule places both
smooth dogfish and Florida
smoothhound into the ‘‘smoothhound
shark complex.’’ This final rule also
announced the opening date and 2010
annual quotas for small coastal sharks.
These changes could have affected all
fishermen, commercial and recreational,
who fish for sharks in the Atlantic
Ocean, the Gulf of Mexico, and the
Caribbean Sea. This action was
conducted by NMFS under the authority
of the Magnuson-Stevens Act.
8. Endangered and Threatened
Wildlife and Plants: Final Rulemaking
to Establish Take Prohibitions for the
Threatened Southern Distinct
Population Segment of North American
Green Sturgeon. RIN 0648–AV94 (75 FR
30714; June 2, 2010). This final
Endangered Species Act (ESA) section
4(d) rule represented the regulations
that we, NMFS, believe necessary and
advisable to conserve the threatened
Southern Distinct Population Segment
of North American green sturgeon
(Acipenser medirostris; hereafter
Southern DPS). We applied the
prohibitions listed under ESA section 9
for the Southern DPS, and we
highlighted specific categories of
activities that were likely to result in
take of Southern DPS fish. We did not
find it necessary and advisable to apply
the take prohibitions to certain
categories of activities that contribute to
conserving the Southern DPS. We also
provided a variety of methods by which
take of the Southern DPS may have been
authorized. This document also
announces the availability of a final
environmental assessment that analyzed
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the environmental impacts of
promulgating the 4(d) regulations for the
Southern DPS. This action was
conducted by NMFS under the authority
of the ESA.
9. Pacific Halibut Fisheries; Limited
Access for Guided Sport Charter Vessels
in Alaska. RIN 0648–AY85 (75 FR
56903; September 17, 2010). NMFS
issued regulations amending the limited
access program for charter vessels in the
guided sport fishery for Pacific halibut
in the waters of International Pacific
Halibut Commission Regulatory Area 2C
(Southeast Alaska) and Area 3A (Central
Gulf of Alaska). These regulations
revised the method of assigning angler
endorsements to charter halibut permits
to more closely align each endorsement
with the greatest number of charter
vessel anglers reported for each vessel
that a charter business used to qualify
for a charter halibut permit. This action
was necessary to achieve the halibut
fishery management goals of the North
Pacific Fishery Management Council.
This action was conducted by NMFS
under authority of the Northern Pacific
Halibut Act of 1982.
10. Fisheries of the Exclusive
Economic Zone Off Alaska; Modified
Nonpelagic Trawl Gear and Habitat
Conservation in the Bering Sea Subarea.
RIN 0648–AY34 (75 FR 61642; October
6, 2010). NMFS issued a final rule that
implemented Amendment 94 to the
Fishery Management Plan for
Groundfish of the Bering Sea and
Aleutian Islands Management Area.
Amendment 94 required participants
using nonpelagic trawl gear in the
directed fishery for flatfish in the Bering
Sea subarea to modify the trawl gear to
raise portions of the gear off the ocean
bottom. Amendment 94 also changed
the boundaries of the Northern Bering
Sea Research Area to establish the
Modified Gear Trawl Zone (MGTZ) and
to expand the Saint Matthew Island
Habitat Conservation Area. Nonpelagic
trawl gear also was required to be
modified to raise portions of the gear off
the ocean bottom if used in any directed
fishery for groundfish in the MGTZ.
This action was necessary to reduce
potential adverse effects of nonpelagic
trawl gear on bottom habitat, to protect
additional blue king crab habitat near
St. Matthew Island, and to allow for
efficient flatfish harvest as the
distribution of flatfish in the Bering Sea
changes. This action was intended to
promote the goals and objectives of the
Magnuson- Stevens Fishery
Conservation and Management Act, the
FMP, and other applicable laws. This
action was conducted by NMFS under
the authority of the Magnuson-Stevens
Act.
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11. Fisheries of the Caribbean, Gulf of
Mexico, and South Atlantic; Regulatory
Amendment to the Fishery Management
Plan for the Reef Fish Fishery of Puerto
Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands. RIN
0648–AY05 (75 FR 67247; November 2,
2010). NMFS issued this final rule that
implemented a regulatory amendment
to the Fishery Management Plan for the
Reef Fish Fishery of Puerto Rico and the
U.S. Virgin Islands prepared by the
Caribbean Fishery Management Council.
