Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic Zone off Alaska; Pacific Halibut and Sablefish Individual Fishing Quota Program; Community Development Quota Program; Modifications to Recordkeeping and Reporting Requirements, 52760-52767 [2018-22687]
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Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 202 / Thursday, October 18, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
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Airworthiness Directive CF–2011–41R1,
dated March 27, 2017, for related
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AD docket on the internet at https://
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locating Docket No. FAA–2018–0161.
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(iii) Bombardier Challenger 300 BD–100
Time Limits/Maintenance Checks Manual,
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(A) Task 29–21–13–101 Discard the
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Issued in Des Moines, Washington, on
September 25, 2018.
John P. Piccola,
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[FR Doc. 2018–22137 Filed 10–17–18; 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. 170626590–8785–02]
RIN 0648–BG94
Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic
Zone off Alaska; Pacific Halibut and
Sablefish Individual Fishing Quota
Program; Community Development
Quota Program; Modifications to
Recordkeeping and Reporting
Requirements
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
NMFS issues a final rule that
modifies regulations governing the
Halibut and Sablefish Individual
Fishing Quota (IFQ) Program. This rule
includes three actions. The first action
allows Western Alaska Community
Development Quota (CDQ) groups to
lease (to receive by transfer) halibut IFQ
in IFQ regulatory areas 4B, 4C, and 4D
in years of extremely low halibut
commercial catch limits. This action is
necessary to provide additional harvest
opportunities to CDQ groups and
community residents, and provide IFQ
holders with the opportunity to receive
value for their IFQ when the halibut
commercial catch limits may not be
large enough to provide for an
SUMMARY:
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economically viable fishery for IFQ
holders. The second action removes an
obsolete reference in the IFQ Program
regulations. The third action clarifies
IFQ vessel use cap regulations. This
final rule is intended to promote the
goals and objectives of the Northern
Pacific Halibut Act of 1982 (Halibut
Act), the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery
Conservation and Management Act
(Magnuson-Stevens Act), the Fishery
Management Plan (FMP) for Groundfish
of the Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands
(BSAI) Management Area, and other
applicable laws.
DATES: This rule is effective on
November 19, 2018.
ADDRESSES: Electronic copies of the
Regulatory Impact Review (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 by mail 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; and by email
to OIRA_Submission@omb.eop.gov or
by fax to (202) 395–5806.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Stephanie Warpinski, (907) 586–7228.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Authority for Action
The International Pacific Halibut
Commission (IPHC) and NMFS manage
fishing for Pacific halibut through
regulations established under the
authority of the Halibut Act. The IPHC
promulgates regulations governing the
halibut fishery under the Convention
between the United States and Canada
for the Preservation of the Halibut
Fishery of the Northern Pacific Ocean
and Bering Sea (Convention). The
IPHC’s regulations are subject to
approval by the Secretary of State with
the concurrence of the Secretary of
Commerce (Secretary). NMFS publishes
the IPHC’s regulations as annual
management measures pursuant to 50
CFR 300.62.
The Halibut Act, at sections 773c(a)
and (b), provides the Secretary with
general responsibility to carry out the
Convention and the Halibut Act. 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
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conflict with, approved IPHC
regulations. Regulations developed by
the Council may be implemented by
NMFS only after approval by the
Secretary.
The Council developed the IFQ
Program for the commercial halibut and
sablefish fisheries. The IFQ Program for
the halibut fishery is implemented by
Federal regulations at 50 CFR part 679
under the authority of section 773 of the
Halibut Act. The IFQ Program for the
sablefish fishery is implemented by the
BSAI FMP and Federal regulations at 50
CFR part 679 under the authority of
section 303(b) of the Magnuson-Stevens
Act.
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Background
On February 23, 2018, NMFS
published a proposed rule (83 FR 8028)
and invited public comment. The
following summarizes the IFQ Program,
the CDQ Program, the need for this final
rule, and the anticipated effects of the
final rule. Additional detail about the
action is provided in the preamble of
the proposed rule and in the Analysis.
The IFQ Program
The IFQ Program for the management
of the fixed gear (hook-and-line and pot
gear) halibut and sablefish fisheries off
Alaska was implemented by NMFS in
1995 (58 FR 59375, November 9, 1993).
A central objective of the IFQ Program
is to support the social and economic
character of the fisheries and the coastal
fishing communities where many of
these fisheries are based. A detailed
description of the IFQ Program can be
found in the proposed rule for this
action (83 FR 8028, February 23, 2018)
and the Analysis.
Under the IFQ Program, access to the
fixed gear sablefish and halibut fisheries
is limited to those persons holding
quota share (QS). QS is an exclusive,
revocable privilege that allows the
holder to harvest a specific percentage
of either the total allowable catch (TAC)
in the sablefish fishery or the annual
commercial catch limit in the halibut
fishery. QS is designated for specific
geographic areas of harvest, a specific
vessel operation type (catcher vessel or
catcher/processor), and for a specific
range of vessel sizes that may be used
to harvest the sablefish or halibut
(vessel category).
This final rule uses the term ‘‘Area’’
to refer to a specific IFQ regulatory area.
The IFQ Program designates four vessel
categories of halibut QS: Category A
shares designated for catcher/
processors, vessels that process their
catch at sea, and do not have a vessel
length restriction; Category B shares
designated for catcher vessels greater
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than 60 feet length overall (LOA);
Category C shares designated for catcher
vessels greater than 35 feet but less than
or equal to 60 feet LOA; and Category
D shares designated for catcher vessels
less than or equal to 35 feet LOA.
NMFS annually issues IFQ permits to
each QS holder. An annual IFQ permit
authorizes the permit holder to harvest
a specified amount of the IFQ species in
a regulatory area from a specific
operation type and vessel category. The
Council and the public frequently use
the terms ‘‘IFQ lease’’ or ‘‘lease’’ to refer
to the transfer of IFQ without a transfer
of the underlying quota shares (QS).
However, NMFS does not generally use
the term ‘‘lease’’ in its IFQ Program
regulations governing the transfer of
IFQ. Therefore, for consistency with the
terminology used in the existing
regulations and for clarity, this rule uses
the term ‘‘transfer of IFQ.’’
NMFS issues halibut IFQ consistent
with the IPHC’s regulatory areas. NMFS’
IFQ regulatory areas (Areas) are defined
in 50 CFR part 679 and described in
Figure 15 to part 679 and Section 1.3 of
the Analysis. The first action in this rule
pertains to Areas 4B, 4C, 4D, and 4E.
Area 4B includes waters in the Central
and Western Aleutian Islands. Areas 4C,
4D, and 4E include waters north of the
Aleutian Islands, in the Bering Sea, and
around the Pribilof Islands. The IPHC
considers Areas 4C, 4D, and 4E a single
stock unit for assessment and
management purposes, and the
combined Areas are referred to as Area
4CDE in this final rule.
The commercial catch limits for Areas
4B and 4CDE are allocated between two
distinct management programs, the CDQ
Program and the IFQ Program.
Throughout the duration of the IFQ
Program, the Area 4E commercial catch
limit has been exclusively allocated to
the CDQ Program; therefore, no Area 4E
QS or IFQ is allocated.
Overall, the halibut IFQ commercial
catch limits in Areas 4B and 4CDE have
trended downward over the past 15
years (see Section 3.6.1 of the Analysis).
The Area 4B commercial catch limit has
dropped substantially from 2001 to
2015. In 2015, the Area 4B commercial
catch limit for IFQ was less than a
quarter of what it was in 2001. The
combined commercial catch limit for
IFQ in Areas 4C and 4D has seen more
fluctuation during this period, but has
still experienced an overall downward
trend since 2007. In 2007, the combined
commercial catch limit for IFQ in Areas
4C and 4D was about 2.2 million
pounds; in 2015, it was about 0.7
million pounds.
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The CDQ Program
The CDQ Program was implemented
in 1992, and in 1996, the MagnusonStevens Act was amended to include
provisions specific to the CDQ Program.
The purposes of the CDQ Program are
(1) to provide eligible western Alaska
villages with the opportunity to
participate and invest in fisheries in the
BSAI management area; (2) to support
economic development in western
Alaska; (3) to alleviate poverty and
provide economic and social benefits for
residents of western Alaska; and (4) to
achieve sustainable and diversified local
economies in western Alaska (16 U.S.C.
1855(i)(1)(A)).
The CDQ Program consists of six
different non-profit managing
organizations (CDQ groups) representing
different geographical regions in Alaska.
The CDQ Program receives annual
allocations of TAC for a variety of
commercially valuable species in the
BSAI groundfish, crab, and halibut
fisheries, which are in turn allocated
among the CDQ groups. Among the
species CDQ groups are allocated for
commercial fishing, Pacific halibut is an
important species for community
resident employment and income.
NMFS allocates halibut to CDQ groups
for commercial fisheries in four Areas:
4B, 4C, 4D, and 4E (see Section 3.5.1 of
the Analysis). See Section 3.5.2 of the
Analysis for additional detail on the
history of the halibut CDQ fishery.
The resident halibut CDQ fleets and
criteria for participation in CDQ
fisheries vary among the CDQ groups.
The resident halibut CDQ fleets are
impacted by internal economic
decisions made by the CDQ groups and
in the ways the CDQ groups choose to
promote economic development in their
communities. Many of the small boat
fishermen in CDQ communities are
dependent on the halibut fishery
(Section 3.5.3 of the Analysis).
Need for Action
The downward trend of halibut
commercial catch limits in Areas 4B and
4CDE over the past 15 years has been
dramatic, with current limits
significantly lower than those of the
recent past years. The recent years of
low halibut abundance and the resulting
low commercial catch limits in Areas 4B
and 4CDE have made it increasingly
difficult for most CDQ groups to create
a viable commercial halibut fishing
opportunity for their community
residents.
Under current regulations, CDQ
groups cannot receive by transfer any
IFQ derived from catcher vessel QS.
Current regulations also prohibit halibut
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QS holders from transferring their IFQ
separately from the underlying QS
except in very narrow, specific
situations (see Section 3.7 of the
Analysis for more information).
To address these problems, this final
rule creates a voluntary option for IFQ
holders in Areas 4B, 4C, or 4D to
temporarily transfer their halibut IFQ to
a CDQ group in years of extremely low
halibut abundance. This flexibility
allows CDQ groups to expand the
fishing opportunities for the small boat
fleets operating out of the CDQ group’s
communities and provides IFQ holders
with the opportunity to receive value for
their IFQ when extremely low halibut
commercial catch limits may not be
large enough to provide for an
economically viable fishery for IFQ
holders.
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This Final Rule and the Anticipated
Effects
This final rule includes three actions.
The primary action, Action 1, creates a
voluntary option for an IFQ holder to
temporarily transfer his or her halibut
IFQ to a CDQ group in years of
extremely low halibut abundance.
Actions 2 and 3 make minor regulatory
adjustments to remove an obsolete
reference in the IFQ Program regulations
and to clarify IFQ vessel use cap
regulations, respectively. The following
paragraphs provide additional detail on
the actions.
Action 1
This final rule (1) defines the halibut
commercial catch limits under which
CDQ groups may receive IFQ by
transfer, (2) establishes limits on the
types and amounts of IFQ that can be
transferred, and (3) establishes reporting
requirements for CDQ groups receiving
IFQ by transfer. This final rule does not
convert transferred IFQ to CDQ.
