Marine Mammals; Pinniped Removal Authority; Revised Authorization, 19052-19053 [2019-09109]
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19052
Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 86 / Friday, May 3, 2019 / Notices
Special Accommodations
This meeting is physically accessible
to people with disabilities. This meeting
will be recorded. Consistent with 16
U.S.C. 1852, a copy of the recording is
available upon request. Requests for
sign language interpretation or other
auxiliary aids should be directed to
Thomas A. Nies, Executive Director, at
(978) 465–0492, at least 5 days prior to
the meeting date.
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
Dated: April 30, 2019.
Rey Israel Marquez,
Acting Deputy Director, Office of Sustainable
Fisheries, National Marine Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2019–09073 Filed 5–2–19; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
RIN 0648–XE461
Marine Mammals; Pinniped Removal
Authority; Revised Authorization
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration,
Commerce (NOAA).
ACTION: Notice of availability.
AGENCY:
NMFS announces the
availability of a revised authorization to
the states of Oregon, Washington, and
Idaho (states) for lethal removal of
individually identifiable predatory
California sea lions (Zalophus
californianus) in the vicinity of
Bonneville Dam to minimize pinniped
predation on Pacific salmon and
steelhead (Oncorhynchus spp.) listed as
threatened or endangered under the
Endangered Species Act (ESA) in the
Columbia River in Washington and
Oregon. This authorization is pursuant
to the Marine Mammal Protection Act
(MMPA).
SUMMARY:
Additional information
about our determination may be
obtained by visiting the NMFS West
Coast Region’s website: https://
www.westcoast.fisheries.noaa.gov, or by
writing to us at: NMFS West Coast
Region, Protected Resources Division,
1201 Lloyd Blvd., Suite 1100, Portland,
OR 97232.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr.
Robert Anderson at the above address,
by phone at (503) 231–2226, or by email
at, robert.c.anderson@noaa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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ADDRESSES:
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16:41 May 02, 2019
Jkt 247001
Background
Section 120 of the MMPA (16 U.S.C.
1361, et seq.) allows the Secretary of
Commerce, acting through the Assistant
Administrator for Fisheries, and the
West Coast Regional Administrator of
NMFS, the discretion to authorize the
intentional lethal taking of individually
identifiable pinnipeds that are having a
significant negative impact on
salmonids that are either: (1) Listed
under the ESA, (2) approaching a
threatened or endangered status, or (3)
migrate through the Ballard Locks in
Seattle. The authorization applies only
to pinnipeds that are not: (1) Listed
under the ESA, (2) designated as
depleted, or (3) designated a strategic
stock.
On January 27, 2016, NMFS received
an application from the states to
reauthorize the 2012 MMPA section 120
authorization through June 30, 2021. On
March 28, 2016, NMFS published a
notice in the Federal Register (81 FR
17141), announcing receipt of the states’
application, and soliciting public
comments on the application and any
additional information that NMFS
should consider in making its decision.
On May 31, 2016, NMFS reconvened the
Pinniped-Fishery Interaction Task Force
(Task Force), which was open to the
public, and during which it reviewed
the states’ application, public comments
on the application, and other
information related to sea lion predation
on salmonids at Bonneville Dam. The
Task Force completed and submitted its
report to NMFS on June 22, 2016.
Thirteen of the fourteen members
recommended that NMFS approve the
states’ extension request, with one
member dissenting. All decision
documents, including a copy of the new
authorization, are available on NMFS’s
West Coast Region web page (see
ADDRESSES).
As part of the MMPA section 120
process, subsection (c)(5) states that
after implementation of an approved
application, the Task Force shall
evaluate the effectiveness of the
permitted intentional lethal taking or
alternative actions implemented. If
implementation was ineffective in
eliminating the problem interaction, the
Task Force shall recommend additional
actions. If the implementation was
effective, the Task Force shall so advise
the Secretary, and the Secretary shall
disband the Task Force.
Because the results of the final year of
implementation were not available at
the time the 2012 authorization was set
to expire, NMFS deferred the
assessment of the effectiveness of the
permitted intentional lethal taking until
PO 00000
Frm 00023
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
that information became available. In
the interim, NMFS granted the states’
request for a renewal on June 28, 2016,
resulting in a new 5-year authorization
starting July 1, 2016.
