Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic Zone Off Alaska; Authorize Recreational Quota Entity To Participate in the Halibut IFQ Program, 47819-47834 [2018-20410]
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[FR Doc. 2018–20551 Filed 9–20–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–13–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
15 CFR Part 902
50 CFR Parts 300 and 679
[Docket No. 161222999–8773–02]
RIN 0648–BG57
Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic
Zone Off Alaska; Authorize
Recreational Quota Entity To
Participate in the Halibut IFQ Program
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
NMFS issues regulations that
authorize formation of a recreational
quota entity (RQE) that could participate
in the Pacific Halibut and Sablefish
Individual Fishing Quota Program in
International Pacific Halibut
Commission Regulatory Areas 2C and
3A in the Gulf of Alaska. The RQE is
authorized to purchase and hold a
limited amount of commercial halibut
quota share that will yield additional
pounds of recreational fishing quota on
an annual basis to augment the amount
of halibut available for harvest in the
charter halibut fishery. The RQE will
provide a mechanism for a compensated
reallocation of a portion of commercial
halibut quota share to the charter
halibut fishery. This final rule is
necessary to promote social and
economic flexibility in the charter
halibut fishery, and is intended to
promote the goals and objectives of the
Northern Pacific Halibut Act of 1982,
and other applicable laws.
DATES: This rule is effective on October
22, 2018.
ADDRESSES: Electronic copies of the
Regulatory Impact/Initial Regulatory
Flexibility Analysis/Environmental
Assessment (collectively, Analysis)
prepared for this action are available
from https://www.regulations.gov or from
the NMFS Alaska Region website at
https://alaskafisheries.noaa.gov.
SUMMARY:
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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 NMFS, Alaska
Region, P.O. Box 21668, Juneau, AK
99082–1668, 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: Kurt
Iverson, 907–586–7228.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This final
rule implements regulatory amendments
to authorize an RQE to participate in the
Pacific Halibut and Sablefish Individual
Fishing Quota Program (IFQ Program) in
International Pacific Halibut
Commission (IPHC) Regulatory Areas 2C
and 3A in the Gulf of Alaska. NMFS
published the proposed rule to
authorize an RQE on October 3, 2017
(82 FR 46016). The comment period on
the proposed rule ended on November
17, 2017. NMFS received 18 comment
letters on the proposed rule. One of the
comment letters was outside the scope
of this action. Of the remaining 17
comment letters, NMFS identified and
considered 19 unique, relevant
comments. A summary of the comments
and NMFS’ responses is provided in the
Comments and Responses section of this
preamble.
A detailed review of this rule and the
rationale for these regulations is
provided in the preamble to the
proposed rule (82 FR 46016, October 3,
2017). Electronic copies of the proposed
rule and the Analysis may be obtained
from www.regulations.gov or from the
NMFS Alaska Region website at https://
alaskafisheries.noaa.gov. All public
comment letters submitted during the
comment period may be obtained from
www.regulations.gov.
Background
Authority for Action
The IPHC and NMFS manage fishing
for Pacific halibut (Hippoglossus
stenolepis) through regulations
established under authority of the
Northern Pacific Halibut Act of 1982
(Halibut Act). The IPHC adopts
regulations governing the Pacific halibut
(halibut) fishery under the Convention
between the United States and Canada
for the Preservation of the Halibut
Fishery of the North Pacific Ocean and
Bering Sea (Convention), signed at
Ottawa, Ontario, on March 2, 1953, as
amended by a Protocol Amending the
Convention (signed at Washington, DC,
on March 29, 1979). For the United
States, regulations developed by the
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IPHC are subject to acceptance by the
Secretary of State with concurrence
from the Secretary of Commerce. After
acceptance by the Secretary of State and
the Secretary of Commerce, NMFS
publishes the IPHC regulations in the
Federal Register as annual management
measures pursuant to 50 CFR 300.62.
The interim final rule implementing
IPHC regulations for the 2018 fishing
season, including regulations affecting
sport fishing for halibut and vessels in
the charter fishery in IPHC Regulatory
Areas 2C (Southeast Alaska) and 3A
(Southcentral Alaska), was published
March 20, 2018 (83 FR 12133).
The Halibut Act, at sections 773c(a)
and (b), provides the Secretary of
Commerce with general responsibility to
carry out the Convention and the
Halibut Act. In adopting regulations that
may be necessary to carry out the
purposes and objectives of the
Convention and the Halibut Act, the
Secretary of Commerce is directed to
consult with the Secretary of the
department in which the U.S. Coast
Guard is operating, which is currently
the Department of Homeland Security.
The Halibut Act, at section 773c(c),
also provides the North Pacific Fishery
Management Council (Council) with
authority to develop regulations,
including limited access regulations,
that are in addition to, and not in
conflict with, approved IPHC
regulations. Regulations developed by
the Council may be implemented by
NMFS only after approval by the
Secretary of Commerce. The Council has
exercised this authority in the
development of halibut fishery
management measures, codified at 50
CFR 300.65, 300.66, and 300.67. The
Council also developed the IFQ Program
for the commercial halibut and sablefish
fisheries, codified at 50 CFR part 679.
Management of halibut in the IFQ
Program is authorized under the Halibut
Act.
Summary Background on Management
of the Charter Halibut Fishery
A comprehensive history of
management of the guided sport fishery
for halibut (also referred to herein as the
‘‘charter fishery’’) was presented in the
proposed rule for this action published
October 3, 2017 (82 FR 46016). The
proposed rule also provides essential
background of the commercial halibut
and sablefish IFQ Program and how the
IFQ Program intersects with
management of the charter fishery,
primarily through the Catch Sharing
Plan (CSP) that establishes allocations of
halibut harvests between the
commercial halibut IFQ and charter
sectors.
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The proposed rule describes the
history and development of annual
management measures for the charter
fishery. The proposed rule also provides
a summary of the development of the
Charter Halibut Limited Access Program
(CHLAP) that established Charter
Halibut Permits (CHPs), and provides
details on the Guided Angler Fish (GAF)
Program, which authorizes limited
annual transfers of commercial halibut
IFQ as GAF to qualified CHP holders.
The proposed rule describes the
Community Quota Entity Program (CQE)
as well, where eligible communities can
form non-profit corporations to
purchase catcher vessel quota shares
(QS). The IFQ resulting from the QS
may then be leased to community
residents annually.
As described in the proposed rule and
in Section 2.3 of the Analysis,
regulatory areas established by the IPHC
are referred to as ‘‘IPHC Regulatory
Areas.’’ This preamble uses the terms
‘‘Area 2C’’ and ‘‘Area 3A’’ to refer to
IPHC Regulatory Areas 2C and 3A,
respectively.
Summary of This Action
This final rule will change halibut
fishery management in Areas 2C
(Southeast Alaska) and 3A (Central Gulf
of Alaska). It will implement a
regulatory amendment to allow a nonprofit RQE to represent the charter
sector in Areas 2C and 3A. Sport fishing
for Pacific halibut in Areas 2C and 3A
is subject to distinct regulations,
depending upon whether anglers are
guided (charter) or unguided. To
provide stability in the charter fishery
and to help meet allocation objectives,
the Council adopted and NMFS
implemented the CHLAP in January
2010. The CHLAP limits the total
number of charter vessel operators that
may participate in the guided sport
fishery in Areas 2C and 3A. To fish for
halibut with charter anglers on board,
an operator must have an original, valid
CHP on board.
Since 2014, harvests of charter halibut
in Alaska have been subject to a CSP
that allocates harvests between the
commercial halibut IFQ fishery and the
charter fishery. To keep the harvests of
the charter fishery within its allocation,
regulations are developed annually in a
cooperative effort between the Council,
NMFS, and IPHC.
Regulations for charter anglers are
generally more restrictive than
regulations for unguided anglers, and
have become more stringent as halibut
abundance has dropped and charter
catch limits have been reduced. Charter
angling restrictions vary between Areas
2C and 3A. Typical restrictions include
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daily and annual limits on the number
of fish retained, fish size limits, and
closures on specific days of the week for
charter halibut fishing.
This final rule will allow the RQE to
purchase commercial halibut QS from
the commercial halibut sector. The
harvest pounds associated with the QS
will yield annual Recreational Fishing
Quota that will supplement the amount
of halibut allocated to the charter sector
under the existing CSP. If the RQE
obtains enough QS, some or all of the
halibut size and bag limits could be
relaxed for charter anglers, up to a point
where charter anglers could potentially
retain up to two fish of any size as a
daily bag limit, which is the current
daily limit for unguided halibut anglers.
Quota share obtained by the RQE will
be purchased on the open market, with
prices and terms negotiated between the
buyer (RQE) and sellers (commercial
halibut QS holders). The regulations
allow the RQE to hold QS indefinitely,
and to transfer QS back to the
commercial halibut sector. This
preamble uses the term ‘‘RQE Program’’
to refer to the regulations that authorize
the RQE and determine its activities and
responsibilities. Additional detail on the
specific provisions that apply to the
RQE is provided in the section of this
preamble titled ‘‘Provisions of Final
Rule.’’
Purpose and Need
The preamble to the proposed rule (82
FR 46016, October 3, 2017) provided a
detailed description of the purpose and
need for this final rule. A brief summary
is provided here. As stated above, the
charter fishery is limited to harvesting
its percentage of the Area 2C or 3A
combined catch limit allocated under
the CSP. Charter catch limits increase or
decrease as total halibut abundance
increases or decreases. When halibut
abundance is relatively low, as it has
been in recent years compared to
abundance in the 1990s and 2000s, the
charter allocations under the CSP are
lower, resulting in more restrictive
annual management measures.
The only way that charter operators
have been able to provide more
opportunity to charter clients than the
established management measures allow
for in their area is through participation
in the GAF Program by individual
charter operators. Because of the current
restrictions on charter harvests under
the CSP and the limited flexibility for
charter operators to provide additional
harvest opportunities to their clients,
charter operators have expressed their
desire to find a market-based
mechanism to increase their overall
allocation of the halibut resource.
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Based on these concerns, in 2015, the
Council initiated the analytic process to
develop a ‘‘market-based mechanism’’ to
allow a non-profit entity to purchase
and hold a limited amount of
commercial halibut QS on behalf of
charter anglers. The intent of the
Council was to provide additional
harvest opportunity and less restrictive
annual harvest measures for charter
anglers in times of low halibut
abundance, while complying with total
halibut removals under the catch limits
established by the IPHC under the CSP.
In initiating this effort, the Council
sought to balance the objectives of
participants in the charter fishery
without undermining the goals of the
IFQ Program or creating significant
adverse impacts to other halibut sectors.
A complete history of the development
of this action is described in the
proposed rule (82 FR 46016, October 3,
2017) and Section 2.2 of the Analysis.
on the estimated adjusted charter catch
limits. RFQ held by the RQE will be
available for harvest by all charter
anglers aboard registered charter vessels
of any size, regardless of the QS
category from which that RFQ
originated. Under this rule, RFQ may
not be transferred as GAF. Unless
specified, regulations that refer only to
IFQ permit holders do not apply to the
RQE. Likewise, unless specified in this
rule, regulations that refer only to IFQ
do not apply to RFQ.
This final rule does not change the
underlying allocations to the
commercial IFQ fishery and charter
fishery specified in the CSP, and does
not change the total QS pool. Therefore,
the QS holders in the commercial IFQ
fishery who do not transfer QS to the
RQE will receive the same amount of
IFQ pounds issued for their QS units,
regardless of the amount of QS
transferred to, and held by, the RQE.
Recreational Quota Entity for Area 2C
and Area 3A
This final rule allows an RQE to be
established as an eligible entity to
purchase halibut QS in Area 2C and
Area 3A, with limitations, for use by the
charter fishery as a whole. This final
rule designates the RQE as an eligible
participant in the IFQ Program that can
purchase Area 2C and 3A halibut QS for
use by all charter halibut anglers in the
respective area. Any halibut QS
purchased by the RQE will be held by
this entity for the common use of
charter halibut anglers.
Halibut QS held by the RQE will
generate annual pounds of recreational
fishing quota (RFQ), a type of annual
harvest privilege similar to IFQ that has
special requirements that pertain only to
the RQE. RFQ will be calculated in the
same manner as IFQ. Under this final
rule, the specific amount of RFQ (in net
pounds) is determined by the number of
QS units held by the RQE as of October
1 of the preceding calendar year, the
total number of halibut QS units issued
in Area 2C or 3A as of January 15 of the
year the IFQ or RFQ is issued, and the
total amount of halibut allocated to the
commercial IFQ fisheries in Areas 2C
and 3A for that year.
Although the amount of RFQ is
calculated in the same way as IFQ, it is
subject to different requirements. The
additional pounds of RFQ for each
regulatory area are combined with the
charter catch limit determined under
the CSP to calculate an adjusted charter
catch limit for the year for Area 2C or
3A. Annual charter management
measures for Areas 2C and 3A will be
analyzed, recommended to the IPHC,
and adopted for implementation based
Provisions of Final Rule
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RQE Organizational Structure
The Council recommended and
NMFS implements the requirement that
an RQE must be established as a
qualified non-profit entity registered
under the laws of the State of Alaska
and recognized as exempt from Federal
income tax by the Internal Revenue
Service (IRS) to purchase and hold
halibut QS for use by the charter fishery.
The QS held by an RQE could yield
RFQ annually. This final rule allows a
single non-profit entity to form to
represent and manage separate QS
holdings for Areas 2C and 3A. More
detailed information on the structure of
the RQE is provided in the preamble to
the proposed rule (82 FR 46016, October
3, 2017) and in Section 4.8.1.1 of the
Analysis.
This final rule adds new definitions
in § 679.2 for ‘‘recreational fishing quota
(RFQ)’’ and ‘‘recreational quota entity
(RQE).’’
Eligibility
This final rule establishes
requirements for the formation of a
single RQE that would be eligible to
purchase and hold commercial halibut
QS for use by the guided halibut sector.
The RQE must be a qualified non-profit
entity registered under the laws of the
State of Alaska and recognized as
exempt from Federal income tax by the
IRS. To qualify as exempt from Federal
income tax, an organization must seek
recognition of exemption from Federal
income tax under section 501(a) of the
Internal Revenue Code.
To be approved as the entity eligible
to purchase and hold halibut QS, the
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applicant wishing to become the RQE is
required to demonstrate it is a nonprofit entity registered under the laws of
the State of Alaska by submitting to
NMFS the articles of incorporation and
management organization information,
including bylaws and a list of key
personnel including, but not limited to,
the board of directors, officers,
representatives, and managers.
Articles of incorporation are public
documents that must be filed with the
state agency where the corporation
becomes incorporated (e.g., with
Alaska’s Division of Corporations,
Business, and Professional Licensing).
The RQE must be incorporated within
the State of Alaska consistent with
incorporation requirements applicable
to CQEs.
In addition to demonstrating it is a
non-profit corporation recognized by the
State of Alaska, the applicant wishing to
become the RQE is required to
demonstrate it has been granted an
exemption from Federal income tax by
the IRS by submitting to NMFS the IRS
acknowledgement of the entity’s Federal
tax exemption.
NMFS requires the approved RQE to
maintain its non-profit and tax-exempt
status, as described above. If the
approved RQE entity does not meet this
requirement, NMFS will not issue the
RFQ that would otherwise be issued to
the RQE based on its QS holdings. In
addition, NMFS will provide the
approved RQE entity with an
opportunity to reinstate its non-profit
and/or tax-exempt status. If the
approved RQE entity does not
demonstrate to NMFS that it is a
qualified non-profit entity registered
under the laws of the State of Alaska
and recognized as exempt from Federal
income tax by the IRS by the established
deadline, NMFS will issue an Initial
Administrative Determination (IAD) to
revoke the entity’s status as the
approved RQE and to require the entity
to divest its QS holdings. The entity has
the opportunity to appeal the IAD
through the National Appeals Office
under the provisions established at 15
CFR part 906. The applicant must
complete the ‘‘Application for a Nonprofit Corporation to be Designated as a
Recreational Quota Entity (RQE)’’ and
submit it to NMFS Alaska Region for
review and approval. The application
form will be available on the NMFS
Alaska Region website at https://
alaskafisheries.noaa.gov after the
effective date of this rule. NMFS will
approve the first complete RQE
application it receives. All other RQE
applications will be disapproved. NMFS
will notify the RQE when its application
has been approved. Once approved,
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NMFS will establish an account for QS
and RFQ holdings when the RQE
acquires QS. If NMFS disapproves an
application, that determination may be
appealed to the NMFS National Appeals
Office under the provisions established
at 15 CFR part 906. Detailed information
on RQE eligibility is provided in the
preamble to the proposed rule (82 FR
46016, October 3, 2017) and in Section
4.8 of the Analysis.
This rule adds a new paragraph to
§ 679.41(n) to describe the application
process and eligibility requirements for
a prospective RQE.
Restrictions on Transfers
This final rule authorizes two-way
transfers of QS. QS acquired by the RQE
may be transferred to an otherwise
eligible participant in the commercial
IFQ fishery. Because QS and the
resulting IFQ used in the commercial
IFQ fishery is subject to vessel
categories and block designations on
initially-issued QS—unlike the QS and
resulting RFQ used by the RQE, which
is exempt from such categories and
designations—NMFS will track QS
units, IFQ pounds, and vessel category
and block designations that apply to
ensure that original categories and
designations for the commercial IFQ
fishery are maintained during the
transfer process. Detailed information
on transfers of QS between the
commercial and charter fishery is
provided in the preamble to the
proposed rule (82 FR 46016, October 3,
2017) and in Section 4.8 of the Analysis.
NMFS modifies § 679.42 to describe
the QS transfer process for RQEs.
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Annual Limit on Transfers to an RQE
This final rule establishes areaspecific annual limits on the amount of
halibut QS that can transfer to an RQE.
Under this final rule, the RQE may
transfer up to the equivalent of 1
percent of the commercial QS units in
Area 2C based on the 2015 pool of all
QS categories (59,477,396 units). An
annual transfer limit was set equivalent
to 1.2 percent of the commercial QS
pool in Area 3A based on the 2015 pool
of all QS categories (184,893,008 units).
For a more detailed description of the
rationale for this provision, please see
the preamble of the proposed rule (82
FR 46016, October 3, 2017). Annual
transfer limits are discussed in further
detail in Section 4.8.1.2.2 of the
Analysis.
NMFS adds a new paragraph at
§ 679.42(f)(8) to implement the annual
transfer limits on QS for RQEs.
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Limit on Total QS Holdings by the RQE
This final rule places limits on the
total amount of halibut QS that may be
held by the RQE. For Area 2C, the RQE
can hold up to 10 percent of the 2015
commercial QS pool. This proportion is
calculated based on the entire QS pool,
including categories and blocks of QS
units that the RQE is prohibited from
purchasing (discussed in the next
sections of this preamble). Ten percent
of the 2015 commercial QS pool in Area
2C equates to 5,947,740 QS units.
This final rule limits QS holdings for
Area 3A to 12 percent of the 2015 entire
commercial QS pool, including
categories and blocks of QS units that
the RQE is prohibited from purchasing.
Twelve percent of the 2015 commercial
QS pool in Area 3A equates to
22,187,161 units.
As described in the proposed rule (82
FR 46016, October 3, 2017), this final
rule specifies the limits on total QS
holdings by the RQE in regulations so
that they are clearly defined for fishery
participants and will not fluctuate if
there are future changes in the Area 2C
or 3A QS pools. The limits on RQE
holdings of QS are discussed in further
detail in Section 4.8.1.2.3 of the
Analysis.
NMFS adds a new paragraph at
§ 679.42(f)(8) to describe the QS holding
limits for the RQE.
Limit on GAF Transfers as RQE
Holdings Increase
Part of this RQE Program limits the
total amount of GAF that may be used
annually by CHP holders. The GAF
transfer restrictions are adopted so that
in any year, the combined amount of
RFQ and GAF transferred to CHP
holders cannot exceed a poundage equal
to the maximum amount of pounds that
could be issued as RFQ in Area 2C or
3A. The limit on GAF transfers as RQE
QS holdings increase is discussed in
further detail in Section 4.8.1.2.4 of the
Analysis.
To implement these restrictions on
IFQ transfers to GAF, NMFS adds a new
paragraph at § 300.65(c)(5)(ii)(D)(1)(iv).
Vessel Category Restrictions
This rule also places limits on the
amounts of QS the RQE could hold by
vessel category. In Area 2C, the RQE is
limited to holding an amount equal to
10 percent of D-category QS and an
amount equal to 10 percent of Bcategory QS, based on the Area 2C 2015
QS pools. Translated to QS units, this
rule prohibits the RQE from holding
more than 889,548 units of D-category
QS, and more than 265,524 units of Bcategory QS, in Area 2C (see Table 4–
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40 of the Analysis). In Area 3A, the RQE
is prohibited from purchasing or
holding D-category QS. The RQE may
purchase any amount, up to the annual
transfer and cumulative use limits of
A-, B-, and C-category QS in Area 3A.
The vessel category restrictions are
discussed in more detail in Section
4.8.1.2.5 of the Analysis.
NMFS adds a new paragraph at
§ 679.42(f)(8) describing RQE use limits
for specific vessel categories of QS.
Block Restrictions
In addition to vessel category
restrictions for RQE purchases of QS,
this final rule places limits on the size
of QS blocks that the RQE may
purchase. The RQE is prohibited from
purchasing (i.e., receiving by transfer)
blocks of QS by category that equate to
1,500 pounds or less (based on 2015
pounds). For Area 2C, this means that
the RQE cannot purchase blocked QS of
24,250 units or less. For Area 3A, the
RQE is prohibited from purchasing
blocked QS of 35,620 units or less.
Block restrictions are discussed in more
detail in Section 4.8.1.3 of the Analysis.
NMFS adds a new paragraph at
§ 679.42(g)(1)(iii) to establish
restrictions on the type and amount of
blocked QS that the RQE can hold and
receive by transfer.
Revisions for the Calculation of the
Charter Catch Limit and Establishment
of Annual Management Measures
This final rule also modifies several
regulations to facilitate the proper
accounting of RFQ. This section
describes the process that will be used
annually to calculate the amount of RFQ
and establish annual management
measures.
On October 1 of each year, the RQE’s
QS holdings will be used as the basis for
estimating the number of RFQ pounds
to add to the charter allocation under
the CSP for the following calendar year.
This estimated combined allocation will
be used to recommend the charter
fishery management measures for the
following year. The process and
timeline for setting annual management
measures remains unchanged. Once the
IPHC annual management measures are
approved, typically in late February or
early March, NMFS will issue pounds of
RFQ to the RQE based on the number
of QS units held by the RQE on October
1 of the previous year. This RFQ will
augment the charter catch limit
established under the CSP. The
regulations establish October 1 as the
date for determining how many QS
units will yield RFQ so that the
Council’s Charter Committee and the
Council is able to estimate the pounds
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of RFQ that the RQE receives in the
following year. The Charter Committee
will then be able to factor that amount
into its recommendations for the
following year’s charter management
measures.