This rule modified the Bajo de Sico
seasonal closure from a 3-month closure
to a 6-month closure, and prohibits
fishing for and possession of Caribbean
reef fish in or from the EEZ portion of
Bajo de Sico during the closure. The
final rule also prohibited anchoring in
the EEZ portion of Bajo de Sico yearround. In addition to the measures
contained in the regulatory amendment,
this final rule also added spear to the
list of allowable gears in the commercial
sector of the Caribbean reef fish fishery
and revises the title of the FMP in the
list of authorized fisheries and gear. The
intended effect of this rule was to
provide further protection for red hind
spawning aggregations and large
snappers and groupers, and better
protect the essential fish habitat where
these species reside. This action was
conducted by NMFS under the authority
of the Magnuson-Stevens Act.
12. Fisheries of the Exclusive
Economic Zone Off Alaska; Groundfish
Observer Program. RIN 0648–AW24 (75
FR 69016; November 10, 2010). NMFS
issued a final rule to amend regulations
implementing the North Pacific
Groundfish Observer Program (Observer
Program). This action was necessary to
improve the operational efficiency of
the Observer Program, as well as to
improve the catch, bycatch, and
biological data collected by observers
for conservation and management of the
North Pacific groundfish fisheries,
including those data collected through
scientific research activities. The final
rule was intended to promote the goals
and objectives of the Fishery
Management Plan for Groundfish of the
Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands
Management Area and the Fishery
Management Plan for Groundfish of the
Gulf of Alaska. This action was
conducted by NMFS under the authority
of the Magnuson-Stevens Act.
13. Fisheries of the Caribbean, Gulf of
Mexico, and South Atlantic; Reef Fish
Fishery of the Gulf of Mexico; Red
Grouper Management Measures. RIN
0648–BA04 (75 FR74656; December 1,
2010). NMFS issued this final rule to
implement actions identified in a
regulatory amendment to the Fishery
Management Plan for the Reef Fish
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Resources of the Gulf of Mexico
prepared by the Gulf of Mexico Fishery
Management Council. This final rule
reduced the commercial quota for red
grouper and, thus, the combined
commercial quota for shallow water
grouper species, and requires vessels
with valid commercial Gulf of Mexico
reef fish permits to mark their buoy gear
with the official vessel number. This
rule also implemented minor revisions
to codified text, including a revised
definition of buoy gear, re-codification
of the commercial and recreational
quotas for greater amberjack, revision of
the recreational accountability measure
for greater amberjack, and removal of
outdated language for the red snapper
individual fishing quota program. The
intended effect of this final rule was to
help prevent overfishing of red grouper
while achieving optimum yield by
reducing red grouper harvest, consistent
with the findings of the recent stock
assessment for this species, and to
implement technical corrections to the
regulations. This action was conducted
by NMFS under the authority of the
Magnuson-Stevens Act.
14. Atlantic Highly Migratory Species;
2011 Commercial Fishing Season and
Adaptive Management Measures for the
Atlantic Shark Fishery. RIN 0648–AY98
(75 FR 76302; December 8, 2010). This
final rule established opening dates and
adjusted quotas for the 2011 fishing
season for sandbar sharks, non-sandbar
large coastal sharks (LCS), blacknose
shark, non-blacknose small coastal
shark (SCS), blue sharks, porbeagle
sharks, and pelagic sharks (other than
porbeagle or blue sharks) based on any
over- and/or underharvests experienced
during the 2009 and 2010 Atlantic
commercial shark fishing seasons.
NMFS was taking this action to
establish the 2011 adjusted fishing
quotas and to open the commercial
fishing seasons for the Atlantic sandbar
shark, non-sandbar LCS, blacknose
shark, non-blacknose SCS, and pelagic
shark fisheries based on over- and
underharvests from the 2009 and 2010
fishing season. This action was expected
to affect commercial shark fishermen in
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the Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico regions.
In addition to establishing opening
dates and adjusting annual quotas, this
final rule implemented adaptive
management measures, including
flexible opening dates for the fishing
season, as well as inseason adjustments
to shark trip limits, to provide flexibility
in management in the furtherance of
equitable fishing opportunities, to the
extent practicable, for commercial shark
fishermen in all regions and areas.
These actions were expected to affect
commercial shark fishermen in the
Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico regions.
This action was conducted by NMFS
under the authority of the MagnusonStevens Act.