On March 1 and 2, 2017, NMFS
reconvened the Task Force to evaluate
the effectiveness of the states permitted
intentional lethal taking at Bonneville
Dam during the years 2012 through
2016. One of the recommendations
provided to NMFS by the Task Force
was to change the criteria in Term and
Condition 1 of the June 28, 2016,
authorization to expedite adding
California sea lions to Appendix 1, thus
expediting the process for identifying
specific California sea lions for removal
(i.e., placement in permanent captivity
or killing).
Currently, the states’ MMPA section
120 authorization permits the states to
lethally remove no more than 92
California sea lions annually. The
program has never been fully
implemented to achieve that level and
as a result many believed it has not been
as effective as it could be. Some Task
Force members thought that increasing
the number of individual California sea
lions on the list of animals approved for
removal might allow for increases in
removal and a decrease in predation,
while others recognized that staffing
and resource limitations may prevent
full implementation. Because individual
residence time of California sea lions
has decreased, there are fewer days/time
that observers may see an animal eating
salmon at the dam. Consideration was
given to changing the criteria in the
current Authorization to one or more of
the following:
a. An animal may be removed if it is
individually identifiable and has been
seen eating salmon, or has been
observed in the observation area for x
days. (See options below for new
number of days).
Option 1: Use data to analyze the
probability of consumption of at-risk
salmonids based on how many days an
animal has been in the area. Then use
this number to determine the
appropriate number of observation days
needed.
Option 2: Reduce the number of days
of observation from 5 days to 3 days,
regardless of a probability analysis;
Option 3: Reduce the number of days
of observation from 5 days to 2 days,
regardless of a probability analysis.
Based on the Task Force
recommendation (Option 1), the states
requested that the U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers Fisheries Field Unit (FFU)
conduct an analysis to examine whether
the changes proposed by the Task Force
would improve the ability to identify
E:\FR\FM\03MYN1.SGM
03MYN1
Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 86 / Friday, May 3, 2019 / Notices
animals for removal. The FFU analyzed
the data presented in 2015 by the states
in the Bonneville Field Report for the
number of California sea lions that
could have been qualified for removal if
the conditions of ‘‘five days observed
and one salmonid kill’’ were changed to
‘‘five days observed or one salmonid
kill.’’ Findings indicated that changing
the criteria would have led to a 66
percent increase in the number of
California sea lions added to the
removal list. Changing criteria from
‘‘and’’ to ‘‘or’’ would therefore
significantly improve the effectiveness
of the state’s lethal removal program.
amozie on DSK9F9SC42PROD with NOTICES
Findings
Based on the results of the FFU
evaluation of the Task Force
recommendation, on February 6, 2019,
NMFS received a letter from the states
and the Columbia River Intertribal Fish
Commission requesting that we formally
adopt the Task Force recommendation
to change the ‘‘and’’ to ‘‘or’’ in Term and
Condition 1 in the June 28, 2016,
authorization. At the request of the
states, NMFS adopts the Task Force
recommendation to change the criteria
in Term and Condition 1 of the state’s
2016 MMPA section 120 authorization.
All other Terms and Conditions in the
June 28, 2016, authorization remain
unchanged. For the revised Term and
Condition, NMFS incorporated
provision ‘‘c’’ in Term and Condition 1
into both criteria ‘‘a’’ and ‘‘b’’ for clarity
and readability.
As required under section 7(a)(2)
under the ESA, NMFS has previously
completed formal consultation, and in
accordance with the National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), in
2016 NMFS completed a supplemental
environmental assessment (EA) to the
2008 EA with a finding of no significant
impact. The proposed action (issuing
the states a revised MMPA section 120
authorization) does not require
reinitiation of consultation under ESA
Section 7 (WCR–2016–4754) as none of
the reinitiation requirements in 50 CFR
402.16 have been met. Similarly, we
have determined that the existing 2016
Supplemental Environmental
Assessment (EA) and Finding of No
Significant Impact (FONSI) remain valid
because the new circumstances and/or
information relevant to environmental
concerns and bearing on the proposed
action or its impacts are not significant
under NEPA because the changes to the
proposed action that are relevant to
environmental considerations are not
substantial, and because the proposed
changes will have no direct, indirect, or
cumulative effects and are within the
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16:41 May 02, 2019
Jkt 247001
range of effects on all resources
considered in our 2016 EA and FONSI.