The RFQ will not be issued to the
RQE in the upcoming fishing year for
any QS that the RQE received by
transfer after October 1. If the RQE
transfers QS that it holds on October 1
to a recipient in the commercial IFQ
fishery after that date, NMFS will not
issue IFQ to the commercial recipient
for that QS in the following calendar
year. This approach is similar to the
method used in the commercial fishery
to allow the transfer of QS but not the
IFQ once that IFQ has been used. In this
case, NMFS considers that RFQ is
effectively ‘‘used’’ if it is assigned to the
charter allocation for the following
calendar year. If the RQE receives QS by
transfer after October 1, that QS will not
result in the issuance of RFQ for the
following calendar year. However, if the
RQE subsequently transfers any QS
received by transfer after October 1 that
did not result in RFQ back to the
commercial IFQ fishery, NMFS will
issue IFQ to the commercial recipient
for that QS.
In late November of each year, NMFS
will estimate the pounds of RFQ that
will be available to the RQE in the
upcoming year, based on the QS units
held by the RQE on October 1, the
QS:IFQ ratio of the current year, and the
IPHC’s preliminary estimate of the
possible combined catch limits in Areas
2C and 3A.
In December of each year, the Council
will recommend a range of potential
charter management measures for Areas
2C and 3A that are expected to limit
charter harvests in an area to the
estimated charter catch limit, plus the
estimated supplemental pounds
provided by the RFQ.
In this final rule, NMFS is revising
§ 679.40(c)(2) to clarify that NMFS will
use the QS pool for the IFQ regulatory
area, including Areas 2C and 3A, on
record with the NMFS Alaska Region,
on January 15 of that year for the
purpose of calculating the amount of
IFQ and RFQ for that regulatory area for
that year. The revision to move the date
of record from January 31 to January 15
of each year ensures that IPHC will be
able to determine the amount of IFQ and
RFQ and that the total allocations are
assigned to the respective commercial
IFQ and charter fisheries when it adopts
annual management measures at its
annual meeting in late January.
NMFS is also revising § 300.65(c) to
authorize the use of RFQ in the charter
fishery, and to describe how and when
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QS holdings by the RQE are calculated
and added to the charter catch limit
under the CSP.
Redistribution of Excess RFQ
This final rule establishes a temporary
redistribution of RFQ from the RQE to
the commercial IFQ fishery if the RQE
holdings of QS provide a charter harvest
opportunity greater than the unguided
recreational management measures in
either Area 2C or 3A. Under this final
rule, NMFS will not issue annual RFQ
in excess of the adjusted charter catch
limit needed for charter anglers to
obtain the unguided recreational
management measures for that area. For
more information on the charter catch
limit, see the preamble of the proposed
rule (82 FR 46016, October 3, 2017).
The Council and the Analysis use the
term ‘‘reallocate’’ to describe the
temporary (1-year) redistribution of
excess RFQ to the commercial IFQ
fishery. NMFS notes that the term
reallocate is often used in other
regulations to describe a permanent
transfer of harvest privileges from one
group of participants to another. NMFS
uses the term ‘‘redistribute’’ in this rule
to clarify for fishery participants and the
public that the distribution of excess
RFQ to commercial IFQ fishery
participants is in effect for one year, and
is not a permanent reallocation.
This rule implements the following
process for the temporary redistribution
of RFQ (as IFQ) to the commercial IFQ
fishery, in the event that the RQE has
QS holdings in excess of the amount
needed to provide charter anglers with
harvest opportunities equal to those for
unguided recreational anglers. Each
January, the IPHC will recommend
charter fishery management measures
for Areas 2C and 3A that are expected
to limit charter harvest to the adjusted
charter catch limit for each area (the
sum of the annual guided sport catch
limit under the CSP and the estimated
amount of RFQ from the RQE’s QS
holdings on October 1 of the previous
year).
After the IPHC recommends charter
fishery management measures, NMFS
will determine if a redistribution of
excess RFQ is necessary. If the IPHC has
adopted charter fishery management
measures that are equivalent to the
unguided recreational management
measures in either Area 2C or 3A (e.g.,
a daily bag limit of two halibut of any
size), NMFS will determine the amount
of RFQ that are needed to account for
charter harvest in Area 2C and Area 3A
under the recommended management
measures and issue that amount as RFQ
to supplement the charter fishery
allocation under the CSP. The difference
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between the total amount of available
RFQ and the amount needed for the
charter fishery is excess RFQ. NMFS
will redistribute the amount of excess
RFQ using the process recommended by
the Council.
Under this final rule, 50 percent of
any RFQ in excess of the amount
needed to achieve the unguided
recreational management measures in
either Area 2C or 3A is redistributed as
IFQ to all catcher vessel QS holders in
the applicable area (Area 2C or Area 3A)
who held not more than 32,333 QS units
in Area 2C, and 47,469 QS units in Area
3A (i.e., the amount of QS that yielded
2,000 pounds of IFQ in 2015) in the year
prior to the redistribution, and who also
held that QS eligible for redistribution
during the year that the redistribution
occurs. This 50 percent is redistributed
among qualified QS holders in
proportion to their QS holdings.
The Council’s recommendation stated
that 50 percent of excess RFQ should be
redistributed ‘‘equally’’ to all qualified
QS holders. NMFS will implement this
provision by dividing the amount of IFQ
available for redistribution to qualified
QS holders by the total amount of QS
units held by all qualified QS holders.
For example, if there were 50,000
pounds of excess RFQ to be
redistributed as IFQ in Area 3A in
calendar year 2025 among QS holders
who held not more than 47,469 QS units
in the year prior to the redistribution
(2024), and in the year during which the
redistribution occurs (2025), and the
total sum of all QS held by those
qualified QS holders is 500,000 units,
then each of the qualified QS holders
would receive an additional 1/10 of a
pound of IFQ in 2025 for each QS unit
they hold. NMFS does not issue IFQ in
less than one pound increments;
therefore, NMFS will round the amount
of redistributed IFQ to the nearest
pound for each qualified QS holder.
Section 4.8.1.3 of the Analysis provides
additional information on the method
NMFS will use to redistribute excess
RFQ.
This final rule requires the QS holder
to hold the QS in the year prior to the
redistribution to meet the clear intent of
the Council, as well as in the year that
the redistribution occurs in order to
ensure the proper administration of this
provision. This requirement ensures
that IFQ is issued to persons who hold
the underlying QS eligible to receive the
redistribution.
Under this final rule, the remaining
50 percent of RFQ in excess of the
amount needed to achieve the unguided
sport management measures in either
Area 2C or 3A will be redistributed
equally among all CQEs that held
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halibut QS in the applicable area (Area
2C or Area 3A) in the year prior to the
redistribution as well as in the year that
the redistribution occurs. If no CQE
holds QS in the applicable area (Area 2C
or Area 3A) in the preceding year and
in the year that the redistribution
occurs, this 50 percent of the excess
RFQ will not be redistributed in that
area. In other words, the excess RFQ
will be unfished or ‘‘left in the water’’
for conservation.
Section 4.8.1.3 of the Analysis
describes the options considered by the
Council and NMFS in developing this
portion of this final rule.
NMFS adds regulations under
§ 679.40(c) to describe how excess RFQ
will be redistributed.
Cost Recovery Fees
The Magnuson-Stevens Fishery
Conservation and Management Act
(Magnuson-Stevens Act) at section
304(d)(2)(A) requires that cost recovery
fees be collected for the costs directly
related to the management, data
collection, and enforcement of any
limited access privilege programs. This
includes programs such as the
commercial halibut IFQ Program, under
which a dedicated allocation is
provided to IFQ permit holders. Fees
owed are a percentage, not to exceed 3
percent, of the ex-vessel value of fish
landed and debited from IFQ permits.
Each year, NMFS sends fee statements
to IFQ holders whose annual IFQ was
landed; those holders must remit fees by
January 31 of the following year. Under
this rule, the RQE is responsible for all
cost recovery fees on their annual RFQ.
In years when the RQE holds QS and
the RFQ is issued to augment the charter
fishery’s catch limit, the charter fishery
will be effectively using all of this RFQ;
therefore, the RQE will be required to
pay cost recovery fees on all of its RFQ.
Since all annual RFQ issued to the RQE
will be considered ‘‘used,’’ NMFS will
levy the fee calculated for the RQE’s
annual RFQ pounds that are issued,
rather than estimating RFQ harvest at
each point of charter landings. The fee
will be calculated using the standard
price calculated for Area 2C or 3A and
the RFQ held by the RQE. This is
similar to the method used to apply an
ex-vessel value for GAF. The IFQ cost
recovery fee will be levied on the RQE
each year the RQE holds QS, and the
resulting RFQ is issued to augment the
catch limit in the charter fishery. All
holdings acquired by the RQE on
October 1 of the prior year are subject
to the IFQ cost recovery fee.
For purposes of cost recovery, the
RQE is required to pay fees on all
resulting pounds of RFQ, even if the
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charter fishery’s harvest is under its
catch limit in Area 2C or 3A for that
year. In December of each year, NMFS
will (1) determine the standard prices
and the cost recovery fee percentage, (2)
announce the standard prices and the
cost recovery fee percentage in the
Federal Register, and (3) issue the RQE
a fee assessment. The RFQ fee
assessment will be based on the number
of RFQ pounds added to either the Area
2C or 3A charter catch limit based on
QS holdings as of October 1 of the prior
year multiplied by the standard price for
Area 2C or Area 3A, and multiplied by
the cost recovery fee percentage
(approximately 3 percent in recent
years). The cost recovery fee payment
from the RQE to NMFS is due by
January 31 of each year.
Additional information about
assessing cost recovery fees for an RQE
is provided in Section 4.8.1.4.1 of the
Analysis.
NMFS is revising regulations
throughout § 679.45 to incorporate the
RQE into the IFQ Program cost recovery
fee estimation and collection process.
General Reporting
Because all RFQ is considered landed
or used by the RQE in the year for
which it is issued and the standard
prices are applied to pounds of RFQ, the
RQE is not required to complete the
recordkeeping and reporting
requirements described for the IFQ
Program at § 679.5(1). The RQE is
exempt from submitting the IFQ Prior
Notice of Landing, Product Transfer,
IFQ Landing, IFQ Transshipment
Authorization, and IFQ Departure
reports.
Annual Report
This final rule requires the RQE to file
an annual report with the Council by
January 31 of each year that details the
administrative activities and business
operations of the RQE during the prior
year for each year that it holds
commercial QS. Although not
specifically requested by the Council,
the annual report also must be
submitted to NMFS for reasons
described below.
The RQE is required to include the
following general information in its
annual report: (1) Any changes to the
bylaws, board of directors, or other key
management personnel of the RQE
during the preceding year; (2) amounts
and descriptions of annual
administrative expenses; (3) amounts
and descriptions of funds spent on
conservation, research, and promotion
of the halibut resource and a summary
of the results; and (4) amounts and
descriptions of all other expenses.
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Additionally, the RQE is required to
submit the following information by
regulatory area: (1) The total amount of
halibut QS by vessel category and block
held by the RQE at the start of the
calendar year, on October 1, and at the
end of the calendar year; (2) a list of all
transfers (purchases, sales, and any
other transfers) of halibut QS, including
transaction prices if applicable; and (3)
the number of CHPs and associated
angler endorsements purchased and
held by the RQE.
Section 679.41(c)(10)(ii) requires a
CQE to submit a timely and complete
annual report to NMFS before a transfer
of QS will be approved or IFQ will be
issued. A similar requirement for the
RQE annual report is added at new
paragraph § 679.41(c)(11)(i). If the RQE
held QS in the previous year and has
not submitted a timely and complete
annual report by the January 31
deadline, NMFS will not approve a
transfer of QS or issue RFQ until the
report is submitted. To confirm receipt
of the report, this rule requires that the
RQE submit the annual report to both
the Council and NMFS.
NMFS is adding §§ 679.5(v) and
679.41(c)(11)(i) to include the RQE
annual report requirements.
Other Regulatory Changes
NMFS revises the IFQ regulations at
50 CFR part 679 that refer to ‘‘an IFQ
permit holder’’ to also include the term
‘‘RQE’’ where applicable.
NMFS revises regulations at 50 CFR
part 679 that refer to the IFQ permit that
also pertain to the RQE to include the
term ‘‘RFQ permit account.’’ NMFS
revised this language because the RQE
will not be issued an IFQ fishing permit.
Instead, NMFS will establish an RFQ
permit account for the RQE that will be
used to administer RFQ as described in
this rule.
NMFS revises regulations at 50 CFR
part 679 that refer to IFQ to include the
term ‘‘RFQ’’ when the regulations refer
to IFQ and RFQ.
The locations of these minor changes
are shown in the table in the regulatory
text at the end of this rule.
Appeals
This rule changes several references
within §§ 679.41 and 679.45 that
describe the former procedure for
appealing an IAD to the NMFS Alaska
Office of Administrative Appeals. Those
procedures are described at § 679.43.
NMFS has centralized the appeals
process in the National Appeals Office,
which operates out of NMFS’
headquarters in Silver Spring, MD. The
National Appeals Office is now charged
with processing appeals that were filed
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with the Office of Administrative
Appeals, Alaska Region. The procedure
for appealing an IAD through the
National Appeals Office is at 15 CFR
part 906 (79 FR 7056, February 6, 2014).
This rule updates the regulations
referring to appeals procedures for the
IFQ Program to refer to 15 CFR part 906
instead of to 50 CFR 679.43.
Changes From Proposed to Final Rule
NMFS made the following changes to
the final rule from the proposed rule:
• Section 679.7(f)(3)(i)(C) confirms
that fixed gear may not be used to retain
RFQ halibut. The regulatory language is
changed to conform with wording used
in similar regulations in this subsection. The phrase ‘‘as defined in
§ 679.2’’ is removed as a reference to
fixed gear, and to add clarity, ‘‘halibut
RFQ’’ is replaced with ‘‘RFQ halibut’’.
• The proposed regulatory text at
§ 679.41(g)(11)(ii), (iii), and (iv) is
changed to clarify that the regulatory
references for RQE eligibility in these
three paragraphs refer to all the
paragraphs and requirements that fall
under (n)(1) of that section.
• The proposed regulatory text at
§ 679.42(g)(1)(iii) is changed to more
clearly reflect the Council’s intent that
the RQE is prohibited from receiving
halibut QS blocks of 1,500 pounds or
less in Areas 2C and 3A, based on 2015
pounds. The phrase ‘‘is limited to
receiving’’ was replaced with ‘‘may not
receive;’’
• Section 679.45(f)(4) is changed to
clarify that the paragraph applies to IFQ
permit holders and to the RQE. The
phrase ‘‘the IFQ permit holder’’ is
replaced with ‘‘the IFQ permit holder or
RQE.’’
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Comments and Responses
NMFS received 18 comment letters on
the proposed rule. One of the comment
letters was outside the scope of this
action. Of the remaining 17 comment
letters, NMFS identified and considered
19 unique, relevant comments, which
are summarized and responded to
below. The commenters consisted of
individuals, representatives of the
charter sector, and representatives of the
commercial fishing sector.
Comment 1: Several commenters
expressed support for the RQE Program
and noted it would bring stability to the
charter fishery and create long-term
efficiency by allowing transfers of QS
between commercial QS holders and the
charter fishery and will help lessen
restrictive harvest measures for guided
anglers whose fishing opportunities are
closely linked to the economics of the
charter fishery.
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Response: NMFS acknowledges the
comment.
Comment 2: We support restricting
the maximum number of shares
transferred annually. We support fixing
October 1 QS holdings as the basis for
estimating the number of IFQ pounds
for the following fishing year. We
support NMFS assessing cost recovery
fees for RFQ holdings.
Response: NMFS acknowledges the
comment, and notes that the provisions
the commenter supports are contained
in this final rule.
Comment 3: Charter fishing is a main
source of income for some Alaskans.
Allowing charter catch limits to increase
would bring fishing back to the sport
fishing industry.
Response: The principal objective of
this final rule is to promote social and
economic flexibility in the charter
fishery by authorizing the development
of an entity that is eligible to purchase
and hold commercial halibut QS in
Areas 2C and 3A, thereby providing
additional harvest opportunities to
charter anglers. This final rule is
therefore intended to promote long-term
efficiency in the use of the halibut
resource by allowing transfers of QS
between commercial QS holders and the
charter fishery, through an RQE, under
a ‘‘willing buyer and willing seller’’
approach.
Comment 4: The RQE should remain
as a non-profit organization and as a
single entity. As a single entity, it
should not be limited on how much QS
it should be able to obtain. The charter
fishery should maintain the daily catch
limit of two fish per day with no size
restrictions. There should be a cap on
the number of charter boats.
Response: This final rule establishes
the RQE as a single, non-profit entity to
represent and manage the separate QS
holdings for Area 2C and Area 3A. The
Council recommended, and NMFS has
adopted, regulations that limit the
amount of QS that the RQE can
purchase and use. These regulations are
adopted primarily to mitigate the
potentially disruptive impacts on the
QS market with the entry of the RQE,
and to take into account the importance
of commercial halibut IFQ on fishing
communities.
The current CHLAP program caps the
number of charter operations in Areas
2C and 3A. Upon implementation of
this final rule, three primary factors will
determine whether charter anglers will
be able to retain two fish per day of any
size: (1) The abundance of halibut and
the resulting catch limits established by
IPHC and allocated under the CSP; (2)
the number of anglers and the size of
halibut that are projected to be retained
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from charter boats; and (3) the amount
of QS that the RQE purchases and holds
on October 1 of each year, and is made
available to augment the charter
allocation.
Comment 5: The 11 vessels that
NMFS considered large entities should
give the RQE 2 percent of their quota.
Response: The Council did not
recommend and this final rule does not
implement regulations to reallocate QS
from specific QS holders to the RQE.
The commenter’s recommendation is
outside of the scope of this action. The
commenter notes that some of the QS
holders are considered to be large
entities. We assume that the commenter
is referring to information provided in
the initial regulatory flexibility analysis
prepared in the proposed rule (82 FR
46016, October 3, 2017). In that
analysis, NMFS estimates that the
owners of 11 vessels that harvest halibut
IFQ would be considered large entities
because they showed revenues that
exceeded a specific threshold in the
most recent year for which we have
records (2014). Additional information
on the revenues of vessels active in the
halibut IFQ fishery is provided in
Section 5.6 of the Analysis.
Comment 6: National Standard
Guidelines that interpret specific
provisions of the Magnuson-Stevens Act
state that fishery management plans
should prevent overfishing and consider
the value of fishery resources to fishing
communities.
Response: NMFS notes that the
National Standard Guidelines cited by
the commenter do not apply to the
halibut fishery because it is managed
under the authority of the Halibut Act
as described in the section of this
preamble titled ‘‘Authority for Action,’’
and not the Magnuson-Stevens Act. As
described in the proposed rule (82 FR
46016, October 3, 2017), creation of an
RQE Program does not change
conservation or management of the
halibut resource in Areas 2C and 3A.
The Analysis at Section 4.8.2 describes
how the Council and NMFS considered
the value of fishery resources to fishing
communities. This action does not
change the current process for
establishing annual catch limits or the
management measures that have been
established to meet specific social and
economic goals for the halibut IFQ
fishery or the RQE Program.
Comment 7: Halibut harvested by the
commercial sector are weighed at the
point of sale. It would be impossible to
determine the pounds of halibut
harvested by the charter fleet.
Response: NMFS disagrees. The
pounds of halibut harvested by the
charter fleet are accounted for by the
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Alaska Department of Fish and Game
logbook program, which is a
requirement for all guided angler
operations in Alaska. All halibut caught
and retained by charter anglers are
required to be measured in a
standardized fashion. From these
measurements, IPHC length-weight
conversion tables are used to establish
the pounds of halibut harvested by the
charter fleet. The logbook program
provides the basis for determining the
charter sector’s harvests under the CSP
and is used to develop annual
management measures for guided
anglers in IPHC Areas 2C and 3A. This
method of catch accounting will not
change when the RQE acquires halibut
QS and the associated pounds of halibut
from that QS is added to the charter
sector allocation under the CSP.
Comment 8: The last twenty years
have led to overfishing and halibut are
small.
Response: According to the most
recent stock assessment by IPHC, Pacific
halibut are not considered to be subject
to overfishing (see https://iphc.int). The
stock assessment prepared by the IPHC
indicates that halibut stocks in Areas 2C
and 3A have declined over the last
decade, and that over that period the
average size-at-age of adult halibut has
become smaller. However, the extent of
the decline varies by geographic area,
and the reasons behind it cannot be
fully explained solely by commercial or
charter fishing removals. NMFS also
notes that this rule does not increase the
combined halibut commercial and
charter catch limits adopted by IPHC
and implemented by NMFS.
Comment 9: We oppose passage of the
RQE Program. The charter sector does
not share in the burden of conservation.
In times of low abundance, all sectors
should share in conserving resources.
Stocks are beginning to rebuild after a
long decline, and the RQE compromises
years of rebuilding.
Response: NMFS disagrees. As
described in the preamble to the
proposed rule (82 FR 46016, October 3,
2017), under the CSP both the
commercial and charter sectors share
the burden of conservation by having
reduced catch limits in times of low
abundance. The RQE Program allows,
but does not require, persons in the
commercial sector to choose to transfer
their QS to the RQE; however,
irrespective of those transfers, each
sector will continue to be constrained
by the combined catch limits
established by the IPHC. This final rule
also implements regulations that allow
the transfer of QS back to the
commercial sector from the RQE.
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Comment 10: Neither the Council nor
NMFS have defined the ‘‘need’’ for an
RQE. Demand for charter services has
remained relatively constant in Areas
2C and 3A despite changes to guided
angler bag limits.
Response: In December 2014, the
Council developed a purpose and need
statement that can be found in Section
2.1 of the Analysis. Restrictions have
increased for the guided angler sport
sector. Allowing an RQE to hold a
limited amount of commercial halibut
QS on behalf of guided recreational
halibut anglers under a ‘‘willing seller
and willing buyer’’ approach may result
in less restrictive annual harvest
measures for guided recreational anglers
in times of low halibut abundance,
while complying with total halibut
removals under the guided halibut catch
limits determined by the IPHC.
Comment 11: The RQE will further
erode the owner-operated nature of the
halibut fleet, undermining goals and
principles of the halibut quota share
program. The price of halibut quota is
already a significant barrier to entry for
young fishermen. The RQE creates an
unbalanced advantage for the charter
fleet to compete for halibut quota in an
already fully-utilized fishery.
Response: The Council considered its
goals of an owner-operated fleet in the
halibut IFQ Program when it developed
its recommendation to authorize the
RQE. This information, combined with
public testimony, factored into the
Council’s recommendation and NMFS’
regulations that place constraints on QS
purchases by the RQE. Specifically, the
Council recommended and this final
rule implements provisions that limit
RQEs from purchasing more than a
specific amount of QS on an annual
basis and in total. This final rule also
limits the RQE from purchasing specific
categories of QS that are typically
purchased by new entrants to the
halibut IFQ fishery. The preamble to the
proposed rule and Section 4.8.1.2 of the
Analysis provides additional
information on QS transfer provisions
and restrictions implemented by this
final rule and how these provisions
balance the interests of owner-operators,
new entrants, and the charter fishery.
Comment 12: Allowing additional
halibut quota to be reallocated to the
charter fleet exacerbates local depletion.
The charter fleet competes directly with
the non-charter resident sport anglers,
and this proposal allows the charter
sector to harvest most of the halibut
near towns. It would be very difficult for
a resident Alaskan angler fishing out of
a small boat to catch halibut.
