Plan for Periodic Review of Regulations, 60079-60089 [2020-21075]
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Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 186 / Thursday, September 24, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
conflict with or change contract
requirements. Within the limits of any
specific authority delegated by the
Contracting Officer, the resident
engineer may, by written direction,
make changes in the work. The
Contractor shall be advised of the extent
of such authority prior to execution of
any work under the contract.
(e) The Contracting Officer or an
Administrative Contracting Officer
identified in paragraph (a) may further
delegate limited authority and
specialized support services
responsibilities below to the following
warranted Resident Engineer personnel
on site, not to exceed the dollar value
and threshold of their warrant:
[Insert name and office address of
Resident Engineer with limited
authority]
(1) Conduct post-award orientation
conferences.
(2) Issue administrative changes (see
FAR 43.101) correcting errors or
omissions, contractor address, facility or
activity code, remittance address,
computations which do not required
additional contract funds, and other
such changes.
(3) For actions not to exceed $ [Insert
dollar amount] negotiate and execute
supplemental agreements resulting from
change orders issued under the Changes
clause.
(4) Negotiate and execute
supplemental agreements changing
contract delivery schedules where the
time extension does not exceed [Insert
number] calendar days.
(End of Clause)
29. Section 852.242–71 is added to
read as follows:
■
852.242–71
Officer.
Administrative Contracting
As prescribed in 842.271, insert the
following clause:
Administrative Contracting Officer
(OCT 2020)
The Contracting Officer reserves the
right to designate an Administrative
Contracting Officer (ACO) for the
purpose of performing certain tasks/
duties in the administration of the
contract. Such designation will be in
writing through an ACO Letter of
Delegation and will identify the
responsibilities and limitations of the
ACO. A copy of the ACO Letter of
Delegation will be furnished to the
Contractor.
(End of Clause)
[FR Doc. 2020–18172 Filed 9–23–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8320–01–P
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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
60079
Tara
Scott, Industry Economist, (301) 427–
8579.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
50 CFR Chapters II, III, and VI
Background
[RTID 0648–XA387]
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA),
5 U.S.C. 601 et seq., requires that
Federal agencies, including NMFS, take
into account how their regulations affect
‘‘small entities,’’ including small
businesses, small Governmental
jurisdictions, and small organizations.
Under the RFA, we must either prepare
a Regulatory Flexibility Analysis or
certify that the regulation, if put in
place, will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. This
requirement has been in place for any
regulation proposed after January 1,
1981. Section 602 of the RFA requires
that NMFS issue an Agenda of
Regulations identifying rules under
development that are likely to have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
Section 610 of the RFA requires
Federal agencies to review existing
regulations. It requires that NMFS
publish a plan in the Federal Register
explaining how it will review its
existing regulations, which have or will
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities.
Regulations that became effective after
January 1, 1981, must be reviewed
within 10 years of the publication date
of the final rule. Section 610(c) requires
that we annually publish a list of final
rules we will review during the
succeeding 12 months in the Federal
Register. The list must describe, explain
the need for, and provide the legal basis
for the rules being reviewed, as well as
invite public comment on the rules
contained in the list.
Plan for Periodic Review of
Regulations
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Request for comments.
AGENCY:
NMFS announces the
availability of a list of the rules it is
reviewing, as required, under section
610 of the Regulatory Flexibility Act.
We are required to notify the public of
our review of existing regulations that
we have determined had, or will have,
a significant impact on a substantial
number of small entities, such as small
businesses, small organizations, and
small governmental jurisdictions. The
intended effect of this notice is to
inform the public of the rules under
review, to outline NMFS’ review
process, and to provide an opportunity
to comment.
DATES: Written comments must be
received by October 26, 2020.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments
on this document, identified by NOAA–
NMFS–2020–0128, by the following
method:
• Electronic Submission: Submit all
electronic public comments via the
Federal e-Rulemaking Portal. Go to
https://www.regulations.gov/
#!docketDetail;D=NOAA-NMFS-20200128, click the ‘‘Comment Now!’’ icon,
complete the required fields, and enter
or attach your comments.
Instructions: Comments must be
submitted by the above method to
ensure that the comments are received,
documented, and considered by NMFS.
Comments sent by any other method, to
any other address or individual, or
received after the end of the comment
period, may not be considered. All
comments received are a part of the
public record and will generally be
posted for public viewing on
www.regulations.gov without change.
All personal identifying information
(e.g., name, address, etc.) submitted
voluntarily by the sender will be
publicly accessible. Do not submit
confidential business information, or
otherwise sensitive or protected
information. NMFS will accept
anonymous comments (enter ‘‘N/A’’ in
the required fields if you wish to remain
anonymous).
SUMMARY:
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Criteria for Review of Existing
Regulations
The purpose of the required review is
to determine whether existing rules
should be left unchanged, or whether
they should be revised or rescinded to
minimize significant economic impacts
on a substantial number of small
entities, consistent with the objectives
of other applicable statutes. In deciding
whether change is necessary, the RFA
establishes five factors that NMFS must
consider:
(1) Whether the rule is still needed;
(2) What type of complaints or
comments were received concerning the
rule from the public;
(3) The complexity of the rule;
(4) How much the rule overlaps,
duplicates or conflicts with other
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Federal rules, and, to the extent feasible,
with State and local governmental rules;
and
(5) How long it has been since the rule
has been evaluated or how much the
technology, economic conditions, or
other factors have changed in the area
affected by the rule.
Plan for Periodic Review of Rules
We will ensure that all rules, which
have or will have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities, are reviewed within 10 years of
the year in which they were originally
issued. Below is the list of rules, and
their summaries, issued between
January 1, 2011, and December 31, 2013,
that we will be reviewing during 2020.