Allocations of halibut CDQ will not
change under this final rule.
Under this final rule, CDQ groups
may receive transfers of halibut catcher
vessel IFQ (Categories B, C, and D IFQ)
in Areas 4C and 4D when the halibut
annual commercial catch limit is less
than 1.5 million pounds in Area 4CDE.
CDQ groups may receive transfers of
halibut catcher vessel IFQ (Categories B,
C, and D IFQ) in Area 4B when the
annual halibut commercial catch limit is
less than 1 million pounds in Area 4B.
IFQ holders may transfer both blocked
and unblocked IFQ to CDQ groups. This
final rule does not revise current
regulations that authorize an IFQ holder
in Areas 4B, 4C and 4D to transfer his
or her Category A halibut IFQ to any
qualified person, including a CDQ
group. However, as explained later, this
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rule provides additional harvesting
flexibility for Category A halibut IFQ
transferred to a CDQ group in years of
extremely low halibut abundance.
The Council recommended and
NMFS is implementing these thresholds
based on an analysis of commercial
catch limits between 2008 and 2017, a
period of time representing a range of
different halibut commercial catch
limits and decreasing opportunities for
CDQ community fishermen. The
Council considered a range of different
commercial catch limit thresholds for
both Areas 4B and 4CDE before
selecting these thresholds. The
preamble to the proposed rule provides
additional information on the factors
considered by the Council and NMFS
(83 FR 8028, March 26, 2018).
These thresholds are intended to
balance the goal of providing additional
halibut fishing opportunities for CDQ
residents when the halibut CDQ
allocation alone may not be large
enough to sustain small vessel resident
fisheries, with the need to avoid
potential adverse distributional impacts
on other halibut IFQ users that could
result if IFQ transfers were permitted
without restrictions. These thresholds
provide the flexibility to transfer halibut
IFQ in Areas 4B, 4C, and 4D only during
worst case scenarios for halibut
commercial catch limits in these areas
(Section 2.3 of the Analysis). For Area
4CDE, the Council determined and
NMFS agrees that a halibut commercial
catch limit below 1.5 million pounds
reflects a worst case scenario for Area
4CDE as it represents an extremely low
commercial catch limit for these areas.
For Area 4B, the Council determined
and NMFS agrees that a halibut
commercial catch limit below 1 million
pounds, which has not been
experienced during the last 10 years,
reflects a worst case scenario for Area
4B as it represents an extremely low
commercial catch limit for this area.
This final rule establishes several
limits on the catcher vessel IFQ that can
be transferred while providing some
flexibility with transferred catcher
vessel and catcher/processor IFQ. The
rationale for the limits can be found in
Section 2.2 of the Analysis and in the
preamble to the proposed rule (83 FR
8028, March 26, 2018). The limits are:
(1) A CDQ group will be able to receive
catcher vessel IFQ by transfer only for
an area in which it also holds halibut
CDQ; (2) no vessel greater than 51 feet
length overall (LOA) may be used to
harvest catcher vessel IFQ transferred to
a CDQ group; (3) catcher vessel IFQ
resulting from QS acquired after
December 14, 2015, may not be
transferred to a CDQ group until 3 years
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after the QS was acquired (i.e., a cooling
off period); (4) an IFQ holder will not be
allowed to transfer catcher vessel
halibut IFQ to a CDQ group for more
than 2 consecutive years; and (5) in
Area 4B, only those QS holders who
hold fewer than 76,355 QS units
specified for Area 4B will be allowed to
transfer their catcher vessel IFQ to CDQ
groups.
The first limit prevents a CDQ group
from receiving catcher vessel halibut
IFQ by transfer for an area in which that
CDQ group does not hold halibut CDQ.
The Council recommended and NMFS
is implementing this limit so that any
catcher vessel IFQ transferred to a CDQ
group is available for use in conjunction
with halibut CDQ that is issued to a
CDQ group.
Additionally, under this final rule at
§ 679.42(a)(1)(iii), a CDQ group that is
eligible to receive a transfer of Area 4D
catcher vessel IFQ will be able to
harvest that IFQ, and any Category A
IFQ it holds, in Area 4E (Section 3.5.2
of the Analysis). This flexibility is
consistent with section 12(8) of the
IPHC annual management measures (83
FR 10390, March 9, 2018), which allows
Area 4D halibut CDQ to be harvested in
Area 4E.
The second limit prohibits the use of
vessels greater than 51 feet LOA to
harvest catcher vessel IFQ that is
transferred to a CDQ group. The Council
recommended and NMFS is
implementing this vessel size limit
because this is the largest size vessel
owned by CDQ community residents
that has landed halibut CDQ during the
past 10 years, 2008 through 2017
(Section 3.5.3 of the Analysis). Current
regulations provide sufficient flexibility
to allow IFQ that could be transferred to
a CDQ group under this final rule to be
fished on a vessel of any length up to
51 feet LOA (see Section 2.4 of the
Analysis).
This final rule clarifies that any Area
4D Category A IFQ that is held by a CDQ
group or transferred to a CDQ group
may be fished in Area 4E by vessels less
than or equal to 51 feet LOA when the
commercial catch limit threshold in
Area 4CDE is triggered. This final rule
does not revise current regulations that
authorize Category A IFQ for Areas 4B,
4C, or 4D to be fished in the
corresponding area on a vessel of any
length.
Under the third limit, IFQ resulting
from QS acquired after December 14,
2015, may not be transferred to a CDQ
group until 3 years after the QS was
acquired (i.e., the date NMFS approved
the transfer). This provision effectively
creates a ‘‘cooling off’’ period. The
Council recommended and NMFS is
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implementing this cooling off period to
reduce the incentive for individuals to
acquire QS with the intention of
transferring the resulting IFQ to CDQ
groups rather than fishing the IFQ.
The fourth limit prohibits an IFQ
holder from transferring catcher vessel
halibut IFQ for a specific IFQ regulatory
area to a CDQ group for more than two
consecutive years. This two-year limit
applies to calendar years and only to
years in which the commercial catch
limit is below the threshold.
Additionally, this limit applies to the
transfer of any halibut IFQ for a specific
area. If an IFQ holder chooses to transfer
some but not all of his or her IFQ for
a particular area during a year when the
annual commercial catch limit for that
area is set below the threshold, that
transfer will count towards the two-year
limit. Transfers of IFQ for one area will
not affect the ability to transfer IFQ for
another area. This final rule limits the
potential for an IFQ holder to
continuously transfer IFQ to CDQ
groups rather than fishing that IFQ or
transferring the underlying QS to other
new entrants in the fishery.
Under the fifth limit, only catcher
vessel QS holders that hold fewer than
76,355 QS units specified for Area 4B
may transfer their catcher vessel IFQ to
CDQ groups. NMFS will consider all
categories of Area 4B QS holdings
regardless of blocked or unblocked
status. This limit ensures that persons
holding larger amounts of QS units
continue to be active fishermen in the
Area 4B halibut fishery while providing
an opportunity for persons holding
smaller amounts of QS units to transfer
catcher vessel IFQ to CDQ groups if the
1 million pound commercial catch limit
threshold to allow IFQ transfers is met.
As described in the proposed rule (83
FR 8028, March 26, 2018), this
limitation applies only for Area 4B to
accommodate the specific nature of IFQ
operations in the remote Aleutian Island
communities in Area 4B.
This final rule establishes a reporting
requirement for CDQ groups that receive
IFQ by transfer. The report is required
only for those years in which CDQ
groups received IFQ by transfer. CDQ
groups that receive IFQ by transfer will
be required to report the annual amount
and vessel category of Area 4 halibut
IFQ transferred to the CDQ group, the
criteria used to select IFQ holders to
transfer Area 4 halibut IFQ to the CDQ
group, and the criteria used to
determine the person(s) eligible to fish
Area 4 halibut IFQ received by transfer.
This report will allow the Council,
NMFS, and the public to monitor the
use of IFQ transferred to CDQ groups
and provide the Council with
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information to determine whether the
use of transferred IFQ is consistent with
its intent for the action. This final rule
requires the report to be submitted to
NMFS and the Council no later than
January 31 of the year after the IFQ was
transferred to the CDQ group. This
deadline is consistent with other reports
required under the IFQ Program and
ensures that NMFS and the Council
have received the report prior to the
issuance of IFQ, which typically occurs
in mid-February. If a CDQ group is
required to submit a report and does not
do so by the deadline, the CDQ group
will be ineligible to receive transfers of
catcher vessel IFQ until the report is
submitted.
Under this final rule, a CDQ group
that wants to receive halibut IFQ by
transfer will make an arrangement with
an IFQ holder to transfer his or her IFQ.
The CDQ group must complete an
Application for Temporary Transfer of
Halibut and Sablefish IFQ and submit
the application to NMFS for approval.
Once approved, NMFS will issue the
CDQ group an IFQ permit with the
pounds of halibut IFQ that will be
available to be fished. After determining
who will fish the halibut IFQ, the CDQ
group with the IFQ permit must apply
to NMFS for a hired master permit for
the vessel operator designated to fish
the halibut IFQ. Current regulations
authorize a vessel operator to harvest
halibut IFQ and CDQ on the same
fishing trip. A vessel operator harvesting
both halibut CDQ and IFQ transferred to
a CDQ group is required to carry (1) a
halibut CDQ permit, (2) a CDQ hired
master permit, (3) a copy of the IFQ
permit of the CDQ group, and (4) an IFQ
hired master permit. Additionally, any
vessels fishing halibut IFQ transferred to
a CDQ group will be subject to the
current IFQ vessel use caps under
§ 679.42(h)(1). If a vessel harvests both
halibut IFQ and CDQ, only the halibut
IFQ accrues towards, and is subject to,
the vessel use cap.
Halibut that is landed by a vessel
operator harvesting CDQ and IFQ will
be debited off two separate catch limits.
Therefore, for purposes of catch
accounting, participants are required to
track what amount of halibut harvest is
associated with the group’s CDQ and
what amount is associated with the IFQ
permit held by the CDQ group. This
distinction must be recorded on the fish
ticket (Section 3.8.11.3 of the Analysis).
NMFS updated the database that
monitors transfers of IFQ between
permit holders and that is used to issue
hired master permits to allow for this
new type of transfer (see Section
3.8.11.4 of the Analysis).
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Under this final rule, CDQ groups are
responsible for cost recovery fees based
on the amount of IFQ pounds held on
the IFQ permit. Section 304(d)(2)(A) of
the Magnuson-Stevens Act obligates
NMFS to recover the actual costs of
management, data collection, and
enforcement (direct program cost) of the
IFQ fisheries. Therefore, NMFS
implemented a cost recovery fee
program for the IFQ fisheries in 2000
(65 FR 14919, March 20, 2000). While
costs specific to the CDQ Program for
halibut are recoverable through a
separate cost recovery program (81 FR
150, January 5, 2016), this final rule
requires regulatory changes to the IFQ
transfer and hired master use provisions
and therefore constitutes a change in
management of the IFQ Program. CDQ
group participants receiving IFQ
transfers will be required to pay an IFQ
cost recovery fee as a portion of the exvessel value of their landed halibut.