Response: This final rule will not
result in an increase in the total amount
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Sfmt 4700
of halibut that may be harvested, and
NMFS does not have information to
suggest that the transfer of QS from
commercial operators to the RQE will
necessarily change harvesting locations
or patterns. The location of charter
fishing and commercial harvests varies
widely. In areas where there is a
significant overlap in both charter and
commercial fishing operations, the
localized effects from this action are
expected to be minimal as fishing
pressure shifts from the commercial
sector to the charter section in the same
area. Local resource abundance may be
a factor in harvest rates, but its
influence is intertwined with other
significant influences, such as stock
abundance, angler demand, and other
factors.
Comment 13: Scheduled Council
actions to establish an annual CHP
renewal process, to stop the transfer of
non-transferable CHPs, and address
latency capacity in the charter sector
will address the charter sector’s
perceived need for an RQE.
Response: The commenter refers to
several actions that are currently under
consideration by the Council. The
potential effects of these management
measures have not been fully analyzed,
and the Council has not recommended
these actions for implementation. At
this time, NMFS does not have the
information available to conclusively
determine whether these actions under
consideration would provide benefits to
the charter fishery consistent with this
final rule.
Comment 14: Annual limits on RQE
QS purchases are essential as are limits
on RQE purchases of category D and (in
Area 2C) B class quota, and the limit on
the size of QS blocks the RQE may
purchase. Unused QS should be
returned to the commercial sector each
season.
Response: This final rule implements
all the measures noted in the comment,
and described in the proposed rule, that
constrain the quantity and type of QS
purchases that can be made by the RQE.
Although these restrictions may impact
the efficacy of the RQE Program, they
are implemented primarily to mitigate
the effects of the RQE upon QS markets,
to prevent an accumulation of excessive
shares by the RQE, and to take into
consideration the importance of the
commercial halibut fishery on fishingdependent communities. The preamble
to the proposed rule described the
limitations on the use of QS that apply
to RQEs (82 FR 46016, October 3, 2017).
Comment 15: This RQE action does
not identify a mechanism for funding
the RQE, and an RQE CHP acquisition
limit is omitted. We recommend that
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RQE CHP limits be at least 10 times
higher than individual CHP limits.
Response: This final rule does not
prescribe the means by which persons
or entities finance their purchases of
QS. The Council and NMFS did not
identify a management need for the RQE
to identify the methods that may be
used to purchase QS prior to NMFS
considering approving the transfer of QS
to the RQE. This final rule does
implement annual reporting
requirements by the RQE to the Council
and NMFS as described in the section
of this preamble titled ‘‘Provisions of
Final Rule.’’ Among other things, the
report requires that each year the RQE
detail all QS transactions, including the
amount paid for QS, and also for the
activities and expenses of the RQE.
The Council did not specify, and this
final rule does not provide, limits on the
acquisition of CHPs by the RQE;
therefore, the RQE will be subject to
regulations that apply to any other
person, as defined at § 300.61, for
purposes of purchasing and holding
CHPs. Section 300.67(j) states that a
person may not own, hold, or control
more than five transferable CHPs in both
regulatory areas combined, with limited
exceptions. This provision applies to
the RQE. Any purchases or sales of
CHPs by the RQE are required to be
reported in the RQE’s annual report to
the Council and NMFS.
Comment 16: There are insufficient
regulations in the proposed rule to limit
how the RQE may profit by buying and
selling QS. The RQE undermines the
owner-operator characteristics of the
fleet and forces individual commercial
fishermen to compete against a
subsidized entity in the quota share
market. The RQE must be prohibited
from trading QS on the market for profit.
Not limiting RQE acquisition will have
an impact to current IFQ Category C
shares. The proposed minimum QS
block that the RQE may purchase in
Area 2C is too low of a minimum. This
will create an incentive for IFQ holders
to sweep up and sell small blocks to the
RQE, limiting blocks available to new
IFQ entrants.
Response: This rule establishes that
the RQE will be a non-profit entity,
created for the purpose of adding social
and economic flexibility to the charter
fishery. To accomplish this, the RQE is
authorized to purchase a limited
amount of QS, which is to be used to
provide additional harvest opportunity
and less restrictive management
measures in times of low abundance.
This rule contains provisions for
monitoring the RQE activities by
requiring an annual report. Among other
things, the RQE must document in the
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report all the buying, selling, and other
transfers of QS during the relevant year,
including the QS prices paid for or
received by the RQE. The annual report
must also contain descriptions and
amounts of the RQE’s expenses during
the year. Although all QS transactions,
whether between or among sectors, will
occur under a ‘‘willing seller and
willing buyer’’ scenario, NMFS has
implemented several constraints on the
amount and type of halibut QS that may
be purchased by the RQE. This includes
restrictions that prohibit purchases of
QS blocks that equate to 1,500 pounds
or less. These constraints will likely
reduce the efficacy of the RQE Program
by limiting the pool of QS that may be
purchased by the RQE. However, the
Council and NMFS have determined
that these constraints are necessary to
balance with other considerations, such
as the RQE’s effects on the availability
of QS to commercial fishermen.
Comment 17: There has not been
sufficient analysis of the GAF’s impacts
to justify discontinuing this model of
compensated reallocation.
Response: NMFS is not discontinuing
the GAF Program. The GAF Program has
distinct advantages that are not
available through the RQE. GAF are
designed to work on an individual
operator level by authorizing limited
annual transfers of commercial halibut
IFQ as GAF to qualified CHP holders.
The GAF Program provides additional
harvest opportunities for charter anglers
by allowing them to retain halibut up to
the limit for unguided anglers when
charter management measures limit
charter anglers to a more restrictive
harvest limit. This program will remain
in place for individual CHP holders to
receive an IFQ transfer. In some cases,
CHP holders also hold QS, and have the
opportunity to use their QS either
commercially or as a means to augment
their charter fishing. The GAF Program
is described in more detail in proposed
rule for the CSP (78 FR 39122, June 28,
2013). Under this rule, RFQ could not
be transferred as GAF.
Comment 18: The incidental bycatch
limits for the trawl fleet should be
included in the RQE calculation. There
should be a mechanism in the RQE
action where the RQE could purchase
bycatch from the trawl fleet.
Response: The purpose of this final
rule is to provide for the transfer of QS
between commercial QS holders and the
RQE, and not to establish alternative
methods for establishing the amount of
catch available for commercial and
charter operators. The IPHC accounts for
incidental bycatch by all vessels when
determining total halibut removals and
catch limits. This includes the halibut
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47827
catch limits established for the
commercial and charter sectors in Areas
2C and 3A.
Comment 19: The Analysis failed to
adequately show the effect this program
would have on the stability of the
commercial fishermen, processors, and
consumers of the product. The action
kept touching on possible funding
sources that the RQE may use to
purchase QS, but ignored the
implications of not addressing funding
issues which is against National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA)
requirements.
Response: The social and economic
impacts of this action were analyzed in
the regulatory impact review (RIR) (see
ADDRESSES). Because both commercial
and charter fisheries will still be
restricted by the total catch limits set for
each regulatory area based on halibut
abundance, the total removals of halibut
and relative timing of the commercial
and charter fisheries are expected to
remain the same. Possible funding
sources for the RQE’s purchase of QS
are also discussed in the RIR.
The environmental assessment (EA)
provides a comprehensive discussion of
this action to authorize an RQE to
purchase and hold commercial halibut
quota share for use by charter halibut
anglers (see ADDRESSES). The EA
analyzes the impacts of QS holdings and
use under a wide range alternative QS
use limits. After considering this
analysis, NMFS prepared a Finding of
No Significant Impact based on the EA
analysis. Regardless of the funding
mechanism used by the RQE, the EA
considered the environmental impact of
the transfer of QS from the commercial
to the charter fishery consistent with the
requirements under NEPA. NMFS
disagrees that this rule violates NEPA
requirements by not limiting or
otherwise determining which funding
sources might be appropriate for the
RQE.
OMB Revisions to PRA References in 15
CFR 902.1(b)
Section 3507(c)(B)(i) of the Paperwork
Reduction Act (PRA) requires that
agencies inventory and display a current
control number assigned by the Director
of the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB), for each agency’s information
collection. Section 902.1(b) identifies
the location of NOAA regulations for
which OMB approval numbers have
been issued. Because this final rule
revises and adds data elements within a
collection-of-information for
recordkeeping and reporting
requirements, 15 CFR 902.1(b) is revised
to reference correctly the sections
resulting from this final rule.
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Classification
Regulations governing the U.S.
fisheries for Pacific halibut are
developed by the IPHC, the Pacific
Fishery Management Council, the
Council, and the Secretary of
Commerce. Section 5 of the Halibut Act
(16 U.S.C. 773c) allows the regional
fishery management council having
authority for a particular geographical
area to develop regulations governing
fishing for halibut in U.S. Convention
waters as long as those regulations do
not conflict with IPHC regulations. The
Halibut Act, at sections 773c(a) and (b),
provides the Secretary of Commerce
with the general responsibility to carry
out the Convention with the authority
to, in consultation with the Secretary of
the department in which the U.S. Coast
Guard is operating, adopt such
regulations as may be necessary to carry
out the purposes and objectives of the
Convention and the Halibut Act. This
rule is consistent with the Halibut Act
and other applicable laws.
This rule has been determined to be
not significant for the purposes of
Executive Order 12866.
Small Entity Compliance Guide
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 final regulatory
flexibility analysis, the agency shall
publish one or more guides to assist
small entities in complying with the
rule, and shall designate such
publications as ‘‘small entity
compliance guides.’’ The preambles to
the proposed rule and this final rule
serve as the small entity compliance
guide. This action does not require any
additional compliance from small
entities that is not described in the
preambles. Copies of the proposed rule
and this final rule are available from the
NMFS website at https://
alaskafisheries.noaa.gov.
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Final Regulatory Flexibility Act (FRFA)
This FRFA incorporates the initial
regulatory flexibility analysis (IRFA), a
summary of the significant issues raised
by the public comments, NMFS’
responses to those comments, and a
summary of the analyses completed to
support this action. Section 604 of the
Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
requires that, when an agency
promulgates a final rule under section
553 of Title 5 of the U.S. Code, after
being required by that section or any
other law to publish a general notice of
proposed rulemaking, the agency shall
prepare a FRFA. Section 604 describes
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the required contents of a FRFA: (1) A
statement of the need for, and objectives
of, the rule; (2) a statement of the
significant issues raised by the public
comments in response to the initial
regulatory flexibility analysis, a
statement of the assessment of the
agency of such issues, and a statement
of any changes made in the proposed
rule as a result of such comments; (3)
the response of the agency to any
comments filed by the Chief Counsel for
Advocacy of the Small Business
Administration (SBA) in response to the
proposed rule, and a detailed statement
of any change made to the proposed rule
in the final rule as a result of the
comments; (4) a description of and an
estimate of the number of small entities
to which the rule will apply or an
explanation of why no such estimate is
available; (5) a description of the
projected reporting, recordkeeping and
other compliance requirements of the
rule, including an estimate of the classes
of small entities which will be subject
to the requirement and the type of
professional skills necessary for
preparation of the report or record; and
(6) a description of the steps the agency
has taken to minimize the significant
economic impact on small entities
consistent with the stated objectives of
applicable statutes, including a
statement of the factual, policy, and
legal reasons for selecting the alternative
adopted in the final rule and why each
one of the other significant alternatives
to the rule considered by the agency
which affect the impact on small
entities was rejected.
Descriptions of this action, its
purpose, and the legal basis are
contained in the preamble to the
proposed rule (82 FR 46016, October 10,
2017) and are not repeated here.
Summary of Significant Issues Raised
During Public Comment
NMFS published the proposed rule on
October 10, 2017 (82 FR 46016). An
IRFA was prepared and summarized in
the ‘‘Classification’’ section of the
preamble to the proposed rule. The
comment period closed on November
17, 2017. NMFS received 18 letters of
public comment on the proposed rule.
None of the comments raised issues in
response to the IRFA. One comment
requested NMFS require the 11 large
entities in the IFQ Program to
redistribute 2 percent of their quota to
the RQE. No changes were made to this
final rule based on this comment. The
Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the SBA
did not file any comments on the
proposed rule.
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Number and Description of Small
Entities Regulated by Action
This final rule directly regulates three
classes of small entities: QS holders,
CQEs, and the newly implemented RQE.
For RFA purposes only, NMFS
established a small business size
standard for businesses, including their
affiliates, whose primary industry is
commercial fishing (see 50 CFR 200.2).
A business primarily engaged in
commercial fishing (NAICS code 11411)
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 $11 million for all its affiliated
operations worldwide.
For this action, the pool of small,
directly regulated entities is limited to
those entities that will be engaging in
QS transfer (i.e., QS holders, including
CQEs, and a future RQE). CQEs and the
future RQE are considered small
entities, or more specifically, a small
organization as defined by the RFA. A
small organization is ‘‘any not-for-profit
enterprise which is independently
owned and operated and is not
dominant in its field.’’ In addition, no
CQE has more than $11 million in
annual gross receipts. The RQE that is
authorized under this action is not be
expected to hold halibut QS that would
yield $11 million in annual gross
receipts. Commercial halibut QS holders
are also considered to be directly
regulated. Most of the QS holders in the
halibut IFQ Program are small entities.
NMFS considers commercial halibut
fishing vessels as proxies for small
entities because IFQ from more than one
QS holder is often fished from the same
vessel. NMFS estimates that 812 vessels
across all IPHC regulatory areas landed
halibut in 2014, which in the Analysis
is the most recent year of complete data
on the value of halibut landings by
vessel. Of those, 11 vessels are
considered large entities because they
showed revenues that exceeded the $11
million threshold. The remaining 801
vessels are considered directly regulated
small entities for this rule. See Section
5.6 of the Analysis for more
information.
Recordkeeping, Reporting, and Other
Compliance Requirements
The RFA requires a description of the
projected reporting, recordkeeping, and
other compliance requirements of this
rule, including an estimate of the classes
of small entities that will be subject to
the requirement and the type of
professional skills necessary for
preparation of the report or record. This
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rule requires new information
collections from an RQE. Under this
rule, a non-profit entity that wants to
become an RQE will need to complete
an application and submit it to NMFS
for approval. This application requires
submission of the entity’s articles of
incorporation, the corporate by-laws,
and a list of key personnel, including
the Board of Directors, officers,
representatives, and managers. NMFS
will approve the first complete RQE
application it receives.
If the RQE intends to receive or
transfer halibut QS, it will use the
‘‘Application for Transfer QS To or
From an RQE’’ available on the NMFS
Alaska Region website at https://
alaskafisheries.noaa.gov/. Additionally,
the RQE is required to submit an annual
report detailing its activities to NMFS
and the Council. The RQE is also subject
to cost recovery fees; therefore, it needs
to comply with the existing cost
recovery fee payment requirements for
IFQ permit holders. These
recordkeeping and reporting
requirements are expected to be
administrative in nature and not require
additional professional expertise.
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Description of Significant Alternatives
That Minimize Adverse Impacts on
Small Entities
This rule minimizes the impact on
small entities and still meets the
objectives for this final rule. The
impacts on small entities for this action
are defined in the IRFA and are not
repeated here. As noted in the IRFA,
this final rule is expected to create a net
benefit for the directly regulated small
entities. The benefits of this action are
expected to outweigh the reporting,
recordkeeping, and other compliance
costs described in the previous section.
This action is not expected to have
negative economic impacts on the small
entities directly impacted by the action.
The Council considered a status quo
alternative (Alternative 1) in addition to
this final rule, which is Alternative 2,
the Council’s preferred alternative.
Alternative 1 would not have provided
more benefits to the directly regulated
small entities or reduced reporting,
recordkeeping, or compliance costs
more than the preferred alternative that
is implemented by this final rule.
Collection-of-Information Requirements
This final rule contains collection-ofinformation requirements subject to the
PRA, which have been approved by
OMB under Control Number 0648–0758
and will be merged with OMB Control
Numbers 0648–0272 and 0648–0711.
Public reporting burden is estimated
to average per response: 200 hours for
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Application for a Non-profit
Corporation to be Designated as a
Recreational Quota Entity; 2 hours for
Application for Transfer of QS To or
From a Recreational Quota Entity; 40
hours for RQE Annual Report; 1 minute
for electronic submission of IFQ Permit
Holder Fee Submission Form. These
estimates include the time for reviewing
instructions, searching existing data
sources, gathering and maintaining the
data needed, and completing and
reviewing the collection of information.
Send comments regarding these
burden estimates or any other aspect of
this data collection, including
suggestions for reducing the burden, to
NMFS (see ADDRESSES) and by email to
OIRA_Submission@omb.eop.gov, or fax
to 202–395–5806. 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. All currently approved NOAA
collections of information may be
viewed at https://www.cio.noaa.gov/
services_programs/prasubs.html.
List of Subjects
15 CFR Part 902
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
50 CFR Part 300
Administrative practice and
procedure, Antarctica, Canada, Exports,
Fish, Fisheries, Fishing, Imports,
Indians, Labeling, Marine resources,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Russian Federation,
Transportation, Treaties, Wildlife.
50 CFR Part 679
Alaska, Fisheries, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
Dated: September 14, 2018.
Samuel D. Rauch, III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for
Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
For the reasons set out in the
preamble, NMFS amends 15 CFR part
902 and 50 CFR parts 300 and 679 as
follows:
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:
■
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Authority: 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.
2. In § 902.1, in the table in paragraph
(b), under the entry ‘‘50 CFR’’:
■ a. Add an entry in alphanumeric order
for ‘‘679.5(v)’’; and
■ b. Revise the entry for ‘‘679.41(b),
(c)(1) through (9), (d) through (f), (g)(1)
through (4), (h) through (k), and (m)’’.
The addition and revision 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:
*
*
*
*
*
679.5(v) .......................
*
*
*
*
679.41(b), (c)(1)
through (9), (d)
through (f), (g)(1)
through (4), (h)
through (k), (m), and
(n) ............................
*
*
*
*
Current OMB
control No.
(all numbers begin
with 0648–)
*
*
*
*
–0272
*
–0272
*
*
*
*
*
*
Title 50—Wildlife and Fisheries
PART 300—INTERNATIONAL
FISHERIES REGULATIONS
Subpart E—Pacific Halibut Fisheries
3. The authority citation for part 300,
subpart E, continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 773–773k.
4. In § 300.65:
a. Add paragraph (c)(1)(iii);
■ b. Revise paragraph (c)(4)(i); and
■ c. Add paragraphs (c)(4)(iii) and
(c)(5)(ii)(D)(1)(iv).
The additions and revision read as
follows:
■
■
§ 300.65 Catch sharing plan and domestic
management measures in waters in and off
Alaska.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(1) * * *
(iii) Authorizes the use of
Commission regulatory areas 2C and 3A
RFQ resulting from halibut QS held by
the RQE as authorized in part 679 to this
title to supplement the annual guided
sport catch limit in the corresponding
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area, pursuant to paragraph (c)(4) of this
section.
*
*
*
*
*
(4) * * *
(i) The Commission regulatory areas
2C and 3A annual guided sport catch
limits are determined by subtracting
wastage from, and adding any pounds of
RFQ held by an RQE for that area to, the
allocations in Tables 3 and 4 of this
subpart, adopted by the Commission as
annual management measures, and
published in the Federal Register as
required in § 300.62.
*
*
*
*
*
(iii) The amount of QS held by the
RQE for Commission regulatory area 2C
and 3A as of October 1 each year will
be the basis for determining the amount
of RFQ pounds that will be added to the
annual guided sport catch limit for the
corresponding area in the upcoming
year.
(5) * * *
(ii) * * *
(D) * * *
(1) * * *
(iv) In the applicable Commission
regulatory area, either Area 2C or Area
3A, the sum of IFQ halibut equivalent
pounds, as defined in § 679.2 of this
title, from the transfer of IFQ to GAF
and the pounds of RFQ issued to the
RQE during a calendar year does not
exceed an amount that is greater than
the amount derived from: 5,947,740
units of Area 2C QS, or 22,187,161 units
of Area 3A QS.
*
*
*
*
*
PART 679—FISHERIES OF THE
EXCLUSIVE ECONOMIC ZONE OFF
ALASKA
5. The authority citation for part 679
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 773 et seq.; 1801 et
seq.; 3631 et seq.; Pub. L. 108–447; Pub. L.
111–281.
6. In § 679.2, add definitions for
‘‘Recreational Fishing Quota (RFQ)’’ and
‘‘Recreational Quota Entity (RQE)’’ in
alphabetical order to read as follows:
■
§ 679.2
Definitions.
daltland on DSKBBV9HB2PROD with RULES
*
*
*
*
*
Recreational Fishing Quota (RFQ)
means the pounds of halibut issued
annually to a Recreational Quota Entity
to supplement the annual guided sport
catch limit under the catch sharing plan
for IFQ regulatory areas 2C and 3A
pursuant to § 300.65(c) of this title.
Recreational Quota Entity (RQE)
means a non-profit entity incorporated
under the laws of the State of Alaska,
recognized as exempt from Federal
income tax by the Internal Revenue
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16:15 Sep 20, 2018
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Service, and authorized by NMFS to
participate in the Halibut IFQ Program
to hold commercial halibut quota share
to supplement the annual guided sport
catch limit in IFQ regulatory areas 2C
and 3A under the catch sharing plan
pursuant to § 300.65(c) of this title.
NMFS will authorize only one RQE at
a time.
*
*
*
*
*
7. In § 679.4, add paragraph (d)(1)(iv)
to read as follows:
■
§ 679.4
Permits.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) * * *
(1) * * *
(iv) An RFQ permit account identifies
the amount of RFQ authorized for use
by charter vessel anglers in Area 2C or
Area 3A. The number of pounds of RFQ
allocated to the RFQ permit account
will be added to the annual guided sport
catch limit under the catch sharing plan
(described at 50 CFR 300.65(c)) for the
appropriate IFQ regulatory area, Area 2C
or Area 3A.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 8. In § 679.5:
■ a. Revise paragraphs (l)(7)(ii)(A), (C),
and (D); and
■ b. Add paragraphs (l)(9) and (v).
The revisions and additions read as
follows:
§ 679.5
(R&R).
Recordkeeping and reporting
*
*
*
*
*
(l) * * *
(7) * * *
(ii) * * *
(A) Applicability. An IFQ permit
holder who holds an IFQ permit against
which a landing was made or an RQE
that holds RFQ must submit to NMFS a
complete IFQ Permit Holder Fee
Submission Form provided by NMFS.
*
*
*
*
*
(C) Completed application. NMFS
will process an IFQ Permit Holder Fee
Submission Form provided that a paper
or electronic form is completed by the
IFQ permit holder or an RQE that holds
RFQ, with all applicable fields
accurately filled in, and all required
additional documentation is attached.
(D) IFQ landing summary and
estimated fee liability. NMFS will
provide to an IFQ permit holder and an
RQE that holds RFQ an IFQ Landing
and Estimated Fee Liability page as
required by § 679.45(a)(2). The IFQ
permit holder must either accept the
accuracy of the NMFS estimated fee
liability associated with his or her IFQ
landings for each IFQ permit, or
calculate a revised IFQ fee liability in
accordance with paragraph (l)(7)(ii)(E)
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Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
of this section. The IFQ permit holder
may calculate a revised fee liability for
all or part of his or her IFQ landings.
*
*
*
*
*
(9) Recreational Quota Entity Program
annual report. An annual report on RQE
activities must be submitted to NMFS
by the RQE as required at § 679.5(v).