We anticipate completing the reviews
for all of these rules by March 31, 2021:
1. Pacific Halibut Fisheries; Guided
Sport Charter Vessel Fishery for Halibut;
Recordkeeping and Reporting. RIN
0648–AY38 (76 FR 6567; February 7,
2011). The final rule amended the
recordkeeping and reporting
requirements for the Pacific halibut
guided sport fishery in International
Pacific Halibut Commission Regulatory
Area 2C (Southeast Alaska) and Area 3A
(Central Gulf of Alaska). These
regulations revised the Federal
requirements for submission of Alaska
Department of Fish and Game Saltwater
Sport Fishing Charter Trip Logbook data
sheets, modified the logbook recording
requirements, and added a definition of
fishing week. This action was necessary
to improve consistency between Federal
and State of Alaska requirements for the
submission of the logbook data sheets
and address recent changes by the State
to the logbook reporting format. This
action was intended to achieve the
halibut fishery management goals of the
North Pacific Fishery Management
Council and to support the conservation
and management provisions of the
Northern Pacific Halibut Act of 1982.
2. Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic
Zone Off Alaska; Gulf of Alaska License
Limitation Program. RIN 0648–AY42 (76
FR 15826; March 22, 2011). The final
rule implemented Amendment 86 to the
Fishery Management Plan (FMP) for
Groundfish of the Gulf of Alaska. This
action added a Pacific cod endorsement
on licenses issued under the License
Limitation Program (LLP) in specific
management areas if those licenses had
been used on vessels that met minimum
recent landing requirements using nontrawl gear, commonly known as fixed
gear. This action exempted vessels that
use jig gear from the requirement to
hold an LLP license, modified the
maximum length designation on a
specific set of fixed gear licenses, and
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allows entities representing specific
communities to receive a limited
number of fixed-gear licenses with
Pacific cod endorsements. This action
was intended to promote the goals and
objectives of the Magnuson-Stevens
Fishery Conservation and Management
Act (MSA), the Fishery Management
Plan, and other applicable law.
3. Fisheries of the Northeastern
United States; Atlantic Bluefish Fishery;
2011 Atlantic Bluefish Specifications;
Regulatory Amendment. RIN 0648–
BA26 (76 FR 17789; March 31, 2011).
NMFS issued final specifications for the
2011 Atlantic bluefish fishery, including
total allowable landings (TAL), a
commercial quota and recreational
harvest limit, and a recreational
possession limit. The intent of this
action was to establish the allowable
2011 harvest levels and other
management measures to achieve the
target fishing mortality rate (F),
consistent with the Atlantic Bluefish
FMP. The final rule also amended the
bluefish regulations that specify the
process for setting the annual TAL and
target F to more clearly reflect the intent
of the FMP. This action was conducted
by NMFS under the authority of the
MSA.
4. Endangered and Threatened
Species: Designation of Critical Habitat
for Cook Inlet Beluga Whale; Final Rule.
RIN 0648–AX50 (76 FR 20179; April 11,
2011). This rule designated critical
habitat for the Cook Inlet beluga whale
(Delphinapterus leucas) distinct
population segment (DPS) under the
Endangered Species Act (ESA). Two
areas were designated, comprising 7,800
square kilometers (km2) (3,013 square
miles (mi2) of marine habitat. In
developing this rule, NMFS considered
public and peer review comments, as
well as economic impacts and impacts
to national security. NMFS decided in
the final rule to exclude the Port of
Anchorage in consideration of national
security interest. Additionally, portions
of military lands were determined to be
ineligible for designation as critical
habitat.
5. Magnuson-Stevens Fishery
Conservation and Management Act
Provisions; Fisheries of the Northeastern
United States; Northeast (NE)
Multispecies Fishery; Framework
Adjustment 45; Final Rule and Interim
Final Rule. RIN 0648–BA27 (76 FR
23042; April 25, 2011). This final rule
partially approved Framework
Adjustment (FW) 45 to the NE
Multispecies FMP and implements the
approved measures. FW 45 was
developed by the New England Fishery
Management Council (Council) to make
adjustments necessary to ensure that
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conservation and management
objectives of the FMP, including
preventing overfishing, rebuilding
overfished stocks, achieving optimum
yield (OY), and minimizing the
economic impact of management
measures on affected vessels, were being
met in accordance with the MSA.
Specifically, this action revised the
biological reference points and stock
status for pollock, updated annual catch
limits (ACL) for several stocks for
fishing years (FYs) 2011–2012, adjusted
the rebuilding program for Georges Bank
(GB) yellowtail flounder, increased
scallop vessel access to the Great South
Channel Exemption Area, approved five
new sectors, modified the existing
dockside and at-sea monitoring
requirements, revised several sector
administrative provisions, established a
Gulf of Maine (GOM) Cod Spawning
Protection Area, and refined measures
affecting the operations of NE
multispecies vessels fishing with
handgear. This action approved the
Council’s proposed FY 2011 U.S./
Canada Management Area total
allowable catch (TAC), acceptable
biological catch (ABC), and ACL for GB
yellowtail flounder, but replaced them
with new catch limits for this stock
through a parallel emergency action,
included as part of this final rule, based
on the International Fisheries
Agreement Clarification Act (IFACA)
that provided new flexibility in setting
catch limits for this stock. In addition,
this action disapproved a measure to
delay fishing industry responsibility for
paying for at-sea monitoring coverage
costs in FY 2012. This action was
necessary to ensure that the fishery is
managed on the basis of the best
available science, to comply with the
ABC control rules adopted in
Amendment 16 to the FMP, and to
enhance the viability of the fishery. This
action was conducted by NMFS under
the authority of the MSA.
