Temporary Rule To Establish Management Measures for Red Grouper in the Gulf of Mexico, 7864-7867 [2019-03829]
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Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 43 / Tuesday, March 5, 2019 / Proposed Rules
assessing the significance, credibility, or
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6106.609
609].
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Hearing; live or paper [Rule 611].
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6106.612
612].
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[FR Doc. 2019–03873 Filed 3–4–19; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6820–AL–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
50 CFR Part 622
[Docket No. 190213109–9109–01]
RIN 0648–BI63
Temporary Rule To Establish
Management Measures for Red
Grouper in the Gulf of Mexico
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
AGENCY:
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Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Proposed temporary rule;
emergency action.
NMFS proposes to issue an
emergency rule as requested by the Gulf
of Mexico Fishery Management Council
(Council) to address concerns regarding
the Gulf of Mexico (Gulf) red grouper
stock. The Council made this request
after receiving new information that
indicates the stock may be in decline.
This proposed emergency rule would
reduce the commercial and recreational
annual catch limits (ACLs) and annual
catch targets (ACTs). This emergency
rule would be effective for 180 days,
although NMFS may extend the
emergency rule’s effectiveness for a
maximum of an additional 186 days.
The intended effect of this emergency
rule is to provide a temporary rapid
reduction in Gulf red grouper harvest
levels to protect the stock from
overharvest while the Council develops
permanent rulemaking.
DATES: Written comments must be
received by March 20, 2019.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments
on the proposed emergency rule,
identified by ‘‘NOAA–NMFS–2018–
0142,’’ by either of the following
methods:
• Electronic submission: Submit all
electronic public comments via the
Federal e-Rulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Go to
www.regulations.gov/
#!docketDetail;D=NOAA-NMFS-20180142 click the ‘‘Comment Now!’’ icon,
complete the required fields, and enter
or attach your comments.
• Mail: Submit written comments to
Peter Hood, NMFS Southeast Regional
Office, 263 13th Avenue South, St.
Petersburg, FL 33701.
Instructions: Comments sent by any
other method, to any other address or
individual, or received after the end of
the comment period, may not be
considered by NMFS. All comments
received are a part of the public record
and will generally be posted for public
viewing on www.regulations.gov
without change. All personal identifying
information (e.g., name, address, etc.),
confidential business information, or
otherwise sensitive information
submitted voluntarily by the sender will
be publicly accessible. NMFS will
accept anonymous comments (enter ‘‘N/
A’’ in required fields if you wish to
remain anonymous).
Electronic copies of the documents in
support of this emergency rule, which
include an environmental assessment,
may be obtained from the Southeast
SUMMARY:
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Regional Office website at https://
sero.nmfs.noaa.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Peter Hood, Southeast Regional Office,
NMFS, telephone: 727–824–5305, email:
peter.hood@noaa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: NMFS and
the Council manage Gulf reef fish,
including red grouper, under the
Fishery Management Plan for Reef Fish
Resources of the Gulf (FMP). The
Council prepared the FMP and NMFS
implements the FMP through
regulations at 50 CFR part 622 under the
authority of the Magnuson-Stevens
Fishery Conservation and Management
Act (Magnuson-Stevens Act). The
Magnuson-Stevens Act provides the
legal authority for the promulgation of
emergency regulations under section
305(c) (16 U.S.C. 1855(c)).
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Background
All weights in this emergency rule are
in gutted weight. The current red
grouper commercial and recreational
ACLs and ACT were implemented
through a framework action to the FMP
in 2016 (81 FR 70365, October 12,
2016). These values were based on a red
grouper stock ACL equal to 10.70
million lb (4.85 million kg). The current
sector allocation for red grouper is 76
percent commercial and 24 percent
recreational, and the commercial and
recreational ACTs reduce the sectorspecific ACLs by 95 percent and 92
percent, respectively. The current red
grouper commercial ACL is 8,190,000 lb
(3,714,922 kg) and the commercial ACT
(commercial quota) is 7,780,000 lb
(3,528,949 kg). The current red grouper
recreational ACL is 2,580,000 lb
(1,170,268 kg) and the recreational ACT
is 2,370,000 lb (1,075,014 kg).
The commercial sector is managed
under an individual fishing quota (IFQ)
program. The commercial red grouper
quota equals the commercial ACT, and
is allocated to red grouper shareholders
each year. The commercial IFQ program
also serves as the accountability
measure (AM) for the commercial
sector.
The current recreational AMs specify
that if the recreational ACL is reached
or projected to be reached, red grouper
fishing will be closed to the recreational
sector for the remainder of the fishing
year. If the ACL is exceeded in the
following fishing year the level of
harvest will be set at the prior year’s
recreational ACT and the length of the
recreational red grouper fishing season
will be adjusted based on the amount
necessary to ensure red grouper
recreational landings do not exceed the
recreational ACT. If the stock is
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overfished and an overage occurs,
NMFS will reduce the recreational ACL
by the amount of the ACL overage in the
prior fishing year. The overage
adjustment will also apply to the
following year’s recreational ACT.