Section 8(2) of the IPHC annual
management measures (83 FR 10390,
March 9, 2018) authorizes a vessel
operator harvesting halibut CDQ in
Areas 4D or 4E to retain halibut that are
less than the size limit established by
the IPHC for personal use. Under the
status quo, a vessel operator harvesting
halibut IFQ held by a CDQ group along
with halibut CDQ may retain halibut
less than legal size for personal use.
Vessel operators harvesting both halibut
CDQ and halibut IFQ transferred to a
CDQ group in Areas 4D or 4E may retain
halibut smaller in length than the size
limit established by the IPHC for
personal use as specified in section 8 of
the IPHC annual management measures.
The personal use allotment applies to
all halibut IFQ transferred to a CDQ
group under this exemption. Section
8(3) of the IPHC annual management
measures requires a CDQ group to report
on all retained halibut for personal use
that are smaller than legal size and
harvested on behalf of a CDQ group.
This final rule modifies the definition
of ‘‘annual commercial catch limit’’ at
50 CFR 300.61 to include definitions for
Areas 3B and 4A, and for Areas 4B, 4C,
4D, and 4E.
This final rule modifies § 679.41 to
allow transfer of halibut IFQ in Areas
4B, 4C, and 4D in years of low halibut
commercial catch limits in Areas 4B and
4CDE to CDQ groups along with the
specific conditions under which this
transfer activity may occur.
This final rule adds a reporting
requirement under § 679.5(l)(10) to
require a CDQ group to submit a report
to NMFS and the Council on the criteria
it used to select IFQ holders from whom
IFQ transfers were received, the criteria
it used to determine the persons who
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could harvest transferred IFQ, and the
amount and type of IFQ transferred.
This final rule adds a provision under
§ 679.42 to allow Area 4D IFQ that is
transferred to a CDQ group to be
harvested in Area 4E.
Anticipated Effects of Action 1
The preamble to the proposed rule
describes the anticipated effects of
Action 1 on CDQ groups, CDQ residents,
IFQ holders, and halibut QS holders (83
FR 8028, March 26, 2018).
Overall, this final rule provides IFQ
holders and CDQ groups with an
opportunity to alleviate the adverse
economic, social, and cultural impacts
of extremely low levels of commercial
halibut catch limits on Western Alaskan
communities. This final rule could also
provide distributional benefits to some
processing plants, secondary service
providers, and communities as a whole.
This final rule could benefit halibut QS
holders in Areas 4B, 4C, and 4D by
permitting them to transfer their Area
4B, 4C, and 4D halibut IFQ in years of
extremely low commercial catch limits.
This final rule could also result in some
consolidation of the number of IFQ
trips, and could affect the decisions of
QS holders to transfer their QS if they
have the ability to transfer their IFQ to
CDQ groups. The preamble of the
proposed rule (83 FR 8028, March 26,
2018) and Section 3.8 of the Analysis
have additional details on the
anticipated effects of Action 1.
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Action 2
This final rule removes an obsolete
reference in § 679.42(a)(2)(i). Currently,
this regulation provides an exception to
a prohibition at § 679.42(a)(2). However,
the exception refers to § 679.42(k),
which was modified in 2008 by the final
rule to revise regulations governing the
use of commercial halibut QS and the
processing of non-IFQ species when
processed halibut is on board a vessel
(73 FR 8822; February 15, 2008). That
final rule removed paragraph (k) and redesignated § 679.42(l) as paragraph (k).
NMFS inadvertently neglected to
remove the cross-reference to paragraph
(k) in § 679.42(a)(2)(i). Therefore, with
this final rule, NMFS removes the crossreference to paragraph (k) to clarify that
persons possessing unused Category B,
C, or D halibut QS may be on board a
catcher/processor vessel when that
vessel is harvesting and processing
Category A halibut or sablefish IFQ, or
is harvesting and processing non-IFQ
species. The effects of this action are
expected to be minor and beneficial by
improving the clarity of the regulations.
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Action 3
This final rule clarifies existing
regulations pertaining to the IFQ vessel
limitations, also referred to as the vessel
use caps. NMFS adds language to
§ 679.42(h)(1) and (h)(2) to clarify that
the vessel use caps apply to halibut and
sablefish IFQ and not to halibut and
sablefish CDQ. This action improves the
clarity of the regulations and helps IFQ
and CDQ participants understand the
regulations to which they are subject.
The effects of this action are expected to
be minor and beneficial by improving
the clarity of the regulations.
Comments and Responses
NMFS received 4 comment letters on
the proposed rule. One of the comment
letters was outside the scope of this
action. NMFS has summarized and
responded to the six unique comments
in the remaining three comment letters.
Comment 1: There should not be a
transfer of halibut IFQ during years of
low abundance unless they give back to
others during years of high abundance.
They harvest so much that they caused
the low abundance.
Response: NMFS disagrees. Based on
the best available scientific information
from the IPHC, halibut is not considered
to be subject to overfishing as that term
is defined by the IPHC (Section 3.6.1 of
Analysis). As described in Section 3.6.1
of the Analysis, annual catch limits are
set in a precautionary manner to achieve
optimum yield on a continuing basis. As
described in the proposed rule and
Section 3.6.1 of the Analysis, this final
rule does not increase the overall
amount of halibut in Areas 4B or 4CDE
that is authorized to be harvested on an
annual basis. The final rule establishes
a voluntary program that provides
participants with an opportunity to
utilize available catch to mutual benefit
during times of low abundance and does
not require QS holders to transfer IFQ
to CDQ groups during times of low
abundance or require CDQ groups to
transfer IFQ back to QS holders during
times of high abundance.
Comment 2: This rule allows leasing
quota when the fish populations are low
and it would increase the chance of
overfishing the halibut stock.
Response: Annual halibut commercial
catch limits are adjusted downward
with decreasing abundance to protect
the stock and prevent overfishing. This
final rule does not change the process of
allocating halibut among Areas or the
process of establishing halibut
commercial catch limits, nor will this
final rule change specific management
measures that govern the harvest of
halibut in Areas 4B and 4CDE, such as
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fishing location, timing, effort, or
authorized gear types. Section 3.6.1 of
the Analysis describes the current status
of the halibut stock which is not
overfished or subject to overfishing.
This final rule creates an exception to
allow CDQ groups to receive IFQ by
transfer, within the established annual
catch limits, in years of low abundance.
Therefore, this final rule will not
increase the chance of overfishing of the
halibut stock.
Comment 3: It is worth pausing to
remember how bad the old days were,
prior to implementation of the IFQ
program. In order to catch as much of
the TAC as possible, the industry did
not pay attention to the environmental
impact of its operations, worker safety,
and excessive bycatch. NOAA is right to
continue to refine this outstanding
program. The proposed rule to allow
transfers of IFQ to CDQ groups is wellwritten and prevents abuse of the
program by ‘‘mailbox-fishermen’’ and
favors the coastal communities.
Response: NMFS acknowledges this
comment.
Comment 4: If the halibut stock is low
enough to trigger this flexibility,
expanding flexibility will further
aggravate the problem of an overfished
stock. When the stock is low, then
everyone should suffer, both CDQ
fishermen and IFQ fishermen, in order
for the stock to regenerate.
Response: NMFS disagrees. Annual
halibut commercial catch limits are set
with precaution and adjusted
downward in times of low abundance to
avoid overfishing. The flexibility
provided by this final rule will not
create an overfished condition or
contribute to overfishing. This final rule
does not modify the methods for
apportioning halibut catch limits
between the CDQ and IFQ Programs. As
halibut catch limits increase or decrease
based on halibut abundance,
participants in the CDQ and IFQ
Programs are not affected any differently
under this final rule than under current
regulations. If the catch limit threshold
is low enough to trigger the ability for
QS holders to transfer their IFQ to CDQ
groups, then QS holders and CDQ
groups benefit from a voluntary market
transaction. Disapproving this rule
would not increase halibut abundance.
Section 3.8 of the Analysis provides
additional detail on the anticipated
effects of this final rule.
Comment 5: NMFS should consider
setting lease terms for this exception
because if the cost of the lease is too
high, the benefits of the proposed rule
would be blunted.
Response: The Council and NMFS did
not want to be involved in setting lease
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terms, similar to other transfer
exceptions in the IFQ Program. The IFQ
Program relies on market-based values
and NMFS anticipates that IFQ and
CDQ participants would come to a
private agreement in this voluntary
exception. In Section 3.8.7 of the
Analysis, NMFS describes the impact
that the transfer of IFQ (i.e., leasing)
could have on QS markets. As described
in the preamble of this final rule, there
are several limitations on the transfer of
IFQ. These limitations are intended, in
part, to maintain current fishing
business practices and to limit potential
adverse impacts on a range of
participants in the CDQ and IFQ
Programs. This final rule does not
establish additional requirements on the
specific agreements between QS holders
and CDQ groups when transferring IFQ
because the limitations established by
this final rule sufficiently constrain the
amount of IFQ, the vessel category of
IFQ, and the specific halibut catch
limits conditions in Areas 4B and 4CDE
IFQ that may be transferred.
Comment 6: NMFS should terminate
the policy to allow unused quota to
carry over to the next season and
instead allow unused quota to carry
over to the next season only for the
purposes of leasing it to CDQ groups.
Response: This final rule does not
modify existing regulations that allow a
QS holder’s annual IFQ allocation to be
adjusted to cover under- or over-harvest
from the previous year (see regulations
at § 679.40(d) and (e)). The Council
focused on alternatives that would
allow transfer of IFQ to CDQ groups
within the year of low halibut
commercial catch limits, rather than
adjusting over/under harvest rules that
would apply to the following year when
the halibut commercial catch limits may
not be under the thresholds, as a more
direct method of addressing the issue.
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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 adds
a new collection-of-information for
recordkeeping and reporting
requirements, 15 CFR 902.1(b) is revised
to reference correctly the section
resulting from this final rule.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:53 Oct 17, 2018
Jkt 247001
Changes From the Proposed Rule
NMFS makes two minor changes to
the proposed regulatory text in this final
rule. First, § 679.5(l)(10) is changed to
include the words ‘‘and the Council.’’
New regulations at § 679.5(w) require a
CDQ group to submit a report to both
NMFS and the Council. Adding this
language to § 679.5(l)(10) creates
consistency between these sections.
Second, NMFS changes ‘‘halibut IFQ’’ to
‘‘IFQ halibut’’ in § 679.42(h)(1) and
‘‘sablefish IFQ’’ to ‘‘IFQ sablefish’’ in
§ 679.42(h)(2). The proposed changes
were intended to refer to the type of fish
(IFQ halibut and IFQ sablefish defined
at § 679.2) that will count towards the
vessel limits prescribed by these
paragraphs rather than the type of
fishing rights (halibut IFQ and sablefish
IFQ).
Classification
The NMFS Alaska Region
Administrator determined that this final
rule is necessary for the conservation
and management of the IFQ halibut
fishery off Alaska and that it is
consistent with the Magnuson-Stevens
Fishery Conservation and Management
Act, the Halibut Act, and other
applicable laws.
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 Northern
Pacific Halibut Act of 1982 (Halibut Act,
16 U.S.C. 773c) allows the Regional
Council having authority for a particular
geographical area to develop regulations
governing the allocation and catch of
halibut in U.S. Convention waters as
long as those regulations are in addition
to, and not in conflict with, IPHC
regulations. This final rule is consistent
with the Council’s authority to allocate
halibut catches among fishery
participants in the waters in and off
Alaska.