6. Fisheries Off West Coast States:
Pacific Coast Groundfish Fishery;
Biennial Specifications and
Management Measure. RIN 0648–BA01
(76 FR 27508; May 11, 2011). This final
rule established the 2011–2012 harvest
specifications for most of the species in
the groundfish fishery and management
measures for that fishery off the coasts
of Washington, Oregon, and California
consistent with the MSA and the Pacific
Coast Groundfish Fishery Management
Plan (PCGFMP). This rule also
established, under emergency authority
in section 305 of the MSA, harvest
specifications for eight overfished
species, and for flatfish. Emergency
authority was being invoked to
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implement measures that were included
in Amendment 16–5 to the PCGFMP,
which NMFS disapproved in December
2010. These included a new rebuilding
plan for petrale sole, revised rebuilding
plans for the remaining seven
overfished species, and revised status
determination criteria and
precautionary harvest control rule for
flatfish.
7. Fisheries of the Northeastern
United States; Northeast Skate Complex
Fishery; Framework Adjustment 1. RIN
0648–BA91 (76 FR 28328; May 17,
2011). This final rule implemented
approved measures in Framework
Adjustment 1 to the Northeast Skate
Complex Fishery Management Plan.
Framework Adjustment 1 was
developed by the New England Fishery
Management Council (Council) to adjust
the possession limits for the skate wing
fishery in order to slow the rate of skate
wing landings, so that the available TAL
was taken by the fishery over a longer
duration in the FY than occurred in FY
2010, thus ensuring a steady market
supply. The action also allowed vessels
that process skate wings at sea to land
skate carcasses for sale into the bait
market, without counting the carcass
landings against the TAL (skate wings
are already converted to live weight for
monitoring). Although recommended by
the Council as part of Framework 1, this
final rule announced that NMFS had
disapproved a proposal to increase the
incidental possession limit for skate
wings that would have applied after the
skate wing possession limit trigger was
reached. This final rule did not adjust
the skate fishery specifications for FY
2011. This action was conducted by
NMFS under the authority of the MSA.
8. Fisheries of the Northeastern
United States; Monkfish; Amendment 5.
RIN 0648–AX70 (76 FR 30265; May 25,
2011). This final rule implemented
measures that were approved in
Amendment 5 to the Monkfish FMP.
The New England and Mid-Atlantic
Fishery Management Councils
developed Amendment 5 to bring the
FMP into compliance with the ACL and
accountability measure (AM)
requirements of the MSA. This rule
established the mechanisms for
specifying ACLs and AMs and set the
ACT and associated measures for daysat-sea (DAS) and trip limits for the
Southern Fishery Management Area.
NMFS disapproved the proposed ACT,
and associated measures, for the
Northern Fishery Management Area on
the grounds that they were not
consistent with the most recent
scientific advice. This final rule
implemented three additional
Amendment 5 management measures to
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promote efficiency and reduce waste,
bring the biological and management
reference points in the Monkfish FMP
into compliance with revised National
Standard 1 Guidelines, and made one
correction to the monkfish weight
conversion factors.
9. Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic
Zone Off Alaska: Bering Sea and
Aleutian Islands Crab Rationalization
Program. RIN 0648–BA11 (76 FR 35781;
June 20, 2011). NMFS issued regulations
to implement Amendment 37 to the
Fishery Management Plan for Bering
Sea/Aleutian Islands King and Tanner
Crabs FMP. This action amended the
Bering Sea/Aleutian Islands Crab
Rationalization Program by establishing
a process for eligible contract signatories
to request that NMFS exempt holders of
West-designated individual fishing
quota (IFQ) and individual processor
quota (IPQ) in the Western Aleutian
Islands golden king crab fishery from
the West regional delivery requirements.
Federal regulations require Westdesignated golden king crab IFQ to be
delivered to a processor in the West
region of the Aleutian Islands with an
exact amount of unused Westdesignated IPQ. However, sufficient
processing capacity may not be
available each season. This rule was
necessary to prevent disruption to the
Western Aleutian Islands golden king
crab fishery, while providing for the
sustained participation of
municipalities in the region. This action
was intended to promote the goals and
objectives of the MSA, the FMP, and
other applicable law.
10. Atlantic Highly Migratory Species
(HMS): Atlantic Bluefin Tuna Quotas
and Atlantic Tuna Fisheries
Management Measures. RIN 0648–BA65
(76 FR 39019; July 5, 2011). NMFS
modified Atlantic bluefin tuna (BFT)
base quotas for all domestic fishing
categories; established BFT quota
specifications for the 2011 fishing year;
reinstated pelagic longline target catch
requirements for retaining BFT in the
Northeast Distant Gear Restricted Area
(NED); amended the Atlantic tunas
possession-at-sea and landing
regulations to allow removal of Atlantic
tunas tail lobes; and clarified the
transfer-at-sea regulations for Atlantic
tunas. This action was necessary to
implement recommendations of the
International Commission for the
Conservation of Atlantic Tunas (ICCAT),
as required by the Atlantic Tunas
Convention Act (ATCA), and to achieve
domestic management objectives under
the MSA.