Status of Stock
The stock status of Gulf red grouper
was last evaluated in 2015 through the
Southeast Data Assessment Review
(SEDAR) 42 stock assessment. The
Council’s Scientific and Statistical
Committee (SSC) reviewed the
assessment results and agreed with the
assessment’s determination that red
grouper were not overfished or
experiencing overfishing. At that time,
the SSC recommended increases in the
overfishing limit and the acceptable
biological catch (ABC), which were the
basis for the current commercial and
recreational ACLs and ACTs.
Justification and Need for This
Emergency Rule
At the October 2018 meeting, the
Council requested that NMFS
implement an emergency or interim rule
to reduce the Gulf red grouper stock
ACL for the 2019 fishing year to 4.60
million lb (2.09 million kg), or the 2017
total red grouper landings, whichever is
less. The Council also began work on a
red grouper framework action to reduce
the red grouper catch limits on a more
permanent basis. The Council took these
actions based on recent information
regarding the health of the stock. Since
2014, combined commercial and
recreational Gulf red grouper landings
have trended downwards from over 7.26
million lb (3.29 million kg) in 2014 to
approximately 4.16 million lb (1.89
million kg) in 2017, an indication that
the stock may be in decline. The most
recent red grouper stock assessment,
SEDAR 61, will not be completed until
mid-2019. Therefore, the NMFS
Southeast Fisheries Science Center
(SEFSC) conducted an interim red
grouper stock analysis to assist the SSC
in developing harvest advice for 2019.
The interim analysis used an index from
a fishery-independent survey to
compare the current stock condition
with the stock condition forecast by the
previous assessment (SEDAR 42). This
analysis suggested that the stock may be
declining. The Council’s SSC reviewed
the analysis and concluded that it
contained too much uncertainty to use
for a new ABC recommendation but did
support recommending that the Council
reduce the 2019 Gulf red grouper total
ACL to 4.60 million lb (2.09 million kg).
The Council received this advice at its
meeting in October 2018.
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In addition to the SSC’s advice based
on the interim analysis, the Council
heard public testimony at the October
2018 meeting primarily from
commercial fishermen. These fishermen
expressed concern about the status of
the red grouper stock, noting that red
grouper are harder to catch than in
previous years and that there appears to
be a scarcity of legal-size and larger fish
throughout the species’ range on the
west Florida shelf.
The Council also discussed the severe
red tide conditions that occurred off the
Florida west coast in the summer and
fall of 2018, which may have adversely
affected the red grouper stock. Although
the impacts of this recent red tide are
unknown, the 2009 SEDAR 12 update
assessment indicated that a similar red
tide event in 2005 reduced the red
grouper spawning stock biomass.
The 2017 combined red grouper
commercial and recreational landings
(approximately 4.16 million lb (1.89
million kg)) are less than the SSC
recommended combined ACL of 4.60
million lb (2.09 million kg). Therefore,
NMFS has developed this proposed
emergency rule to reduce the red
grouper commercial and recreational
ACLs and ACTs consistent with a stock
ACL of 4.16 million lb (1.89 million kg).
This emergency rule would be effective
for 180 days, although NMFS may
extend the emergency rule’s
effectiveness for a maximum of an
additional 186 days. This would allow
for sufficient time for the Council and
NMFS to develop and implement a new
framework action to manage the red
grouper stock for the 2020 fishing year
and beyond.
Measures Contained in This Proposed
Emergency Rule
For red grouper, this emergency rule
would revise the red grouper stock ACL
to 4.16 million lb (1.89 million kg),
which is equal to the combined red
grouper commercial and recreational
landings. Applying the commercial
allocation of 76 percent to the stock
ACL of 4.16 million lb (1.89 million kg)
results in a proposed commercial ACL
of 3.16 million lb (1.43 million kg). The
commercial ACT would be set at 95
percent of the commercial ACL, or 3.00
million lb (1.36 million kg). This would
be an approximate 60 percent reduction
from the current commercial ACL and
ACT.
Because commercial red grouper is
managed under an IFQ program, NMFS
distributes IFQ allocation to the
program shareholders on January 1 of
each year. After NMFS distributes the
applicable commercial quota to
shareholders, it cannot be recalled.
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Therefore, in anticipation of this
proposed emergency rule reducing the
commercial quota, NMFS has withheld
distribution of 59.4 percent, equivalent
to 4.78 million lb (2.17 million kg) of
red grouper IFQ allocation effective on
January 1, 2019, through a temporary
rule (83 FR 64480, December 17, 2018).
If the commercial quota reduction
implemented through this proposed
emergency rule is not effective by June
1, 2019, the withheld commercial quota
will be redistributed to the
shareholders.
For the recreational sector, 24 percent
of the 4.16 million lb (1.89 million kg)
proposed total stock ACL results in a
recreational ACL of 1.00 million lb (0.45
million kg). The recreational ACT
would be set at 92 percent of the
recreational ACL, or 0.92 million lb
(0.42 million kg).
Emergency Rule Criteria
NMFS’ Policy Guidelines for the Use
of Emergency Rules (62 FR 44421,
August 21, 1997) list three criteria for
determining whether an emergency
exists, and this proposed emergency
rule would be promulgated under these
criteria. Specifically, NMFS’ policy
guidelines require that an emergency:
(1) Result from recent, unforeseen
events or recently discovered
circumstances; and
(2) Present serious conservation or
management problems in the fishery;
and
(3) Can be addressed through
emergency regulations for which the
immediate benefits outweigh the value
of advance notice, public comment, and
deliberative consideration of the
impacts on participants to the same
extent as would be expected under the
normal rulemaking process.