15. Fisheries of the Caribbean, Gulf of
Mexico, and South Atlantic; SnapperGrouper Fishery Off the Southern
Atlantic States; Amendment 17A;
Emergency Rule To Delay Effectiveness
of the Snapper-Grouper Area Closure;
Final Rule and Temporary Rule. RIN
0648–AY10 (75 FR 76873; December 9,
2010). NMFS issued this final rule to
implement Amendment 17A to the
Fishery Management Plan for the
Snapper-Grouper Fishery of the South
Atlantic Region (FMP), as prepared and
submitted by the South Atlantic Fishery
Management Council. This final rule
established an ACL of zero for red
snapper, which means all harvest and
possession of red snapper in or from the
South Atlantic EEZ is prohibited, and
for a vessel with a Federal commercial
or charter vessel/headboat permit for
South Atlantic snapper-grouper, harvest
and possession of red snapper is
prohibited in or from State or Federal
waters. This rule also implemented an
area closure for South Atlantic snappergrouper that extends from southern
Georgia to northern Florida where
harvest and possession of all snappergrouper species is prohibited (except
when fishing with black sea bass pots or
spearfishing gear for species other than
red snapper), and requires the use of
non-stainless steel circle hooks when
fishing for snapper-grouper species with
hook and line gear north of 28 degrees
N. latitude in the South Atlantic EEZ.
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Additionally, Amendment 17A
established a rebuilding plan for red
snapper and requires a monitoring
program as the AM for red snapper. The
intended effects of this rule were to end
overfishing of South Atlantic red
snapper and rebuild the stock. This
action was conducted by NMFS under
the authority of the Magnuson-Stevens
Act.
16. Fisheries of the Caribbean, Gulf of
Mexico, and South Atlantic; SnapperGrouper Fishery Off the Southern
Atlantic States; Amendment 17B. RIN
0648–AY11 (75 FR 82280; December 20,
2010). NMFS issued this final rule to
implement Amendment 17B to the
Fishery Management Plan for the
Snapper-Grouper Fishery of the South
Atlantic Region, as prepared and
submitted by the South Atlantic Fishery
Management Council. This final rule
established ACLs and AMs for eight
snapper-grouper species in the FMP that
were undergoing overfishing, and for
black grouper, which was recently
assessed and determined to not be
undergoing overfishing or overfished;
modified management measures to limit
total mortality of those species to the
ACL; and added ACLs, annual catch
targets (ACTs), and AMs to the list of
management measures that may be
amended via the framework process.
The intent of this final rule was to
address overfishing of eight snappergrouper species while maintaining catch
levels consistent with achieving
optimum yield. This action was
conducted by NMFS under the authority
of the Magnuson-Stevens Act.
Availability of Completed Reviews
NMFS will make available a copy of
this notice and the completed reviews to
the public at: https://www.nmfs.noaa.
gov/sfa/laws_policies/economic_social/
index.html.
Dated: June 2, 2017.
Margo B. Schulze-Haugen,
Acting Deputy Director, Office of Sustainable
Fisheries, National Marine Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2017–11815 Filed 6–6–17; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 82, Number 108 (Wednesday, June 7, 2017)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 26419-26422]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2017-11815]
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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
50 CFR Chapters II, III, IV, V, and VI
RIN 0648-XF326
Plan for Periodic Review of Regulations
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Notice; request for comments.
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SUMMARY: NMFS announces the existing rules that it is reviewing, as
required, under section 610 of the Regulatory Flexibility Act, which
had, or will have a significant impact on a substantial number of small
entities, such as small businesses, small organizations, and small
governmental jurisdictions. The intended effect of this document is to
inform the public of the rules under review, to outline NMFS' review
process, and to provide an opportunity to comment. In addition,
information compiled through this routine action will be relevant to
the regulatory reviews required under Executive Order 13771, ``Reducing
Regulation and Controlling Regulatory Costs,'' and Executive Order
13777, ``Enforcing the Regulatory Reform Agenda.''
DATES: Written comments must be received by July 7, 2017.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments on this document, identified by
NOAA-NMFS-2017-0054, by either of the following methods:
Electronic Submission: Submit all electronic public
comments via the Federal e-Rulemaking Portal. Go to https://www.regulations.gov/#!docketDetail;D=NOAA-NMFS-2017-0054, click the
``Comment Now!'' icon, complete the required fields, and enter or
attach your comments.