11. Atlantic Highly Migratory Species:
Modification of the Retention of
Incidentally-Caught Highly Migratory
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Species in Atlantic Trawl Fisheries. RIN
0648–BA45 (76 FR 49368; August 10,
2011). This final rule modified the
permitting requirements and retention
limits for Atlantic HMS that were
incidentally-caught in Atlantic trawl
fisheries. This action reduced regulatory
dead discards of incidentally-caught
Atlantic swordfish in the Illex squid
trawl fishery by establishing a new
Incidental HMS Squid Trawl permit for
all valid Illex squid moratorium permit
holders. The Incidental HMS Squid
Trawl permit allowed up to 15
swordfish per trip to be retained. The
final rule also established a retention
limit for smoothhound sharks in all
Atlantic trawl fisheries. These actions
were necessary to achieve domestic
management objectives under the MSA,
and implemented the 2006 Consolidated
HMS Fishery Management Plan
(Consolidated HMS FMP), which
included objectives in the FMP to
monitor and control all components of
fishing mortality, both directed and
incidental, so as to ensure the long-term
sustainability of HMS stocks, and to
provide the data necessary for assessing
HMS fish stocks and managing HMS,
including addressing inadequacies in
current data collection and the ongoing
collection of economic and bycatch data
in Atlantic HMS fisheries.
12. Atlantic Highly Migratory Species:
Atlantic Shark Management Measures.
RIN 0648–BA69 (76 FR 53652; August
29, 2011). NMFS implemented the
ICCAT recommendations 10–07 and 10–
08, which prohibited the retention,
transshipping, landing, storing, or
selling of hammerhead sharks in the
family Sphyrnidae (except for Sphyrna
tiburo) and oceanic whitetip sharks
(Carcharhinus longimanus) caught in
association with ICCAT fisheries. This
rule affected the commercial HMS
pelagic longline (PLL) fishery and
recreational fisheries for tunas,
swordfish, and billfish in the Atlantic
Ocean, including the Caribbean Sea and
Gulf of Mexico. This action
implemented ICCAT recommendations,
consistent with the ATCA, and furthers
domestic management objectives under
the MSA.
13. Fisheries of Northeastern United
States: Atlantic Herring Fishery;
Regulatory Amendment. RIN 0648–
BA79 (76 FR 54385; September 1, 2011).
NMFS revised the reporting
requirements for vessels issued Atlantic
herring (herring) permits, because more
timely catch information was necessary
to monitor herring catch against the
stock-wide herring ACL and herring
management area sub-ACLs, to help
prevent sub-ACLs overages and the
chance of premature fishery closures.
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This action required limited access
herring vessels to report catch daily via
vessel monitoring systems (VMS), open
access herring vessels to report catch
weekly via the interactive voice
response system, and all herringpermitted vessels to submit vessel trip
reports weekly.
14. Fisheries of the Northeastern
United States: Atlantic Deep-Sea Red
Crab; Amendment 3. RIN 0648–BA22
(76 FR 60379 September 29, 2011). This
final rule implemented measures that
were approved in Amendment 3 to the
Atlantic Deep-Sea Red Crab FMP. The
New England Fishery Management
Council developed Amendment 3 to
bring the FMP into compliance with the
ACL and AM requirements of the MSA.
This rule established the mechanisms
for specifying an ACL and AMs and set
the TAL for red crab for the 2011–2013
FY. NMFS disapproved two proposed
measures in Amendment 3. This final
rule implemented additional
management measures to promote
efficiency in the red crab fishery.
15. Fishing Capacity Reduction
Program for the Southeast Alaska Purse
Seine Salmon Fishery. RIN 0648–BA13
(76 FR 61985, October 6, 2011). NMFS
established regulations to implement a
fishing capacity reduction (buyback)
program and an industry fee system to
repay a $23,476,500 loan for the
Southeast Alaska Purse Seine Salmon
Fishery (Reduction Fishery). The fee
system involves future landings of the
Reduction Fishery. This action’s intent
was to permanently reduce the most
fishing capacity at the least cost and
establish the fee system. This action was
conducted by NMFS under the authority
of the MSA.
16. Endangered and Threatened
Species: Designation of Critical Habitat
for the Southern Distinct Population
Segment of Eulachon. RIN 0648–XF87
(76 FR 65324; October 20, 2011). NMFS
issued a final rule to designate critical
habitat for the southern DPS of Pacific
eulachon (Thaleichthys pacificus),
pursuant to section 4 of the ESA. NMFS
designated 16 specific areas as critical
habitat within the states of California,
Oregon, and Washington. The
designated areas were a combination of
freshwater creeks and rivers and their
associated estuaries, comprising
approximately 539 km (335 mi) of
habitat. The Tribal lands of four Indian
Tribes were excluded from designation
after the evaluation of the impacts of
designation and benefits of exclusion
associated with Tribal land ownership
and management by the Tribes. No areas
were excluded from designation based
on economic impacts. This final rule
responded to and incorporated public
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comments received on the proposed
rule and supporting documents, as well
as peer reviewer comments received on
our draft biological report and draft
economic report.
17. Endangered and Threatened
Wildlife and Plants: Designation of
Critical Habitat for Black Abalone. RIN
0648–AY62 (76 FR 66806; October 27,
2011). NMFS designated critical habitat
for the endangered black abalone under
the ESA. This designation included
approximately 360 km2 of rocky
intertidal and subtidal habitat within
five segments of the California coast
between the Del Mar Landing Ecological
Reserve to the Palos Verdes Peninsula,
as well as on the Farallon Islands, An˜o
Nuevo Island, San Miguel Island, Santa
Rosa Island, Santa Cruz Island, Anacapa
Island, Santa Barbara Island, and Santa
Catalina Island. This designation
included rocky intertidal and subtidal
habitats from the mean higher high
water (MHHW) line to a depth of ¥6
meters (m) (relative to the mean lower
low water (MLLW) line), as well as the
coastal marine waters encompassed by
these areas. NMFS did not designate the
specific area from Corona Del Mar State
Beach to Dana Point, California, because
they concluded that the economic
benefits of exclusion from the critical
habitat designation outweigh the
benefits of inclusion and that exclusion
of this specific area would not result in
the extinction of the species. NMFS also
concluded that two of the specific areas
proposed for designation (San Nicolas
Island and San Clemente Island) were
no longer eligible for designation, based
on determinations that the U.S. Navy’s
revised integrated natural resource
management plans (INRMPs) for these
areas provide benefits to black abalone.