*
*
*
*
*
(v) Recreational Quota Entity Program
Annual Report—(1) Applicability. The
RQE must submit a timely and complete
annual report on the RQE’s
administrative activities and business
operation for each calendar year that it
holds halibut recreational fishing quota
(RFQ) and quota shares (QS). The RQE
may combine annual reports on its
holdings of halibut QS and RFQ for IFQ
regulatory areas 2C and 3A into one
report. The RQE must submit annual
report data for the halibut QS and RFQ
it held during the calendar year. The
RQE is not required to submit an annual
report for any calendar year in which it
did not hold any halibut QS or RFQ.
(2) Time limits and submittal. By
January 31, the RQE must submit a
complete annual report for the prior
calendar year to the North Pacific
Fishery Management Council, 605 West
4th Ave., Suite 306, Anchorage, AK
99501–2252, and to NMFS-Alaska
Regional Administrator, P.O. Box 21668,
Juneau, AK 99802–1668.
(3) Complete annual report. A
complete annual report contains all
general report requirements described in
paragraphs (v)(4)(i) through (iv) of this
section, and all information specific to
IFQ regulatory areas 2C and 3A
described in paragraphs (v)(5)(i) through
(iii) of this section.
(4) General report requirements. The
RQE must annually report the following
information:
(i) Any changes to the bylaws, board
of directors, or other key management
personnel of the RQE from the
preceding year;
(ii) Amount and description of annual
administrative expenses;
(iii) Amount and description of funds
spent on conservation and research,
including a summary of the results of
those expenditures; and
(iv) Amount and description of all
other expenses incurred by the RQE.
(5) Information by IFQ regulatory
area. For each IFQ regulatory area
represented by the RQE, the RQE must
annually report the following
information:
(i) The total amount of halibut QS by
category and blocks held by the RQE at
the start of the calendar year, on October
1, and at the end of the calendar year;
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(ii) A list of all transfers (purchases or
sales) of halibut QS, including the
transaction price; and
(iii) A description of the number of
charter halibut permits and number of
angler endorsements purchased and
held by the RQE.
9. In § 679.7, add paragraph (f)(3)(i)(C)
to read as follows:
■
§ 679.7
Prohibitions.
*
*
*
*
*
(f) * * *
(3) * * *
(i) * * *
(C) Use fixed gear to retain RFQ
halibut.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 10. In § 679.40:
■ a. Revise paragraphs (b), (c) heading,
and (c)(2);
■ b. Add paragraphs (c)(4) and (g)(2)(iii);
■ c. Revise paragraph (h)(3)
introductory text; and
■ d. Add paragraph (h)(3)(iii).
The revisions and additions read as
follows:
§ 679.40
Sablefish and halibut QS.
daltland on DSKBBV9HB2PROD with RULES
*
*
*
*
*
(b) Annual allocation of IFQ and RFQ.
The Regional Administrator shall assign
halibut or sablefish IFQs to each person,
except the RQE, holding unrestricted QS
halibut or sablefish, respectively, up to
the limits prescribed in § 679.42(e) and
(f). Each assigned IFQ will be specific to
an IFQ regulatory area and vessel
category, and will represent the
maximum amount of halibut or
sablefish that may be harvested from the
specified IFQ regulatory area and by the
person to whom it is assigned during
the specified fishing year, unless the
IFQ assignment is changed by the
Regional Administrator within the
fishing year because of an approved
transfer or because all or part of the IFQ
is sanctioned for violating rules of this
part. The Regional Administrator shall
assign RFQ to the RQE pursuant to
paragraph (c)(4) of this section.
(c) Calculation of annual IFQ and
RFQ allocations.* * *
(2) QS amounts. For purposes of
calculating IFQs and RFQ for any
fishing year, the amount of a person’s
QS and the amount of the QS pool for
any IFQ regulatory area will be the
amounts on record with the Alaska
Region, NMFS, on January 15 of that
year.
*
*
*
*
*
(4) RFQ allocation to RQE—(i) RQE
QS amounts. For purposes of
calculating RFQ for any fishing year, the
amount of halibut QS held by the RQE
for either IFQ regulatory area 2C or 3A
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16:15 Sep 20, 2018
Jkt 244001
for the corresponding IFQ regulatory
area will be the amounts on record with
the Alaska Region, NMFS on October 1
of the year prior.
(ii) Calculation of RFQ. The annual
allocation of RFQ halibut to an RQE
(person r) in IFQ regulatory area 2C or
3A (area a) will be equal to the product
of the annual commercial catch limit as
defined in § 300.61 of this title, and the
QS held by the RQE (specified in
paragraph (c)(4)(i) of this section)
divided by the QS pool for that area
(specified in paragraph (c)(2) of this
section). No overage or underage
adjustments will be applied to the
RQE’s annual RFQ. Expressed
algebraically, the annual RFQ halibut
allocation formula is as follows:
RFQra = [fixed gear TACa × (QSra/QS
poola)]
(iii) Excess RFQ. NMFS will not issue
the RQE any excess RFQ. Excess RFQ is
the difference between the amount of
RFQ based on the QS held by the RQE
and the amount of RFQ needed to
provide charter fishery management
measures that are equivalent to
unguided recreational fishery
management measures. If the annual
management measures published
pursuant to § 300.62 of this title specify
charter fishery management measures
that are equivalent to the unguided
recreational management measures,
NMFS will:
(A) Calculate the annual allocation of
halibut RFQ to the RQE as specified in
paragraph (c)(4)(ii) of this section; and
(B) Determine the amount of RFQ
needed to supplement the annual
guided sport catch limit from the CSP in
Area 2C and Area 3A (described in
§ 300.65(c) of this title) to account for
charter fishery harvests under the
charter fishery management measures
specified in the annual management
measures and issue that amount of RFQ
to the RFQ permit account.
(C) Calculate the amount of excess
RFQ by subtracting the amount of RFQ
issued as determined in paragraph
(c)(4)(iii)(B) of this section from the
annual calculation of RFQ halibut to the
RQE as calculated in paragraph
(c)(4)(iii)(A) of this section.
(iv) Redistribution of excess RFQ.
Excess pounds of RFQ will be
redistributed as IFQ as follows:
(A) 50 percent to all catcher vessel QS
holders in the applicable area who held
not more than 32,333 QS units in Area
2C, and 47,469 QS units in Area 3A in
the current calendar year and in the
calendar year prior to the redistribution,
in proportion to their QS holdings; and
(B) 50 percent divided equally among
all CQEs that held halibut QS in the
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Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
47831
applicable IFQ regulatory area (Area 2C
or Area 3A) in the current calendar year
and in the calendar year prior to the
redistribution. If no CQE held QS in the
applicable IFQ regulatory area (Area 2C
and Area 3A) in the current calendar
year and in the calendar year prior to
the redistribution, that RFQ will not be
redistributed as IFQ and will not be
available for use by any CQE, IFQ
permit holder, or RQE in that calendar
year.
*
*
*
*
*
(g) * * *
(2) * * *
(iii) The fish will not be calculated as
part of the recreational harvest of
halibut and will not be debited against
the RFQ permit account or the annual
guided sport catch limit as defined in
§ 300.61 of this title.
(h) * * *
(3) Source of debit. NMFS will use the
following sources (see paragraphs
(h)(3)(i), (ii) and (iii) of this section) of
information to debit a CDQ halibut, IFQ
halibut, IFQ sablefish, or RFQ permit
account:
*
*
*
*
*
(iii) Landed RFQ. All annual RFQ
halibut issued to an RQE will be
considered landed in the year for which
it is issued.
11. In § 679.41:
a. Redesignate paragraph (c)(11) as
paragraph (c)(12);
■ b. Add new paragraph (c)(11);
■ c. Revise paragraphs (d)(1) and (g)(1);
and
■ d. Add paragraphs (g)(9) through (11)
and (n).
The additions and revisions read as
follows:
■
■
§ 679.41
Transfer of quota shares and IFQ.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(11) If the person applying to receive
or transfer QS is an RQE, the following
determinations are required:
(i) The RQE applying to receive or
transfer QS, has submitted the timely
and complete annual report required by
§ 679.5(v);
(ii) The RQE applying to receive QS
is eligible to hold QS on behalf of the
charter halibut sector in IFQ regulatory
area 2C or 3A; and
(iii) The RQE applying to receive QS
has received notification of approval of
eligibility to receive QS on behalf of the
charter halibut sector in IFQ regulatory
area 2C or 3A as described in paragraph
(d)(1) of this section.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) * * *
(1) Application for Eligibility. All
persons applying to receive QS or IFQ
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must submit an Application for
Eligibility to Receive QS/IFQ
(Application for Eligibility) containing
accurate information to the Regional
Administrator. An Application for
Eligibility to Receive QS/IFQ
(Application for Eligibility) is not
required for a CQE if a complete
application to become a CQE, as
described in paragraph (l)(3) of this
section, has been approved by the
Regional Administrator on behalf of an
eligible community. An Application for
Eligibility to Receive QS/IFQ
(Application for Eligibility) is not
required for the RQE if a complete
application to become an RQE, as
described in paragraph (n)(2) of this
section, has been approved by the
Regional Administrator. The Regional
Administrator will not approve a
transfer of IFQ or QS to a person until
the Application for Eligibility for that
person is approved by the Regional
Administrator. The Regional
Administrator will provide an
Application for Eligibility form to any
person on request.
*
*
*
*
*
(g) * * *
(1) Except as provided in paragraph
(f), (g)(2), (l), or (n) of this section, only
persons who are IFQ crew members, or
who were initially issued QS assigned
to vessel categories B, C, or D, and meet
the eligibility requirements in this
section, may receive by transfer QS
assigned to vessel categories B, C, or D,
or the IFQ resulting from it.
*
*
*
*
*
(9) For transfers of QS to an RQE, the
RQE may only receive halibut QS that
is assigned to IFQ regulatory area 2C or
3A.
(10) For transfers of QS from an RQE:
(i) Quota category and block
designations at time of purchase by an
RQE are retained if QS is transferred to
an eligible QS holder for use in the IFQ
program.
(ii) NMFS will not issue any IFQ from
any QS transferred from an RQE to a QS
holder for use in the IFQ program for a
calendar year if that QS resulted in the
issuance of RFQ to an RQE during that
calendar year.
(11)(i) To maintain eligibility as the
RQE authorized by NMFS, the RQE
must be a non-profit entity incorporated
under the laws of the State of Alaska
and recognized as exempt from Federal
income tax by the Internal Revenue
Service as required by paragraph
(n)(1)(ii) of this section.
(ii) If the Regional Administrator
determines the RQE approved by NMFS
does not meet the requirements
specified in paragraph (n)(1) of this
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16:15 Sep 20, 2018
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section, NMFS will notify the RQE of
the Regional Administrator’s
determination and specify that the RQE
has 60 days to meet the requirements in
paragraph (n)(1) of this section to
maintain eligibility as the RQE
authorized by NMFS.
(iii) If the RQE demonstrates to NMFS
within 60 days of notification that it
meets the requirements in paragraph
(n)(1) of this section, NMFS will notify
the RQE that it remains the authorized
RQE.
(iv) If the RQE does not demonstrate
to NMFS within 60 days of notification
that it meets the requirements in
paragraph (n)(1) of this section, NMFS
will issue an initial administrative
determination (IAD):
(A) Revoking authorization of the
RQE;
(B) Disallowing the RQE from
receiving any QS by transfer;
(C) Requiring the CQE to divest of any
QS that it holds; and
(D) Withholding the issuance of RFQ
based on any QS that the RQE holds.
(v) The RQE will have the opportunity
to appeal the IAD through the National
Appeals Office under the provisions
established at 15 CFR part 906.
*
*
*
*
*
(n) Transfer of halibut QS to an
RQE—(1) RQE organizational structure.
(i) The RQE must be a single entity
representing IFQ regulatory Areas 2C
and 3A.
(ii) The RQE must be a non-profit
entity incorporated under the laws of
the State of Alaska and recognized as
exempt from Federal income tax by the
Internal Revenue Service; and
(iii) The RQE must submit an annual
report to NMFS and the Council
detailing RQE activities during the prior
year according to § 679.5(v).
(2) Application for Eligibility. Prior to
initially receiving QS by transfer, a nonprofit entity that intends to participate
in the Halibut IFQ Program and
purchase and hold halibut QS in Area
2C and Area 3A as the RQE must have
approval from the Regional
Administrator. To receive that approval,
the non-profit entity seeking to become
an RQE must submit a complete
‘‘Application for a Non-profit Entity to
be Designated as a Recreational Quota
Entity (RQE)’’ (available on the NMFS
Alaska Region website at https://
alaskafisheries.noaa.gov/). NMFS will
approve only one entity as the RQE. A
complete application to become an RQE
must include:
(i) The articles of incorporation under
the laws of the State of Alaska for that
non-profit entity;
(ii) Acknowledgement from the
Internal Revenue Service that the non-
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Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
profit entity is exempt from Federal
income tax under section 501(a) of the
Internal Revenue Code; and
(iii) Management organization
information, including:
(A) The bylaws of the non-profit
entity;
(B) A list of key personnel of the
managing organization including, but
not limited to, the RQE board of
directors, officers, representatives, and
any managers;
(C) A description of how the nonprofit entity is qualified to manage QS
on behalf of charter fishery participants
and a demonstration that the non-profit
entity has the management, technical
expertise, and ability to manage QS and
RFQ;
(D) The name of the non-profit
organization, taxpayer ID number,
NMFS person number, permanent
business mailing addresses, name of
contact persons and additional contact
information of the managing personnel
for the non-profit entity, resumes of
management personnel, name and
notarized signature of applicant, and
Notary Public signature and date when
commission expires; and
(iv) A statement describing the
procedures that will be used to
determine the acquisition of funds to
purchase QS.
(3) Address for submittal of
application. Regional Administrator,
NMFS, P.O. Box 21668, Juneau, AK
99802.
(4) Approval. NMFS will approve the
first complete application received. If an
application is approved, NMFS will
notify the RQE by mail, unless another
mode of communication is requested on
the application.
(5) Disapproval. If an application is
disapproved, that determination may be
appealed under the provisions
established at 15 CFR part 906.
■ 12. In § 679.42:
■ a. Add paragraph (a)(2)(v);
■ b. Revise paragraph (f)(1) introductory
text; and
■ c. Add paragraphs (f)(8) and (g)(1)(iii).
The additions and revision read as
follows:
§ 679.42
Limitations on use of QS and IFQ.
(a) * * *
(2) * * *
(v) In IFQ regulatory areas 2C and 3A,
RFQ held by an RQE may be harvested
aboard charter vessels as defined at 50
CFR 300.61 of any size, regardless of the
QS category from which that RFQ
originated.
*
*
*
*
*
(f) * * *
(1) Unless the amount in excess of the
following limits was received in the
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initial allocation of halibut QS, no
person other than a CQE representing
the community of Adak, AK,
individually or collectively, or an RQE,
may use more than:
*
*
*
*
*
(8)(i) Annual transfer limits. The RQE
may not receive by transfer more than
594,774 units of Area 2C halibut QS and
more than 2,218,716 units of Area 3A
halibut QS in a year.
(ii) Cumulative use limits. The RQE
may not hold more than 5,947,740 units
of Area 2C halibut QS and more than
22,187,161 units of Area 3A halibut QS.
(iii) Vessel category restrictions. (A)
The RQE may not hold more than
889,548 units of halibut QS in IFQ
regulatory area 2C that is assigned to
vessel category D.
(B) The RQE may not hold halibut QS
in IFQ regulatory area 3A that is
assigned to vessel category D.
(C) The RQE may not hold more than
265,524 units of halibut QS that is
assigned to vessel category B in IFQ
regulatory area 2C.
(g) * * *
(1) * * *
(iii) The RQE may not receive:
(A) Transfers of halibut QS blocks of
less than or equal to 24,250 quota share
units in IFQ regulatory area 2C.
(B) Transfers of halibut QS blocks of
less than or equal to 35,620 quota share
units in IFQ regulatory area 3A.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 13. In § 679.45:
■ a. Revise paragraphs (a)(1), (a)(2)(i)
introductory text, and (a)(2)(i)(A);
■ b. Add paragraphs (a)(2)(i)(B)(3) and
(a)(2)(i)(D); and
■ c. Revise paragraphs (a)(3), (a)(4)(i),
(b)(1), and (f)(2).
The revisions and addition read as
follows:
§ 679.45
IFQ cost recovery program.
daltland on DSKBBV9HB2PROD with RULES
(a) * * *
(1) Responsibility. An IFQ permit
holder is responsible for cost recovery
fees for landings of his or her IFQ
halibut and sablefish, including any
halibut landed as guided angler fish
(GAF), as defined in § 300.61 of this
title, derived from his or her IFQ
accounts. An RQE is responsible for cost
recovery fees for all RFQ issued to the
RQE. An IFQ permit holder or RQE
must comply with the requirements of
this section.
(2) * * *
(i) General. IFQ fee liability means a
cost recovery liability based on either
the value of all landed IFQ and GAF
derived from the permit holder’s IFQ
permit(s), or the value of all RFQ issued
to an RQE.
(A) Each year, the Regional
Administrator will issue each IFQ
permit holder a summary of his or her
IFQ equivalent pounds landed as IFQ
and GAF and will issue an RQE a
summary of its RFQ pounds issued as
part of the IFQ Landing and Estimated
Fee Liability page described at
§ 679.5(l)(7)(ii)(D).
(B) * * *
(3) All RFQ issued to an RQE in IFQ
regulatory area 2C or 3A will be
assessed at the IFQ regulatory area 2C or
3A IFQ standard ex-vessel value.
*
*
*
*
*
(D) An RQE may not challenge the
standard ex-vessel value used to
determine the fee liability for all RFQ
issued to the RQE.
*
*
*
*
*
(3) Fee collection. (i) An IFQ permit
holder with IFQ and/or GAF landings is
responsible for collecting his or her own
fee during the calendar year in which
the IFQ fish and/or GAF are landed.
(ii) An RQE is responsible for
collecting its own fees during the
calendar year in which the RFQ is
issued to the RQE.
(4) * * *
(i) Payment due date. An IFQ permit
holder or RQE must submit its IFQ fee
liability payment(s) to NMFS as
instructed at paragraph (a)(4)(iii) of this
section not later than January 31 of the
year following the calendar year in
47833
which the IFQ or GAF landings were
made or the RFQ was issued to the RQE.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(1) General. (i) An IFQ permit holder
must use either the IFQ actual ex-vessel
value or the IFQ standard ex-vessel
value when determining the IFQ fee
liability based on ex-vessel value,
except that landed GAF are assessed at
the standard ex-vessel values derived by
NMFS. An IFQ permit holder must base
all fee liability calculations on the exvessel value that correlates to landed
IFQ in IFQ equivalent pounds.
(ii) An RQE must use the IFQ
standard ex-vessel value derived by
NMFS for all RFQ issued to the RQE.
*
*
*
*
*
(f) * * *
(2) After the expiration of the 30-day
period, the Regional Administrator will
evaluate any additional documentation
submitted by an IFQ permit holder or
RQE in support of its payment. If the
Regional Administrator determines that
the additional documentation does not
meet the burden of proving the payment
is correct, the Regional Administrator
will send the IFQ permit holder or RQE
an IAD indicating that the IFQ permit
holder or RQE did not meet the burden
of proof to change the IFQ fee liability
as calculated by the Regional
Administrator based upon the IFQ
standard ex-vessel value. The IAD will
set out the facts and indicate the
deficiencies in the documentation
submitted by the IFQ permit holder or
RQE. An IFQ permit holder or RQE who
receives an IAD may appeal the IAD, as
described in paragraph (h) of this
section.
*
*
*
*
*
§ § 679.41 and 679.45
[Amended]
14. In the table below, for each section
indicated in the ‘‘Location’’ column,
remove the title indicated in the
‘‘Remove’’ column from wherever it
appears in the section, and add the title
indicated in the ‘‘Add’’ column:
■
Location
Remove
§ 679.41(l)(3)
introductory
text,
and
(l)(3)(v)(E)(3).
§ 679.41(m)(5)(ii) ................................................
§ 679.45(b)(2) .....................................................
§ 679.45(b)(3)(ii) .................................................
§ 679.45(b)(3)(v) introductory text ......................
50 CFR 679.43 ................................................
15 CFR part 906.
§ 679.43 ............................................................
landed as GAF .................................................
landed GAF ......................................................
aggregated IFQ regulatory area 2C or 3A, to
GAF landings.
15 CFR part 906.
landed as GAF or issued as RFQ.
landed GAF and RFQ issued to an RQE.
aggregated by IFQ regulatory area 2C or 3A,
to GAF landings and RFQ issued to an
RQE.
IFQ, RFQ, and GAF.
include RQE and GAF costs.
as commercial catch, RFQ, or GAF.
IFQ, RFQ, and GAF.
IFQ permit holder or RQE.
IFQ permit holder or RQE.
§ 679.45(d)(2)(i)(A) and (B) ................................
§ 679.45(d)(2)(i)(C) .............................................
§ 679.45(d)(2)(ii) .................................................
§ 679.45(d)(4) .....................................................
§ 679.45(d)(4) .....................................................
§ 679.45(e)(1) introductory text ..........................
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:15 Sep 20, 2018
Jkt 244001
Add
IFQ and GAF ...................................................
include GAF costs ............................................
as commercial catch or as GAF ......................
IFQ and GAF ...................................................
IFQ permit holder .............................................
IFQ permit holder .............................................
PO 00000
Frm 00033
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\21SER1.SGM
21SER1
47834
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 184 / Friday, September 21, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
Location
Remove
Add
§ 679.45(e)(1)(i) and (ii) ......................................
§ 679.45(e)(1)(i) ..................................................
§ 679.45(e)(2) .....................................................
IFQ permit holder .............................................
the IFQ permit holder’s estimated fee liability
IFQ fishing permit held ....................................
§ 679.45(e)(2), (f)(1)(i) and (ii), and (f)(5) ...........
§ 679.45(f)(1) introductory text ...........................
§ 679.45(f)(1) introductory text ...........................
§ 679.45(f)(3) ......................................................
§ 679.45(f)(4) ......................................................
§ 679.45(g) ..........................................................
IFQ permit holder .............................................
IFQ permit holder has ......................................
by the IFQ permit holder ..................................
§ 679.43 ............................................................
the IFQ permit holder .......................................
IFQ permit holder unless the permit holder requests.
IFQ permit holder’s ..........................................
§ 679.43 ............................................................
IFQ permit holder or RQE.
the estimated fee liability.
IFQ fishing permit or RFQ permit account
held.
IFQ permit holder or RQE.
IFQ permit holder or RQE has.
by the IFQ permit holder or RQE.
15 CFR part 906.
the IFQ permit holder or RQE.
IFQ permit holder or RQE unless the IFQ permit holder or RQE requests.
IFQ permit holder’s or RQE’s.
15 CFR part 906.
§ 679.45(g) ..........................................................
§ 679.45(h) ..........................................................
[FR Doc. 2018–20410 Filed 9–20–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
17 CFR Parts 227 and 230
[Release No. 33–10556]
Regulation Crowdfunding and
Regulation A Relief and Assistance for
Victims of Hurricane Florence
Securities and Exchange
Commission.
ACTION: Interim final temporary rule.
AGENCY:
We are adopting interim final
temporary rules for issuers subject to
reporting obligations pursuant to
Regulation Crowdfunding and
Regulation A in order to address the
needs of companies directly or
indirectly affected by Hurricane
Florence. The temporary rules extend
the filing deadlines for specified reports
and forms due pursuant to Regulation
Crowdfunding and Regulation A for
certain issuers.