Mail: Submit written comments to Kelly Denit, National
Marine Fisheries Service, NOAA, Office of Sustainable Fisheries, 1315
East-West Highway, Silver Spring, MD 20910 (mark outside of envelope
``Comments on 610 Review'').
Instructions: Comments must be submitted by one of the above
methods to ensure that the comments are received, documented, and
considered by NMFS. Comments sent by any other method, to any other
address or individual, or received after the end of the comment period,
may not be considered. All comments received are a part of the public
record and will generally be posted for public viewing on
www.regulations.gov without change. All personal identifying
information (e.g., name, address, etc.) submitted voluntarily by the
sender will be publicly accessible. Do not submit confidential business
information, or otherwise sensitive or protected information. NMFS will
accept anonymous comments (enter ``N/A'' in the required fields if you
wish to remain anonymous).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Tara Scott, (301) 427-8579 or Heather
Sagar, (301) 427-8019.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA), 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.,
requires that Federal agencies including NMFS take into account how
their regulations affect ``small entities,'' including small
businesses, small Governmental jurisdictions, and small organizations.
Under the RFA, we must either prepare a Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
or certify that the regulation, if put in place, will not have a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities
for any regulation proposed after January 1, 1981. Section 602 of the
RFA requires that NMFS issue an Agenda of Regulations identifying rules
under development that are likely to have a significant economic impact
on a substantial number of small entities.
Section 610 of the RFA requires Federal agencies to review existing
regulations. It requires that NMFS publish a plan in the Federal
Register explaining how it will review its existing regulations which
have or will have a significant economic impact on a substantial number
of small entities. Regulations that became effective after January 1,
1981, must be reviewed within 10 years of the publication date of the
final rule. Section 610(c) requires that we annually publish a list of
final rules we will review during the succeeding 12 months in the
Federal Register. The list must describe, explain the need for, and
provide the legal basis for the rules being reviewed, as well as invite
public comment on the rule.
In addition, information compiled through this routine action under
Section 610 of the RFA will be relevant to the regulatory reviews
required under Executive Order 13771, ``Reducing Regulation and
Controlling Regulatory Costs,'' and Executive Order 13777, ``Enforcing
the Regulatory Reform Agenda.''
Criteria for Review of Existing Regulations
The purpose of the review is to determine whether existing rules
should be left unchanged, or whether they should be revised or
rescinded to minimize significant economic impacts on a substantial
number of small entities, consistent with the objectives of other
applicable statutes. In deciding whether change is necessary, the RFA
establishes five factors that NMFS must consider:
(1) Whether the rule is still needed;
(2) What type of complaints or comments were received concerning
the rule from the public;
(3) The complexity of the rule;
(4) How much the rule overlaps, duplicates or conflicts with other
Federal rules, and, to the extent feasible, with State and local
governmental rules; and
(5) How long it has been since the rule has been evaluated or how
much the technology, economic conditions, or
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other factors have changed in the area affected by the rule.
Plan for Periodic Review of Rules
Below is the list of rules and their summaries issued in 2010 that
we will review by December 31, 2017, consistent with RFA Section 610.
This list includes rules issues in 2010 for which initial and final
regulatory flexibility analyses were completed.
1. Pacific Halibut Fisheries; Limited Access for Guided Sport
Charter. RIN 0648-AW92 (75 FR 553; January 5, 2010). NMFS issued
regulations creating a limited access system for charter vessels in the
guided sport fishery for Pacific halibut in waters of International
Pacific Halibut Commission Regulatory Areas 2C (Southeast Alaska) and
3A (Central Gulf of Alaska). This limited access system limited the
number of charter vessels that may participate in the guided sport
fishery for halibut in these areas. NMFS issued a charter halibut
permit to a licensed charter fishing business owner based on his or her
past participation in the charter halibut fishery and to a Community
Quota Entity representing specific rural communities. All charter
halibut permit holders were subject to limits on the number of permits
they may hold and on the number of charter vessel anglers who may catch
and retain halibut on permitted charter vessels. This action was
necessary to achieve the approved halibut fishery management goals of
the North Pacific Fishery Management Council. The intended effect was
to curtail growth of fishing capacity in the guided sport fishery for
halibut. This action was conducted by NMFS under authority of the
Northern Pacific Halibut Act of 1982.