18. Fisheries of the Exclusive
Economic Zone Off Alaska: Bering Sea
and Aleutian Islands Management Area;
Limited Access Privilege Program. RIN
0648–BA18 (76 FR 68354; November 4,
2011). NMFS issued regulations
implementing Amendment 93 to the
FMP for Groundfish of the Bering Sea
and Aleutian Islands Management Area.
These regulations amended the Bering
Sea and Aleutian Islands Amendment
80 Program to modify the criteria for
forming and participating in a
harvesting cooperative. This action was
necessary to encourage greater
participation in harvesting cooperatives,
which enable members to more
efficiently target species, avoid areas
with undesirable bycatch, and improve
the quality of products produced. This
action was intended to promote the
goals and objectives of the MSA, the
FMP, and other applicable law.
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19. Fisheries of the Northeastern
United States: Atlantic Mackerel, Squid,
and Butterfish Fisheries; Amendment
11. RIN 0648–AX05 (76 FR 68642;
November 7, 2011). NMFS implemented
approved measures in Amendment 11 to
the Atlantic Mackerel, Squid, and
Butterfish Fishery Management Plan,
developed by the Mid-Atlantic Fishery
Management Council. The approved
measures included: A tiered limited
access program for the Atlantic
mackerel fishery; an open access
incidental catch permit for mackerel; an
update to essential fish habitat
designations for all life stages of
mackerel, longfin squid, Illex squid, and
butterfish; and the establishment of a
recreational allocation for mackerel.
This action was conducted by NMFS
under the authority of the MSA.
20. Fisheries of Exclusive Economic
Zone Off Alaska: Revisions to Pacific
Cod Fishing in Parallel Fishery in Bering
Sea and Aleutian Islands Management
Area. RIN 0648–AY65 (76 FR 73513;
November 29, 2011). NMFS issued
regulations to limit access of federally
permitted pot and hook-and-line
catcher/processors (C/Ps) to the Pacific
cod fishery in Alaska State waters
within three nautical miles of shore
adjacent to the Bering Sea and Aleutian
Islands management area (BSAI). The
affected fishery is commonly known as
the ‘‘parallel’’ fishery. The parallel
fishery is managed by the State of
Alaska concurrent with the Federal pot
and hook-and-line fishery for Pacific
cod in the BSAI. This rule limited
access by federally permitted vessels to
the parallel fishery for Pacific cod in
three ways. First, it required an owner
of a federally permitted pot or hookand-line C/P vessel used to catch Pacific
cod in the State of Alaska parallel
fishery to be issued the same
endorsements on his or her Federal
fisheries permit (FFP) or license
limitation program (LLP) license as
currently were required for catching
Pacific cod in the Federal waters of the
BSAI. Second, it provided that the
owner of a pot or hook-and-line C/P
vessel who surrenders an FFP would
not be reissued a new FFP for that
vessel within the 3-year term of the
permit. Third, it required an operator of
any federally permitted pot or hookand-line C/P vessel used to catch Pacific
cod in the parallel fishery to comply
with the same seasonal closures of
Pacific cod that apply in the Federal
fishery. These three measures were
necessary to limit some C/Ps from
catching a greater amount of Pacific cod
in the parallel fishery than has been
allocated to their sector from the BSAI
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total allowable catch. Maintaining
Pacific cod catch amounts within BSAI
sector allocations also would reduce the
potential for shortened Pacific cod
seasons for C/Ps in the Federal fishery.
These three measures would improve
the effectiveness of NMFS’ catch
accounting and monitoring
requirements on vessels participating in
the parallel fishery. This action was
intended to promote the goals and
objectives of the Fishery Management
Plan for Groundfish of the Bering Sea
and Aleutian Islands Management Area,
the MSA, and other applicable laws.
21. Atlantic Highly Migratory Species:
Adjustments to the Atlantic Bluefin
Tuna General and Harpoon Category
Regulations. RIN 0648–AX85 (76 FR
74003; November 30, 2011). NMFS
adjusted the Atlantic BFT fishery
regulations to: Increase the General
category maximum daily retention limit;
allow the General category season to
remain open until the January subquota
was reached, or March 31, whichever
happens first; and increase the Harpoon
category daily incidental retention limit.
This action was intended to enable more
thorough utilization of the available
U.S. BFT quota for the General and
Harpoon (commercial handgear)
categories; minimize bycatch and
bycatch mortality to the extent
practicable; expand fishing
opportunities for participants in the
commercial winter General category
fishery; and increase NMFS’ flexibility
for setting the General category
retention limit depending on available
quota. This action was conducted by
NMFS under the authority of the MSA.
22. Fisheries of the Exclusive
Economic Zone Off Alaska: Pacific Cod
Allocations in the Gulf of Alaska;
Amendment 83. RIN 0648–AY53 (76 FR
74670; December 1, 2011). NMFS
published regulations to implement
Amendment 83 to the Fishery
Management Plan for Groundfish of the
Gulf of Alaska (GOA). Amendment 83
allocated Western and Central GOA
Pacific cod TAC limits among various
gear and operational sectors. Sector
allocations limit the amount of Western
and Central GOA Pacific cod that each
sector was authorized to harvest. This
action reduced competition among
sectors and supported stability in the
Pacific cod fishery. This rule limited
access to the Federal Pacific cod TAC
fisheries prosecuted in State of Alaska
waters, commonly known as the parallel
fishery, adjacent to the Western and
Central GOA. This action was intended
to promote community participation
and provide incentives for new entrants
in the jig sector. It also promoted the
goals and objectives of the MSA, the
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Fishery Management Plan, and other
applicable laws.