This final rule has been determined to
be not significant for the purposes of
Executive Order 12866.
The Chief Counsel for Regulation of
the Department of Commerce certified
to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the
Small Business Administration during
the proposed rule stage that this action
would not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities. The factual basis for the
certification was published in the
proposed rule and is not repeated here.
No comments were received regarding
this certification or on the economic
impacts of the rule more generally. As
a result, a regulatory flexibility analysis
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52765
was not required, and none was
prepared, pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 605.
Collection-of-Information Requirements
This final rule contains collection-ofinformation requirements subject to the
PRA, which have been approved by
OMB under OMB control number 0648–
0764. After this final rule’s effective
date, OMB Control Number 0648–0764
will be merged with OMB Control
Numbers 0648–0272 and 0648–0711.
Public reporting burden is estimated
to average per response: 2 hours for
Application for Temporary Transfer of
Halibut and Sablefish IFQ, 40 hours for
the annual report, and 1 minute for
electronic submission of cost recovery
fees or 30 minutes for non-electronic fee
submission. 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, nor shall any person be
subject to penalty for failure to comply
with, a collection of information subject
to the requirement 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, Fisheries, Fishing, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements.
50 CFR Part 679
Alaska, Fisheries, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
Dated: October 12, 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:
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Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 202 / Thursday, October 18, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
Title 15—Commerce and Foreign Trade
PART 902—NOAA INFORMATION
COLLECTION REQUIREMENTS UNDER
THE PAPERWORK REDUCTION ACT:
OMB CONTROL NUMBERS
2. In § 902.1, in the table in paragraph
(b), under the entry ‘‘50 CFR’’, add an
entry in alphanumeric order for
‘‘679.5(w)’’ to read as follows:
§ 902.1 OMB control numbers assigned
pursuant to the Paperwork Reduction Act.
*
CFR part or section where the information collection
requirement is
located
*
50 CFR:
*
Current OMB control No.
(all numbers begin with
0648–)
*
*
*
679.5(w) ............
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
–0272
*
*
Title 50—Wildlife and Fisheries
PART 300—INTERNATIONAL
FISHERIES REGULATIONS
3. The authority for 50 CFR part 300,
subpart E, continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 773–773k.
4. In § 300.61, revise the definition of
‘‘Annual commercial catch limit’’ to
read as follows:
■
§ 300.61
Definitions.
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*
*
*
*
*
Annual commercial catch limit, for
purposes of commercial fishing in:
(1) Commission regulatory areas 2C
and 3A, means the annual commercial
allocation minus an area-specific
estimate of commercial halibut wastage.
(2) Commission regulatory areas 3B
and 4A, means the annual total
allowable halibut removals by persons
fishing IFQ.
(3) Commission regulatory areas 4B,
4C, 4D, and 4E, means the annual total
allowable halibut removals by persons
fishing IFQ and CDQ.
*
*
*
*
*
VerDate Sep<11>2014
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§ 679.41
6. In § 679.5, add paragraphs (l)(10)
and (w) to read as follows:
■
*
*
(b) * * *
5. The authority citation for 50 CFR
part 679 continues to read as follows:
■
■
Authority: 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.
*
■
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 773 et seq.; 1801 et
seq.; 3631 et seq.; Pub. L. 108–447; Pub. L.
111–281.
1. The authority citation for part 902
continues to read as follows:
■
Jkt 247001
c. Add paragraph (o).
The additions and revisions read as
follows:
PART 679—FISHERIES OF THE
EXCLUSIVE ECONOMIC ZONE OFF
ALASKA
§ 679.5
Recordkeeping and reporting.
*
*
*
*
*
(l) * * *
(10) A report on annual IFQ
regulatory areas 4B, 4C, and 4D Halibut
IFQ transfer activities must be
submitted to NMFS and the Council by
a CDQ group as required at § 679.5(w).
*
*
*
*
*
(w) Report on Area 4 halibut IFQ
transfers to CDQ groups—(1)
Applicability. A CDQ group that
receives IFQ regulatory area 4 halibut
IFQ by transfer must submit a timely
and complete report on the CDQ group’s
annual halibut IFQ transfer activities for
each calendar year that it receives IFQ
regulatory area 4 halibut IFQ by transfer.
A CDQ group is not required to submit
a report for any calendar year in which
it did not receive any IFQ regulatory
area 4 halibut IFQ by transfer.
(2) Time limits and submittal. A CDQ
group must submit a complete report by
January 31 of the year following a
fishing year during which the CDQ
group receives IFQ regulatory area 4B,
4C, or 4D halibut IFQ by transfer. The
complete report must be submitted 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 report. A complete
report contains all report requirements
described in paragraphs (w)(4)(i)
through (w)(4)(iii) of this section.
(4) Report requirements. A CDQ group
must report the following information:
(i) The annual amount, IFQ regulatory
area, and vessel category of IFQ
regulatory area 4B, 4C, and 4D halibut
IFQ transferred to the CDQ group;
(ii) The criteria used to select IFQ
holders to transfer IFQ regulatory area
4B, 4C, and 4D halibut IFQ to the CDQ
group; and
(iii) The criteria used to determine the
person(s) eligible to harvest IFQ
regulatory area 4B, 4C, and 4D halibut
IFQ received by transfer.
■ 7. In § 679.41,
■ a. Add paragraph (c)(13);
■ b. Revise paragraphs (d)(1), (g)(1), and
(h)(2); and
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Transfer of quota shares and IFQ.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(13) If the person applying to receive
halibut IFQ assigned to vessel categories
B, C, or D in IFQ regulatory areas 4B,
4C, or 4D is a CDQ group, the following
determinations are required:
(i) The CDQ group applying to receive
halibut IFQ for an IFQ regulatory area
receives an annual allocation of halibut
CDQ for that IFQ regulatory area
pursuant to § 679.31(b)(1);
(ii) The QS holder applying to transfer
halibut IFQ to a CDQ group has not
transferred any halibut IFQ assigned to
vessel categories B, C, or D for that IFQ
regulatory area to a CDQ group during
the last two consecutive fishing years;
(iii) If the IFQ to be transferred to a
CDQ group results from QS that was
transferred to the QS holder after
December 14, 2015, the QS holder
applying to transfer halibut IFQ to a
CDQ group has held the underlying QS
for that IFQ for a minimum of 3 years
from the date NMFS approved the
transfer;
(iv) If the IFQ to be transferred to a
CDQ group is assigned to vessel
categories B, C, or D in IFQ regulatory
area 4B, the QS holder applying to
transfer that halibut IFQ to a CDQ group
holds fewer than 76,355 halibut QS
units in IFQ regulatory area 4B; and
(v) The CDQ group applying to
receive halibut IFQ has submitted a
complete report if required to do so by
§ 679.5(w).
(d) * * *
(1) Application for Eligibility. All
persons, except as provided in
paragraphs (d)(1)(i) and (d)(1)(ii) of this
section, applying to receive QS or IFQ
must submit an Application for
Eligibility to Receive QS/IFQ
(Application for Eligibility) containing
accurate information to 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 shall provide an
Application for Eligibility form to any
person on request.
(i) An 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.
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(ii) An Application for Eligibility is
not required for a CDQ group.
*
*
*
*
*
(g) * * *
(1) Except as provided in paragraph
(f), paragraph (g)(2), paragraph (l),
paragraph (n) or paragraph (o) 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.
*
*
*
*
*
(h) * * *
(2) IFQ resulting from categories B, C,
or D QS may not be transferred
separately from its originating QS,
except as provided in paragraph (d),
paragraph (f), paragraph (k), paragraph
(l), paragraph (m), or paragraph (o) of
this section.
*
*
*
*
*
(o) Transfer of IFQ to CDQ groups. (1)
A QS holder who holds fewer than
76,355 units of halibut QS in IFQ
regulatory area 4B may transfer halibut
IFQ assigned to vessel categories B, C,
or D in IFQ regulatory area 4B to a CDQ
group that receives an allocation of IFQ
regulatory area 4B halibut CDQ if the
annual commercial halibut catch limit,
as defined in § 300.61 of this title, for
Area 4B is less than 1 million pounds
in that calendar year.
(2) A QS holder in IFQ regulatory
areas 4C or 4D may transfer halibut IFQ
assigned to vessel categories B, C, or D
in IFQ regulatory areas 4C or 4D to a
CDQ group that receives an allocation of
halibut CDQ in that IFQ regulatory area
if the annual commercial halibut catch
limit, as defined in § 300.61 of this title,
for Area 4CDE is less than 1.5 million
pounds in that calendar year.
(3) A QS holder must meet the
requirements in paragraph (c)(13) of this
section to transfer halibut IFQ assigned
to vessel categories B, C, or D in IFQ
regulatory areas 4B, 4C, or 4D to a CDQ
group.
(4) A CDQ group that receives halibut
IFQ by transfer may not transfer that
halibut IFQ to any other person.
■ 8. In § 679.42,
■ a. Revise paragraph (a)(1);
■ b. Remove paragraph (a)(2)(i);
■ c. Redesignate paragraphs (a)(2)(ii)
through (iv) as paragraphs (a)(2)(i)
through (iii);
■ d. Add new paragraph (a)(2)(iv); and
■ e. Revise paragraphs (h)(1)
introductory text and (h)(2) introductory
text.
The revisions and additions read as
follows:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:53 Oct 17, 2018
Jkt 247001
§ 679.42
Limitations on use of QS and IFQ.
(a) * * *
(1) The QS or IFQ specified for one
IFQ regulatory area must not be used in
a different IFQ regulatory area, except
for the following:
(i) All or part of the QS and IFQ
specified for regulatory area 4C may be
harvested in either Area 4C or Area 4D.
(ii) All or part of the halibut CDQ
specified for regulatory area 4D may be
harvested in either Area 4D or Area 4E.
(iii) If a CDQ group is authorized to
receive a transfer of halibut IFQ
assigned to vessel categories B, C, or D
in IFQ regulatory area 4D as specified in
§ 679.41(o) of this part, all or part of the
halibut IFQ specified for regulatory area
4D that is held by or transferred to a
CDQ group may be harvested in either
Area 4D or Area 4E.
(2) * * *
*
*
*
*
*
(iv) Halibut IFQ assigned to vessel
category B, C, or D held by a CDQ group
may not be used on a vessel over 51 feet
LOA, irrespective of the vessel category
assigned to the IFQ.
*
*
*
*
*
(h) * * *
(1) Halibut. No vessel may be used,
during any fishing year, to harvest more
IFQ halibut than one-half percent of the
combined total catch limits of halibut
for IFQ regulatory areas 2C, 3A, 3B, 4A,
4B, 4C, 4D, and 4E, except that:
*
*
*
*
*
(2) Sablefish. No vessel may be used,
during any fishing year, to harvest more
IFQ sablefish than one percent of the
combined fixed gear TAC of sablefish
for the GOA and BSAI IFQ regulatory
areas, except that:
*
*
*
*
*
[FR Doc. 2018–22687 Filed 10–17–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
52767
additional flexibility to specify in its
notice requesting large position reports
where and how reports are to be filed.