2. International Fisheries; Western and Central Pacific Fisheries
for Highly Migratory Species; Initial Implementation of the Western and
Central Pacific Fisheries Convention. RIN 0648-AV63 (75 FR 3335;
January 21, 2010). NMFS issued regulations under authority of the
Western and Central Pacific Fisheries Convention Implementation Act,
which authorized the Secretary of Commerce to promulgate regulations
needed to carry out the obligations of the U.S. under the Convention on
the Conservation and Management of Highly Migratory Fish Stocks in the
Western and Central Pacific Ocean, including implementing the decisions
of the Commission for the Conservation and Management of Highly
Migratory Fish Stocks in the Western and Central Pacific Ocean. The
regulations included requirements related to permitting, vessel
monitoring systems, vessel observers, vessel markings, reporting and
recordkeeping, at-sea transshipment, and boarding and inspection on the
high seas, among others. NMFS has determined that this action was
necessary for the United States to satisfy its international
obligations under the Convention, to which it is a Contracting Party.
It has the effect of requiring that all relevant U.S. fishing vessels
were operated in conformance with the provisions of the Convention.
3. Taking of Marine Mammals Incidental to Commercial Fishing
Operations; Harbor Porpoise Take Reduction Plan Regulations. RIN 0648-
AW51 (75 FR 7383; February 19, 2010). NMFS issued this final rule to
amend the regulations implementing the Harbor Porpoise Take Reduction
Plan to address the increased incidental mortality and serious injury
of the Gulf of Maine/Bay of Fundy stock of harbor porpoises (Phocoena
phocoena) in gillnet fisheries throughout the stock's U.S. range. This
action was conducted by NMFS under the authority of the Marine Mammal
Protection Act.
4. Fisheries of the Northeastern United States; Atlantic Mackerel,
Squid, and Butterfish Fisheries; Amendment 10. RIN 0648-AY00 (75 FR
11441; March 11, 2010). NMFS implemented approved measures in Amendment
10 to the Atlantic Mackerel, Squid, and Butterfish (MSB) Fishery
Management Plan (FMP). Amendment 10 was developed by the Mid-Atlantic
Fishery Management Council to bring the FMP into compliance with
Magnuson-Stevens Act requirements by establishing a rebuilding program
that allows the butterfish stock to rebuild and protects the long-term
health and stability of the stock; and by minimizing bycatch and the
fishing mortality of unavoidable bycatch, to the extent practicable, in
the MSB fisheries. Amendment 10 increased the minimum codend mesh size
requirement for the long fin squid fishery; established a butterfish
rebuilding program with a butterfish mortality cap for the long fin
squid fishery; established a 72-hr trip notification requirement for
the long fin squid fishery; and required an annual assessment of the
butterfish rebuilding program by the Council's Scientific and
Statistical Committee. This rule also made minor, technical corrections
to the existing regulations. This action was conducted by NMFS under
the authority of the Magnuson-Stevens Act.
5. Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act
Provisions; Fisheries of the Northeastern United States; Northeast (NE)
Multispecies Fishery; Amendment 16; Final Rule. RIN 0648-AW72 (75 FR
18261; April 9, 2010). NMFS issued the final rule to implement measures
approved under Amendment 16 to the NE Multispecies Fishery Management
Plan. Amendment 16 was developed by the New England Fishery Management
Council as part of the biennial adjustment process in the FMP to update
status determination criteria for all regulated NE multispecies and
ocean pout stocks; to adopt rebuilding programs for NE multispecies
stocks newly classified as being overfished and subject to overfishing;
and to revise management measures, including significant revisions to
the sector management measures, necessary to end overfishing, rebuild
overfished regulated NE multispecies and ocean pout stocks, and
mitigate the adverse economic impacts of increased effort controls.
This final rule also implemented new requirements under Amendment 16
for establishing acceptable biological catch (ABC), annual catch limits
(ACLs), and accountability measures (AMs) for each stock managed under
the FMP, pursuant to the Magnuson-Stevens Act. Finally, this action
added Atlantic wolffish to the list of species managed by the FMP. This
action was necessary to address the results of the most recent stock
assessment, which indicate that several additional regulated species
are overfished and subject to overfishing, and that stocks currently
classified as overfished require additional reductions in fishing
mortality to rebuild by the end of their rebuilding periods. This
action was conducted by NMFS under the authority of the Magnuson-
Stevens Act
6. Fisheries of the Caribbean, Gulf of Mexico, and South Atlantic;
Reef Fish Fishery of the Gulf of Mexico; Amendment 31. RIN 0648-AX67.