DATES: These rules are effective from
September 21, 2018, through October
29, 2018.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Jennifer Zepralka, Office Chief, or Amy
Reischauer, Special Counsel, Office of
Small Business Policy, Division of
Corporation Finance, at (202) 551–3460,
U.S. Securities and Exchange
Commission, 100 F Street NE,
Washington, DC 20549–3628.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: We are
adopting amendments to 17 CFR
227.202 (‘‘Rule 202’’) of Regulation
Crowdfunding 1 under the Securities
Act of 1933 (the ‘‘Securities Act’’) 2 and
17 CFR 230.257 (‘‘Rule 257’’) of
Regulation A 3 under the Securities Act
as interim final temporary rules.
daltland on DSKBBV9HB2PROD with RULES
SUMMARY:
1 17
CFR 227 et seq.
U.S.C. 77a et seq.
3 17 CFR 230.251 through 230.263.
17:31 Sep 20, 2018
II. Temporary Relief From Filing
Requirements for Issuers Subject to the
Reporting Obligations of Regulation
Crowdfunding or Regulation A
The lack of communications,
transportation, electricity, facilities, and
available staff and professional advisors
as a result of Hurricane Florence could
hamper the efforts of companies with
reporting obligations to meet their filing
deadlines pursuant to Regulation
Crowdfunding or Regulation A. At the
same time, investors have an interest in
the timely availability of required
information about these companies.
While the Commission believes that the
temporary relief from filing
requirements provided by the
amendments to Rule 202 of Regulation
Crowdfunding 5 and Rule 257 of
U.S.C. 77z–3.
Rule 202(c) of Regulation Crowdfunding. 17
CFR 227.202(c).
Regulation A 6 is both necessary in the
public interest and consistent with the
protection of investors, we remind
companies that are the subject of the
relief provided in these interim final
temporary rules to continue to evaluate
their obligations to make materially
accurate and complete disclosures in
accordance with the anti-fraud
provisions of the federal securities laws.
Accordingly, pursuant to Section 28
of the Securities Act, we are adopting
interim final temporary rules providing
that an issuer subject to the reporting
requirements of either Regulation
Crowdfunding or Regulation A is
exempt from any requirement to file
specified reports or forms with the
Commission where the conditions
below are satisfied:
(a) The issuer is not able to meet a
filing deadline due to Hurricane
Florence or its aftermath;
(b) The issuer files with the
Commission, on or before October 29,
2018, the report or form required to be
filed pursuant to either Regulation
Crowdfunding or Regulation A during
the period from and including
September 14, 2018 to and including
October 26, 2018; and
(c) In any such report or form, the
issuer discloses that it is relying on the
interim final temporary rules and states
the reasons why, in good faith, it could
not file such report or form on a timely
basis.
For Regulation Crowdfunding, the
relief includes annual reports on Form
C–AR, progress updates on Form C–U,
and termination of reporting on Form
C–TR. For Regulation A, the relief
includes post-qualification amendments
required at least every 12 months after
the qualification date to include
updated financial statements, annual
reports on Form 1–K, semi-annual
reports on Form 1–SA, special financial
reports on Forms 1–K or 1–SA, current
4 15
2 15
VerDate Sep<11>2014
I. Introduction
On September 14, 2018, Hurricane
Florence made landfall near the North
Carolina and South Carolina border. The
storm and subsequent flooding have
displaced individuals and businesses
and disrupted communications and
transportation across the affected region.
We are adopting these interim final
temporary rules to address the needs of
companies directly or indirectly affected
by Hurricane Florence or its aftermath
that are subject to reporting obligations
pursuant to Regulation Crowdfunding or
Regulation A.
Section 28 of the Securities Act
provides that the Commission may, by
rule or regulation, ‘‘conditionally or
unconditionally exempt any person,
security, or transaction, or any class or
classes of persons, securities, or
transactions, from any provision or
provisions of this title or of any rule or
regulation issued under this title, to the
extent that such exemption is necessary
or appropriate in the public interest,
and is consistent with the protection of
investors.’’ 4
5 See
Jkt 244001
PO 00000
Frm 00034
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
6 See Rule 257(f) of Regulation A. 17 CFR
230.257(f).
E:\FR\FM\21SER1.SGM
21SER1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 184 (Friday, September 21, 2018)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 47819-47834]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2018-20410]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
15 CFR Part 902
50 CFR Parts 300 and 679
[Docket No. 161222999-8773-02]
RIN 0648-BG57
Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic Zone Off Alaska; Authorize
Recreational Quota Entity To Participate in the Halibut IFQ Program
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: NMFS issues regulations that authorize formation of a
recreational quota entity (RQE) that could participate in the Pacific
Halibut and Sablefish Individual Fishing Quota Program in International
Pacific Halibut Commission Regulatory Areas 2C and 3A in the Gulf of
Alaska. The RQE is authorized to purchase and hold a limited amount of
commercial halibut quota share that will yield additional pounds of
recreational fishing quota on an annual basis to augment the amount of
halibut available for harvest in the charter halibut fishery. The RQE
will provide a mechanism for a compensated reallocation of a portion of
commercial halibut quota share to the charter halibut fishery. This
final rule is necessary to promote social and economic flexibility in
the charter halibut fishery, and is intended to promote the goals and
objectives of the Northern Pacific Halibut Act of 1982, and other
applicable laws.
DATES: This rule is effective on October 22, 2018.
ADDRESSES: Electronic copies of the Regulatory Impact/Initial
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis/Environmental Assessment (collectively,
Analysis) prepared for this action are available from https://www.regulations.gov or from the NMFS Alaska Region website at https://alaskafisheries.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 NMFS, Alaska Region, P.O. Box 21668,
Juneau, AK 99082-1668, Attn: Ellen Sebastian, Records Officer, in
person at NMFS, Alaska Region, 709 West 9th Street, Room 420A, Juneau,
AK; by email to [email protected]; or by fax to 202-395-5806.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Kurt Iverson, 907-586-7228.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This final rule implements regulatory
amendments to authorize an RQE to participate in the Pacific Halibut
and Sablefish Individual Fishing Quota Program (IFQ Program) in
International Pacific Halibut Commission (IPHC) Regulatory Areas 2C and
3A in the Gulf of Alaska. NMFS published the proposed rule to authorize
an RQE on October 3, 2017 (82 FR 46016). The comment period on the
proposed rule ended on November 17, 2017. NMFS received 18 comment
letters on the proposed rule. One of the comment letters was outside
the scope of this action. Of the remaining 17 comment letters, NMFS
identified and considered 19 unique, relevant comments. A summary of
the comments and NMFS' responses is provided in the Comments and
Responses section of this preamble.
A detailed review of this rule and the rationale for these
regulations is provided in the preamble to the proposed rule (82 FR
46016, October 3, 2017). Electronic copies of the proposed rule and the
Analysis may be obtained from www.regulations.gov or from the NMFS
Alaska Region website at https://alaskafisheries.noaa.gov. All public
comment letters submitted during the comment period may be obtained
from www.regulations.gov.
Background
Authority for Action
The IPHC and NMFS manage fishing for Pacific halibut (Hippoglossus
stenolepis) through regulations established under authority of the
Northern Pacific Halibut Act of 1982 (Halibut Act). The IPHC adopts
regulations governing the Pacific halibut (halibut) fishery under the
Convention between the United States and Canada for the Preservation of
the Halibut Fishery of the North Pacific Ocean and Bering Sea
(Convention), signed at Ottawa, Ontario, on March 2, 1953, as amended
by a Protocol Amending the Convention (signed at Washington, DC, on
March 29, 1979). For the United States, regulations developed by the
[[Page 47820]]
IPHC are subject to acceptance by the Secretary of State with
concurrence from the Secretary of Commerce. After acceptance by the
Secretary of State and the Secretary of Commerce, NMFS publishes the
IPHC regulations in the Federal Register as annual management measures
pursuant to 50 CFR 300.62. The interim final rule implementing IPHC
regulations for the 2018 fishing season, including regulations
affecting sport fishing for halibut and vessels in the charter fishery
in IPHC Regulatory Areas 2C (Southeast Alaska) and 3A (Southcentral
Alaska), was published March 20, 2018 (83 FR 12133).
The Halibut Act, at sections 773c(a) and (b), provides the
Secretary of Commerce with general responsibility to carry out the
Convention and the Halibut Act. In adopting regulations that may be
necessary to carry out the purposes and objectives of the Convention
and the Halibut Act, the Secretary of Commerce is directed to consult
with the Secretary of the department in which the U.S. Coast Guard is
operating, which is currently the Department of Homeland Security.
The Halibut Act, at section 773c(c), also provides the North
Pacific Fishery Management Council (Council) with authority to develop
regulations, including limited access regulations, that are in addition
to, and not in conflict with, approved IPHC regulations. Regulations
developed by the Council may be implemented by NMFS only after approval
by the Secretary of Commerce. The Council has exercised this authority
in the development of halibut fishery management measures, codified at
50 CFR 300.65, 300.66, and 300.67. The Council also developed the IFQ
Program for the commercial halibut and sablefish fisheries, codified at
50 CFR part 679. Management of halibut in the IFQ Program is authorized
under the Halibut Act.
Summary Background on Management of the Charter Halibut Fishery
A comprehensive history of management of the guided sport fishery
for halibut (also referred to herein as the ``charter fishery'') was
presented in the proposed rule for this action published October 3,
2017 (82 FR 46016). The proposed rule also provides essential
background of the commercial halibut and sablefish IFQ Program and how
the IFQ Program intersects with management of the charter fishery,
primarily through the Catch Sharing Plan (CSP) that establishes
allocations of halibut harvests between the commercial halibut IFQ and
charter sectors.
The proposed rule describes the history and development of annual
management measures for the charter fishery. The proposed rule also
provides a summary of the development of the Charter Halibut Limited
Access Program (CHLAP) that established Charter Halibut Permits (CHPs),
and provides details on the Guided Angler Fish (GAF) Program, which
authorizes limited annual transfers of commercial halibut IFQ as GAF to
qualified CHP holders. The proposed rule describes the Community Quota
Entity Program (CQE) as well, where eligible communities can form non-
profit corporations to purchase catcher vessel quota shares (QS). The
IFQ resulting from the QS may then be leased to community residents
annually.
As described in the proposed rule and in Section 2.3 of the
Analysis, regulatory areas established by the IPHC are referred to as
``IPHC Regulatory Areas.'' This preamble uses the terms ``Area 2C'' and
``Area 3A'' to refer to IPHC Regulatory Areas 2C and 3A, respectively.
Summary of This Action
This final rule will change halibut fishery management in Areas 2C
(Southeast Alaska) and 3A (Central Gulf of Alaska). It will implement a
regulatory amendment to allow a non-profit RQE to represent the charter
sector in Areas 2C and 3A. Sport fishing for Pacific halibut in Areas
2C and 3A is subject to distinct regulations, depending upon whether
anglers are guided (charter) or unguided. To provide stability in the
charter fishery and to help meet allocation objectives, the Council
adopted and NMFS implemented the CHLAP in January 2010. The CHLAP
limits the total number of charter vessel operators that may
participate in the guided sport fishery in Areas 2C and 3A. To fish for
halibut with charter anglers on board, an operator must have an
original, valid CHP on board.
Since 2014, harvests of charter halibut in Alaska have been subject
to a CSP that allocates harvests between the commercial halibut IFQ
fishery and the charter fishery. To keep the harvests of the charter
fishery within its allocation, regulations are developed annually in a
cooperative effort between the Council, NMFS, and IPHC.
Regulations for charter anglers are generally more restrictive than
regulations for unguided anglers, and have become more stringent as
halibut abundance has dropped and charter catch limits have been
reduced. Charter angling restrictions vary between Areas 2C and 3A.
Typical restrictions include daily and annual limits on the number of
fish retained, fish size limits, and closures on specific days of the
week for charter halibut fishing.
This final rule will allow the RQE to purchase commercial halibut
QS from the commercial halibut sector. The harvest pounds associated
with the QS will yield annual Recreational Fishing Quota that will
supplement the amount of halibut allocated to the charter sector under
the existing CSP. If the RQE obtains enough QS, some or all of the
halibut size and bag limits could be relaxed for charter anglers, up to
a point where charter anglers could potentially retain up to two fish
of any size as a daily bag limit, which is the current daily limit for
unguided halibut anglers.
Quota share obtained by the RQE will be purchased on the open
market, with prices and terms negotiated between the buyer (RQE) and
sellers (commercial halibut QS holders). The regulations allow the RQE
to hold QS indefinitely, and to transfer QS back to the commercial
halibut sector. This preamble uses the term ``RQE Program'' to refer to
the regulations that authorize the RQE and determine its activities and
responsibilities. Additional detail on the specific provisions that
apply to the RQE is provided in the section of this preamble titled
``Provisions of Final Rule.''
Purpose and Need
The preamble to the proposed rule (82 FR 46016, October 3, 2017)
provided a detailed description of the purpose and need for this final
rule. A brief summary is provided here. As stated above, the charter
fishery is limited to harvesting its percentage of the Area 2C or 3A
combined catch limit allocated under the CSP. Charter catch limits
increase or decrease as total halibut abundance increases or decreases.
When halibut abundance is relatively low, as it has been in recent
years compared to abundance in the 1990s and 2000s, the charter
allocations under the CSP are lower, resulting in more restrictive
annual management measures.
The only way that charter operators have been able to provide more
opportunity to charter clients than the established management measures
allow for in their area is through participation in the GAF Program by
individual charter operators. Because of the current restrictions on
charter harvests under the CSP and the limited flexibility for charter
operators to provide additional harvest opportunities to their clients,
charter operators have expressed their desire to find a market-based
mechanism to increase their overall allocation of the halibut resource.
[[Page 47821]]
Based on these concerns, in 2015, the Council initiated the
analytic process to develop a ``market-based mechanism'' to allow a
non-profit entity to purchase and hold a limited amount of commercial
halibut QS on behalf of charter anglers. The intent of the Council was
to provide additional harvest opportunity and less restrictive annual
harvest measures for charter anglers in times of low halibut abundance,
while complying with total halibut removals under the catch limits
established by the IPHC under the CSP. In initiating this effort, the
Council sought to balance the objectives of participants in the charter
fishery without undermining the goals of the IFQ Program or creating
significant adverse impacts to other halibut sectors. A complete
history of the development of this action is described in the proposed
rule (82 FR 46016, October 3, 2017) and Section 2.2 of the Analysis.
Recreational Quota Entity for Area 2C and Area 3A
This final rule allows an RQE to be established as an eligible
entity to purchase halibut QS in Area 2C and Area 3A, with limitations,
for use by the charter fishery as a whole. This final rule designates
the RQE as an eligible participant in the IFQ Program that can purchase
Area 2C and 3A halibut QS for use by all charter halibut anglers in the
respective area. Any halibut QS purchased by the RQE will be held by
this entity for the common use of charter halibut anglers.
Halibut QS held by the RQE will generate annual pounds of
recreational fishing quota (RFQ), a type of annual harvest privilege
similar to IFQ that has special requirements that pertain only to the
RQE. RFQ will be calculated in the same manner as IFQ. Under this final
rule, the specific amount of RFQ (in net pounds) is determined by the
number of QS units held by the RQE as of October 1 of the preceding
calendar year, the total number of halibut QS units issued in Area 2C
or 3A as of January 15 of the year the IFQ or RFQ is issued, and the
total amount of halibut allocated to the commercial IFQ fisheries in
Areas 2C and 3A for that year.
Although the amount of RFQ is calculated in the same way as IFQ, it
is subject to different requirements. The additional pounds of RFQ for
each regulatory area are combined with the charter catch limit
determined under the CSP to calculate an adjusted charter catch limit
for the year for Area 2C or 3A. Annual charter management measures for
Areas 2C and 3A will be analyzed, recommended to the IPHC, and adopted
for implementation based on the estimated adjusted charter catch
limits. RFQ held by the RQE will be available for harvest by all
charter anglers aboard registered charter vessels of any size,
regardless of the QS category from which that RFQ originated. Under
this rule, RFQ may not be transferred as GAF. Unless specified,
regulations that refer only to IFQ permit holders do not apply to the
RQE. Likewise, unless specified in this rule, regulations that refer
only to IFQ do not apply to RFQ.
This final rule does not change the underlying allocations to the
commercial IFQ fishery and charter fishery specified in the CSP, and
does not change the total QS pool. Therefore, the QS holders in the
commercial IFQ fishery who do not transfer QS to the RQE will receive
the same amount of IFQ pounds issued for their QS units, regardless of
the amount of QS transferred to, and held by, the RQE.
Provisions of Final Rule
RQE Organizational Structure
The Council recommended and NMFS implements the requirement that an
RQE must be established as a qualified non[hyphen]profit entity
registered under the laws of the State of Alaska and recognized as
exempt from Federal income tax by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) to
purchase and hold halibut QS for use by the charter fishery. The QS
held by an RQE could yield RFQ annually. This final rule allows a
single non-profit entity to form to represent and manage separate QS
holdings for Areas 2C and 3A. More detailed information on the
structure of the RQE is provided in the preamble to the proposed rule
(82 FR 46016, October 3, 2017) and in Section 4.8.1.1 of the Analysis.
This final rule adds new definitions in Sec. 679.2 for
``recreational fishing quota (RFQ)'' and ``recreational quota entity
(RQE).''
Eligibility
This final rule establishes requirements for the formation of a
single RQE that would be eligible to purchase and hold commercial
halibut QS for use by the guided halibut sector. The RQE must be a
qualified non-profit entity registered under the laws of the State of
Alaska and recognized as exempt from Federal income tax by the IRS. To
qualify as exempt from Federal income tax, an organization must seek
recognition of exemption from Federal income tax under section 501(a)
of the Internal Revenue Code.
To be approved as the entity eligible to purchase and hold halibut
QS, the applicant wishing to become the RQE is required to demonstrate
it is a non-profit entity registered under the laws of the State of
Alaska by submitting to NMFS the articles of incorporation and
management organization information, including bylaws and a list of key
personnel including, but not limited to, the board of directors,
officers, representatives, and managers.
Articles of incorporation are public documents that must be filed
with the state agency where the corporation becomes incorporated (e.g.,
with Alaska's Division of Corporations, Business, and Professional
Licensing). The RQE must be incorporated within the State of Alaska
consistent with incorporation requirements applicable to CQEs.
In addition to demonstrating it is a non-profit corporation
recognized by the State of Alaska, the applicant wishing to become the
RQE is required to demonstrate it has been granted an exemption from
Federal income tax by the IRS by submitting to NMFS the IRS
acknowledgement of the entity's Federal tax exemption.
NMFS requires the approved RQE to maintain its non-profit and tax-
exempt status, as described above. If the approved RQE entity does not
meet this requirement, NMFS will not issue the RFQ that would otherwise
be issued to the RQE based on its QS holdings. In addition, NMFS will
provide the approved RQE entity with an opportunity to reinstate its
non-profit and/or tax-exempt status. If the approved RQE entity does
not demonstrate to NMFS that it is a qualified non[hyphen]profit entity
registered under the laws of the State of Alaska and recognized as
exempt from Federal income tax by the IRS by the established deadline,
NMFS will issue an Initial Administrative Determination (IAD) to revoke
the entity's status as the approved RQE and to require the entity to
divest its QS holdings. The entity has the opportunity to appeal the
IAD through the National Appeals Office under the provisions
established at 15 CFR part 906. The applicant must complete the
``Application for a Non-profit Corporation to be Designated as a
Recreational Quota Entity (RQE)'' and submit it to NMFS Alaska Region
for review and approval. The application form will be available on the
NMFS Alaska Region website at https://alaskafisheries.noaa.gov after
the effective date of this rule. NMFS will approve the first complete
RQE application it receives. All other RQE applications will be
disapproved. NMFS will notify the RQE when its application has been
approved. Once approved,
[[Page 47822]]
NMFS will establish an account for QS and RFQ holdings when the RQE
acquires QS. If NMFS disapproves an application, that determination may
be appealed to the NMFS National Appeals Office under the provisions
established at 15 CFR part 906. Detailed information on RQE eligibility
is provided in the preamble to the proposed rule (82 FR 46016, October
3, 2017) and in Section 4.8 of the Analysis.
This rule adds a new paragraph to Sec. 679.41(n) to describe the
application process and eligibility requirements for a prospective RQE.
Restrictions on Transfers
This final rule authorizes two-way transfers of QS. QS acquired by
the RQE may be transferred to an otherwise eligible participant in the
commercial IFQ fishery. Because QS and the resulting IFQ used in the
commercial IFQ fishery is subject to vessel categories and block
designations on initially-issued QS--unlike the QS and resulting RFQ
used by the RQE, which is exempt from such categories and
designations--NMFS will track QS units, IFQ pounds, and vessel category
and block designations that apply to ensure that original categories
and designations for the commercial IFQ fishery are maintained during
the transfer process. Detailed information on transfers of QS between
the commercial and charter fishery is provided in the preamble to the
proposed rule (82 FR 46016, October 3, 2017) and in Section 4.8 of the
Analysis.
NMFS modifies Sec. 679.42 to describe the QS transfer process for
RQEs.
Annual Limit on Transfers to an RQE
This final rule establishes area-specific annual limits on the
amount of halibut QS that can transfer to an RQE. Under this final
rule, the RQE may transfer up to the equivalent of 1 percent of the
commercial QS units in Area 2C based on the 2015 pool of all QS
categories (59,477,396 units). An annual transfer limit was set
equivalent to 1.2 percent of the commercial QS pool in Area 3A based on
the 2015 pool of all QS categories (184,893,008 units). For a more
detailed description of the rationale for this provision, please see
the preamble of the proposed rule (82 FR 46016, October 3, 2017).
Annual transfer limits are discussed in further detail in Section
4.8.1.2.2 of the Analysis.
NMFS adds a new paragraph at Sec. 679.42(f)(8) to implement the
annual transfer limits on QS for RQEs.
Limit on Total QS Holdings by the RQE
This final rule places limits on the total amount of halibut QS
that may be held by the RQE. For Area 2C, the RQE can hold up to 10
percent of the 2015 commercial QS pool. This proportion is calculated
based on the entire QS pool, including categories and blocks of QS
units that the RQE is prohibited from purchasing (discussed in the next
sections of this preamble). Ten percent of the 2015 commercial QS pool
in Area 2C equates to 5,947,740 QS units.
This final rule limits QS holdings for Area 3A to 12 percent of the
2015 entire commercial QS pool, including categories and blocks of QS
units that the RQE is prohibited from purchasing. Twelve percent of the
2015 commercial QS pool in Area 3A equates to 22,187,161 units.
As described in the proposed rule (82 FR 46016, October 3, 2017),
this final rule specifies the limits on total QS holdings by the RQE in
regulations so that they are clearly defined for fishery participants
and will not fluctuate if there are future changes in the Area 2C or 3A
QS pools. The limits on RQE holdings of QS are discussed in further
detail in Section 4.8.1.2.3 of the Analysis.
NMFS adds a new paragraph at Sec. 679.42(f)(8) to describe the QS
holding limits for the RQE.
Limit on GAF Transfers as RQE Holdings Increase
Part of this RQE Program limits the total amount of GAF that may be
used annually by CHP holders. The GAF transfer restrictions are adopted
so that in any year, the combined amount of RFQ and GAF transferred to
CHP holders cannot exceed a poundage equal to the maximum amount of
pounds that could be issued as RFQ in Area 2C or 3A. The limit on GAF
transfers as RQE QS holdings increase is discussed in further detail in
Section 4.8.1.2.4 of the Analysis.