Accordingly, Treasury will provide
notice by issuing a public
announcement and subsequently
publishing the notice in the Federal
Register. Treasury believes these
amendments may also minimize the
costs and burden on reporting entities.
DATES: The amendments are effective
November 17, 2018.
ADDRESSES: This final rule is available at
https://www.treasurydirect.gov and
https://www.regulations.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Lori
Santamorena, Kurt Eidemiller, Kevin
Hawkins, or John Garrison, Department
of the Treasury, Bureau of the Fiscal
Service, Government Securities
Regulations Staff, (202) 504–3632 or
email us at govsecreg@
fiscal.treasury.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
A. Treasury’s Large Position Reporting
Rules
The LPR Rules 1 are issued under the
Government Securities Act (GSA),2 as
amended, for the purposes of
monitoring the impact of large positions
in Treasury securities in the Treasury
securities market and otherwise
assisting the Securities and Exchange
Commission (SEC) in enforcing the
GSA.3 The LPR Rules provide an ondemand reporting system 4 that requires
reports to be filed by entities that
control 10 percent or more in a
particular Treasury security (or
securities) as of a particular date. The
reports provide information on large
positions in Treasury securities held by
market participants and additional
insight into the supply and demand
dynamics in certain Treasury
securities.5 This information allows
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
1 78
17 CFR Part 420
Government Securities Act
Regulations: Large Position Reporting
Rules
Office of the Assistant
Secretary for Financial Markets,
Treasury.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
The Department of the
Treasury (Treasury) is issuing a final
rule to amend its Large Position
Reporting rules (LPR Rules). These
technical amendments make no
substantive changes to the rules but are
designed to provide Treasury with
SUMMARY:
PO 00000
Frm 00017
Fmt 4700
FR 73414 December 10, 2014.
Law 103–202, 107 Stat. 2344 (1993) [15
U.S.C. 78o–5(f)].
3 Treasury does not believe that large positions in
Treasury securities are inherently problematic and
there is no presumption of manipulative or illegal
intent merely because a reporting entity’s position
is large enough to be subject to Treasury’s LPR
Rules.
4 An ‘‘on-demand’’ reporting system, rather than
a regular, ongoing system of reporting, provides
Treasury with the information necessary to
understand supply and demand dynamics in the
Treasury securities market, while minimizing the
potential impact on the market’s efficiency and
liquidity and the cost to taxpayers of funding the
federal debt. It also minimizes the cost and burden
to those reporting entities affected by the LPR
Rules.
5 The GSA specifically provides that Treasury
shall not be compelled to disclose publicly any
2 Public
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\18OCR1.SGM
Continued
18OCR1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 202 (Thursday, October 18, 2018)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 52760-52767]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2018-22687]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
15 CFR Part 902
50 CFR Parts 300 and 679
[Docket No. 170626590-8785-02]
RIN 0648-BG94
Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic Zone off Alaska; Pacific
Halibut and Sablefish Individual Fishing Quota Program; Community
Development Quota Program; Modifications to Recordkeeping and Reporting
Requirements
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: NMFS issues a final rule that modifies regulations governing
the Halibut and Sablefish Individual Fishing Quota (IFQ) Program. This
rule includes three actions. The first action allows Western Alaska
Community Development Quota (CDQ) groups to lease (to receive by
transfer) halibut IFQ in IFQ regulatory areas 4B, 4C, and 4D in years
of extremely low halibut commercial catch limits. This action is
necessary to provide additional harvest opportunities to CDQ groups and
community residents, and provide IFQ holders with the opportunity to
receive value for their IFQ when the halibut commercial catch limits
may not be large enough to provide for an economically viable fishery
for IFQ holders. The second action removes an obsolete reference in the
IFQ Program regulations. The third action clarifies IFQ vessel use cap
regulations. This final rule is intended to promote the goals and
objectives of the Northern Pacific Halibut Act of 1982 (Halibut Act),
the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act (Magnuson-
Stevens Act), the Fishery Management Plan (FMP) for Groundfish of the
Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands (BSAI) Management Area, and other
applicable laws.
DATES: This rule is effective on November 19, 2018.
ADDRESSES: Electronic copies of the Regulatory Impact Review (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 by mail 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; and by email to [email protected] or by fax to
(202) 395-5806.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Stephanie Warpinski, (907) 586-7228.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Authority for Action
The International Pacific Halibut Commission (IPHC) and NMFS manage
fishing for Pacific halibut through regulations established under the
authority of the Halibut Act. The IPHC promulgates regulations
governing the halibut fishery under the Convention between the United
States and Canada for the Preservation of the Halibut Fishery of the
Northern Pacific Ocean and Bering Sea (Convention). The IPHC's
regulations are subject to approval by the Secretary of State with the
concurrence of the Secretary of Commerce (Secretary). NMFS publishes
the IPHC's regulations as annual management measures pursuant to 50 CFR
300.62.
The Halibut Act, at sections 773c(a) and (b), provides the
Secretary with general responsibility to carry out the Convention and
the Halibut Act. 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
[[Page 52761]]
conflict with, approved IPHC regulations. Regulations developed by the
Council may be implemented by NMFS only after approval by the
Secretary.
The Council developed the IFQ Program for the commercial halibut
and sablefish fisheries. The IFQ Program for the halibut fishery is
implemented by Federal regulations at 50 CFR part 679 under the
authority of section 773 of the Halibut Act. The IFQ Program for the
sablefish fishery is implemented by the BSAI FMP and Federal
regulations at 50 CFR part 679 under the authority of section 303(b) of
the Magnuson-Stevens Act.
Background
On February 23, 2018, NMFS published a proposed rule (83 FR 8028)
and invited public comment. The following summarizes the IFQ Program,
the CDQ Program, the need for this final rule, and the anticipated
effects of the final rule. Additional detail about the action is
provided in the preamble of the proposed rule and in the Analysis.
The IFQ Program
The IFQ Program for the management of the fixed gear (hook-and-line
and pot gear) halibut and sablefish fisheries off Alaska was
implemented by NMFS in 1995 (58 FR 59375, November 9, 1993). A central
objective of the IFQ Program is to support the social and economic
character of the fisheries and the coastal fishing communities where
many of these fisheries are based. A detailed description of the IFQ
Program can be found in the proposed rule for this action (83 FR 8028,
February 23, 2018) and the Analysis.
Under the IFQ Program, access to the fixed gear sablefish and
halibut fisheries is limited to those persons holding quota share (QS).
QS is an exclusive, revocable privilege that allows the holder to
harvest a specific percentage of either the total allowable catch (TAC)
in the sablefish fishery or the annual commercial catch limit in the
halibut fishery. QS is designated for specific geographic areas of
harvest, a specific vessel operation type (catcher vessel or catcher/
processor), and for a specific range of vessel sizes that may be used
to harvest the sablefish or halibut (vessel category).
This final rule uses the term ``Area'' to refer to a specific IFQ
regulatory area. The IFQ Program designates four vessel categories of
halibut QS: Category A shares designated for catcher/processors,
vessels that process their catch at sea, and do not have a vessel
length restriction; Category B shares designated for catcher vessels
greater than 60 feet length overall (LOA); Category C shares designated
for catcher vessels greater than 35 feet but less than or equal to 60
feet LOA; and Category D shares designated for catcher vessels less
than or equal to 35 feet LOA.
NMFS annually issues IFQ permits to each QS holder. An annual IFQ
permit authorizes the permit holder to harvest a specified amount of
the IFQ species in a regulatory area from a specific operation type and
vessel category. The Council and the public frequently use the terms
``IFQ lease'' or ``lease'' to refer to the transfer of IFQ without a
transfer of the underlying quota shares (QS). However, NMFS does not
generally use the term ``lease'' in its IFQ Program regulations
governing the transfer of IFQ. Therefore, for consistency with the
terminology used in the existing regulations and for clarity, this rule
uses the term ``transfer of IFQ.''
NMFS issues halibut IFQ consistent with the IPHC's regulatory
areas. NMFS' IFQ regulatory areas (Areas) are defined in 50 CFR part
679 and described in Figure 15 to part 679 and Section 1.3 of the
Analysis. The first action in this rule pertains to Areas 4B, 4C, 4D,
and 4E. Area 4B includes waters in the Central and Western Aleutian
Islands. Areas 4C, 4D, and 4E include waters north of the Aleutian
Islands, in the Bering Sea, and around the Pribilof Islands. The IPHC
considers Areas 4C, 4D, and 4E a single stock unit for assessment and
management purposes, and the combined Areas are referred to as Area
4CDE in this final rule.
The commercial catch limits for Areas 4B and 4CDE are allocated
between two distinct management programs, the CDQ Program and the IFQ
Program. Throughout the duration of the IFQ Program, the Area 4E
commercial catch limit has been exclusively allocated to the CDQ
Program; therefore, no Area 4E QS or IFQ is allocated.
Overall, the halibut IFQ commercial catch limits in Areas 4B and
4CDE have trended downward over the past 15 years (see Section 3.6.1 of
the Analysis). The Area 4B commercial catch limit has dropped
substantially from 2001 to 2015. In 2015, the Area 4B commercial catch
limit for IFQ was less than a quarter of what it was in 2001. The
combined commercial catch limit for IFQ in Areas 4C and 4D has seen
more fluctuation during this period, but has still experienced an
overall downward trend since 2007. In 2007, the combined commercial
catch limit for IFQ in Areas 4C and 4D was about 2.2 million pounds; in
2015, it was about 0.7 million pounds.
The CDQ Program
The CDQ Program was implemented in 1992, and in 1996, the Magnuson-
Stevens Act was amended to include provisions specific to the CDQ
Program. The purposes of the CDQ Program are (1) to provide eligible
western Alaska villages with the opportunity to participate and invest
in fisheries in the BSAI management area; (2) to support economic
development in western Alaska; (3) to alleviate poverty and provide
economic and social benefits for residents of western Alaska; and (4)
to achieve sustainable and diversified local economies in western
Alaska (16 U.S.C. 1855(i)(1)(A)).
The CDQ Program consists of six different non-profit managing
organizations (CDQ groups) representing different geographical regions
in Alaska. The CDQ Program receives annual allocations of TAC for a
variety of commercially valuable species in the BSAI groundfish, crab,
and halibut fisheries, which are in turn allocated among the CDQ
groups. Among the species CDQ groups are allocated for commercial
fishing, Pacific halibut is an important species for community resident
employment and income. NMFS allocates halibut to CDQ groups for
commercial fisheries in four Areas: 4B, 4C, 4D, and 4E (see Section
3.5.1 of the Analysis). See Section 3.5.2 of the Analysis for
additional detail on the history of the halibut CDQ fishery.
The resident halibut CDQ fleets and criteria for participation in
CDQ fisheries vary among the CDQ groups. The resident halibut CDQ
fleets are impacted by internal economic decisions made by the CDQ
groups and in the ways the CDQ groups choose to promote economic
development in their communities. Many of the small boat fishermen in
CDQ communities are dependent on the halibut fishery (Section 3.5.3 of
the Analysis).