NMFS has determined that reducing
the red grouper 2019 commercial and
recreational ACLs and ACTs for 2019
meets the three criteria required for an
emergency rule. The new red grouper
interim analysis developed by the
SEFSC and subsequent SSC
recommendation were presented to the
Council at its October 2018 meeting and
constitute recently discovered
circumstances. In addition, public
testimony at the October Council
meeting expressed concern about the
status of the red grouper stock, noting
that red grouper appear to be scarcer in
abundance than in previous years. The
severe red tide event that occurred in
summer and fall 2018 off the Florida
west coast was also unforeseen and may
have adversely affected the red grouper
stock. Although the impacts of this
recent red tide are unknown, the 2009
SEDAR 12 update assessment and 2015
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SEDAR 42 assessment indicated that a
similar 2005 red tide event depressed
the red grouper spawning stock
biomass. The SEDAR 61 red grouper
stock assessment is presently underway
and NMFS expects to present the results
to the Council’s SSC in July 2019.
Without this emergency rule, the red
grouper ACLs and ACTs could not be
effectively reduced for the 2019 fishing
year. This could present a serious
conservation problem if the red grouper
stock is in decline, as the reduction in
landings, public comment, and interim
analysis may suggest.
Based on the Council’s request for an
interim or emergency rule, in its
December 17, 2018 temporary rule,
NMFS withheld the IFQ allocation
equal to this emergency rule’s proposed
reduction in the commercial ACT
(quota) (83 FR 64480). This proposed
emergency rule meets the third criteria
for an emergency because it would
reduce the commercial quota to be
effective prior to June 1, 2019. This
would provide the Council and NMFS
sufficient time to develop and
implement a framework action that will
address the new information about the
red grouper stock, including the SEDAR
61 assessment, for the 2020 fishing year
and beyond. However, NMFS is
proposing this emergency reduction
because there is sufficient time to
include a 15-day comment period and
implement any final emergency rule by
June 1, 2019.
Classification
This action is issued pursuant to
section 305(c) of the Magnuson-Stevens
Act, 16 U.S.C. 1855(c). The Assistant
Administrator for Fisheries, NOAA
(AA), has determined that this
emergency rule is necessary to provide
increased protection for the Gulf red
grouper stock and is consistent with the
Magnuson-Stevens Act and other
applicable laws.
This action is being taken pursuant to
the emergency provision of MagnusonStevens Act and is exempt from review
by the Office of Management and
Budget.
NMFS prepared an initial Regulatory
Flexibility Analysis (IRFA) as required
by section 603 of the Regulatory
Flexibility Act (RFA), for this
emergency rule. The IRFA describes the
economic impact this rule, if adopted,
would have on small entities. A
description of the action, why it is being
considered, the objectives of, and legal
basis for this action are contained at the
beginning of this section in the
preamble and in the SUMMARY section of
the preamble. A copy of the full analysis
is available from NMFS (see
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ADDRESSES). A summary of the IRFA
follows.
The Magnuson-Stevens Act provides
the statutory basis for this proposed
rule. No duplicative, overlapping, or
conflicting Federal rules have been
identified. A description of this
proposed rule and its purpose and need
are contained in the SUMMARY section of
the preamble.
This proposed rule would directly
apply to recreational fishers (anglers)
and commercial fishing businesses that
harvest red grouper in Federal waters of
the Gulf. Anglers are not considered
small entities as that term is defined in
5 U.S.C. 601(6), whether fishing from
for-hire fishing, private, or leased
vessels. Therefore, estimates of the
number of anglers directly affected by
the rule and the impacts on them are not
provided here. For-hire fishing
businesses that harvest red grouper in
Federal waters would be indirectly
affected if the rule were to cause
changes in angler demand for their
services. However, The RFA does not
consider such indirect impacts on small
entities.
This proposed rule would directly
affect commercial fishing businesses
(NAICS code 11411) that harvest red
grouper in Federal waters of the Gulf by
decreasing the commercial quota for red
grouper.
An annual average of 376 vessels land
red grouper and an estimated 330
businesses own the vessels. All of these
businesses operate in the commercial
fishing industry (NAICS code 11411)
and some also in related industries,
such as fish and seafood merchant
wholesalers (NAICS code 424460) and
fish and seafood (retail) markets (NAICS
code 445220). All are expected to
operate primarily in the commercial
fishing industry.
For RFA purposes, NMFS has
established a small business size
standard for businesses, including their
affiliates, whose primary industry is
commercial fishing (see 50 CFR 200.2).
A business primarily involved in
commercial fishing is classified as a
small business if it is independently
owned and operated, is not dominant in
its field of operation (including its
affiliates), and its combined annual
receipts are not in excess of $11 million
(in 2017 dollars) for all of its affiliated
operations worldwide. The average
vessel that used bottom longline gear to
harvest red grouper from 2013 through
2017 had average total annual revenue
of $309,737 (in 2018 dollars), whereas
the average total annual revenue for
vessels that used other gear types to
harvest red grouper were considerably
lower. Additional examination of
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annual revenues indicates the total
annual revenue of each business to be
less than $11 million. Consequently, all
of the 330 businesses directly affected
by the proposed action are identified as
small.