To implement these restrictions on IFQ transfers to GAF, NMFS adds
a new paragraph at Sec. 300.65(c)(5)(ii)(D)(1)(iv).
Vessel Category Restrictions
This rule also places limits on the amounts of QS the RQE could
hold by vessel category. In Area 2C, the RQE is limited to holding an
amount equal to 10 percent of D-category QS and an amount equal to 10
percent of B-category QS, based on the Area 2C 2015 QS pools.
Translated to QS units, this rule prohibits the RQE from holding more
than 889,548 units of D-category QS, and more than 265,524 units of B-
category QS, in Area 2C (see Table 4-40 of the Analysis). In Area 3A,
the RQE is prohibited from purchasing or holding D-category QS. The RQE
may purchase any amount, up to the annual transfer and cumulative use
limits of A-, B-, and C-category QS in Area 3A. The vessel category
restrictions are discussed in more detail in Section 4.8.1.2.5 of the
Analysis.
NMFS adds a new paragraph at Sec. 679.42(f)(8) describing RQE use
limits for specific vessel categories of QS.
Block Restrictions
In addition to vessel category restrictions for RQE purchases of
QS, this final rule places limits on the size of QS blocks that the RQE
may purchase. The RQE is prohibited from purchasing (i.e., receiving by
transfer) blocks of QS by category that equate to 1,500 pounds or less
(based on 2015 pounds). For Area 2C, this means that the RQE cannot
purchase blocked QS of 24,250 units or less. For Area 3A, the RQE is
prohibited from purchasing blocked QS of 35,620 units or less. Block
restrictions are discussed in more detail in Section 4.8.1.3 of the
Analysis.
NMFS adds a new paragraph at Sec. 679.42(g)(1)(iii) to establish
restrictions on the type and amount of blocked QS that the RQE can hold
and receive by transfer.
Revisions for the Calculation of the Charter Catch Limit and
Establishment of Annual Management Measures
This final rule also modifies several regulations to facilitate the
proper accounting of RFQ. This section describes the process that will
be used annually to calculate the amount of RFQ and establish annual
management measures.
On October 1 of each year, the RQE's QS holdings will be used as
the basis for estimating the number of RFQ pounds to add to the charter
allocation under the CSP for the following calendar year. This
estimated combined allocation will be used to recommend the charter
fishery management measures for the following year. The process and
timeline for setting annual management measures remains unchanged. Once
the IPHC annual management measures are approved, typically in late
February or early March, NMFS will issue pounds of RFQ to the RQE based
on the number of QS units held by the RQE on October 1 of the previous
year. This RFQ will augment the charter catch limit established under
the CSP. The regulations establish October 1 as the date for
determining how many QS units will yield RFQ so that the Council's
Charter Committee and the Council is able to estimate the pounds
[[Page 47823]]
of RFQ that the RQE receives in the following year. The Charter
Committee will then be able to factor that amount into its
recommendations for the following year's charter management measures.
The RFQ will not be issued to the RQE in the upcoming fishing year
for any QS that the RQE received by transfer after October 1. If the
RQE transfers QS that it holds on October 1 to a recipient in the
commercial IFQ fishery after that date, NMFS will not issue IFQ to the
commercial recipient for that QS in the following calendar year. This
approach is similar to the method used in the commercial fishery to
allow the transfer of QS but not the IFQ once that IFQ has been used.
In this case, NMFS considers that RFQ is effectively ``used'' if it is
assigned to the charter allocation for the following calendar year. If
the RQE receives QS by transfer after October 1, that QS will not
result in the issuance of RFQ for the following calendar year. However,
if the RQE subsequently transfers any QS received by transfer after
October 1 that did not result in RFQ back to the commercial IFQ
fishery, NMFS will issue IFQ to the commercial recipient for that QS.
In late November of each year, NMFS will estimate the pounds of RFQ
that will be available to the RQE in the upcoming year, based on the QS
units held by the RQE on October 1, the QS:IFQ ratio of the current
year, and the IPHC's preliminary estimate of the possible combined
catch limits in Areas 2C and 3A.
In December of each year, the Council will recommend a range of
potential charter management measures for Areas 2C and 3A that are
expected to limit charter harvests in an area to the estimated charter
catch limit, plus the estimated supplemental pounds provided by the
RFQ.
In this final rule, NMFS is revising Sec. 679.40(c)(2) to clarify
that NMFS will use the QS pool for the IFQ regulatory area, including
Areas 2C and 3A, on record with the NMFS Alaska Region, on January 15
of that year for the purpose of calculating the amount of IFQ and RFQ
for that regulatory area for that year. The revision to move the date
of record from January 31 to January 15 of each year ensures that IPHC
will be able to determine the amount of IFQ and RFQ and that the total
allocations are assigned to the respective commercial IFQ and charter
fisheries when it adopts annual management measures at its annual
meeting in late January.
NMFS is also revising Sec. 300.65(c) to authorize the use of RFQ
in the charter fishery, and to describe how and when QS holdings by the
RQE are calculated and added to the charter catch limit under the CSP.
Redistribution of Excess RFQ
This final rule establishes a temporary redistribution of RFQ from
the RQE to the commercial IFQ fishery if the RQE holdings of QS provide
a charter harvest opportunity greater than the unguided recreational
management measures in either Area 2C or 3A. Under this final rule,
NMFS will not issue annual RFQ in excess of the adjusted charter catch
limit needed for charter anglers to obtain the unguided recreational
management measures for that area. For more information on the charter
catch limit, see the preamble of the proposed rule (82 FR 46016,
October 3, 2017).
The Council and the Analysis use the term ``reallocate'' to
describe the temporary (1-year) redistribution of excess RFQ to the
commercial IFQ fishery. NMFS notes that the term reallocate is often
used in other regulations to describe a permanent transfer of harvest
privileges from one group of participants to another. NMFS uses the
term ``redistribute'' in this rule to clarify for fishery participants
and the public that the distribution of excess RFQ to commercial IFQ
fishery participants is in effect for one year, and is not a permanent
reallocation.
This rule implements the following process for the temporary
redistribution of RFQ (as IFQ) to the commercial IFQ fishery, in the
event that the RQE has QS holdings in excess of the amount needed to
provide charter anglers with harvest opportunities equal to those for
unguided recreational anglers. Each January, the IPHC will recommend
charter fishery management measures for Areas 2C and 3A that are
expected to limit charter harvest to the adjusted charter catch limit
for each area (the sum of the annual guided sport catch limit under the
CSP and the estimated amount of RFQ from the RQE's QS holdings on
October 1 of the previous year).
After the IPHC recommends charter fishery management measures, NMFS
will determine if a redistribution of excess RFQ is necessary. If the
IPHC has adopted charter fishery management measures that are
equivalent to the unguided recreational management measures in either
Area 2C or 3A (e.g., a daily bag limit of two halibut of any size),
NMFS will determine the amount of RFQ that are needed to account for
charter harvest in Area 2C and Area 3A under the recommended management
measures and issue that amount as RFQ to supplement the charter fishery
allocation under the CSP. The difference between the total amount of
available RFQ and the amount needed for the charter fishery is excess
RFQ. NMFS will redistribute the amount of excess RFQ using the process
recommended by the Council.
Under this final rule, 50 percent of any RFQ in excess of the
amount needed to achieve the unguided recreational management measures
in either Area 2C or 3A is redistributed as IFQ to all catcher vessel
QS holders in the applicable area (Area 2C or Area 3A) who held not
more than 32,333 QS units in Area 2C, and 47,469 QS units in Area 3A
(i.e., the amount of QS that yielded 2,000 pounds of IFQ in 2015) in
the year prior to the redistribution, and who also held that QS
eligible for redistribution during the year that the redistribution
occurs. This 50 percent is redistributed among qualified QS holders in
proportion to their QS holdings.
The Council's recommendation stated that 50 percent of excess RFQ
should be redistributed ``equally'' to all qualified QS holders. NMFS
will implement this provision by dividing the amount of IFQ available
for redistribution to qualified QS holders by the total amount of QS
units held by all qualified QS holders. For example, if there were
50,000 pounds of excess RFQ to be redistributed as IFQ in Area 3A in
calendar year 2025 among QS holders who held not more than 47,469 QS
units in the year prior to the redistribution (2024), and in the year
during which the redistribution occurs (2025), and the total sum of all
QS held by those qualified QS holders is 500,000 units, then each of
the qualified QS holders would receive an additional 1/10 of a pound of
IFQ in 2025 for each QS unit they hold. NMFS does not issue IFQ in less
than one pound increments; therefore, NMFS will round the amount of
redistributed IFQ to the nearest pound for each qualified QS holder.
Section 4.8.1.3 of the Analysis provides additional information on the
method NMFS will use to redistribute excess RFQ.
This final rule requires the QS holder to hold the QS in the year
prior to the redistribution to meet the clear intent of the Council, as
well as in the year that the redistribution occurs in order to ensure
the proper administration of this provision. This requirement ensures
that IFQ is issued to persons who hold the underlying QS eligible to
receive the redistribution.
Under this final rule, the remaining 50 percent of RFQ in excess of
the amount needed to achieve the unguided sport management measures in
either Area 2C or 3A will be redistributed equally among all CQEs that
held
[[Page 47824]]
halibut QS in the applicable area (Area 2C or Area 3A) in the year
prior to the redistribution as well as in the year that the
redistribution occurs. If no CQE holds QS in the applicable area (Area
2C or Area 3A) in the preceding year and in the year that the
redistribution occurs, this 50 percent of the excess RFQ will not be
redistributed in that area. In other words, the excess RFQ will be
unfished or ``left in the water'' for conservation.
Section 4.8.1.3 of the Analysis describes the options considered by
the Council and NMFS in developing this portion of this final rule.
NMFS adds regulations under Sec. 679.40(c) to describe how excess
RFQ will be redistributed.
Cost Recovery Fees
The Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act
(Magnuson-Stevens Act) at section 304(d)(2)(A) requires that cost
recovery fees be collected for the costs directly related to the
management, data collection, and enforcement of any limited access
privilege programs. This includes programs such as the commercial
halibut IFQ Program, under which a dedicated allocation is provided to
IFQ permit holders. Fees owed are a percentage, not to exceed 3
percent, of the ex-vessel value of fish landed and debited from IFQ
permits. Each year, NMFS sends fee statements to IFQ holders whose
annual IFQ was landed; those holders must remit fees by January 31 of
the following year. Under this rule, the RQE is responsible for all
cost recovery fees on their annual RFQ.
In years when the RQE holds QS and the RFQ is issued to augment the
charter fishery's catch limit, the charter fishery will be effectively
using all of this RFQ; therefore, the RQE will be required to pay cost
recovery fees on all of its RFQ. Since all annual RFQ issued to the RQE
will be considered ``used,'' NMFS will levy the fee calculated for the
RQE's annual RFQ pounds that are issued, rather than estimating RFQ
harvest at each point of charter landings. The fee will be calculated
using the standard price calculated for Area 2C or 3A and the RFQ held
by the RQE. This is similar to the method used to apply an ex-vessel
value for GAF. The IFQ cost recovery fee will be levied on the RQE each
year the RQE holds QS, and the resulting RFQ is issued to augment the
catch limit in the charter fishery. All holdings acquired by the RQE on
October 1 of the prior year are subject to the IFQ cost recovery fee.
For purposes of cost recovery, the RQE is required to pay fees on
all resulting pounds of RFQ, even if the charter fishery's harvest is
under its catch limit in Area 2C or 3A for that year. In December of
each year, NMFS will (1) determine the standard prices and the cost
recovery fee percentage, (2) announce the standard prices and the cost
recovery fee percentage in the Federal Register, and (3) issue the RQE
a fee assessment. The RFQ fee assessment will be based on the number of
RFQ pounds added to either the Area 2C or 3A charter catch limit based
on QS holdings as of October 1 of the prior year multiplied by the
standard price for Area 2C or Area 3A, and multiplied by the cost
recovery fee percentage (approximately 3 percent in recent years). The
cost recovery fee payment from the RQE to NMFS is due by January 31 of
each year.
Additional information about assessing cost recovery fees for an
RQE is provided in Section 4.8.1.4.1 of the Analysis.
NMFS is revising regulations throughout Sec. 679.45 to incorporate
the RQE into the IFQ Program cost recovery fee estimation and
collection process.
General Reporting
Because all RFQ is considered landed or used by the RQE in the year
for which it is issued and the standard prices are applied to pounds of
RFQ, the RQE is not required to complete the recordkeeping and
reporting requirements described for the IFQ Program at Sec. 679.5(1).
The RQE is exempt from submitting the IFQ Prior Notice of Landing,
Product Transfer, IFQ Landing, IFQ Transshipment Authorization, and IFQ
Departure reports.
Annual Report
This final rule requires the RQE to file an annual report with the
Council by January 31 of each year that details the administrative
activities and business operations of the RQE during the prior year for
each year that it holds commercial QS. Although not specifically
requested by the Council, the annual report also must be submitted to
NMFS for reasons described below.
The RQE is required to include the following general information in
its annual report: (1) Any changes to the bylaws, board of directors,
or other key management personnel of the RQE during the preceding year;
(2) amounts and descriptions of annual administrative expenses; (3)
amounts and descriptions of funds spent on conservation, research, and
promotion of the halibut resource and a summary of the results; and (4)
amounts and descriptions of all other expenses. Additionally, the RQE
is required to submit the following information by regulatory area: (1)
The total amount of halibut QS by vessel category and block held by the
RQE at the start of the calendar year, on October 1, and at the end of
the calendar year; (2) a list of all transfers (purchases, sales, and
any other transfers) of halibut QS, including transaction prices if
applicable; and (3) the number of CHPs and associated angler
endorsements purchased and held by the RQE.
Section 679.41(c)(10)(ii) requires a CQE to submit a timely and
complete annual report to NMFS before a transfer of QS will be approved
or IFQ will be issued. A similar requirement for the RQE annual report
is added at new paragraph Sec. 679.41(c)(11)(i). If the RQE held QS in
the previous year and has not submitted a timely and complete annual
report by the January 31 deadline, NMFS will not approve a transfer of
QS or issue RFQ until the report is submitted. To confirm receipt of
the report, this rule requires that the RQE submit the annual report to
both the Council and NMFS.
NMFS is adding Sec. Sec. 679.5(v) and 679.41(c)(11)(i) to include
the RQE annual report requirements.
Other Regulatory Changes
NMFS revises the IFQ regulations at 50 CFR part 679 that refer to
``an IFQ permit holder'' to also include the term ``RQE'' where
applicable.
NMFS revises regulations at 50 CFR part 679 that refer to the IFQ
permit that also pertain to the RQE to include the term ``RFQ permit
account.'' NMFS revised this language because the RQE will not be
issued an IFQ fishing permit. Instead, NMFS will establish an RFQ
permit account for the RQE that will be used to administer RFQ as
described in this rule.
NMFS revises regulations at 50 CFR part 679 that refer to IFQ to
include the term ``RFQ'' when the regulations refer to IFQ and RFQ.
The locations of these minor changes are shown in the table in the
regulatory text at the end of this rule.
Appeals
This rule changes several references within Sec. Sec. 679.41 and
679.45 that describe the former procedure for appealing an IAD to the
NMFS Alaska Office of Administrative Appeals. Those procedures are
described at Sec. 679.43. NMFS has centralized the appeals process in
the National Appeals Office, which operates out of NMFS' headquarters
in Silver Spring, MD. The National Appeals Office is now charged with
processing appeals that were filed
[[Page 47825]]
with the Office of Administrative Appeals, Alaska Region. The procedure
for appealing an IAD through the National Appeals Office is at 15 CFR
part 906 (79 FR 7056, February 6, 2014). This rule updates the
regulations referring to appeals procedures for the IFQ Program to
refer to 15 CFR part 906 instead of to 50 CFR 679.43.
Changes From Proposed to Final Rule
NMFS made the following changes to the final rule from the proposed
rule:
Section 679.7(f)(3)(i)(C) confirms that fixed gear may not
be used to retain RFQ halibut. The regulatory language is changed to
conform with wording used in similar regulations in this sub-section.
The phrase ``as defined in Sec. 679.2'' is removed as a reference to
fixed gear, and to add clarity, ``halibut RFQ'' is replaced with ``RFQ
halibut''.
The proposed regulatory text at Sec. 679.41(g)(11)(ii),
(iii), and (iv) is changed to clarify that the regulatory references
for RQE eligibility in these three paragraphs refer to all the
paragraphs and requirements that fall under (n)(1) of that section.
The proposed regulatory text at Sec. 679.42(g)(1)(iii) is
changed to more clearly reflect the Council's intent that the RQE is
prohibited from receiving halibut QS blocks of 1,500 pounds or less in
Areas 2C and 3A, based on 2015 pounds. The phrase ``is limited to
receiving'' was replaced with ``may not receive;''
Section 679.45(f)(4) is changed to clarify that the
paragraph applies to IFQ permit holders and to the RQE. The phrase
``the IFQ permit holder'' is replaced with ``the IFQ permit holder or
RQE.''
Comments and Responses
NMFS received 18 comment letters on the proposed rule. One of the
comment letters was outside the scope of this action. Of the remaining
17 comment letters, NMFS identified and considered 19 unique, relevant
comments, which are summarized and responded to below. The commenters
consisted of individuals, representatives of the charter sector, and
representatives of the commercial fishing sector.
Comment 1: Several commenters expressed support for the RQE Program
and noted it would bring stability to the charter fishery and create
long-term efficiency by allowing transfers of QS between commercial QS
holders and the charter fishery and will help lessen restrictive
harvest measures for guided anglers whose fishing opportunities are
closely linked to the economics of the charter fishery.
Response: NMFS acknowledges the comment.
Comment 2: We support restricting the maximum number of shares
transferred annually. We support fixing October 1 QS holdings as the
basis for estimating the number of IFQ pounds for the following fishing
year. We support NMFS assessing cost recovery fees for RFQ holdings.
Response: NMFS acknowledges the comment, and notes that the
provisions the commenter supports are contained in this final rule.
Comment 3: Charter fishing is a main source of income for some
Alaskans. Allowing charter catch limits to increase would bring fishing
back to the sport fishing industry.
Response: The principal objective of this final rule is to promote
social and economic flexibility in the charter fishery by authorizing
the development of an entity that is eligible to purchase and hold
commercial halibut QS in Areas 2C and 3A, thereby providing additional
harvest opportunities to charter anglers. This final rule is therefore
intended to promote long-term efficiency in the use of the halibut
resource by allowing transfers of QS between commercial QS holders and
the charter fishery, through an RQE, under a ``willing buyer and
willing seller'' approach.
Comment 4: The RQE should remain as a non-profit organization and
as a single entity. As a single entity, it should not be limited on how
much QS it should be able to obtain. The charter fishery should
maintain the daily catch limit of two fish per day with no size
restrictions. There should be a cap on the number of charter boats.
Response: This final rule establishes the RQE as a single, non-
profit entity to represent and manage the separate QS holdings for Area
2C and Area 3A. The Council recommended, and NMFS has adopted,
regulations that limit the amount of QS that the RQE can purchase and
use. These regulations are adopted primarily to mitigate the
potentially disruptive impacts on the QS market with the entry of the
RQE, and to take into account the importance of commercial halibut IFQ
on fishing communities.
The current CHLAP program caps the number of charter operations in
Areas 2C and 3A. Upon implementation of this final rule, three primary
factors will determine whether charter anglers will be able to retain
two fish per day of any size: (1) The abundance of halibut and the
resulting catch limits established by IPHC and allocated under the CSP;
(2) the number of anglers and the size of halibut that are projected to
be retained from charter boats; and (3) the amount of QS that the RQE
purchases and holds on October 1 of each year, and is made available to
augment the charter allocation.
Comment 5: The 11 vessels that NMFS considered large entities
should give the RQE 2 percent of their quota.
Response: The Council did not recommend and this final rule does
not implement regulations to reallocate QS from specific QS holders to
the RQE. The commenter's recommendation is outside of the scope of this
action. The commenter notes that some of the QS holders are considered
to be large entities. We assume that the commenter is referring to
information provided in the initial regulatory flexibility analysis
prepared in the proposed rule (82 FR 46016, October 3, 2017). In that
analysis, NMFS estimates that the owners of 11 vessels that harvest
halibut IFQ would be considered large entities because they showed
revenues that exceeded a specific threshold in the most recent year for
which we have records (2014). Additional information on the revenues of
vessels active in the halibut IFQ fishery is provided in Section 5.6 of
the Analysis.
Comment 6: National Standard Guidelines that interpret specific
provisions of the Magnuson-Stevens Act state that fishery management
plans should prevent overfishing and consider the value of fishery
resources to fishing communities.
Response: NMFS notes that the National Standard Guidelines cited by
the commenter do not apply to the halibut fishery because it is managed
under the authority of the Halibut Act as described in the section of
this preamble titled ``Authority for Action,'' and not the Magnuson-
Stevens Act. As described in the proposed rule (82 FR 46016, October 3,
2017), creation of an RQE Program does not change conservation or
management of the halibut resource in Areas 2C and 3A. The Analysis at
Section 4.8.2 describes how the Council and NMFS considered the value
of fishery resources to fishing communities. This action does not
change the current process for establishing annual catch limits or the
management measures that have been established to meet specific social
and economic goals for the halibut IFQ fishery or the RQE Program.
Comment 7: Halibut harvested by the commercial sector are weighed
at the point of sale. It would be impossible to determine the pounds of
halibut harvested by the charter fleet.
Response: NMFS disagrees. The pounds of halibut harvested by the
charter fleet are accounted for by the
[[Page 47826]]
Alaska Department of Fish and Game logbook program, which is a
requirement for all guided angler operations in Alaska. All halibut
caught and retained by charter anglers are required to be measured in a
standardized fashion. From these measurements, IPHC length-weight
conversion tables are used to establish the pounds of halibut harvested
by the charter fleet. The logbook program provides the basis for
determining the charter sector's harvests under the CSP and is used to
develop annual management measures for guided anglers in IPHC Areas 2C
and 3A. This method of catch accounting will not change when the RQE
acquires halibut QS and the associated pounds of halibut from that QS
is added to the charter sector allocation under the CSP.
Comment 8: The last twenty years have led to overfishing and
halibut are small.
Response: According to the most recent stock assessment by IPHC,
Pacific halibut are not considered to be subject to overfishing (see
https://iphc.int). The stock assessment prepared by the IPHC indicates
that halibut stocks in Areas 2C and 3A have declined over the last
decade, and that over that period the average size-at-age of adult
halibut has become smaller. However, the extent of the decline varies
by geographic area, and the reasons behind it cannot be fully explained
solely by commercial or charter fishing removals. NMFS also notes that
this rule does not increase the combined halibut commercial and charter
catch limits adopted by IPHC and implemented by NMFS.
Comment 9: We oppose passage of the RQE Program. The charter sector
does not share in the burden of conservation. In times of low
abundance, all sectors should share in conserving resources. Stocks are
beginning to rebuild after a long decline, and the RQE compromises
years of rebuilding.