23. Atlantic Highly Migratory Species:
Vessel Monitoring Systems. RIN 0648–
BA64 (76 FR 75492; December 2, 2011).
NMFS finalized requirements for
fishermen to replace currently required
Mobile Transmitting Unit (MTU) VMS
units with Enhanced Mobile
Transmitting Unit (E–MTU) VMS in
Atlantic HMS fisheries. The key
difference between MTU and E–MTU
VMS units was that the E–MTU VMS
units were capable of two-way
communication. The purpose of this
final action was to facilitate enhanced
communication with HMS vessels at
sea, provide HMS fishery participants
with an additional means of sending
and receiving information at sea, ensure
that HMS VMS units are consistent with
the current VMS technology and type
approval requirements that apply to
newly installed units, and to provide
NMFS enforcement with additional
information describing gear onboard
and target species. This rule affected all
HMS PLL, bottom longline (BLL), and
shark gillnet fishermen who are
currently required to have VMS onboard
their vessels. This action was conducted
by NMFS under the authority of the
MSA.
24. Fisheries of the Exclusive
Economic Zone Off Alaska: Groundfish
of the Gulf of Alaska; Amendment
Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic
Zone Off Alaska: Groundfish of the Gulf
of Alaska; Amendment 88. RIN 0648–
BA97 (76 FR 81248; December 27,
2011). This final rule implemented
Amendment 88 to the FMP for
Groundfish of the Gulf of Alaska (GOA
FMP). Amendment 88 was the Central
Gulf of Alaska Rockfish Program
(Rockfish Program). These regulations
allocated exclusive harvest privileges to
a specific group of license limitation
program license holders who used trawl
gear to target Pacific ocean perch,
pelagic shelf rockfish, and northern
rockfish during particular qualifying
years. The Rockfish Program retained
the conservation, management, safety,
and economic gains realized under the
Central Gulf of Alaska Rockfish Pilot
Program (Pilot Program) and resolved
identified issues in the management and
viability of the rockfish fisheries. This
action was necessary to replace
particular Pilot Program regulations that
were scheduled to expire at the end of
2011. This action was intended to
promote the goals and objectives of the
MSA, the GOA FMP, and other
applicable law.
25. Endangered and Threatened
Species: Critical Habitat Designation for
Endangered Leatherback Sea Turtle.
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RIN 0648–AX06 (77 FR 4170; January
26, 2012). NMFS issued a final rule to
revise the current critical habitat for the
leatherback sea turtle (Dermochelys
coriacea) by designating additional
areas within the Pacific Ocean. This
designation included approximately
16,910 mi2 (43,798 km2) stretching
along the California coast from Point
Arena to Point Arguello east of the 3,000
meter depth contour; and 25,004 mi2
(64,760 km2) stretching from Cape
Flattery, Washington to Cape Blanco,
Oregon east of the 2,000 meter depth
contour. The designated areas
comprised approximately 41,914 mi2
(108,558 km2) of marine habitat and
include waters from the ocean surface
down to a maximum depth of 262 feet
(80 m). Other Pacific waters within the
U.S. Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ)
were evaluated based on the
geographical area occupied by the
species, but NMFS determined that they
were not eligible for designation, as they
did not contain the feature identified as
essential to the conservation of the
species. The total estimated annualized
economic impact associated with this
designation was estimated to range
between $188,000 and $9.1 million U.S.
dollars. This action was conducted by
NMFS under the authority of the ESA.
26. Fisheries of Exclusive Economic
Zone Off Alaska: Chinook Salmon
Bycatch Management in Bering Sea
Pollock Fishery; Economic Data
Collection. RIN 0648–BA80 (77 FR 5389;
February 3, 2012). NMFS issued a final
rule to implement the Chinook Salmon
Economic Data Report Program, which
would evaluate the effectiveness of
Chinook salmon bycatch management
measures for the Bering Sea pollock
fishery that were implemented under
Amendment 91 to the FMP for
Groundfish of the Bering Sea and
Aleutian Islands Management Area.
Members of the American Fisheries Act
catcher vessels, catcher/processor, and
mothership sectors as well as
representatives for the six western
Alaska Community Development Quota
Program organizations that were
receiving allocations of Bering Sea
pollock would submit the data collected
for this program. This rule was intended
to promote the goals and objectives of
the FMP, the MSA, and other applicable
law.
27. Fisheries of Exclusive Economic
Zone Off Alaska: Community
Development Quota Program. RIN 0648–
AV33 (77 FR 6492; February 8, 2012).
NMFS issued regulations that govern
fisheries managed under the Western
Alaska Community Development Quota
(CDQ) Program. These revisions were
needed to comply with certain changes
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made to the MSA in 2006. Changes
included revision to regulations
associated with recordkeeping, vessel
licensing, catch retention requirements,
and fisheries observer requirements to
ensure that they were no more
restrictive than the regulations in effect
for comparable non-CDQ fisheries
managed under individual fishing
quotas or cooperative allocations. In
addition, NMFS removed CDQ Program
regulations that were inconsistent with
the MSA, including regulations
associated with the CDQ allocation
process, the transfer of groundfish CDQ
and halibut prohibited species quota,
and the oversight of CDQ groups’
expenditures. This action was
conducted by NMFS under the authority
of the MSA.
28. Fisheries of the Northeastern
United States: Northeast Multispecies
Fishery; Framework Adjustment 47. RIN
0648–BB62 (77 FR 26104; May 2, 2012).