The commercial quota would be
reduced from 7.78 million lb (3,528,949
kg) to 3.00 million lb (1.36 million kg).
The commercial sector landed only 3.33
million lb (1.51 million kg) in 2017.
However, an average of approximately
4.56 million lb (2.07 million kg) of red
grouper were landed annually from
2013 through 2017, and that average is
used as the baseline landings for the
analysis below. As such, the 330 small
businesses would incur combined losses
of red grouper landings that total
approximately 1.56 million lb (0.71
million kg) and have an estimated
dockside value of approximately $6.43
million (in 2018 dollars) in 2019.
The average loss per vessel is
expected to vary by the gear used to
harvest red grouper. The average
longline vessel would incur the largest
average loss of red grouper revenue
($86,857), followed in turn by the
average bandit-gear vessel ($8,970),
average hand hook-and-line vessel
($5,361) and average other-gear vessel
($3,079). These decreases in 2019
revenue from red grouper landings
represent a 28.0 percent reduction in the
average longline vessel’s total revenue,
a 7.3 percent reduction in the average
bandit-gear vessel’s total revenue, a 16.6
percent reduction in the average hand
hook-and-line vessel’s total revenue,
and a 15.2 percent reduction in the
average other-gear vessel’s total revenue.
Two alternatives were considered, but
not selected for red grouper commercial
harvest limit revisions. The first
alternative, the no action alternative,
would maintain the current commercial
quota. Although the no-action
alternative would have no adverse
economic impact in 2019, it would have
the largest long-term costs to small
businesses because it could allow for
the largest decline of the status of the
stock. The second non-selected
alternative would reduce the
commercial quota to 3.32 million lb
(1.51 million kg), and have a smaller
adverse economic impact than the
selected alternative. However, this
alternative could have smaller long-term
benefits than the selected alternative
because it may allow for less
improvement of the stock’s status.
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List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 622
Annual catch limits, Fisheries,
Fishing, Gulf of Mexico, Red grouper,
Quotas.
Dated: February 26, 2019.
Samuel D. Rauch, III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for
Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
For the reasons set out in the
preamble, 50 CFR part 622 is proposed
to be amended as follows:
PART 622—FISHERIES OF THE
CARIBBEAN, GULF OF MEXICO, AND
SOUTH ATLANTIC
1. The authority citation for part 622
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
2. In § 622.39, suspend paragraph
(a)(1)(iii)(C) and add paragraph
(a)(1)(iii)(D) to read as follows:
■
§ 622.39
Quotas.
*
*
*
*
*
(a) * * *
(1) * * *
(iii) * * *
(D) Red grouper—3.00 million lb (1.36
million kg)
*
*
*
*
*
■ 3. In § 622.41, suspend paragraph (e)
and add paragraph (r) to read as follows:
§ 622.41 Annual catch limits (ACLs),
annual catch targets (ACTs), and
accountability measures (AMs).
*
*
*
*
*
(r) Red grouper—(1) Commercial
sector. The IFQ program for groupers
and tilefishes in the Gulf of Mexico
serves as the accountability measure for
commercial red grouper. The applicable
commercial ACL for red grouper, in
gutted weight, is 3.16 million lb (1.43
million kg).
(2) Recreational sector. (i) Without
regard to overfished status, if red
grouper recreational landings, as
estimated by the SRD, reach or are
projected to reach the applicable ACL
specified in paragraph (r)(2)(iv) of this
section, the AA will file a notification
with the Office of the Federal Register,
to close the recreational sector for the
remainder of the fishing year. On and
after the effective date of such a
notification, the bag and possession
limit of red grouper in or from the Gulf
EEZ is zero. This bag and possession
limit applies in the Gulf on board a
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7867
vessel for which a valid Federal charter
vessel/headboat permit for Gulf reef fish
has been issued, without regard to
where such species were harvested, i.e.
in state or Federal waters.
(ii) Without regard to overfished
status, and in addition to the measures
specified in paragraph (r)(2)(i) of this
section, if red grouper recreational
landings, as estimated by the SRD,
exceed the applicable ACL specified in
paragraph (r)(2)(iv) of this section, the
AA will file a notification with the
Office of the Federal Register to
maintain the red grouper ACT, specified
in paragraph (r)(2)(iv) of this section, for
that following fishing year at the level
of the prior year’s ACT, unless the best
scientific information available
determines that maintaining the prior
year’s ACT is unnecessary. In addition,
the notification will reduce the length of
the recreational red grouper fishing
season the following fishing year by the
amount necessary to ensure red grouper
recreational landings do not exceed the
recreational ACT in the following
fishing year.
(iii) If red grouper are overfished,
based on the most recent Status of U.S.
Fisheries Report to Congress, and red
grouper recreational landings, as
estimated by the SRD, exceed the
applicable ACL specified in paragraph
(r)(2)(iv) of this section, the following
measures will apply. In addition to the
measures specified in paragraphs
(r)(2)(i) and (ii) of this section, the AA
will file a notification with the Office of
the Federal Register, at or near the
beginning of the following fishing year
to reduce the ACL for that following
year by the amount of the ACL overage
in the prior fishing year, and reduce the
ACT, as determined in paragraph
(r)(2)(ii) of this section, by the amount
of the ACL overage in the prior fishing
year, unless the best scientific
information available determines that a
greater, lesser, or no overage adjustment
is necessary.