Response: NMFS disagrees. As described in the preamble to the
proposed rule (82 FR 46016, October 3, 2017), under the CSP both the
commercial and charter sectors share the burden of conservation by
having reduced catch limits in times of low abundance. The RQE Program
allows, but does not require, persons in the commercial sector to
choose to transfer their QS to the RQE; however, irrespective of those
transfers, each sector will continue to be constrained by the combined
catch limits established by the IPHC. This final rule also implements
regulations that allow the transfer of QS back to the commercial sector
from the RQE.
Comment 10: Neither the Council nor NMFS have defined the ``need''
for an RQE. Demand for charter services has remained relatively
constant in Areas 2C and 3A despite changes to guided angler bag
limits.
Response: In December 2014, the Council developed a purpose and
need statement that can be found in Section 2.1 of the Analysis.
Restrictions have increased for the guided angler sport sector.
Allowing an RQE to hold a limited amount of commercial halibut QS on
behalf of guided recreational halibut anglers under a ``willing seller
and willing buyer'' approach may result in less restrictive annual
harvest measures for guided recreational anglers in times of low
halibut abundance, while complying with total halibut removals under
the guided halibut catch limits determined by the IPHC.
Comment 11: The RQE will further erode the owner-operated nature of
the halibut fleet, undermining goals and principles of the halibut
quota share program. The price of halibut quota is already a
significant barrier to entry for young fishermen. The RQE creates an
unbalanced advantage for the charter fleet to compete for halibut quota
in an already fully-utilized fishery.
Response: The Council considered its goals of an owner-operated
fleet in the halibut IFQ Program when it developed its recommendation
to authorize the RQE. This information, combined with public testimony,
factored into the Council's recommendation and NMFS' regulations that
place constraints on QS purchases by the RQE. Specifically, the Council
recommended and this final rule implements provisions that limit RQEs
from purchasing more than a specific amount of QS on an annual basis
and in total. This final rule also limits the RQE from purchasing
specific categories of QS that are typically purchased by new entrants
to the halibut IFQ fishery. The preamble to the proposed rule and
Section 4.8.1.2 of the Analysis provides additional information on QS
transfer provisions and restrictions implemented by this final rule and
how these provisions balance the interests of owner-operators, new
entrants, and the charter fishery.
Comment 12: Allowing additional halibut quota to be reallocated to
the charter fleet exacerbates local depletion. The charter fleet
competes directly with the non-charter resident sport anglers, and this
proposal allows the charter sector to harvest most of the halibut near
towns. It would be very difficult for a resident Alaskan angler fishing
out of a small boat to catch halibut.
Response: This final rule will not result in an increase in the
total amount of halibut that may be harvested, and NMFS does not have
information to suggest that the transfer of QS from commercial
operators to the RQE will necessarily change harvesting locations or
patterns. The location of charter fishing and commercial harvests
varies widely. In areas where there is a significant overlap in both
charter and commercial fishing operations, the localized effects from
this action are expected to be minimal as fishing pressure shifts from
the commercial sector to the charter section in the same area. Local
resource abundance may be a factor in harvest rates, but its influence
is intertwined with other significant influences, such as stock
abundance, angler demand, and other factors.
Comment 13: Scheduled Council actions to establish an annual CHP
renewal process, to stop the transfer of non-transferable CHPs, and
address latency capacity in the charter sector will address the charter
sector's perceived need for an RQE.
Response: The commenter refers to several actions that are
currently under consideration by the Council. The potential effects of
these management measures have not been fully analyzed, and the Council
has not recommended these actions for implementation. At this time,
NMFS does not have the information available to conclusively determine
whether these actions under consideration would provide benefits to the
charter fishery consistent with this final rule.
Comment 14: Annual limits on RQE QS purchases are essential as are
limits on RQE purchases of category D and (in Area 2C) B class quota,
and the limit on the size of QS blocks the RQE may purchase. Unused QS
should be returned to the commercial sector each season.
Response: This final rule implements all the measures noted in the
comment, and described in the proposed rule, that constrain the
quantity and type of QS purchases that can be made by the RQE. Although
these restrictions may impact the efficacy of the RQE Program, they are
implemented primarily to mitigate the effects of the RQE upon QS
markets, to prevent an accumulation of excessive shares by the RQE, and
to take into consideration the importance of the commercial halibut
fishery on fishing-dependent communities. The preamble to the proposed
rule described the limitations on the use of QS that apply to RQEs (82
FR 46016, October 3, 2017).
Comment 15: This RQE action does not identify a mechanism for
funding the RQE, and an RQE CHP acquisition limit is omitted. We
recommend that
[[Page 47827]]
RQE CHP limits be at least 10 times higher than individual CHP limits.
Response: This final rule does not prescribe the means by which
persons or entities finance their purchases of QS. The Council and NMFS
did not identify a management need for the RQE to identify the methods
that may be used to purchase QS prior to NMFS considering approving the
transfer of QS to the RQE. This final rule does implement annual
reporting requirements by the RQE to the Council and NMFS as described
in the section of this preamble titled ``Provisions of Final Rule.''
Among other things, the report requires that each year the RQE detail
all QS transactions, including the amount paid for QS, and also for the
activities and expenses of the RQE.
The Council did not specify, and this final rule does not provide,
limits on the acquisition of CHPs by the RQE; therefore, the RQE will
be subject to regulations that apply to any other person, as defined at
Sec. 300.61, for purposes of purchasing and holding CHPs. Section
300.67(j) states that a person may not own, hold, or control more than
five transferable CHPs in both regulatory areas combined, with limited
exceptions. This provision applies to the RQE. Any purchases or sales
of CHPs by the RQE are required to be reported in the RQE's annual
report to the Council and NMFS.
Comment 16: There are insufficient regulations in the proposed rule
to limit how the RQE may profit by buying and selling QS. The RQE
undermines the owner-operator characteristics of the fleet and forces
individual commercial fishermen to compete against a subsidized entity
in the quota share market. The RQE must be prohibited from trading QS
on the market for profit. Not limiting RQE acquisition will have an
impact to current IFQ Category C shares. The proposed minimum QS block
that the RQE may purchase in Area 2C is too low of a minimum. This will
create an incentive for IFQ holders to sweep up and sell small blocks
to the RQE, limiting blocks available to new IFQ entrants.
Response: This rule establishes that the RQE will be a non-profit
entity, created for the purpose of adding social and economic
flexibility to the charter fishery. To accomplish this, the RQE is
authorized to purchase a limited amount of QS, which is to be used to
provide additional harvest opportunity and less restrictive management
measures in times of low abundance. This rule contains provisions for
monitoring the RQE activities by requiring an annual report. Among
other things, the RQE must document in the report all the buying,
selling, and other transfers of QS during the relevant year, including
the QS prices paid for or received by the RQE. The annual report must
also contain descriptions and amounts of the RQE's expenses during the
year. Although all QS transactions, whether between or among sectors,
will occur under a ``willing seller and willing buyer'' scenario, NMFS
has implemented several constraints on the amount and type of halibut
QS that may be purchased by the RQE. This includes restrictions that
prohibit purchases of QS blocks that equate to 1,500 pounds or less.
These constraints will likely reduce the efficacy of the RQE Program by
limiting the pool of QS that may be purchased by the RQE. However, the
Council and NMFS have determined that these constraints are necessary
to balance with other considerations, such as the RQE's effects on the
availability of QS to commercial fishermen.
Comment 17: There has not been sufficient analysis of the GAF's
impacts to justify discontinuing this model of compensated
reallocation.
Response: NMFS is not discontinuing the GAF Program. The GAF
Program has distinct advantages that are not available through the RQE.
GAF are designed to work on an individual operator level by authorizing
limited annual transfers of commercial halibut IFQ as GAF to qualified
CHP holders. The GAF Program provides additional harvest opportunities
for charter anglers by allowing them to retain halibut up to the limit
for unguided anglers when charter management measures limit charter
anglers to a more restrictive harvest limit. This program will remain
in place for individual CHP holders to receive an IFQ transfer. In some
cases, CHP holders also hold QS, and have the opportunity to use their
QS either commercially or as a means to augment their charter fishing.
The GAF Program is described in more detail in proposed rule for the
CSP (78 FR 39122, June 28, 2013). Under this rule, RFQ could not be
transferred as GAF.
Comment 18: The incidental bycatch limits for the trawl fleet
should be included in the RQE calculation. There should be a mechanism
in the RQE action where the RQE could purchase bycatch from the trawl
fleet.
Response: The purpose of this final rule is to provide for the
transfer of QS between commercial QS holders and the RQE, and not to
establish alternative methods for establishing the amount of catch
available for commercial and charter operators. The IPHC accounts for
incidental bycatch by all vessels when determining total halibut
removals and catch limits. This includes the halibut catch limits
established for the commercial and charter sectors in Areas 2C and 3A.
Comment 19: The Analysis failed to adequately show the effect this
program would have on the stability of the commercial fishermen,
processors, and consumers of the product. The action kept touching on
possible funding sources that the RQE may use to purchase QS, but
ignored the implications of not addressing funding issues which is
against National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) requirements.
Response: The social and economic impacts of this action were
analyzed in the regulatory impact review (RIR) (see ADDRESSES). Because
both commercial and charter fisheries will still be restricted by the
total catch limits set for each regulatory area based on halibut
abundance, the total removals of halibut and relative timing of the
commercial and charter fisheries are expected to remain the same.
Possible funding sources for the RQE's purchase of QS are also
discussed in the RIR.
The environmental assessment (EA) provides a comprehensive
discussion of this action to authorize an RQE to purchase and hold
commercial halibut quota share for use by charter halibut anglers (see
ADDRESSES). The EA analyzes the impacts of QS holdings and use under a
wide range alternative QS use limits. After considering this analysis,
NMFS prepared a Finding of No Significant Impact based on the EA
analysis. Regardless of the funding mechanism used by the RQE, the EA
considered the environmental impact of the transfer of QS from the
commercial to the charter fishery consistent with the requirements
under NEPA. NMFS disagrees that this rule violates NEPA requirements by
not limiting or otherwise determining which funding sources might be
appropriate for the RQE.
OMB Revisions to PRA References in 15 CFR 902.1(b)
Section 3507(c)(B)(i) of the Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA) requires
that agencies inventory and display a current control number assigned
by the Director of the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), for each
agency's information collection. Section 902.1(b) identifies the
location of NOAA regulations for which OMB approval numbers have been
issued. Because this final rule revises and adds data elements within a
collection-of-information for recordkeeping and reporting requirements,
15 CFR 902.1(b) is revised to reference correctly the sections
resulting from this final rule.
[[Page 47828]]
Classification
Regulations governing the U.S. fisheries for Pacific halibut are
developed by the IPHC, the Pacific Fishery Management Council, the
Council, and the Secretary of Commerce. Section 5 of the Halibut Act
(16 U.S.C. 773c) allows the regional fishery management council having
authority for a particular geographical area to develop regulations
governing fishing for halibut in U.S. Convention waters as long as
those regulations do not conflict with IPHC regulations. The Halibut
Act, at sections 773c(a) and (b), provides the Secretary of Commerce
with the general responsibility to carry out the Convention with the
authority to, in consultation with the Secretary of the department in
which the U.S. Coast Guard is operating, adopt such regulations as may
be necessary to carry out the purposes and objectives of the Convention
and the Halibut Act. This rule is consistent with the Halibut Act and
other applicable laws.
This rule has been determined to be not significant for the
purposes of Executive Order 12866.
Small Entity Compliance Guide
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 final regulatory flexibility
analysis, the agency shall publish one or more guides to assist small
entities in complying with the rule, and shall designate such
publications as ``small entity compliance guides.'' The preambles to
the proposed rule and this final rule serve as the small entity
compliance guide. This action does not require any additional
compliance from small entities that is not described in the preambles.
Copies of the proposed rule and this final rule are available from the
NMFS website at https://alaskafisheries.noaa.gov.
Final Regulatory Flexibility Act (FRFA)
This FRFA incorporates the initial regulatory flexibility analysis
(IRFA), a summary of the significant issues raised by the public
comments, NMFS' responses to those comments, and a summary of the
analyses completed to support this action. Section 604 of the
Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) requires that, when an agency
promulgates a final rule under section 553 of Title 5 of the U.S. Code,
after being required by that section or any other law to publish a
general notice of proposed rulemaking, the agency shall prepare a FRFA.
Section 604 describes the required contents of a FRFA: (1) A statement
of the need for, and objectives of, the rule; (2) a statement of the
significant issues raised by the public comments in response to the
initial regulatory flexibility analysis, a statement of the assessment
of the agency of such issues, and a statement of any changes made in
the proposed rule as a result of such comments; (3) the response of the
agency to any comments filed by the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the
Small Business Administration (SBA) in response to the proposed rule,
and a detailed statement of any change made to the proposed rule in the
final rule as a result of the comments; (4) a description of and an
estimate of the number of small entities to which the rule will apply
or an explanation of why no such estimate is available; (5) a
description of the projected reporting, recordkeeping and other
compliance requirements of the rule, including an estimate of the
classes of small entities which will be subject to the requirement and
the type of professional skills necessary for preparation of the report
or record; and (6) a description of the steps the agency has taken to
minimize the significant economic impact on small entities consistent
with the stated objectives of applicable statutes, including a
statement of the factual, policy, and legal reasons for selecting the
alternative adopted in the final rule and why each one of the other
significant alternatives to the rule considered by the agency which
affect the impact on small entities was rejected.
Descriptions of this action, its purpose, and the legal basis are
contained in the preamble to the proposed rule (82 FR 46016, October
10, 2017) and are not repeated here.
Summary of Significant Issues Raised During Public Comment
NMFS published the proposed rule on October 10, 2017 (82 FR 46016).
An IRFA was prepared and summarized in the ``Classification'' section
of the preamble to the proposed rule. The comment period closed on
November 17, 2017. NMFS received 18 letters of public comment on the
proposed rule. None of the comments raised issues in response to the
IRFA. One comment requested NMFS require the 11 large entities in the
IFQ Program to redistribute 2 percent of their quota to the RQE. No
changes were made to this final rule based on this comment. The Chief
Counsel for Advocacy of the SBA did not file any comments on the
proposed rule.
Number and Description of Small Entities Regulated by Action
This final rule directly regulates three classes of small entities:
QS holders, CQEs, and the newly implemented RQE. For RFA purposes only,
NMFS established a small business size standard for businesses,
including their affiliates, whose primary industry is commercial
fishing (see 50 CFR 200.2). A business primarily engaged in commercial
fishing (NAICS code 11411) 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 $11 million for all its affiliated operations
worldwide.
For this action, the pool of small, directly regulated entities is
limited to those entities that will be engaging in QS transfer (i.e.,
QS holders, including CQEs, and a future RQE). CQEs and the future RQE
are considered small entities, or more specifically, a small
organization as defined by the RFA. A small organization is ``any not-
for-profit enterprise which is independently owned and operated and is
not dominant in its field.'' In addition, no CQE has more than $11
million in annual gross receipts. The RQE that is authorized under this
action is not be expected to hold halibut QS that would yield $11
million in annual gross receipts. Commercial halibut QS holders are
also considered to be directly regulated. Most of the QS holders in the
halibut IFQ Program are small entities.
NMFS considers commercial halibut fishing vessels as proxies for
small entities because IFQ from more than one QS holder is often fished
from the same vessel. NMFS estimates that 812 vessels across all IPHC
regulatory areas landed halibut in 2014, which in the Analysis is the
most recent year of complete data on the value of halibut landings by
vessel. Of those, 11 vessels are considered large entities because they
showed revenues that exceeded the $11 million threshold. The remaining
801 vessels are considered directly regulated small entities for this
rule. See Section 5.6 of the Analysis for more information.
Recordkeeping, Reporting, and Other Compliance Requirements
The RFA requires a description of the projected reporting,
recordkeeping, and other compliance requirements of this rule,
including an estimate of the classes of small entities that will be
subject to the requirement and the type of professional skills
necessary for preparation of the report or record. This
[[Page 47829]]
rule requires new information collections from an RQE. Under this rule,
a non-profit entity that wants to become an RQE will need to complete
an application and submit it to NMFS for approval. This application
requires submission of the entity's articles of incorporation, the
corporate by-laws, and a list of key personnel, including the Board of
Directors, officers, representatives, and managers. NMFS will approve
the first complete RQE application it receives.
If the RQE intends to receive or transfer halibut QS, it will use
the ``Application for Transfer QS To or From an RQE'' available on the
NMFS Alaska Region website at https://alaskafisheries.noaa.gov/.
Additionally, the RQE is required to submit an annual report detailing
its activities to NMFS and the Council. The RQE is also subject to cost
recovery fees; therefore, it needs to comply with the existing cost
recovery fee payment requirements for IFQ permit holders. These
recordkeeping and reporting requirements are expected to be
administrative in nature and not require additional professional
expertise.
Description of Significant Alternatives That Minimize Adverse Impacts
on Small Entities
This rule minimizes the impact on small entities and still meets
the objectives for this final rule. The impacts on small entities for
this action are defined in the IRFA and are not repeated here. As noted
in the IRFA, this final rule is expected to create a net benefit for
the directly regulated small entities. The benefits of this action are
expected to outweigh the reporting, recordkeeping, and other compliance
costs described in the previous section. This action is not expected to
have negative economic impacts on the small entities directly impacted
by the action.
The Council considered a status quo alternative (Alternative 1) in
addition to this final rule, which is Alternative 2, the Council's
preferred alternative. Alternative 1 would not have provided more
benefits to the directly regulated small entities or reduced reporting,
recordkeeping, or compliance costs more than the preferred alternative
that is implemented by this final rule.
Collection-of-Information Requirements
This final rule contains collection-of-information requirements
subject to the PRA, which have been approved by OMB under Control
Number 0648-0758 and will be merged with OMB Control Numbers 0648-0272
and 0648-0711.
Public reporting burden is estimated to average per response: 200
hours for Application for a Non-profit Corporation to be Designated as
a Recreational Quota Entity; 2 hours for Application for Transfer of QS
To or From a Recreational Quota Entity; 40 hours for RQE Annual Report;
1 minute for electronic submission of IFQ Permit Holder Fee Submission
Form. These estimates include the time for reviewing instructions,
searching existing data sources, gathering and maintaining the data
needed, and completing and reviewing the collection of information.
Send comments regarding these burden estimates or any other aspect
of this data collection, including suggestions for reducing the burden,
to NMFS (see ADDRESSES) and by email to [email protected], or
fax to 202-395-5806. 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. All currently approved
NOAA collections of information may be viewed at https://www.cio.noaa.gov/services_programs/prasubs.html.
List of Subjects
15 CFR Part 902
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
50 CFR Part 300
Administrative practice and procedure, Antarctica, Canada, Exports,
Fish, Fisheries, Fishing, Imports, Indians, Labeling, Marine resources,
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Russian Federation,
Transportation, Treaties, Wildlife.
50 CFR Part 679
Alaska, Fisheries, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
Dated: September 14, 2018.
Samuel D. Rauch, III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
For the reasons set out in the preamble, NMFS amends 15 CFR part
902 and 50 CFR parts 300 and 679 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. [thinsp]902.1, in the table in paragraph (b), under the
entry ``50 CFR'':
0
a. Add an entry in alphanumeric order for ``679.5(v)''; and
0
b. Revise the entry for ``679.41(b), (c)(1) through (9), (d) through
(f), (g)(1) through (4), (h) through (k), and (m)''.
The addition and revision read as follows:
Sec. [thinsp]902.1 OMB control numbers assigned pursuant to the
Paperwork Reduction Act.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Current OMB control
CFR part or section where the information No. (all numbers
collection requirement is located begin with 0648-)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * *
50 CFR:
* * * * *
679.5(v)........................................... -0272
* * * * *
679.41(b), (c)(1) through (9), (d) through (f), -0272
(g)(1) through (4), (h) through (k), (m), and (n).
* * * * *
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * *
Title 50--Wildlife and Fisheries
PART 300--INTERNATIONAL FISHERIES REGULATIONS
Subpart E--Pacific Halibut Fisheries
0
3. The authority citation for part 300, subpart E, continues to read as
follows:
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 773-773k.
0
4. In Sec. 300.65:
0
a. Add paragraph (c)(1)(iii);
0
b. Revise paragraph (c)(4)(i); and
0
c. Add paragraphs (c)(4)(iii) and (c)(5)(ii)(D)(1)(iv).
The additions and revision read as follows:
Sec. 300.65 Catch sharing plan and domestic management measures in
waters in and off Alaska.
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(1) * * *
(iii) Authorizes the use of Commission regulatory areas 2C and 3A
RFQ resulting from halibut QS held by the RQE as authorized in part 679
to this title to supplement the annual guided sport catch limit in the
corresponding
[[Page 47830]]
area, pursuant to paragraph (c)(4) of this section.
* * * * *
(4) * * *
(i) The Commission regulatory areas 2C and 3A annual guided sport
catch limits are determined by subtracting wastage from, and adding any
pounds of RFQ held by an RQE for that area to, the allocations in
Tables 3 and 4 of this subpart, adopted by the Commission as annual
management measures, and published in the Federal Register as required
in Sec. 300.62.
* * * * *
(iii) The amount of QS held by the RQE for Commission regulatory
area 2C and 3A as of October 1 each year will be the basis for
determining the amount of RFQ pounds that will be added to the annual
guided sport catch limit for the corresponding area in the upcoming
year.
(5) * * *
(ii) * * *
(D) * * *
(1) * * *
(iv) In the applicable Commission regulatory area, either Area 2C
or Area 3A, the sum of IFQ halibut equivalent pounds, as defined in
Sec. 679.2 of this title, from the transfer of IFQ to GAF and the
pounds of RFQ issued to the RQE during a calendar year does not exceed
an amount that is greater than the amount derived from: 5,947,740 units
of Area 2C QS, or 22,187,161 units of Area 3A QS.
* * * * *
PART 679--FISHERIES OF THE EXCLUSIVE ECONOMIC ZONE OFF ALASKA
0
5. The authority citation for part 679 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 773 et seq.; 1801 et seq.; 3631 et seq.;
Pub. L. 108-447; Pub. L. 111-281.
0
6. In Sec. 679.2, add definitions for ``Recreational Fishing Quota
(RFQ)'' and ``Recreational Quota Entity (RQE)'' in alphabetical order
to read as follows:
Sec. 679.2 Definitions.
* * * * *
Recreational Fishing Quota (RFQ) means the pounds of halibut issued
annually to a Recreational Quota Entity to supplement the annual guided
sport catch limit under the catch sharing plan for IFQ regulatory areas
2C and 3A pursuant to Sec. 300.65(c) of this title.
Recreational Quota Entity (RQE) means a non-profit entity
incorporated under the laws of the State of Alaska, recognized as
exempt from Federal income tax by the Internal Revenue Service, and
authorized by NMFS to participate in the Halibut IFQ Program to hold
commercial halibut quota share to supplement the annual guided sport
catch limit in IFQ regulatory areas 2C and 3A under the catch sharing
plan pursuant to Sec. 300.65(c) of this title. NMFS will authorize
only one RQE at a time.
* * * * *
0
7. In Sec. 679.4, add paragraph (d)(1)(iv) to read as follows:
Sec. 679.4 Permits.
* * * * *
(d) * * *
(1) * * *
(iv) An RFQ permit account identifies the amount of RFQ authorized
for use by charter vessel anglers in Area 2C or Area 3A. The number of
pounds of RFQ allocated to the RFQ permit account will be added to the
annual guided sport catch limit under the catch sharing plan (described
at 50 CFR 300.65(c)) for the appropriate IFQ regulatory area, Area 2C
or Area 3A.