NMFS approved Framework
Adjustment 47 (Framework 47) to NE
Multispecies FMP and implemented the
approved measures. The New England
Fishery Management Council developed
and adopted Framework 47 based on the
biennial review process established in
the NE Multispecies FMP to develop
ACLs and revise management measures
necessary to rebuild overfished
groundfish stocks and achieve the goals
and objectives of the FMP. This action
also implemented management
measures and revised existing
regulations that were not included in
Framework 47, including common pool
management measures for fishing year
(FY) 2012, modification of the Ruhle
trawl definition, and clarification of the
regulations for charter/party and
recreational groundfish vessels fishing
in groundfish closed areas. This action
was intended to prevent overfishing,
rebuild overfished stocks, achieve OY,
and ensure that management measures
were based on the best available
scientific information at the time
Framework 47 was submitted. This
action was conducted by NMFS under
the authority of the MSA.
29. Fisheries of the Exclusive
Economic Zone Off Alaska: Pacific
Halibut and Sablefish Individual
Fishing Quota Program. RIN 0648–AX91
(77 FR 29556; May 18, 2012). NMFS
issued a final rule to modify the IFQ
Program for the Fixed-Gear Commercial
Fisheries for Pacific Halibut and
Sablefish in Waters in and off Alaska
(IFQ Program) by revoking quota share
(QS) that had been inactive since they
were originally issued in 1995. Inactive
QS were those held by persons that have
never harvested their IFQ and had never
transferred QS or IFQ into or out of their
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IFQ accounts. This action was necessary
to achieve the catch limit from the
halibut fisheries and optimum yield
from the sablefish fisheries in Alaska in
accordance with National Standard 1 of
the MSA and to achieve more efficient
use of these species. The intended effect
was to promote the management
provisions in the Northern Pacific
Halibut Act of 1982, the Fishery
Management Plan for Groundfish of the
Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands
Management Area, and the Fishery
Management Plan for Groundfish of the
Gulf of Alaska.
30. Atlantic Coastal Fisheries
Cooperative Management Act
Provisions: American Lobster Fishery.
RIN 0648–BA56 (77 FR 32420; June 1,
2012). This rule implemented new
Federal American lobster regulations
that limited entry into the lobster trap
fishery in Lobster Conservation
Management Area 1 (Area 1), located in
the Federal inshore waters of the Gulf of
Maine. Eligibility was based on specific
eligibility criteria designed to identify
active Federal Area 1 lobster trap
permits. If a permit met the eligibility
criteria, the permit holder was
authorized to fish in the Federal waters
of Area 1 with up to 800 lobster traps.
The limited entry program responded to
the recommendations for Federal action
in the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries
Commission’s Interstate Fishery
Management Plan for American Lobster.
31. Fisheries of Caribbean, Gulf of
Mexico, and South Atlantic: SnapperGrouper Fishery off Southern Atlantic
States; Amendment 18A. RIN 0648–
BB56 (77 FR 32408; June 1, 2012).
NMFS issued this final rule to
implement Amendment 18A to the FMP
for the Snapper-Grouper Fishery of the
South Atlantic Region (Amendment
18A), as prepared and submitted by the
South Atlantic Fishery Management
Council. This rule modified the current
system of accountability measures for
black sea bass, limited effort in the black
sea bass segment of the snapper-grouper
fishery, and improved fisheries data in
the for-hire sector of the snappergrouper fishery. Amendment 18A also
updated the rebuilding plan and
modified the ABC for black sea bass.
The rule established a spawning season
closure for black sea bass. It also
modified the rebuilding strategy, ABC,
ACL and ACT for black sea bass;
modified the current commercial and/or
recreational size limits; established a
commercial trip limit for black sea bass;
and limited participation in the black
sea bass pot segment of the snapper
grouper fishery through an endorsement
program. The rule also established an
appeals process for fishermen excluded
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from the black sea bass pot endorsement
program. This final rule was intended to
reduce overcapacity in the black sea
bass segment of the snapper-grouper
fishery and improve data reporting in
the commercial and for-hire sectors of
the snapper grouper fishery. This action
was conducted by NMFS under the
authority of the MSA.
32. Fisheries of the Northeastern
United States: Northeast Multispecies
Fishery; Exempted Fishery for Southern
New England Skate Bait Trawl Fishery.
RIN 0648–BB35 (77 FR 38738; June 29,
2012). This final rule modified the
regulations implementing the NE
Multispecies FMP to allow vessels
issued a Federal skate permit and a
Skate Bait Letter of Authorization to fish
for skates in a portion of southern New
England (SNE) from July 1 through
October 31 of each year, outside of the
NE multispecies DAS program. This
action allowed vessels to harvest skates
in a manner that is consistent with the
bycatch reduction objectives of the NE
Multispecies FMP. This action was
conducted by NMFS under the authority
of the MSA.
33. Fisheries of the Exclusive
Economic Zone Off Alaska: Chinook
Salmon Bycatch Management in the
Gulf of Alaska Pollock Fishery;
Amendment 93. RIN 0648–BB24 (77 FR
42629; July 20, 2012). NMFS published
regulations to implement Amendment
93 to the FMP for Groundfish of the Gulf
of Alaska. The regulations apply
exclusively to the directed pollock trawl
fisheries in the Central and Western
Reporting Areas of the GOA (Central
and Western GOA). Amendment 93
established separate prohibited species
catch (PSC) limits in the Central and
Western GOA for Chinook salmon
(Oncorhynchus tshawytscha), which
would cause NMFS to close the directed
pollock fishery in the Central or
Western regulatory areas of the GOA, if
the applicable limit was reached. This
action also required retention of salmon
by all vessels in the Central and Western
GOA pollock fisheries until the catch
was delivered to a processing facility
where an observer was provided the
opportunity to count the number of
salmon and to collect scientific data or
biological samples from the salmon.