Need for Action
The downward trend of halibut commercial catch limits in Areas 4B
and 4CDE over the past 15 years has been dramatic, with current limits
significantly lower than those of the recent past years. The recent
years of low halibut abundance and the resulting low commercial catch
limits in Areas 4B and 4CDE have made it increasingly difficult for
most CDQ groups to create a viable commercial halibut fishing
opportunity for their community residents.
Under current regulations, CDQ groups cannot receive by transfer
any IFQ derived from catcher vessel QS. Current regulations also
prohibit halibut
[[Page 52762]]
QS holders from transferring their IFQ separately from the underlying
QS except in very narrow, specific situations (see Section 3.7 of the
Analysis for more information).
To address these problems, this final rule creates a voluntary
option for IFQ holders in Areas 4B, 4C, or 4D to temporarily transfer
their halibut IFQ to a CDQ group in years of extremely low halibut
abundance. This flexibility allows CDQ groups to expand the fishing
opportunities for the small boat fleets operating out of the CDQ
group's communities and provides IFQ holders with the opportunity to
receive value for their IFQ when extremely low halibut commercial catch
limits may not be large enough to provide for an economically viable
fishery for IFQ holders.
This Final Rule and the Anticipated Effects
This final rule includes three actions. The primary action, Action
1, creates a voluntary option for an IFQ holder to temporarily transfer
his or her halibut IFQ to a CDQ group in years of extremely low halibut
abundance. Actions 2 and 3 make minor regulatory adjustments to remove
an obsolete reference in the IFQ Program regulations and to clarify IFQ
vessel use cap regulations, respectively. The following paragraphs
provide additional detail on the actions.
Action 1
This final rule (1) defines the halibut commercial catch limits
under which CDQ groups may receive IFQ by transfer, (2) establishes
limits on the types and amounts of IFQ that can be transferred, and (3)
establishes reporting requirements for CDQ groups receiving IFQ by
transfer. This final rule does not convert transferred IFQ to CDQ.
Allocations of halibut CDQ will not change under this final rule.
Under this final rule, CDQ groups may receive transfers of halibut
catcher vessel IFQ (Categories B, C, and D IFQ) in Areas 4C and 4D when
the halibut annual commercial catch limit is less than 1.5 million
pounds in Area 4CDE. CDQ groups may receive transfers of halibut
catcher vessel IFQ (Categories B, C, and D IFQ) in Area 4B when the
annual halibut commercial catch limit is less than 1 million pounds in
Area 4B. IFQ holders may transfer both blocked and unblocked IFQ to CDQ
groups. This final rule does not revise current regulations that
authorize an IFQ holder in Areas 4B, 4C and 4D to transfer his or her
Category A halibut IFQ to any qualified person, including a CDQ group.
However, as explained later, this rule provides additional harvesting
flexibility for Category A halibut IFQ transferred to a CDQ group in
years of extremely low halibut abundance.
The Council recommended and NMFS is implementing these thresholds
based on an analysis of commercial catch limits between 2008 and 2017,
a period of time representing a range of different halibut commercial
catch limits and decreasing opportunities for CDQ community fishermen.
The Council considered a range of different commercial catch limit
thresholds for both Areas 4B and 4CDE before selecting these
thresholds. The preamble to the proposed rule provides additional
information on the factors considered by the Council and NMFS (83 FR
8028, March 26, 2018).
These thresholds are intended to balance the goal of providing
additional halibut fishing opportunities for CDQ residents when the
halibut CDQ allocation alone may not be large enough to sustain small
vessel resident fisheries, with the need to avoid potential adverse
distributional impacts on other halibut IFQ users that could result if
IFQ transfers were permitted without restrictions. These thresholds
provide the flexibility to transfer halibut IFQ in Areas 4B, 4C, and 4D
only during worst case scenarios for halibut commercial catch limits in
these areas (Section 2.3 of the Analysis). For Area 4CDE, the Council
determined and NMFS agrees that a halibut commercial catch limit below
1.5 million pounds reflects a worst case scenario for Area 4CDE as it
represents an extremely low commercial catch limit for these areas. For
Area 4B, the Council determined and NMFS agrees that a halibut
commercial catch limit below 1 million pounds, which has not been
experienced during the last 10 years, reflects a worst case scenario
for Area 4B as it represents an extremely low commercial catch limit
for this area.
This final rule establishes several limits on the catcher vessel
IFQ that can be transferred while providing some flexibility with
transferred catcher vessel and catcher/processor IFQ. The rationale for
the limits can be found in Section 2.2 of the Analysis and in the
preamble to the proposed rule (83 FR 8028, March 26, 2018). The limits
are: (1) A CDQ group will be able to receive catcher vessel IFQ by
transfer only for an area in which it also holds halibut CDQ; (2) no
vessel greater than 51 feet length overall (LOA) may be used to harvest
catcher vessel IFQ transferred to a CDQ group; (3) catcher vessel IFQ
resulting from QS acquired after December 14, 2015, may not be
transferred to a CDQ group until 3 years after the QS was acquired
(i.e., a cooling off period); (4) an IFQ holder will not be allowed to
transfer catcher vessel halibut IFQ to a CDQ group for more than 2
consecutive years; and (5) in Area 4B, only those QS holders who hold
fewer than 76,355 QS units specified for Area 4B will be allowed to
transfer their catcher vessel IFQ to CDQ groups.
The first limit prevents a CDQ group from receiving catcher vessel
halibut IFQ by transfer for an area in which that CDQ group does not
hold halibut CDQ. The Council recommended and NMFS is implementing this
limit so that any catcher vessel IFQ transferred to a CDQ group is
available for use in conjunction with halibut CDQ that is issued to a
CDQ group.
Additionally, under this final rule at Sec. 679.42(a)(1)(iii), a
CDQ group that is eligible to receive a transfer of Area 4D catcher
vessel IFQ will be able to harvest that IFQ, and any Category A IFQ it
holds, in Area 4E (Section 3.5.2 of the Analysis). This flexibility is
consistent with section 12(8) of the IPHC annual management measures
(83 FR 10390, March 9, 2018), which allows Area 4D halibut CDQ to be
harvested in Area 4E.
The second limit prohibits the use of vessels greater than 51 feet
LOA to harvest catcher vessel IFQ that is transferred to a CDQ group.
The Council recommended and NMFS is implementing this vessel size limit
because this is the largest size vessel owned by CDQ community
residents that has landed halibut CDQ during the past 10 years, 2008
through 2017 (Section 3.5.3 of the Analysis). Current regulations
provide sufficient flexibility to allow IFQ that could be transferred
to a CDQ group under this final rule to be fished on a vessel of any
length up to 51 feet LOA (see Section 2.4 of the Analysis).
This final rule clarifies that any Area 4D Category A IFQ that is
held by a CDQ group or transferred to a CDQ group may be fished in Area
4E by vessels less than or equal to 51 feet LOA when the commercial
catch limit threshold in Area 4CDE is triggered. This final rule does
not revise current regulations that authorize Category A IFQ for Areas
4B, 4C, or 4D to be fished in the corresponding area on a vessel of any
length.
Under the third limit, IFQ resulting from QS acquired after
December 14, 2015, may not be transferred to a CDQ group until 3 years
after the QS was acquired (i.e., the date NMFS approved the transfer).
This provision effectively creates a ``cooling off'' period. The
Council recommended and NMFS is
[[Page 52763]]
implementing this cooling off period to reduce the incentive for
individuals to acquire QS with the intention of transferring the
resulting IFQ to CDQ groups rather than fishing the IFQ.
The fourth limit prohibits an IFQ holder from transferring catcher
vessel halibut IFQ for a specific IFQ regulatory area to a CDQ group
for more than two consecutive years. This two-year limit applies to
calendar years and only to years in which the commercial catch limit is
below the threshold. Additionally, this limit applies to the transfer
of any halibut IFQ for a specific area. If an IFQ holder chooses to
transfer some but not all of his or her IFQ for a particular area
during a year when the annual commercial catch limit for that area is
set below the threshold, that transfer will count towards the two-year
limit. Transfers of IFQ for one area will not affect the ability to
transfer IFQ for another area. This final rule limits the potential for
an IFQ holder to continuously transfer IFQ to CDQ groups rather than
fishing that IFQ or transferring the underlying QS to other new
entrants in the fishery.
Under the fifth limit, only catcher vessel QS holders that hold
fewer than 76,355 QS units specified for Area 4B may transfer their
catcher vessel IFQ to CDQ groups. NMFS will consider all categories of
Area 4B QS holdings regardless of blocked or unblocked status. This
limit ensures that persons holding larger amounts of QS units continue
to be active fishermen in the Area 4B halibut fishery while providing
an opportunity for persons holding smaller amounts of QS units to
transfer catcher vessel IFQ to CDQ groups if the 1 million pound
commercial catch limit threshold to allow IFQ transfers is met. As
described in the proposed rule (83 FR 8028, March 26, 2018), this
limitation applies only for Area 4B to accommodate the specific nature
of IFQ operations in the remote Aleutian Island communities in Area 4B.
This final rule establishes a reporting requirement for CDQ groups
that receive IFQ by transfer. The report is required only for those
years in which CDQ groups received IFQ by transfer. CDQ groups that
receive IFQ by transfer will be required to report the annual amount
and vessel category of Area 4 halibut IFQ transferred to the CDQ group,
the criteria used to select IFQ holders to transfer Area 4 halibut IFQ
to the CDQ group, and the criteria used to determine the person(s)
eligible to fish Area 4 halibut IFQ received by transfer. This report
will allow the Council, NMFS, and the public to monitor the use of IFQ
transferred to CDQ groups and provide the Council with information to
determine whether the use of transferred IFQ is consistent with its
intent for the action. This final rule requires the report to be
submitted to NMFS and the Council no later than January 31 of the year
after the IFQ was transferred to the CDQ group. This deadline is
consistent with other reports required under the IFQ Program and
ensures that NMFS and the Council have received the report prior to the
issuance of IFQ, which typically occurs in mid-February. If a CDQ group
is required to submit a report and does not do so by the deadline, the
CDQ group will be ineligible to receive transfers of catcher vessel IFQ
until the report is submitted.
Under this final rule, a CDQ group that wants to receive halibut
IFQ by transfer will make an arrangement with an IFQ holder to transfer
his or her IFQ. The CDQ group must complete an Application for
Temporary Transfer of Halibut and Sablefish IFQ and submit the
application to NMFS for approval. Once approved, NMFS will issue the
CDQ group an IFQ permit with the pounds of halibut IFQ that will be
available to be fished. After determining who will fish the halibut
IFQ, the CDQ group with the IFQ permit must apply to NMFS for a hired
master permit for the vessel operator designated to fish the halibut
IFQ. Current regulations authorize a vessel operator to harvest halibut
IFQ and CDQ on the same fishing trip. A vessel operator harvesting both
halibut CDQ and IFQ transferred to a CDQ group is required to carry (1)
a halibut CDQ permit, (2) a CDQ hired master permit, (3) a copy of the
IFQ permit of the CDQ group, and (4) an IFQ hired master permit.
Additionally, any vessels fishing halibut IFQ transferred to a CDQ
group will be subject to the current IFQ vessel use caps under Sec.
679.42(h)(1). If a vessel harvests both halibut IFQ and CDQ, only the
halibut IFQ accrues towards, and is subject to, the vessel use cap.