* * * * *
0
8. In Sec. 679.5:
0
a. Revise paragraphs (l)(7)(ii)(A), (C), and (D); and
0
b. Add paragraphs (l)(9) and (v).
The revisions and additions read as follows:
Sec. 679.5 Recordkeeping and reporting (R&R).
* * * * *
(l) * * *
(7) * * *
(ii) * * *
(A) Applicability. An IFQ permit holder who holds an IFQ permit
against which a landing was made or an RQE that holds RFQ must submit
to NMFS a complete IFQ Permit Holder Fee Submission Form provided by
NMFS.
* * * * *
(C) Completed application. NMFS will process an IFQ Permit Holder
Fee Submission Form provided that a paper or electronic form is
completed by the IFQ permit holder or an RQE that holds RFQ, with all
applicable fields accurately filled in, and all required additional
documentation is attached.
(D) IFQ landing summary and estimated fee liability. NMFS will
provide to an IFQ permit holder and an RQE that holds RFQ an IFQ
Landing and Estimated Fee Liability page as required by Sec.
679.45(a)(2). The IFQ permit holder must either accept the accuracy of
the NMFS estimated fee liability associated with his or her IFQ
landings for each IFQ permit, or calculate a revised IFQ fee liability
in accordance with paragraph (l)(7)(ii)(E) of this section. The IFQ
permit holder may calculate a revised fee liability for all or part of
his or her IFQ landings.
* * * * *
(9) Recreational Quota Entity Program annual report. An annual
report on RQE activities must be submitted to NMFS by the RQE as
required at Sec. 679.5(v).
* * * * *
(v) Recreational Quota Entity Program Annual Report--(1)
Applicability. The RQE must submit a timely and complete annual report
on the RQE's administrative activities and business operation for each
calendar year that it holds halibut recreational fishing quota (RFQ)
and quota shares (QS). The RQE may combine annual reports on its
holdings of halibut QS and RFQ for IFQ regulatory areas 2C and 3A into
one report. The RQE must submit annual report data for the halibut QS
and RFQ it held during the calendar year. The RQE is not required to
submit an annual report for any calendar year in which it did not hold
any halibut QS or RFQ.
(2) Time limits and submittal. By January 31, the RQE must submit a
complete annual report for the prior calendar year to the North Pacific
Fishery Management Council, 605 West 4th Ave., Suite 306, Anchorage, AK
99501-2252, and to NMFS-Alaska Regional Administrator, P.O. Box 21668,
Juneau, AK 99802-1668.
(3) Complete annual report. A complete annual report contains all
general report requirements described in paragraphs (v)(4)(i) through
(iv) of this section, and all information specific to IFQ regulatory
areas 2C and 3A described in paragraphs (v)(5)(i) through (iii) of this
section.
(4) General report requirements. The RQE must annually report the
following information:
(i) Any changes to the bylaws, board of directors, or other key
management personnel of the RQE from the preceding year;
(ii) Amount and description of annual administrative expenses;
(iii) Amount and description of funds spent on conservation and
research, including a summary of the results of those expenditures; and
(iv) Amount and description of all other expenses incurred by the
RQE.
(5) Information by IFQ regulatory area. For each IFQ regulatory
area represented by the RQE, the RQE must annually report the following
information:
(i) The total amount of halibut QS by category and blocks held by
the RQE at the start of the calendar year, on October 1, and at the end
of the calendar year;
[[Page 47831]]
(ii) A list of all transfers (purchases or sales) of halibut QS,
including the transaction price; and
(iii) A description of the number of charter halibut permits and
number of angler endorsements purchased and held by the RQE.
0
9. In Sec. 679.7, add paragraph (f)(3)(i)(C) to read as follows:
Sec. 679.7 Prohibitions.
* * * * *
(f) * * *
(3) * * *
(i) * * *
(C) Use fixed gear to retain RFQ halibut.
* * * * *
0
10. In Sec. 679.40:
0
a. Revise paragraphs (b), (c) heading, and (c)(2);
0
b. Add paragraphs (c)(4) and (g)(2)(iii);
0
c. Revise paragraph (h)(3) introductory text; and
0
d. Add paragraph (h)(3)(iii).
The revisions and additions read as follows:
Sec. 679.40 Sablefish and halibut QS.
* * * * *
(b) Annual allocation of IFQ and RFQ. The Regional Administrator
shall assign halibut or sablefish IFQs to each person, except the RQE,
holding unrestricted QS halibut or sablefish, respectively, up to the
limits prescribed in Sec. 679.42(e) and (f). Each assigned IFQ will be
specific to an IFQ regulatory area and vessel category, and will
represent the maximum amount of halibut or sablefish that may be
harvested from the specified IFQ regulatory area and by the person to
whom it is assigned during the specified fishing year, unless the IFQ
assignment is changed by the Regional Administrator within the fishing
year because of an approved transfer or because all or part of the IFQ
is sanctioned for violating rules of this part. The Regional
Administrator shall assign RFQ to the RQE pursuant to paragraph (c)(4)
of this section.
(c) Calculation of annual IFQ and RFQ allocations.* * *
(2) QS amounts. For purposes of calculating IFQs and RFQ for any
fishing year, the amount of a person's QS and the amount of the QS pool
for any IFQ regulatory area will be the amounts on record with the
Alaska Region, NMFS, on January 15 of that year.
* * * * *
(4) RFQ allocation to RQE--(i) RQE QS amounts. For purposes of
calculating RFQ for any fishing year, the amount of halibut QS held by
the RQE for either IFQ regulatory area 2C or 3A for the corresponding
IFQ regulatory area will be the amounts on record with the Alaska
Region, NMFS on October 1 of the year prior.
(ii) Calculation of RFQ. The annual allocation of RFQ halibut to an
RQE (person r) in IFQ regulatory area 2C or 3A (area a) will be equal
to the product of the annual commercial catch limit as defined in Sec.
300.61 of this title, and the QS held by the RQE (specified in
paragraph (c)(4)(i) of this section) divided by the QS pool for that
area (specified in paragraph (c)(2) of this section). No overage or
underage adjustments will be applied to the RQE's annual RFQ. Expressed
algebraically, the annual RFQ halibut allocation formula is as follows:
RFQra = [fixed gear TACa x (QSra/QS
poola)]
(iii) Excess RFQ. NMFS will not issue the RQE any excess RFQ.
Excess RFQ is the difference between the amount of RFQ based on the QS
held by the RQE and the amount of RFQ needed to provide charter fishery
management measures that are equivalent to unguided recreational
fishery management measures. If the annual management measures
published pursuant to Sec. 300.62 of this title specify charter
fishery management measures that are equivalent to the unguided
recreational management measures, NMFS will:
(A) Calculate the annual allocation of halibut RFQ to the RQE as
specified in paragraph (c)(4)(ii) of this section; and
(B) Determine the amount of RFQ needed to supplement the annual
guided sport catch limit from the CSP in Area 2C and Area 3A (described
in Sec. 300.65(c) of this title) to account for charter fishery
harvests under the charter fishery management measures specified in the
annual management measures and issue that amount of RFQ to the RFQ
permit account.
(C) Calculate the amount of excess RFQ by subtracting the amount of
RFQ issued as determined in paragraph (c)(4)(iii)(B) of this section
from the annual calculation of RFQ halibut to the RQE as calculated in
paragraph (c)(4)(iii)(A) of this section.
(iv) Redistribution of excess RFQ. Excess pounds of RFQ will be
redistributed as IFQ as follows:
(A) 50 percent to all catcher vessel QS holders in the applicable
area who held not more than 32,333 QS units in Area 2C, and 47,469 QS
units in Area 3A in the current calendar year and in the calendar year
prior to the redistribution, in proportion to their QS holdings; and
(B) 50 percent divided equally among all CQEs that held halibut QS
in the applicable IFQ regulatory area (Area 2C or Area 3A) in the
current calendar year and in the calendar year prior to the
redistribution. If no CQE held QS in the applicable IFQ regulatory area
(Area 2C and Area 3A) in the current calendar year and in the calendar
year prior to the redistribution, that RFQ will not be redistributed as
IFQ and will not be available for use by any CQE, IFQ permit holder, or
RQE in that calendar year.
* * * * *
(g) * * *
(2) * * *
(iii) The fish will not be calculated as part of the recreational
harvest of halibut and will not be debited against the RFQ permit
account or the annual guided sport catch limit as defined in Sec.
300.61 of this title.
(h) * * *
(3) Source of debit. NMFS will use the following sources (see
paragraphs (h)(3)(i), (ii) and (iii) of this section) of information to
debit a CDQ halibut, IFQ halibut, IFQ sablefish, or RFQ permit account:
* * * * *
(iii) Landed RFQ. All annual RFQ halibut issued to an RQE will be
considered landed in the year for which it is issued.
0
11. In Sec. 679.41:
0
a. Redesignate paragraph (c)(11) as paragraph (c)(12);
0
b. Add new paragraph (c)(11);
0
c. Revise paragraphs (d)(1) and (g)(1); and
0
d. Add paragraphs (g)(9) through (11) and (n).
The additions and revisions read as follows:
Sec. 679.41 Transfer of quota shares and IFQ.
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(11) If the person applying to receive or transfer QS is an RQE,
the following determinations are required:
(i) The RQE applying to receive or transfer QS, has submitted the
timely and complete annual report required by Sec. 679.5(v);
(ii) The RQE applying to receive QS is eligible to hold QS on
behalf of the charter halibut sector in IFQ regulatory area 2C or 3A;
and
(iii) The RQE applying to receive QS has received notification of
approval of eligibility to receive QS on behalf of the charter halibut
sector in IFQ regulatory area 2C or 3A as described in paragraph (d)(1)
of this section.
* * * * *
(d) * * *
(1) Application for Eligibility. All persons applying to receive QS
or IFQ
[[Page 47832]]
must submit an Application for Eligibility to Receive QS/IFQ
(Application for Eligibility) containing accurate information to the
Regional Administrator. An Application for Eligibility to Receive QS/
IFQ (Application for Eligibility) is not required for a CQE if a
complete application to become a CQE, as described in paragraph (l)(3)
of this section, has been approved by the Regional Administrator on
behalf of an eligible community. An Application for Eligibility to
Receive QS/IFQ (Application for Eligibility) is not required for the
RQE if a complete application to become an RQE, as described in
paragraph (n)(2) of this section, has been approved by the Regional
Administrator. The Regional Administrator will not approve a transfer
of IFQ or QS to a person until the Application for Eligibility for that
person is approved by the Regional Administrator. The Regional
Administrator will provide an Application for Eligibility form to any
person on request.
* * * * *
(g) * * *
(1) Except as provided in paragraph (f), (g)(2), (l), or (n) of
this section, only persons who are IFQ crew members, or who were
initially issued QS assigned to vessel categories B, C, or D, and meet
the eligibility requirements in this section, may receive by transfer
QS assigned to vessel categories B, C, or D, or the IFQ resulting from
it.
* * * * *
(9) For transfers of QS to an RQE, the RQE may only receive halibut
QS that is assigned to IFQ regulatory area 2C or 3A.
(10) For transfers of QS from an RQE:
(i) Quota category and block designations at time of purchase by an
RQE are retained if QS is transferred to an eligible QS holder for use
in the IFQ program.
(ii) NMFS will not issue any IFQ from any QS transferred from an
RQE to a QS holder for use in the IFQ program for a calendar year if
that QS resulted in the issuance of RFQ to an RQE during that calendar
year.
(11)(i) To maintain eligibility as the RQE authorized by NMFS, the
RQE must be a non-profit entity incorporated under the laws of the
State of Alaska and recognized as exempt from Federal income tax by the
Internal Revenue Service as required by paragraph (n)(1)(ii) of this
section.
(ii) If the Regional Administrator determines the RQE approved by
NMFS does not meet the requirements specified in paragraph (n)(1) of
this section, NMFS will notify the RQE of the Regional Administrator's
determination and specify that the RQE has 60 days to meet the
requirements in paragraph (n)(1) of this section to maintain
eligibility as the RQE authorized by NMFS.
(iii) If the RQE demonstrates to NMFS within 60 days of
notification that it meets the requirements in paragraph (n)(1) of this
section, NMFS will notify the RQE that it remains the authorized RQE.
(iv) If the RQE does not demonstrate to NMFS within 60 days of
notification that it meets the requirements in paragraph (n)(1) of this
section, NMFS will issue an initial administrative determination (IAD):
(A) Revoking authorization of the RQE;
(B) Disallowing the RQE from receiving any QS by transfer;
(C) Requiring the CQE to divest of any QS that it holds; and
(D) Withholding the issuance of RFQ based on any QS that the RQE
holds.
(v) The RQE will have the opportunity to appeal the IAD through the
National Appeals Office under the provisions established at 15 CFR part
906.
* * * * *
(n) Transfer of halibut QS to an RQE--(1) RQE organizational
structure. (i) The RQE must be a single entity representing IFQ
regulatory Areas 2C and 3A.
(ii) The RQE must be a non-profit entity incorporated under the
laws of the State of Alaska and recognized as exempt from Federal
income tax by the Internal Revenue Service; and
(iii) The RQE must submit an annual report to NMFS and the Council
detailing RQE activities during the prior year according to Sec.
679.5(v).
(2) Application for Eligibility. Prior to initially receiving QS by
transfer, a non-profit entity that intends to participate in the
Halibut IFQ Program and purchase and hold halibut QS in Area 2C and
Area 3A as the RQE must have approval from the Regional Administrator.
To receive that approval, the non-profit entity seeking to become an
RQE must submit a complete ``Application for a Non-profit Entity to be
Designated as a Recreational Quota Entity (RQE)'' (available on the
NMFS Alaska Region website at https://alaskafisheries.noaa.gov/). NMFS
will approve only one entity as the RQE. A complete application to
become an RQE must include:
(i) The articles of incorporation under the laws of the State of
Alaska for that non-profit entity;
(ii) Acknowledgement from the Internal Revenue Service that the
non-profit entity is exempt from Federal income tax under section
501(a) of the Internal Revenue Code; and
(iii) Management organization information, including:
(A) The bylaws of the non-profit entity;
(B) A list of key personnel of the managing organization including,
but not limited to, the RQE board of directors, officers,
representatives, and any managers;
(C) A description of how the non-profit entity is qualified to
manage QS on behalf of charter fishery participants and a demonstration
that the non-profit entity has the management, technical expertise, and
ability to manage QS and RFQ;
(D) The name of the non-profit organization, taxpayer ID number,
NMFS person number, permanent business mailing addresses, name of
contact persons and additional contact information of the managing
personnel for the non-profit entity, resumes of management personnel,
name and notarized signature of applicant, and Notary Public signature
and date when commission expires; and
(iv) A statement describing the procedures that will be used to
determine the acquisition of funds to purchase QS.
(3) Address for submittal of application. Regional Administrator,
NMFS, P.O. Box 21668, Juneau, AK 99802.
(4) Approval. NMFS will approve the first complete application
received. If an application is approved, NMFS will notify the RQE by
mail, unless another mode of communication is requested on the
application.
(5) Disapproval. If an application is disapproved, that
determination may be appealed under the provisions established at 15
CFR part 906.
0
12. In Sec. 679.42:
0
a. Add paragraph (a)(2)(v);
0
b. Revise paragraph (f)(1) introductory text; and
0
c. Add paragraphs (f)(8) and (g)(1)(iii).
The additions and revision read as follows:
Sec. 679.42 Limitations on use of QS and IFQ.
(a) * * *
(2) * * *
(v) In IFQ regulatory areas 2C and 3A, RFQ held by an RQE may be
harvested aboard charter vessels as defined at 50 CFR 300.61 of any
size, regardless of the QS category from which that RFQ originated.
* * * * *
(f) * * *
(1) Unless the amount in excess of the following limits was
received in the
[[Page 47833]]
initial allocation of halibut QS, no person other than a CQE
representing the community of Adak, AK, individually or collectively,
or an RQE, may use more than:
* * * * *
(8)(i) Annual transfer limits. The RQE may not receive by transfer
more than 594,774 units of Area 2C halibut QS and more than 2,218,716
units of Area 3A halibut QS in a year.
(ii) Cumulative use limits. The RQE may not hold more than
5,947,740 units of Area 2C halibut QS and more than 22,187,161 units of
Area 3A halibut QS.
(iii) Vessel category restrictions. (A) The RQE may not hold more
than 889,548 units of halibut QS in IFQ regulatory area 2C that is
assigned to vessel category D.
(B) The RQE may not hold halibut QS in IFQ regulatory area 3A that
is assigned to vessel category D.
(C) The RQE may not hold more than 265,524 units of halibut QS that
is assigned to vessel category B in IFQ regulatory area 2C.
(g) * * *
(1) * * *
(iii) The RQE may not receive:
(A) Transfers of halibut QS blocks of less than or equal to 24,250
quota share units in IFQ regulatory area 2C.
(B) Transfers of halibut QS blocks of less than or equal to 35,620
quota share units in IFQ regulatory area 3A.
* * * * *
0
13. In Sec. 679.45:
0
a. Revise paragraphs (a)(1), (a)(2)(i) introductory text, and
(a)(2)(i)(A);
0
b. Add paragraphs (a)(2)(i)(B)(3) and (a)(2)(i)(D); and
0
c. Revise paragraphs (a)(3), (a)(4)(i), (b)(1), and (f)(2).
The revisions and addition read as follows:
Sec. 679.45 IFQ cost recovery program.
(a) * * *
(1) Responsibility. An IFQ permit holder is responsible for cost
recovery fees for landings of his or her IFQ halibut and sablefish,
including any halibut landed as guided angler fish (GAF), as defined in
Sec. 300.61 of this title, derived from his or her IFQ accounts. An
RQE is responsible for cost recovery fees for all RFQ issued to the
RQE. An IFQ permit holder or RQE must comply with the requirements of
this section.
(2) * * *
(i) General. IFQ fee liability means a cost recovery liability
based on either the value of all landed IFQ and GAF derived from the
permit holder's IFQ permit(s), or the value of all RFQ issued to an
RQE.
(A) Each year, the Regional Administrator will issue each IFQ
permit holder a summary of his or her IFQ equivalent pounds landed as
IFQ and GAF and will issue an RQE a summary of its RFQ pounds issued as
part of the IFQ Landing and Estimated Fee Liability page described at
Sec. 679.5(l)(7)(ii)(D).
(B) * * *
(3) All RFQ issued to an RQE in IFQ regulatory area 2C or 3A will
be assessed at the IFQ regulatory area 2C or 3A IFQ standard ex-vessel
value.
* * * * *
(D) An RQE may not challenge the standard ex-vessel value used to
determine the fee liability for all RFQ issued to the RQE.
* * * * *
(3) Fee collection. (i) An IFQ permit holder with IFQ and/or GAF
landings is responsible for collecting his or her own fee during the
calendar year in which the IFQ fish and/or GAF are landed.
(ii) An RQE is responsible for collecting its own fees during the
calendar year in which the RFQ is issued to the RQE.
(4) * * *
(i) Payment due date. An IFQ permit holder or RQE must submit its
IFQ fee liability payment(s) to NMFS as instructed at paragraph
(a)(4)(iii) of this section not later than January 31 of the year
following the calendar year in which the IFQ or GAF landings were made
or the RFQ was issued to the RQE.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(1) General. (i) An IFQ permit holder must use either the IFQ
actual ex-vessel value or the IFQ standard ex-vessel value when
determining the IFQ fee liability based on ex-vessel value, except that
landed GAF are assessed at the standard ex-vessel values derived by
NMFS. An IFQ permit holder must base all fee liability calculations on
the ex-vessel value that correlates to landed IFQ in IFQ equivalent
pounds.
(ii) An RQE must use the IFQ standard ex-vessel value derived by
NMFS for all RFQ issued to the RQE.
* * * * *
(f) * * *
(2) After the expiration of the 30-day period, the Regional
Administrator will evaluate any additional documentation submitted by
an IFQ permit holder or RQE in support of its payment. If the Regional
Administrator determines that the additional documentation does not
meet the burden of proving the payment is correct, the Regional
Administrator will send the IFQ permit holder or RQE an IAD indicating
that the IFQ permit holder or RQE did not meet the burden of proof to
change the IFQ fee liability as calculated by the Regional
Administrator based upon the IFQ standard ex-vessel value. The IAD will
set out the facts and indicate the deficiencies in the documentation
submitted by the IFQ permit holder or RQE. An IFQ permit holder or RQE
who receives an IAD may appeal the IAD, as described in paragraph (h)
of this section.
* * * * *
Sec. Sec. 679.41 and 679.45 [Amended]
0
14. In the table below, for each section indicated in the ``Location''
column, remove the title indicated in the ``Remove'' column from
wherever it appears in the section, and add the title indicated in the
``Add'' column:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Location Remove Add
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sec. 679.41(l)(3) 50 CFR 679.43....... 15 CFR part 906.
introductory text, and
(l)(3)(v)(E)(3).
Sec. 679.41(m)(5)(ii)..... Sec. 679.43....... 15 CFR part 906.
Sec. 679.45(b)(2)......... landed as GAF....... landed as GAF or
issued as RFQ.
Sec. 679.45(b)(3)(ii)..... landed GAF.......... landed GAF and RFQ
issued to an RQE.
Sec. 679.45(b)(3)(v) aggregated IFQ aggregated by IFQ
introductory text. regulatory area 2C regulatory area 2C
or 3A, to GAF or 3A, to GAF
landings. landings and RFQ
issued to an RQE.
Sec. 679.45(d)(2)(i)(A) IFQ and GAF......... IFQ, RFQ, and GAF.
and (B).
Sec. 679.45(d)(2)(i)(C)... include GAF costs... include RQE and GAF
costs.
Sec. 679.45(d)(2)(ii)..... as commercial catch as commercial catch,
or as GAF. RFQ, or GAF.
Sec. 679.45(d)(4)......... IFQ and GAF......... IFQ, RFQ, and GAF.
Sec. 679.45(d)(4)......... IFQ permit holder... IFQ permit holder or
RQE.
Sec. 679.45(e)(1) IFQ permit holder... IFQ permit holder or
introductory text. RQE.
[[Page 47834]]
Sec. 679.45(e)(1)(i) and IFQ permit holder... IFQ permit holder or
(ii). RQE.
Sec. 679.45(e)(1)(i)...... the IFQ permit the estimated fee
holder's estimated liability.
fee liability.
Sec. 679.45(e)(2)......... IFQ fishing permit IFQ fishing permit
held. or RFQ permit
account held.
Sec. 679.45(e)(2), IFQ permit holder... IFQ permit holder or
(f)(1)(i) and (ii), and RQE.
(f)(5).
Sec. 679.45(f)(1) IFQ permit holder IFQ permit holder or
introductory text. has. RQE has.
Sec. 679.45(f)(1) by the IFQ permit by the IFQ permit
introductory text. holder. holder or RQE.
Sec. 679.45(f)(3)......... Sec. 679.43....... 15 CFR part 906.
Sec. 679.45(f)(4)......... the IFQ permit the IFQ permit
holder. holder or RQE.
Sec. 679.45(g)............ IFQ permit holder IFQ permit holder or
unless the permit RQE unless the IFQ
holder requests. permit holder or
RQE requests.
Sec. 679.45(g)............ IFQ permit holder's. IFQ permit holder's
or RQE's.
Sec. 679.45(h)............ Sec. 679.43....... 15 CFR part 906.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[FR Doc. 2018-20410 Filed 9-20-18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-22-P