(75 FR 21512; April 26, 2010). NMFS issued this final rule to implement
Amendment 31 to the Fishery Management Plan for the Reef Fish Resources
of the Gulf of Mexico prepared by the Gulf of Mexico Fishery Management
Council. This final rule implemented restrictions applicable to the
bottom longline component of the reef fish fishery in the exclusive
economic zone (EEZ) of the eastern Gulf of Mexico. The restrictions
included a bottom longline endorsement requirement, a seasonal closed
area, and a limitation on the number of hooks that can be possessed and
fished. The intent of this rule was to balance the continued operation
of the bottom longline component of the reef fish fishery in the
eastern Gulf while maintaining adequate protective measures for sea
turtles. This action was conducted by NMFS under
[[Page 26421]]
the authority of the Magnuson-Stevens Act.
7. Atlantic Highly Migratory Species; Atlantic Shark Management
Measures; Amendment 3; Final Rule. RIN 0648-AW65 (75 FR 30483; June 1,
2010). NMFS published this final rule to implement the Final Amendment
3 to the Consolidated Atlantic Highly Migratory Species (HMS) Fishery
Management Plan (FMP). As it developed Amendment 3, NMFS examined a
full range of management alternatives available to rebuild blacknose
sharks and end overfishing of blacknose and shortfin mako sharks,
consistent with recent stock assessments, the Magnuson-Stevens Act, and
other applicable law, and evaluated options for managing smooth dogfish
as a highly migratory species under the HMS FMP. This final rule
implemented the final conservation and management measures in Amendment
3 for blacknose sharks, shortfin mako sharks, and smooth dogfish. In
order to reduce confusion with spiny dogfish regulations, this final
rule places both smooth dogfish and Florida smoothhound into the
``smoothhound shark complex.'' This final rule also announced the
opening date and 2010 annual quotas for small coastal sharks. These
changes could have affected all fishermen, commercial and recreational,
who fish for sharks in the Atlantic Ocean, the Gulf of Mexico, and the
Caribbean Sea. This action was conducted by NMFS under the authority of
the Magnuson-Stevens Act.
8. Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants: Final Rulemaking
to Establish Take Prohibitions for the Threatened Southern Distinct
Population Segment of North American Green Sturgeon. RIN 0648-AV94 (75
FR 30714; June 2, 2010). This final Endangered Species Act (ESA)
section 4(d) rule represented the regulations that we, NMFS, believe
necessary and advisable to conserve the threatened Southern Distinct
Population Segment of North American green sturgeon (Acipenser
medirostris; hereafter Southern DPS). We applied the prohibitions
listed under ESA section 9 for the Southern DPS, and we highlighted
specific categories of activities that were likely to result in take of
Southern DPS fish. We did not find it necessary and advisable to apply
the take prohibitions to certain categories of activities that
contribute to conserving the Southern DPS. We also provided a variety
of methods by which take of the Southern DPS may have been authorized.
This document also announces the availability of a final environmental
assessment that analyzed the environmental impacts of promulgating the
4(d) regulations for the Southern DPS. This action was conducted by
NMFS under the authority of the ESA.
9. Pacific Halibut Fisheries; Limited Access for Guided Sport
Charter Vessels in Alaska. RIN 0648-AY85 (75 FR 56903; September 17,
2010). NMFS issued regulations amending the limited access program for
charter vessels in the guided sport fishery for Pacific halibut in the
waters of International Pacific Halibut Commission Regulatory Area 2C
(Southeast Alaska) and Area 3A (Central Gulf of Alaska). These
regulations revised the method of assigning angler endorsements to
charter halibut permits to more closely align each endorsement with the
greatest number of charter vessel anglers reported for each vessel that
a charter business used to qualify for a charter halibut permit. This
action was necessary to achieve the halibut fishery management goals of
the North Pacific Fishery Management Council. This action was conducted
by NMFS under authority of the Northern Pacific Halibut Act of 1982.
10. Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic Zone Off Alaska; Modified
Nonpelagic Trawl Gear and Habitat Conservation in the Bering Sea
Subarea. RIN 0648-AY34 (75 FR 61642; October 6, 2010). NMFS issued a
final rule that implemented Amendment 94 to the Fishery Management Plan
for Groundfish of the Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands Management Area.