(iv) The recreational ACL for red
grouper, in gutted weight, is 1.00
million lb (0.45 million kg). The
recreational ACT for red grouper, in
gutted weight, is 0.92 million lb (0.42
million kg).
[FR Doc. 2019–03829 Filed 3–4–19; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
E:\FR\FM\05MRP1.SGM
05MRP1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 84, Number 43 (Tuesday, March 5, 2019)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 7864-7867]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2019-03829]
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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
50 CFR Part 622
[Docket No. 190213109-9109-01]
RIN 0648-BI63
Temporary Rule To Establish Management Measures for Red Grouper
in the Gulf of Mexico
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Proposed temporary rule; emergency action.
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SUMMARY: NMFS proposes to issue an emergency rule as requested by the
Gulf of Mexico Fishery Management Council (Council) to address concerns
regarding the Gulf of Mexico (Gulf) red grouper stock. The Council made
this request after receiving new information that indicates the stock
may be in decline. This proposed emergency rule would reduce the
commercial and recreational annual catch limits (ACLs) and annual catch
targets (ACTs). This emergency rule would be effective for 180 days,
although NMFS may extend the emergency rule's effectiveness for a
maximum of an additional 186 days. The intended effect of this
emergency rule is to provide a temporary rapid reduction in Gulf red
grouper harvest levels to protect the stock from overharvest while the
Council develops permanent rulemaking.
DATES: Written comments must be received by March 20, 2019.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments on the proposed emergency rule,
identified by ``NOAA-NMFS-2018-0142,'' by either of the following
methods:
Electronic submission: Submit all electronic public
comments via the Federal e-Rulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov. Go to www.regulations.gov/#!docketDetail;D=NOAA-
NMFS-2018-0142 click the ``Comment Now!'' icon, complete the required
fields, and enter or attach your comments.
Mail: Submit written comments to Peter Hood, NMFS
Southeast Regional Office, 263 13th Avenue South, St. Petersburg, FL
33701.
Instructions: Comments sent by any other method, to any other
address or individual, or received after the end of the comment period,
may not be considered by NMFS. All comments received are a part of the
public record and will generally be posted for public viewing on
www.regulations.gov without change. All personal identifying
information (e.g., name, address, etc.), confidential business
information, or otherwise sensitive information submitted voluntarily
by the sender will be publicly accessible. NMFS will accept anonymous
comments (enter ``N/A'' in required fields if you wish to remain
anonymous).
Electronic copies of the documents in support of this emergency
rule, which include an environmental assessment, may be obtained from
the Southeast
[[Page 7865]]
Regional Office website at https://sero.nmfs.noaa.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Peter Hood, Southeast Regional Office,
NMFS, telephone: 727-824-5305, email: peter.hood@noaa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: NMFS and the Council manage Gulf reef fish,
including red grouper, under the Fishery Management Plan for Reef Fish
Resources of the Gulf (FMP). The Council prepared the FMP and NMFS
implements the FMP through regulations at 50 CFR part 622 under the
authority of the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management
Act (Magnuson-Stevens Act). The Magnuson-Stevens Act provides the legal
authority for the promulgation of emergency regulations under section
305(c) (16 U.S.C. 1855(c)).
Background
All weights in this emergency rule are in gutted weight. The
current red grouper commercial and recreational ACLs and ACT were
implemented through a framework action to the FMP in 2016 (81 FR 70365,
October 12, 2016). These values were based on a red grouper stock ACL
equal to 10.70 million lb (4.85 million kg). The current sector
allocation for red grouper is 76 percent commercial and 24 percent
recreational, and the commercial and recreational ACTs reduce the
sector-specific ACLs by 95 percent and 92 percent, respectively. The
current red grouper commercial ACL is 8,190,000 lb (3,714,922 kg) and
the commercial ACT (commercial quota) is 7,780,000 lb (3,528,949 kg).
The current red grouper recreational ACL is 2,580,000 lb (1,170,268 kg)
and the recreational ACT is 2,370,000 lb (1,075,014 kg).
The commercial sector is managed under an individual fishing quota
(IFQ) program. The commercial red grouper quota equals the commercial
ACT, and is allocated to red grouper shareholders each year. The
commercial IFQ program also serves as the accountability measure (AM)
for the commercial sector.
The current recreational AMs specify that if the recreational ACL
is reached or projected to be reached, red grouper fishing will be
closed to the recreational sector for the remainder of the fishing
year. If the ACL is exceeded in the following fishing year the level of
harvest will be set at the prior year's recreational ACT and the length
of the recreational red grouper fishing season will be adjusted based
on the amount necessary to ensure red grouper recreational landings do
not exceed the recreational ACT. If the stock is overfished and an
overage occurs, NMFS will reduce the recreational ACL by the amount of
the ACL overage in the prior fishing year. The overage adjustment will
also apply to the following year's recreational ACT.