Halibut that is landed by a vessel operator harvesting CDQ and IFQ
will be debited off two separate catch limits. Therefore, for purposes
of catch accounting, participants are required to track what amount of
halibut harvest is associated with the group's CDQ and what amount is
associated with the IFQ permit held by the CDQ group. This distinction
must be recorded on the fish ticket (Section 3.8.11.3 of the Analysis).
NMFS updated the database that monitors transfers of IFQ between permit
holders and that is used to issue hired master permits to allow for
this new type of transfer (see Section 3.8.11.4 of the Analysis).
Under this final rule, CDQ groups are responsible for cost recovery
fees based on the amount of IFQ pounds held on the IFQ permit. Section
304(d)(2)(A) of the Magnuson-Stevens Act obligates NMFS to recover the
actual costs of management, data collection, and enforcement (direct
program cost) of the IFQ fisheries. Therefore, NMFS implemented a cost
recovery fee program for the IFQ fisheries in 2000 (65 FR 14919, March
20, 2000). While costs specific to the CDQ Program for halibut are
recoverable through a separate cost recovery program (81 FR 150,
January 5, 2016), this final rule requires regulatory changes to the
IFQ transfer and hired master use provisions and therefore constitutes
a change in management of the IFQ Program. CDQ group participants
receiving IFQ transfers will be required to pay an IFQ cost recovery
fee as a portion of the ex-vessel value of their landed halibut.
Section 8(2) of the IPHC annual management measures (83 FR 10390,
March 9, 2018) authorizes a vessel operator harvesting halibut CDQ in
Areas 4D or 4E to retain halibut that are less than the size limit
established by the IPHC for personal use. Under the status quo, a
vessel operator harvesting halibut IFQ held by a CDQ group along with
halibut CDQ may retain halibut less than legal size for personal use.
Vessel operators harvesting both halibut CDQ and halibut IFQ
transferred to a CDQ group in Areas 4D or 4E may retain halibut smaller
in length than the size limit established by the IPHC for personal use
as specified in section 8 of the IPHC annual management measures. The
personal use allotment applies to all halibut IFQ transferred to a CDQ
group under this exemption. Section 8(3) of the IPHC annual management
measures requires a CDQ group to report on all retained halibut for
personal use that are smaller than legal size and harvested on behalf
of a CDQ group.
This final rule modifies the definition of ``annual commercial
catch limit'' at 50 CFR 300.61 to include definitions for Areas 3B and
4A, and for Areas 4B, 4C, 4D, and 4E.
This final rule modifies Sec. 679.41 to allow transfer of halibut
IFQ in Areas 4B, 4C, and 4D in years of low halibut commercial catch
limits in Areas 4B and 4CDE to CDQ groups along with the specific
conditions under which this transfer activity may occur.
This final rule adds a reporting requirement under Sec.
679.5(l)(10) to require a CDQ group to submit a report to NMFS and the
Council on the criteria it used to select IFQ holders from whom IFQ
transfers were received, the criteria it used to determine the persons
who
[[Page 52764]]
could harvest transferred IFQ, and the amount and type of IFQ
transferred.
This final rule adds a provision under Sec. 679.42 to allow Area
4D IFQ that is transferred to a CDQ group to be harvested in Area 4E.
Anticipated Effects of Action 1
The preamble to the proposed rule describes the anticipated effects
of Action 1 on CDQ groups, CDQ residents, IFQ holders, and halibut QS
holders (83 FR 8028, March 26, 2018).
Overall, this final rule provides IFQ holders and CDQ groups with
an opportunity to alleviate the adverse economic, social, and cultural
impacts of extremely low levels of commercial halibut catch limits on
Western Alaskan communities. This final rule could also provide
distributional benefits to some processing plants, secondary service
providers, and communities as a whole. This final rule could benefit
halibut QS holders in Areas 4B, 4C, and 4D by permitting them to
transfer their Area 4B, 4C, and 4D halibut IFQ in years of extremely
low commercial catch limits. This final rule could also result in some
consolidation of the number of IFQ trips, and could affect the
decisions of QS holders to transfer their QS if they have the ability
to transfer their IFQ to CDQ groups. The preamble of the proposed rule
(83 FR 8028, March 26, 2018) and Section 3.8 of the Analysis have
additional details on the anticipated effects of Action 1.
Action 2
This final rule removes an obsolete reference in Sec.
679.42(a)(2)(i). Currently, this regulation provides an exception to a
prohibition at Sec. 679.42(a)(2). However, the exception refers to
Sec. 679.42(k), which was modified in 2008 by the final rule to revise
regulations governing the use of commercial halibut QS and the
processing of non-IFQ species when processed halibut is on board a
vessel (73 FR 8822; February 15, 2008). That final rule removed
paragraph (k) and re-designated Sec. 679.42(l) as paragraph (k). NMFS
inadvertently neglected to remove the cross-reference to paragraph (k)
in Sec. 679.42(a)(2)(i). Therefore, with this final rule, NMFS removes
the cross-reference to paragraph (k) to clarify that persons possessing
unused Category B, C, or D halibut QS may be on board a catcher/
processor vessel when that vessel is harvesting and processing Category
A halibut or sablefish IFQ, or is harvesting and processing non-IFQ
species. The effects of this action are expected to be minor and
beneficial by improving the clarity of the regulations.
Action 3
This final rule clarifies existing regulations pertaining to the
IFQ vessel limitations, also referred to as the vessel use caps. NMFS
adds language to Sec. 679.42(h)(1) and (h)(2) to clarify that the
vessel use caps apply to halibut and sablefish IFQ and not to halibut
and sablefish CDQ. This action improves the clarity of the regulations
and helps IFQ and CDQ participants understand the regulations to which
they are subject. The effects of this action are expected to be minor
and beneficial by improving the clarity of the regulations.
Comments and Responses
NMFS received 4 comment letters on the proposed rule. One of the
comment letters was outside the scope of this action. NMFS has
summarized and responded to the six unique comments in the remaining
three comment letters.
Comment 1: There should not be a transfer of halibut IFQ during
years of low abundance unless they give back to others during years of
high abundance. They harvest so much that they caused the low
abundance.
Response: NMFS disagrees. Based on the best available scientific
information from the IPHC, halibut is not considered to be subject to
overfishing as that term is defined by the IPHC (Section 3.6.1 of
Analysis). As described in Section 3.6.1 of the Analysis, annual catch
limits are set in a precautionary manner to achieve optimum yield on a
continuing basis. As described in the proposed rule and Section 3.6.1
of the Analysis, this final rule does not increase the overall amount
of halibut in Areas 4B or 4CDE that is authorized to be harvested on an
annual basis. The final rule establishes a voluntary program that
provides participants with an opportunity to utilize available catch to
mutual benefit during times of low abundance and does not require QS
holders to transfer IFQ to CDQ groups during times of low abundance or
require CDQ groups to transfer IFQ back to QS holders during times of
high abundance.
Comment 2: This rule allows leasing quota when the fish populations
are low and it would increase the chance of overfishing the halibut
stock.
Response: Annual halibut commercial catch limits are adjusted
downward with decreasing abundance to protect the stock and prevent
overfishing. This final rule does not change the process of allocating
halibut among Areas or the process of establishing halibut commercial
catch limits, nor will this final rule change specific management
measures that govern the harvest of halibut in Areas 4B and 4CDE, such
as fishing location, timing, effort, or authorized gear types. Section
3.6.1 of the Analysis describes the current status of the halibut stock
which is not overfished or subject to overfishing. This final rule
creates an exception to allow CDQ groups to receive IFQ by transfer,
within the established annual catch limits, in years of low abundance.
Therefore, this final rule will not increase the chance of overfishing
of the halibut stock.
Comment 3: It is worth pausing to remember how bad the old days
were, prior to implementation of the IFQ program. In order to catch as
much of the TAC as possible, the industry did not pay attention to the
environmental impact of its operations, worker safety, and excessive
bycatch. NOAA is right to continue to refine this outstanding program.
The proposed rule to allow transfers of IFQ to CDQ groups is well-
written and prevents abuse of the program by ``mailbox-fishermen'' and
favors the coastal communities.
Response: NMFS acknowledges this comment.
Comment 4: If the halibut stock is low enough to trigger this
flexibility, expanding flexibility will further aggravate the problem
of an overfished stock. When the stock is low, then everyone should
suffer, both CDQ fishermen and IFQ fishermen, in order for the stock to
regenerate.
Response: NMFS disagrees. Annual halibut commercial catch limits
are set with precaution and adjusted downward in times of low abundance
to avoid overfishing. The flexibility provided by this final rule will
not create an overfished condition or contribute to overfishing. This
final rule does not modify the methods for apportioning halibut catch
limits between the CDQ and IFQ Programs. As halibut catch limits
increase or decrease based on halibut abundance, participants in the
CDQ and IFQ Programs are not affected any differently under this final
rule than under current regulations. If the catch limit threshold is
low enough to trigger the ability for QS holders to transfer their IFQ
to CDQ groups, then QS holders and CDQ groups benefit from a voluntary
market transaction. Disapproving this rule would not increase halibut
abundance. Section 3.8 of the Analysis provides additional detail on
the anticipated effects of this final rule.
Comment 5: NMFS should consider setting lease terms for this
exception because if the cost of the lease is too high, the benefits of
the proposed rule would be blunted.
Response: The Council and NMFS did not want to be involved in
setting lease
[[Page 52765]]
terms, similar to other transfer exceptions in the IFQ Program. The IFQ
Program relies on market-based values and NMFS anticipates that IFQ and
CDQ participants would come to a private agreement in this voluntary
exception. In Section 3.8.7 of the Analysis, NMFS describes the impact
that the transfer of IFQ (i.e., leasing) could have on QS markets. As
described in the preamble of this final rule, there are several
limitations on the transfer of IFQ. These limitations are intended, in
part, to maintain current fishing business practices and to limit
potential adverse impacts on a range of participants in the CDQ and IFQ
Programs. This final rule does not establish additional requirements on
the specific agreements between QS holders and CDQ groups when
transferring IFQ because the limitations established by this final rule
sufficiently constrain the amount of IFQ, the vessel category of IFQ,
and the specific halibut catch limits conditions in Areas 4B and 4CDE
IFQ that may be transferred.
Comment 6: NMFS should terminate the policy to allow unused quota
to carry over to the next season and instead allow unused quota to
carry over to the next season only for the purposes of leasing it to
CDQ groups.
Response: This final rule does not modify existing regulations that
allow a QS holder's annual IFQ allocation to be adjusted to cover
under- or over-harvest from the previous year (see regulations at Sec.
679.40(d) and (e)). The Council focused on alternatives that would
allow transfer of IFQ to CDQ groups within the year of low halibut
commercial catch limits, rather than adjusting over/under harvest rules
that would apply to the following year when the halibut commercial
catch limits may not be under the thresholds, as a more direct method
of addressing the issue.
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 adds a new collection-of-information
for recordkeeping and reporting requirements, 15 CFR 902.1(b) is
revised to reference correctly the section resulting from this final
rule.