Amendment 94 required participants using nonpelagic trawl gear in the
directed fishery for flatfish in the Bering Sea subarea to modify the
trawl gear to raise portions of the gear off the ocean bottom.
Amendment 94 also changed the boundaries of the Northern Bering Sea
Research Area to establish the Modified Gear Trawl Zone (MGTZ) and to
expand the Saint Matthew Island Habitat Conservation Area. Nonpelagic
trawl gear also was required to be modified to raise portions of the
gear off the ocean bottom if used in any directed fishery for
groundfish in the MGTZ. This action was necessary to reduce potential
adverse effects of nonpelagic trawl gear on bottom habitat, to protect
additional blue king crab habitat near St. Matthew Island, and to allow
for efficient flatfish harvest as the distribution of flatfish in the
Bering Sea changes. This action was intended to promote the goals and
objectives of the Magnuson- Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management
Act, the FMP, and other applicable laws. This action was conducted by
NMFS under the authority of the Magnuson-Stevens Act.
11. Fisheries of the Caribbean, Gulf of Mexico, and South Atlantic;
Regulatory Amendment to the Fishery Management Plan for the Reef Fish
Fishery of Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands. RIN 0648-AY05 (75
FR 67247; November 2, 2010). NMFS issued this final rule that
implemented a regulatory amendment to the Fishery Management Plan for
the Reef Fish Fishery of Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands
prepared by the Caribbean Fishery Management Council. This rule
modified the Bajo de Sico seasonal closure from a 3-month closure to a
6-month closure, and prohibits fishing for and possession of Caribbean
reef fish in or from the EEZ portion of Bajo de Sico during the
closure. The final rule also prohibited anchoring in the EEZ portion of
Bajo de Sico year-round. In addition to the measures contained in the
regulatory amendment, this final rule also added spear to the list of
allowable gears in the commercial sector of the Caribbean reef fish
fishery and revises the title of the FMP in the list of authorized
fisheries and gear. The intended effect of this rule was to provide
further protection for red hind spawning aggregations and large
snappers and groupers, and better protect the essential fish habitat
where these species reside. This action was conducted by NMFS under the
authority of the Magnuson-Stevens Act.
12. Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic Zone Off Alaska; Groundfish
Observer Program. RIN 0648-AW24 (75 FR 69016; November 10, 2010). NMFS
issued a final rule to amend regulations implementing the North Pacific
Groundfish Observer Program (Observer Program). This action was
necessary to improve the operational efficiency of the Observer
Program, as well as to improve the catch, bycatch, and biological data
collected by observers for conservation and management of the North
Pacific groundfish fisheries, including those data collected through
scientific research activities. The final rule was intended to promote
the goals and objectives of the Fishery Management Plan for Groundfish
of the Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands Management Area and the Fishery
Management Plan for Groundfish of the Gulf of Alaska. This action was
conducted by NMFS under the authority of the Magnuson-Stevens Act.
13. Fisheries of the Caribbean, Gulf of Mexico, and South Atlantic;
Reef Fish Fishery of the Gulf of Mexico; Red Grouper Management
Measures. RIN 0648-BA04 (75 FR74656; December 1, 2010). NMFS issued
this final rule to implement actions identified in a regulatory
amendment to the Fishery Management Plan for the Reef Fish
[[Page 26422]]
Resources of the Gulf of Mexico prepared by the Gulf of Mexico Fishery
Management Council. This final rule reduced the commercial quota for
red grouper and, thus, the combined commercial quota for shallow water
grouper species, and requires vessels with valid commercial Gulf of
Mexico reef fish permits to mark their buoy gear with the official
vessel number. This rule also implemented minor revisions to codified
text, including a revised definition of buoy gear, re-codification of
the commercial and recreational quotas for greater amberjack, revision
of the recreational accountability measure for greater amberjack, and
removal of outdated language for the red snapper individual fishing
quota program. The intended effect of this final rule was to help
prevent overfishing of red grouper while achieving optimum yield by
reducing red grouper harvest, consistent with the findings of the
recent stock assessment for this species, and to implement technical
corrections to the regulations. This action was conducted by NMFS under
the authority of the Magnuson-Stevens Act.
14. Atlantic Highly Migratory Species; 2011 Commercial Fishing
Season and Adaptive Management Measures for the Atlantic Shark Fishery.