Status of Stock
The stock status of Gulf red grouper was last evaluated in 2015
through the Southeast Data Assessment Review (SEDAR) 42 stock
assessment. The Council's Scientific and Statistical Committee (SSC)
reviewed the assessment results and agreed with the assessment's
determination that red grouper were not overfished or experiencing
overfishing. At that time, the SSC recommended increases in the
overfishing limit and the acceptable biological catch (ABC), which were
the basis for the current commercial and recreational ACLs and ACTs.
Justification and Need for This Emergency Rule
At the October 2018 meeting, the Council requested that NMFS
implement an emergency or interim rule to reduce the Gulf red grouper
stock ACL for the 2019 fishing year to 4.60 million lb (2.09 million
kg), or the 2017 total red grouper landings, whichever is less. The
Council also began work on a red grouper framework action to reduce the
red grouper catch limits on a more permanent basis. The Council took
these actions based on recent information regarding the health of the
stock. Since 2014, combined commercial and recreational Gulf red
grouper landings have trended downwards from over 7.26 million lb (3.29
million kg) in 2014 to approximately 4.16 million lb (1.89 million kg)
in 2017, an indication that the stock may be in decline. The most
recent red grouper stock assessment, SEDAR 61, will not be completed
until mid-2019. Therefore, the NMFS Southeast Fisheries Science Center
(SEFSC) conducted an interim red grouper stock analysis to assist the
SSC in developing harvest advice for 2019. The interim analysis used an
index from a fishery-independent survey to compare the current stock
condition with the stock condition forecast by the previous assessment
(SEDAR 42). This analysis suggested that the stock may be declining.
The Council's SSC reviewed the analysis and concluded that it contained
too much uncertainty to use for a new ABC recommendation but did
support recommending that the Council reduce the 2019 Gulf red grouper
total ACL to 4.60 million lb (2.09 million kg). The Council received
this advice at its meeting in October 2018.
In addition to the SSC's advice based on the interim analysis, the
Council heard public testimony at the October 2018 meeting primarily
from commercial fishermen. These fishermen expressed concern about the
status of the red grouper stock, noting that red grouper are harder to
catch than in previous years and that there appears to be a scarcity of
legal-size and larger fish throughout the species' range on the west
Florida shelf.
The Council also discussed the severe red tide conditions that
occurred off the Florida west coast in the summer and fall of 2018,
which may have adversely affected the red grouper stock. Although the
impacts of this recent red tide are unknown, the 2009 SEDAR 12 update
assessment indicated that a similar red tide event in 2005 reduced the
red grouper spawning stock biomass.
The 2017 combined red grouper commercial and recreational landings
(approximately 4.16 million lb (1.89 million kg)) are less than the SSC
recommended combined ACL of 4.60 million lb (2.09 million kg).
Therefore, NMFS has developed this proposed emergency rule to reduce
the red grouper commercial and recreational ACLs and ACTs consistent
with a stock ACL of 4.16 million lb (1.89 million kg). This emergency
rule would be effective for 180 days, although NMFS may extend the
emergency rule's effectiveness for a maximum of an additional 186 days.
This would allow for sufficient time for the Council and NMFS to
develop and implement a new framework action to manage the red grouper
stock for the 2020 fishing year and beyond.
Measures Contained in This Proposed Emergency Rule
For red grouper, this emergency rule would revise the red grouper
stock ACL to 4.16 million lb (1.89 million kg), which is equal to the
combined red grouper commercial and recreational landings. Applying the
commercial allocation of 76 percent to the stock ACL of 4.16 million lb
(1.89 million kg) results in a proposed commercial ACL of 3.16 million
lb (1.43 million kg). The commercial ACT would be set at 95 percent of
the commercial ACL, or 3.00 million lb (1.36 million kg). This would be
an approximate 60 percent reduction from the current commercial ACL and
ACT.
Because commercial red grouper is managed under an IFQ program,
NMFS distributes IFQ allocation to the program shareholders on January
1 of each year. After NMFS distributes the applicable commercial quota
to shareholders, it cannot be recalled.
[[Page 7866]]
Therefore, in anticipation of this proposed emergency rule reducing the
commercial quota, NMFS has withheld distribution of 59.4 percent,
equivalent to 4.78 million lb (2.17 million kg) of red grouper IFQ
allocation effective on January 1, 2019, through a temporary rule (83
FR 64480, December 17, 2018). If the commercial quota reduction
implemented through this proposed emergency rule is not effective by
June 1, 2019, the withheld commercial quota will be redistributed to
the shareholders.
For the recreational sector, 24 percent of the 4.16 million lb
(1.89 million kg) proposed total stock ACL results in a recreational
ACL of 1.00 million lb (0.45 million kg). The recreational ACT would be
set at 92 percent of the recreational ACL, or 0.92 million lb (0.42
million kg).
Emergency Rule Criteria
NMFS' Policy Guidelines for the Use of Emergency Rules (62 FR
44421, August 21, 1997) list three criteria for determining whether an
emergency exists, and this proposed emergency rule would be promulgated
under these criteria. Specifically, NMFS' policy guidelines require
that an emergency:
(1) Result from recent, unforeseen events or recently discovered
circumstances; and
(2) Present serious conservation or management problems in the
fishery; and
(3) Can be addressed through emergency regulations for which the
immediate benefits outweigh the value of advance notice, public
comment, and deliberative consideration of the impacts on participants
to the same extent as would be expected under the normal rulemaking
process.