In considering a state’s application to
lethally remove pinnipeds, NMFS is
also required, pursuant to section
120(b)(1) of the MMPA, to determine
that individually identifiable pinnipeds
are having a significant negative impact
on the decline or recovery of at-risk
salmonid fishery stocks. We determined
that changing criteria from ‘‘and’’ to
‘‘or’’ would not change our
determination that the MMPA section
120 individually identifiable and
significant negative impact
requirements in section 120(b)(1) have
been met. The proposed criteria only
change the process, not the standard, by
which such animals are deemed
qualified for removal, and is consistent
with our previous MMPA section 120
decisions that pinnipeds collectively are
having a significant negative impact on
ESA-listed salmon and steelhead in the
vicinity of Bonneville Dam, and are also
deemed to be major contributors to
detrimental impacts on ESA-listed
salmonids because they have been
documented to prey on ESA-listed
salmonids, are repeat offenders, and
persist in the action area after being
exposed to nonlethal deterrence.
Based on these requirements,
considerations, and analyses, NMFS has
determined that the requirements of
section 120 of the MMPA have been met
and it is therefore reasonable to issue a
revised authorization to the states for
the lethal removal in the vicinity of
Bonneville Dam of individually
identifiable predatory California sea
lions through 2021.
Dated: April 30, 2019.
Donna S. Wieting,
Director, Office of Protected Resources,
National Marine Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2019–09109 Filed 5–2–19; 8:45 am]
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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
Patent and Trademark Office
[Docket No.: PTO–C–2019–0015]
National Medal of Technology and
Innovation Nomination Evaluation
Committee Meeting
United States Patent and
Trademark Office, Department of
Commerce.
ACTION: Notice of closed meeting.
AGENCY:
The National Medal of
Technology and Innovation (NMTI)
Nomination Evaluation Committee will
meet in closed session on June 5, 2019.
The primary purpose of the meeting is
SUMMARY:
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19053
to discuss the relative merits of persons,
teams, and companies nominated for the
NMTI.
DATES: The meeting will convene June
5, 2019, at approximately 9 a.m., and
adjourn at approximately 5 p.m.
ADDRESSES: The meeting will be held at
the United States Patent and Trademark
Office, 600 Dulany St., Alexandria, VA
22314.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: John
Palafoutas, Program Manager, National
Medal of Technology and Innovation
Program, United States Patent and
Trademark Office, P.O. Box, Alexandria,
VA 22313; telephone (571) 272–9821; or
by electronic mail: nmti@uspto.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Pursuant
to the Federal Advisory Committee Act
(FACA), 5 U.S.C. App. 2, notice is
hereby given that the NMTI Nomination
Evaluation Committee, chartered to the
United States Department of Commerce,
will meet at the United States Patent
and Trademark Office campus in
Alexandria, Virginia.
The Secretary of Commerce is
responsible for recommending to the
President prospective NMTI recipients.
The NMTI Nomination Evaluation
Committee evaluates the nominations
received pursuant to public solicitation
and makes its recommendations for the
Medal to the Secretary. Committee
members are distinguished experts in
the fields of science, technology,
business, and patent law drawn from
both the public and private sectors and
are appointed by the Secretary for threeyear terms.
The NMTI Nomination Evaluation
Committee was established in
accordance with the FACA. The
Committee meeting will be closed to the
public in accordance with the FACA
and 5 U.S.C. 552b(c)(6) and (9)(B),
because the discussion of the relative
merit of the Medal nominations is likely
to disclose information of a personal
nature that would constitute a clearly
unwarranted invasion of personal
privacy of the nominees; and premature
disclosure of the Committee’s
recommendations would be likely to
significantly frustrate implementation of
the Medal Program.
The Chief Financial Officer and
Assistant Secretary for Administration,
United States Department of Commerce,
formally determined on April 16, 2019,
pursuant to Section 10(d) of the FACA,
that the meeting may be closed because
Committee members are concerned with
matters that are within the purview of
5 U.S.C. 552b(c)(6) and (9)(B). Due to
closure of this meeting, copies of any
minutes of the meeting will not be
available. A copy of the determination
E:\FR\FM\03MYN1.SGM
03MYN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 84, Number 86 (Friday, May 3, 2019)]
[Notices]
[Pages 19052-19053]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2019-09109]
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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
RIN 0648-XE461
Marine Mammals; Pinniped Removal Authority; Revised Authorization
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration, Commerce (NOAA).