Changes From the Proposed Rule
NMFS makes two minor changes to the proposed regulatory text in
this final rule. First, Sec. 679.5(l)(10) is changed to include the
words ``and the Council.'' New regulations at Sec. 679.5(w) require a
CDQ group to submit a report to both NMFS and the Council. Adding this
language to Sec. 679.5(l)(10) creates consistency between these
sections. Second, NMFS changes ``halibut IFQ'' to ``IFQ halibut'' in
Sec. 679.42(h)(1) and ``sablefish IFQ'' to ``IFQ sablefish'' in Sec.
679.42(h)(2). The proposed changes were intended to refer to the type
of fish (IFQ halibut and IFQ sablefish defined at Sec. 679.2) that
will count towards the vessel limits prescribed by these paragraphs
rather than the type of fishing rights (halibut IFQ and sablefish IFQ).
Classification
The NMFS Alaska Region Administrator determined that this final
rule is necessary for the conservation and management of the IFQ
halibut fishery off Alaska and that it is consistent with the Magnuson-
Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act, the Halibut Act, and
other applicable laws.
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 Northern
Pacific Halibut Act of 1982 (Halibut Act, 16 U.S.C. 773c) allows the
Regional Council having authority for a particular geographical area to
develop regulations governing the allocation and catch of halibut in
U.S. Convention waters as long as those regulations are in addition to,
and not in conflict with, IPHC regulations. This final rule is
consistent with the Council's authority to allocate halibut catches
among fishery participants in the waters in and off Alaska.
This final rule has been determined to be not significant for the
purposes of Executive Order 12866.
The Chief Counsel for Regulation of the Department of Commerce
certified to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small Business
Administration during the proposed rule stage that this action would
not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small
entities. The factual basis for the certification was published in the
proposed rule and is not repeated here. No comments were received
regarding this certification or on the economic impacts of the rule
more generally. As a result, a regulatory flexibility analysis was not
required, and none was prepared, pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 605.
Collection-of-Information Requirements
This final rule contains collection-of-information requirements
subject to the PRA, which have been approved by OMB under OMB control
number 0648-0764. After this final rule's effective date, OMB Control
Number 0648-0764 will be merged with OMB Control Numbers 0648-0272 and
0648-0711.
Public reporting burden is estimated to average per response: 2
hours for Application for Temporary Transfer of Halibut and Sablefish
IFQ, 40 hours for the annual report, and 1 minute for electronic
submission of cost recovery fees or 30 minutes for non-electronic fee
submission. 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, nor shall any person be subject to penalty for
failure to comply with, a collection of information subject to the
requirement 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, Fisheries, Fishing,
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
50 CFR Part 679
Alaska, Fisheries, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
Dated: October 12, 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:
[[Page 52766]]
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'', add an entry in alphanumeric order for ``679.5(w)''
to read as follows:
Sec. [thinsp]902.1 OMB control numbers assigned pursuant to the
Paperwork Reduction Act.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Current OMB control No.
CFR part or section where the information (all numbers begin with
collection requirement is located 0648-)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * *
50 CFR:
* * * * *
679.5(w)..................................... -0272
* * * * *
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * *
Title 50--Wildlife and Fisheries
PART 300--INTERNATIONAL FISHERIES REGULATIONS
0
3. The authority for 50 CFR part 300, subpart E, continues to read as
follows:
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 773-773k.
0
4. In Sec. 300.61, revise the definition of ``Annual commercial catch
limit'' to read as follows:
Sec. 300.61 Definitions.
* * * * *
Annual commercial catch limit, for purposes of commercial fishing
in:
(1) Commission regulatory areas 2C and 3A, means the annual
commercial allocation minus an area-specific estimate of commercial
halibut wastage.
(2) Commission regulatory areas 3B and 4A, means the annual total
allowable halibut removals by persons fishing IFQ.
(3) Commission regulatory areas 4B, 4C, 4D, and 4E, means the
annual total allowable halibut removals by persons fishing IFQ and CDQ.
* * * * *
PART 679--FISHERIES OF THE EXCLUSIVE ECONOMIC ZONE OFF ALASKA
0
5. The authority citation for 50 CFR 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. 679.5, add paragraphs (l)(10) and (w) to read as follows:
Sec. 679.5 Recordkeeping and reporting.
* * * * *
(l) * * *
(10) A report on annual IFQ regulatory areas 4B, 4C, and 4D Halibut
IFQ transfer activities must be submitted to NMFS and the Council by a
CDQ group as required at Sec. 679.5(w).
* * * * *
(w) Report on Area 4 halibut IFQ transfers to CDQ groups--(1)
Applicability. A CDQ group that receives IFQ regulatory area 4 halibut
IFQ by transfer must submit a timely and complete report on the CDQ
group's annual halibut IFQ transfer activities for each calendar year
that it receives IFQ regulatory area 4 halibut IFQ by transfer. A CDQ
group is not required to submit a report for any calendar year in which
it did not receive any IFQ regulatory area 4 halibut IFQ by transfer.
(2) Time limits and submittal. A CDQ group must submit a complete
report by January 31 of the year following a fishing year during which
the CDQ group receives IFQ regulatory area 4B, 4C, or 4D halibut IFQ by
transfer. The complete report must be submitted 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 report. A complete report contains all report
requirements described in paragraphs (w)(4)(i) through (w)(4)(iii) of
this section.
(4) Report requirements. A CDQ group must report the following
information:
(i) The annual amount, IFQ regulatory area, and vessel category of
IFQ regulatory area 4B, 4C, and 4D halibut IFQ transferred to the CDQ
group;
(ii) The criteria used to select IFQ holders to transfer IFQ
regulatory area 4B, 4C, and 4D halibut IFQ to the CDQ group; and
(iii) The criteria used to determine the person(s) eligible to
harvest IFQ regulatory area 4B, 4C, and 4D halibut IFQ received by
transfer.
0
7. In Sec. 679.41,
0
a. Add paragraph (c)(13);
0
b. Revise paragraphs (d)(1), (g)(1), and (h)(2); and
0
c. Add paragraph (o).
The additions and revisions read as follows:
Sec. 679.41 Transfer of quota shares and IFQ.
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(13) If the person applying to receive halibut IFQ assigned to
vessel categories B, C, or D in IFQ regulatory areas 4B, 4C, or 4D is a
CDQ group, the following determinations are required:
(i) The CDQ group applying to receive halibut IFQ for an IFQ
regulatory area receives an annual allocation of halibut CDQ for that
IFQ regulatory area pursuant to Sec. 679.31(b)(1);
(ii) The QS holder applying to transfer halibut IFQ to a CDQ group
has not transferred any halibut IFQ assigned to vessel categories B, C,
or D for that IFQ regulatory area to a CDQ group during the last two
consecutive fishing years;
(iii) If the IFQ to be transferred to a CDQ group results from QS
that was transferred to the QS holder after December 14, 2015, the QS
holder applying to transfer halibut IFQ to a CDQ group has held the
underlying QS for that IFQ for a minimum of 3 years from the date NMFS
approved the transfer;
(iv) If the IFQ to be transferred to a CDQ group is assigned to
vessel categories B, C, or D in IFQ regulatory area 4B, the QS holder
applying to transfer that halibut IFQ to a CDQ group holds fewer than
76,355 halibut QS units in IFQ regulatory area 4B; and
(v) The CDQ group applying to receive halibut IFQ has submitted a
complete report if required to do so by Sec. 679.5(w).
(d) * * *
(1) Application for Eligibility. All persons, except as provided in
paragraphs (d)(1)(i) and (d)(1)(ii) of this section, applying to
receive QS or IFQ must submit an Application for Eligibility to Receive
QS/IFQ (Application for Eligibility) containing accurate information to
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 shall provide an Application for Eligibility
form to any person on request.
(i) An 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.
[[Page 52767]]
(ii) An Application for Eligibility is not required for a CDQ
group.
* * * * *
(g) * * *
(1) Except as provided in paragraph (f), paragraph (g)(2),
paragraph (l), paragraph (n) or paragraph (o) 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.
* * * * *
(h) * * *
(2) IFQ resulting from categories B, C, or D QS may not be
transferred separately from its originating QS, except as provided in
paragraph (d), paragraph (f), paragraph (k), paragraph (l), paragraph
(m), or paragraph (o) of this section.
* * * * *
(o) Transfer of IFQ to CDQ groups. (1) A QS holder who holds fewer
than 76,355 units of halibut QS in IFQ regulatory area 4B may transfer
halibut IFQ assigned to vessel categories B, C, or D in IFQ regulatory
area 4B to a CDQ group that receives an allocation of IFQ regulatory
area 4B halibut CDQ if the annual commercial halibut catch limit, as
defined in Sec. 300.61 of this title, for Area 4B is less than 1
million pounds in that calendar year.
(2) A QS holder in IFQ regulatory areas 4C or 4D may transfer
halibut IFQ assigned to vessel categories B, C, or D in IFQ regulatory
areas 4C or 4D to a CDQ group that receives an allocation of halibut
CDQ in that IFQ regulatory area if the annual commercial halibut catch
limit, as defined in Sec. 300.61 of this title, for Area 4CDE is less
than 1.5 million pounds in that calendar year.
(3) A QS holder must meet the requirements in paragraph (c)(13) of
this section to transfer halibut IFQ assigned to vessel categories B,
C, or D in IFQ regulatory areas 4B, 4C, or 4D to a CDQ group.
(4) A CDQ group that receives halibut IFQ by transfer may not
transfer that halibut IFQ to any other person.
0
8. In Sec. 679.42,
0
a. Revise paragraph (a)(1);
0
b. Remove paragraph (a)(2)(i);
0
c. Redesignate paragraphs (a)(2)(ii) through (iv) as paragraphs
(a)(2)(i) through (iii);
0
d. Add new paragraph (a)(2)(iv); and
0
e. Revise paragraphs (h)(1) introductory text and (h)(2) introductory
text.
The revisions and additions read as follows:
Sec. 679.42 Limitations on use of QS and IFQ.
(a) * * *
(1) The QS or IFQ specified for one IFQ regulatory area must not be
used in a different IFQ regulatory area, except for the following:
(i) All or part of the QS and IFQ specified for regulatory area 4C
may be harvested in either Area 4C or Area 4D.
(ii) All or part of the halibut CDQ specified for regulatory area
4D may be harvested in either Area 4D or Area 4E.
(iii) If a CDQ group is authorized to receive a transfer of halibut
IFQ assigned to vessel categories B, C, or D in IFQ regulatory area 4D
as specified in Sec. 679.41(o) of this part, all or part of the
halibut IFQ specified for regulatory area 4D that is held by or
transferred to a CDQ group may be harvested in either Area 4D or Area
4E.
(2) * * *
* * * * *
(iv) Halibut IFQ assigned to vessel category B, C, or D held by a
CDQ group may not be used on a vessel over 51 feet LOA, irrespective of
the vessel category assigned to the IFQ.
* * * * *
(h) * * *
(1) Halibut. No vessel may be used, during any fishing year, to
harvest more IFQ halibut than one-half percent of the combined total
catch limits of halibut for IFQ regulatory areas 2C, 3A, 3B, 4A, 4B,
4C, 4D, and 4E, except that:
* * * * *
(2) Sablefish. No vessel may be used, during any fishing year, to
harvest more IFQ sablefish than one percent of the combined fixed gear
TAC of sablefish for the GOA and BSAI IFQ regulatory areas, except
that:
* * * * *
[FR Doc. 2018-22687 Filed 10-17-18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-22-P