RIN 0648-AY98 (75 FR 76302; December 8, 2010). This final rule
established opening dates and adjusted quotas for the 2011 fishing
season for sandbar sharks, non-sandbar large coastal sharks (LCS),
blacknose shark, non-blacknose small coastal shark (SCS), blue sharks,
porbeagle sharks, and pelagic sharks (other than porbeagle or blue
sharks) based on any over- and/or underharvests experienced during the
2009 and 2010 Atlantic commercial shark fishing seasons. NMFS was
taking this action to establish the 2011 adjusted fishing quotas and to
open the commercial fishing seasons for the Atlantic sandbar shark,
non-sandbar LCS, blacknose shark, non-blacknose SCS, and pelagic shark
fisheries based on over- and underharvests from the 2009 and 2010
fishing season. This action was expected to affect commercial shark
fishermen in the Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico regions. In addition to
establishing opening dates and adjusting annual quotas, this final rule
implemented adaptive management measures, including flexible opening
dates for the fishing season, as well as inseason adjustments to shark
trip limits, to provide flexibility in management in the furtherance of
equitable fishing opportunities, to the extent practicable, for
commercial shark fishermen in all regions and areas. These actions were
expected to affect commercial shark fishermen in the Atlantic and Gulf
of Mexico regions. This action was conducted by NMFS under the
authority of the Magnuson-Stevens Act.
15. Fisheries of the Caribbean, Gulf of Mexico, and South Atlantic;
Snapper-Grouper Fishery Off the Southern Atlantic States; Amendment
17A; Emergency Rule To Delay Effectiveness of the Snapper-Grouper Area
Closure; Final Rule and Temporary Rule. RIN 0648-AY10 (75 FR 76873;
December 9, 2010). NMFS issued this final rule to implement Amendment
17A to the Fishery Management Plan for the Snapper-Grouper Fishery of
the South Atlantic Region (FMP), as prepared and submitted by the South
Atlantic Fishery Management Council. This final rule established an ACL
of zero for red snapper, which means all harvest and possession of red
snapper in or from the South Atlantic EEZ is prohibited, and for a
vessel with a Federal commercial or charter vessel/headboat permit for
South Atlantic snapper-grouper, harvest and possession of red snapper
is prohibited in or from State or Federal waters. This rule also
implemented an area closure for South Atlantic snapper-grouper that
extends from southern Georgia to northern Florida where harvest and
possession of all snapper-grouper species is prohibited (except when
fishing with black sea bass pots or spearfishing gear for species other
than red snapper), and requires the use of non-stainless steel circle
hooks when fishing for snapper-grouper species with hook and line gear
north of 28 degrees N. latitude in the South Atlantic EEZ.
Additionally, Amendment 17A established a rebuilding plan for red
snapper and requires a monitoring program as the AM for red snapper.
The intended effects of this rule were to end overfishing of South
Atlantic red snapper and rebuild the stock. This action was conducted
by NMFS under the authority of the Magnuson-Stevens Act.
16. Fisheries of the Caribbean, Gulf of Mexico, and South Atlantic;
Snapper-Grouper Fishery Off the Southern Atlantic States; Amendment
17B. RIN 0648-AY11 (75 FR 82280; December 20, 2010). NMFS issued this
final rule to implement Amendment 17B to the Fishery Management Plan
for the Snapper-Grouper Fishery of the South Atlantic Region, as
prepared and submitted by the South Atlantic Fishery Management
Council. This final rule established ACLs and AMs for eight snapper-
grouper species in the FMP that were undergoing overfishing, and for
black grouper, which was recently assessed and determined to not be
undergoing overfishing or overfished; modified management measures to
limit total mortality of those species to the ACL; and added ACLs,
annual catch targets (ACTs), and AMs to the list of management measures
that may be amended via the framework process. The intent of this final
rule was to address overfishing of eight snapper-grouper species while
maintaining catch levels consistent with achieving optimum yield. This
action was conducted by NMFS under the authority of the Magnuson-
Stevens Act.
Availability of Completed Reviews
NMFS will make available a copy of this notice and the completed
reviews to the public at: https://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/sfa/laws_policies/economic_social/.
Dated: June 2, 2017.
Margo B. Schulze-Haugen,
Acting Deputy Director, Office of Sustainable Fisheries, National
Marine Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2017-11815 Filed 6-6-17; 8:45 am]
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