NMFS has determined that reducing the red grouper 2019 commercial
and recreational ACLs and ACTs for 2019 meets the three criteria
required for an emergency rule. The new red grouper interim analysis
developed by the SEFSC and subsequent SSC recommendation were presented
to the Council at its October 2018 meeting and constitute recently
discovered circumstances. In addition, public testimony at the October
Council meeting expressed concern about the status of the red grouper
stock, noting that red grouper appear to be scarcer in abundance than
in previous years. The severe red tide event that occurred in summer
and fall 2018 off the Florida west coast was also unforeseen and may
have adversely affected the red grouper stock. Although the impacts of
this recent red tide are unknown, the 2009 SEDAR 12 update assessment
and 2015 SEDAR 42 assessment indicated that a similar 2005 red tide
event depressed the red grouper spawning stock biomass. The SEDAR 61
red grouper stock assessment is presently underway and NMFS expects to
present the results to the Council's SSC in July 2019.
Without this emergency rule, the red grouper ACLs and ACTs could
not be effectively reduced for the 2019 fishing year. This could
present a serious conservation problem if the red grouper stock is in
decline, as the reduction in landings, public comment, and interim
analysis may suggest.
Based on the Council's request for an interim or emergency rule, in
its December 17, 2018 temporary rule, NMFS withheld the IFQ allocation
equal to this emergency rule's proposed reduction in the commercial ACT
(quota) (83 FR 64480). This proposed emergency rule meets the third
criteria for an emergency because it would reduce the commercial quota
to be effective prior to June 1, 2019. This would provide the Council
and NMFS sufficient time to develop and implement a framework action
that will address the new information about the red grouper stock,
including the SEDAR 61 assessment, for the 2020 fishing year and
beyond. However, NMFS is proposing this emergency reduction because
there is sufficient time to include a 15-day comment period and
implement any final emergency rule by June 1, 2019.
Classification
This action is issued pursuant to section 305(c) of the Magnuson-
Stevens Act, 16 U.S.C. 1855(c). The Assistant Administrator for
Fisheries, NOAA (AA), has determined that this emergency rule is
necessary to provide increased protection for the Gulf red grouper
stock and is consistent with the Magnuson-Stevens Act and other
applicable laws.
This action is being taken pursuant to the emergency provision of
Magnuson-Stevens Act and is exempt from review by the Office of
Management and Budget.
NMFS prepared an initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (IRFA) as
required by section 603 of the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA), for
this emergency rule. The IRFA describes the economic impact this rule,
if adopted, would have on small entities. A description of the action,
why it is being considered, the objectives of, and legal basis for this
action are contained at the beginning of this section in the preamble
and in the SUMMARY section of the preamble. A copy of the full analysis
is available from NMFS (see ADDRESSES). A summary of the IRFA follows.
The Magnuson-Stevens Act provides the statutory basis for this
proposed rule. No duplicative, overlapping, or conflicting Federal
rules have been identified. A description of this proposed rule and its
purpose and need are contained in the SUMMARY section of the preamble.
This proposed rule would directly apply to recreational fishers
(anglers) and commercial fishing businesses that harvest red grouper in
Federal waters of the Gulf. Anglers are not considered small entities
as that term is defined in 5 U.S.C. 601(6), whether fishing from for-
hire fishing, private, or leased vessels. Therefore, estimates of the
number of anglers directly affected by the rule and the impacts on them
are not provided here. For-hire fishing businesses that harvest red
grouper in Federal waters would be indirectly affected if the rule were
to cause changes in angler demand for their services. However, The RFA
does not consider such indirect impacts on small entities.
This proposed rule would directly affect commercial fishing
businesses (NAICS code 11411) that harvest red grouper in Federal
waters of the Gulf by decreasing the commercial quota for red grouper.
An annual average of 376 vessels land red grouper and an estimated
330 businesses own the vessels. All of these businesses operate in the
commercial fishing industry (NAICS code 11411) and some also in related
industries, such as fish and seafood merchant wholesalers (NAICS code
424460) and fish and seafood (retail) markets (NAICS code 445220). All
are expected to operate primarily in the commercial fishing industry.
For RFA purposes, NMFS has established a small business size
standard for businesses, including their affiliates, whose primary
industry is commercial fishing (see 50 CFR 200.2). A business primarily
involved in commercial fishing is classified as a small business if it
is independently owned and operated, is not dominant in its field of
operation (including its affiliates), and its combined annual receipts
are not in excess of $11 million (in 2017 dollars) for all of its
affiliated operations worldwide. The average vessel that used bottom
longline gear to harvest red grouper from 2013 through 2017 had average
total annual revenue of $309,737 (in 2018 dollars), whereas the average
total annual revenue for vessels that used other gear types to harvest
red grouper were considerably lower. Additional examination of
[[Page 7867]]
annual revenues indicates the total annual revenue of each business to
be less than $11 million. Consequently, all of the 330 businesses
directly affected by the proposed action are identified as small.