ACTION: Notice of availability.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: NMFS announces the availability of a revised authorization to
the states of Oregon, Washington, and Idaho (states) for lethal removal
of individually identifiable predatory California sea lions (Zalophus
californianus) in the vicinity of Bonneville Dam to minimize pinniped
predation on Pacific salmon and steelhead (Oncorhynchus spp.) listed as
threatened or endangered under the Endangered Species Act (ESA) in the
Columbia River in Washington and Oregon. This authorization is pursuant
to the Marine Mammal Protection Act (MMPA).
ADDRESSES: Additional information about our determination may be
obtained by visiting the NMFS West Coast Region's website: https://www.westcoast.fisheries.noaa.gov, or by writing to us at: NMFS West
Coast Region, Protected Resources Division, 1201 Lloyd Blvd., Suite
1100, Portland, OR 97232.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr. Robert Anderson at the above
address, by phone at (503) 231-2226, or by email at,
[email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
Section 120 of the MMPA (16 U.S.C. 1361, et seq.) allows the
Secretary of Commerce, acting through the Assistant Administrator for
Fisheries, and the West Coast Regional Administrator of NMFS, the
discretion to authorize the intentional lethal taking of individually
identifiable pinnipeds that are having a significant negative impact on
salmonids that are either: (1) Listed under the ESA, (2) approaching a
threatened or endangered status, or (3) migrate through the Ballard
Locks in Seattle. The authorization applies only to pinnipeds that are
not: (1) Listed under the ESA, (2) designated as depleted, or (3)
designated a strategic stock.
On January 27, 2016, NMFS received an application from the states
to reauthorize the 2012 MMPA section 120 authorization through June 30,
2021. On March 28, 2016, NMFS published a notice in the Federal
Register (81 FR 17141), announcing receipt of the states' application,
and soliciting public comments on the application and any additional
information that NMFS should consider in making its decision. On May
31, 2016, NMFS reconvened the Pinniped-Fishery Interaction Task Force
(Task Force), which was open to the public, and during which it
reviewed the states' application, public comments on the application,
and other information related to sea lion predation on salmonids at
Bonneville Dam. The Task Force completed and submitted its report to
NMFS on June 22, 2016. Thirteen of the fourteen members recommended
that NMFS approve the states' extension request, with one member
dissenting. All decision documents, including a copy of the new
authorization, are available on NMFS's West Coast Region web page (see
ADDRESSES).
As part of the MMPA section 120 process, subsection (c)(5) states
that after implementation of an approved application, the Task Force
shall evaluate the effectiveness of the permitted intentional lethal
taking or alternative actions implemented. If implementation was
ineffective in eliminating the problem interaction, the Task Force
shall recommend additional actions. If the implementation was
effective, the Task Force shall so advise the Secretary, and the
Secretary shall disband the Task Force.
Because the results of the final year of implementation were not
available at the time the 2012 authorization was set to expire, NMFS
deferred the assessment of the effectiveness of the permitted
intentional lethal taking until that information became available. In
the interim, NMFS granted the states' request for a renewal on June 28,
2016, resulting in a new 5-year authorization starting July 1, 2016.
On March 1 and 2, 2017, NMFS reconvened the Task Force to evaluate
the effectiveness of the states permitted intentional lethal taking at
Bonneville Dam during the years 2012 through 2016. One of the
recommendations provided to NMFS by the Task Force was to change the
criteria in Term and Condition 1 of the June 28, 2016, authorization to
expedite adding California sea lions to Appendix 1, thus expediting the
process for identifying specific California sea lions for removal
(i.e., placement in permanent captivity or killing).
Currently, the states' MMPA section 120 authorization permits the
states to lethally remove no more than 92 California sea lions
annually. The program has never been fully implemented to achieve that
level and as a result many believed it has not been as effective as it
could be. Some Task Force members thought that increasing the number of
individual California sea lions on the list of animals approved for
removal might allow for increases in removal and a decrease in
predation, while others recognized that staffing and resource
limitations may prevent full implementation. Because individual
residence time of California sea lions has decreased, there are fewer
days/time that observers may see an animal eating salmon at the dam.