The commercial quota would be reduced from 7.78 million lb
(3,528,949 kg) to 3.00 million lb (1.36 million kg). The commercial
sector landed only 3.33 million lb (1.51 million kg) in 2017. However,
an average of approximately 4.56 million lb (2.07 million kg) of red
grouper were landed annually from 2013 through 2017, and that average
is used as the baseline landings for the analysis below. As such, the
330 small businesses would incur combined losses of red grouper
landings that total approximately 1.56 million lb (0.71 million kg) and
have an estimated dockside value of approximately $6.43 million (in
2018 dollars) in 2019.
The average loss per vessel is expected to vary by the gear used to
harvest red grouper. The average longline vessel would incur the
largest average loss of red grouper revenue ($86,857), followed in turn
by the average bandit-gear vessel ($8,970), average hand hook-and-line
vessel ($5,361) and average other-gear vessel ($3,079). These decreases
in 2019 revenue from red grouper landings represent a 28.0 percent
reduction in the average longline vessel's total revenue, a 7.3 percent
reduction in the average bandit-gear vessel's total revenue, a 16.6
percent reduction in the average hand hook-and-line vessel's total
revenue, and a 15.2 percent reduction in the average other-gear
vessel's total revenue.
Two alternatives were considered, but not selected for red grouper
commercial harvest limit revisions. The first alternative, the no
action alternative, would maintain the current commercial quota.
Although the no-action alternative would have no adverse economic
impact in 2019, it would have the largest long-term costs to small
businesses because it could allow for the largest decline of the status
of the stock. The second non-selected alternative would reduce the
commercial quota to 3.32 million lb (1.51 million kg), and have a
smaller adverse economic impact than the selected alternative. However,
this alternative could have smaller long-term benefits than the
selected alternative because it may allow for less improvement of the
stock's status.
List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 622
Annual catch limits, Fisheries, Fishing, Gulf of Mexico, Red
grouper, Quotas.
Dated: February 26, 2019.
Samuel D. Rauch, III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
For the reasons set out in the preamble, 50 CFR part 622 is
proposed to be amended as follows:
PART 622--FISHERIES OF THE CARIBBEAN, GULF OF MEXICO, AND SOUTH
ATLANTIC
0
1. The authority citation for part 622 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
0
2. In Sec. 622.39, suspend paragraph (a)(1)(iii)(C) and add paragraph
(a)(1)(iii)(D) to read as follows:
Sec. 622.39 Quotas.
* * * * *
(a) * * *
(1) * * *
(iii) * * *
(D) Red grouper--3.00 million lb (1.36 million kg)
* * * * *
0
3. In Sec. 622.41, suspend paragraph (e) and add paragraph (r) to read
as follows:
Sec. 622.41 Annual catch limits (ACLs), annual catch targets (ACTs),
and accountability measures (AMs).
* * * * *
(r) Red grouper--(1) Commercial sector. The IFQ program for
groupers and tilefishes in the Gulf of Mexico serves as the
accountability measure for commercial red grouper. The applicable
commercial ACL for red grouper, in gutted weight, is 3.16 million lb
(1.43 million kg).
(2) Recreational sector. (i) Without regard to overfished status,
if red grouper recreational landings, as estimated by the SRD, reach or
are projected to reach the applicable ACL specified in paragraph
(r)(2)(iv) of this section, the AA will file a notification with the
Office of the Federal Register, to close the recreational sector for
the remainder of the fishing year. On and after the effective date of
such a notification, the bag and possession limit of red grouper in or
from the Gulf EEZ is zero. This bag and possession limit applies in the
Gulf on board a vessel for which a valid Federal charter vessel/
headboat permit for Gulf reef fish has been issued, without regard to
where such species were harvested, i.e. in state or Federal waters.
(ii) Without regard to overfished status, and in addition to the
measures specified in paragraph (r)(2)(i) of this section, if red
grouper recreational landings, as estimated by the SRD, exceed the
applicable ACL specified in paragraph (r)(2)(iv) of this section, the
AA will file a notification with the Office of the Federal Register to
maintain the red grouper ACT, specified in paragraph (r)(2)(iv) of this
section, for that following fishing year at the level of the prior
year's ACT, unless the best scientific information available determines
that maintaining the prior year's ACT is unnecessary. In addition, the
notification will reduce the length of the recreational red grouper
fishing season the following fishing year by the amount necessary to
ensure red grouper recreational landings do not exceed the recreational
ACT in the following fishing year.
(iii) If red grouper are overfished, based on the most recent
Status of U.S. Fisheries Report to Congress, and red grouper
recreational landings, as estimated by the SRD, exceed the applicable
ACL specified in paragraph (r)(2)(iv) of this section, the following
measures will apply. In addition to the measures specified in
paragraphs (r)(2)(i) and (ii) of this section, the AA will file a
notification with the Office of the Federal Register, at or near the
beginning of the following fishing year to reduce the ACL for that
following year by the amount of the ACL overage in the prior fishing
year, and reduce the ACT, as determined in paragraph (r)(2)(ii) of this
section, by the amount of the ACL overage in the prior fishing year,
unless the best scientific information available determines that a
greater, lesser, or no overage adjustment is necessary.
(iv) The recreational ACL for red grouper, in gutted weight, is
1.00 million lb (0.45 million kg). The recreational ACT for red
grouper, in gutted weight, is 0.92 million lb (0.42 million kg).
[FR Doc. 2019-03829 Filed 3-4-19; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-22-P