Consideration was given to changing the criteria in the current
Authorization to one or more of the following:
a. An animal may be removed if it is individually identifiable and
has been seen eating salmon, or has been observed in the observation
area for x days. (See options below for new number of days).
Option 1: Use data to analyze the probability of consumption of at-
risk salmonids based on how many days an animal has been in the area.
Then use this number to determine the appropriate number of observation
days needed.
Option 2: Reduce the number of days of observation from 5 days to 3
days, regardless of a probability analysis;
Option 3: Reduce the number of days of observation from 5 days to 2
days, regardless of a probability analysis.
Based on the Task Force recommendation (Option 1), the states
requested that the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Fisheries Field Unit
(FFU) conduct an analysis to examine whether the changes proposed by
the Task Force would improve the ability to identify
[[Page 19053]]
animals for removal. The FFU analyzed the data presented in 2015 by the
states in the Bonneville Field Report for the number of California sea
lions that could have been qualified for removal if the conditions of
``five days observed and one salmonid kill'' were changed to ``five
days observed or one salmonid kill.'' Findings indicated that changing
the criteria would have led to a 66 percent increase in the number of
California sea lions added to the removal list. Changing criteria from
``and'' to ``or'' would therefore significantly improve the
effectiveness of the state's lethal removal program.
Findings
Based on the results of the FFU evaluation of the Task Force
recommendation, on February 6, 2019, NMFS received a letter from the
states and the Columbia River Intertribal Fish Commission requesting
that we formally adopt the Task Force recommendation to change the
``and'' to ``or'' in Term and Condition 1 in the June 28, 2016,
authorization. At the request of the states, NMFS adopts the Task Force
recommendation to change the criteria in Term and Condition 1 of the
state's 2016 MMPA section 120 authorization. All other Terms and
Conditions in the June 28, 2016, authorization remain unchanged. For
the revised Term and Condition, NMFS incorporated provision ``c'' in
Term and Condition 1 into both criteria ``a'' and ``b'' for clarity and
readability.
As required under section 7(a)(2) under the ESA, NMFS has
previously completed formal consultation, and in accordance with the
National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), in 2016 NMFS completed a
supplemental environmental assessment (EA) to the 2008 EA with a
finding of no significant impact. The proposed action (issuing the
states a revised MMPA section 120 authorization) does not require
reinitiation of consultation under ESA Section 7 (WCR-2016-4754) as
none of the reinitiation requirements in 50 CFR 402.16 have been met.
Similarly, we have determined that the existing 2016 Supplemental
Environmental Assessment (EA) and Finding of No Significant Impact
(FONSI) remain valid because the new circumstances and/or information
relevant to environmental concerns and bearing on the proposed action
or its impacts are not significant under NEPA because the changes to
the proposed action that are relevant to environmental considerations
are not substantial, and because the proposed changes will have no
direct, indirect, or cumulative effects and are within the range of
effects on all resources considered in our 2016 EA and FONSI.
In considering a state's application to lethally remove pinnipeds,
NMFS is also required, pursuant to section 120(b)(1) of the MMPA, to
determine that individually identifiable pinnipeds are having a
significant negative impact on the decline or recovery of at-risk
salmonid fishery stocks. We determined that changing criteria from
``and'' to ``or'' would not change our determination that the MMPA
section 120 individually identifiable and significant negative impact
requirements in section 120(b)(1) have been met. The proposed criteria
only change the process, not the standard, by which such animals are
deemed qualified for removal, and is consistent with our previous MMPA
section 120 decisions that pinnipeds collectively are having a
significant negative impact on ESA-listed salmon and steelhead in the
vicinity of Bonneville Dam, and are also deemed to be major
contributors to detrimental impacts on ESA-listed salmonids because
they have been documented to prey on ESA-listed salmonids, are repeat
offenders, and persist in the action area after being exposed to
nonlethal deterrence.
Based on these requirements, considerations, and analyses, NMFS has
determined that the requirements of section 120 of the MMPA have been
met and it is therefore reasonable to issue a revised authorization to
the states for the lethal removal in the vicinity of Bonneville Dam of
individually identifiable predatory California sea lions through 2021.
Dated: April 30, 2019.
Donna S. Wieting,
Director, Office of Protected Resources, National Marine Fisheries
Service.
[FR Doc. 2019-09109 Filed 5-2-19; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-22-P