This action made several revisions to
the Prohibited Species Donation (PSD)
program. Amendment 93 was intended
to promote the goals and objectives of
the MSA, the FMP, and other applicable
laws.
34. Atlantic Highly Migratory Species:
Electronic Dealer Reporting
Requirements. RIN 0648–BA75 (77 FR
47303; August 8, 2012). This final rule
required that Federal Atlantic
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swordfish, shark, and tuna dealers
report receipt of Atlantic sharks,
swordfish, and bigeye, albacore,
skipjack, and yellowfin (BAYS) tunas to
NMFS through an electronic reporting
system on a weekly basis. Atlantic HMS
dealers would not be required to report
bluefin tuna through this electronic
reporting system, as a separate reporting
system was in place for this species.
This final rule changed the current
definition of who was considered an
Atlantic HMS dealer and required
Atlantic HMS dealers to submit dealer
reports to NMFS in a timely manner in
order to be able to purchase
commercially-harvested Atlantic sharks,
swordfish, and BAYS tunas. Any
delinquent reports would need to be
submitted by the dealer and received by
NMFS before a dealer could purchase
commercially-harvested Atlantic sharks,
swordfish, and BAYS tunas from a
fishing vessel. These measures were
necessary to ensure timely and accurate
reporting, which was critical for quota
monitoring and management of these
species. This action was conducted by
NMFS under the authority of the MSA.
35. Second Fishing Capacity
Reduction Program: Longline Catcher
Processor Subsector of Bering Sea and
Aleutian Islands Non-pollock
Groundfish Fishery. RIN 0648–BB06 (77
FR 58775; September 24, 2012). NMFS
established regulations to implement a
second fishing capacity reduction
program (also commonly known as
‘‘buyback’’) and an industry fee system
to repay a $2.7 million loan for a single
latent permit within the Longline
Catcher Processor Subsector of the
Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands (BSAI)
non-pollock groundfish fishery
(Reduction Fishery). The purpose of this
action was to permanently reduce the
greatest amount of fishing capacity at
the least cost. This was intended to
result in increased harvesting
productivity for the permit holders
remaining in the fishery. The loan for
this program was added to the previous
program loan of $35,700,000 authorized
by the FY 2005 Appropriations Act. For
purposes of this regulation, the terms
license and permit were used
interchangeably. This action was
conducted by NMFS under the authority
of the MSA and other applicable laws.
36. Fisheries of the Exclusive
Economic Zone Off Alaska: Bering Sea
and Aleutian Islands Management Area;
Amendment 97. RIN 0648–BB18 (77 FR
59852, October 1, 2012). This final rule
implemented Amendment 97 to the
FMP for Groundfish of the Bering Sea
and Aleutian Islands Management Area.
Amendment 97 allowed the owner of a
trawl catcher/processor vessel
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authorized to participate in the
Amendment 80 catch share program to
replace that vessel with a vessel that
meets certain requirements. This action
established the regulatory process for
replacement of vessels in the
Amendment 80 fleet and the
requirements for Amendment 80
replacement vessels, such as a limit on
the overall length of a replacement
vessel, a prohibition on the use of an
American Fisheries Act (AFA) vessel as
a replacement vessel, measures to
prevent a replaced vessel from
participating in Federal groundfish
fisheries off Alaska that are not
Amendment 80 fisheries, and measures
that extend specific catch limits (known
as Amendment 80 sideboards) to a
replacement vessel. This action was
necessary to promote safety-at-sea by
allowing Amendment 80 vessel owners
to replace their vessels for any reason at
any time and by requiring replacement
vessels to meet certain U.S. Coast Guard
vessel safety standards, and to improve
the retention and utilization of
groundfish catch by these vessels by
facilitating an increase in the processing
capabilities of the fleet. This action was
intended to promote the goals and
objectives of the MSA, the FMP, and
other applicable laws.
37. Atlantic Highly Migratory Species:
Silky Shark Management Measures. RIN
0648–BB96 (77 FR 60632; October 4,
2012). NMFS implemented the ICCAT
Recommendation 11–08, which
prohibits retaining, transshipping, or
landing of silky sharks (Carcharhinus
falciformis) caught in association with
ICCAT fisheries. In order to facilitate
domestic compliance and enforcement,
NMFS also prohibited the storing,
selling, and purchasing of the species.
This rule primarily affected the
commercial Atlantic HMS pelagic
longline fishery for tuna and tuna-like
species in the Atlantic Ocean, including
the Caribbean Sea and Gulf of Mexico.
This rule did not affect commercial
fishermen fishing for sharks with
bottom longline, gillnet, or handgear,
and it does not further affect
recreational fishermen because
harvesting silky sharks was already
prohibited in the recreational fishery.
This action implemented the ICCAT
recommendation, consistent with the
ATCA, and furthers domestic
management objectives under the MSA.
38. Groundfish Fisheries of the
Exclusive Economic Zone off Alaska
and Pacific Halibut Fisheries: Observer
Program. RIN 0648–BB42 (77 FR 70062;
November 21, 2012). This final rule
implemented Amendment 86 to the
Fishery Management Plan for
Groundfish of the Bering Sea and
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Aleutian Islands Management Area and
Amendment 76 to the Fishery
Management Plan for Groundfish of the
Gulf of Alaska (Amendments 86/76).
Amendments 86/76 add a funding and
deployment system for observer
coverage to the existing North Pacific
Groundfish Observer Program (Observer
Program) and amend existing observer
coverage requirements for vessels and
processing plants. The new funding and
deployment system allowed NMFS to
determine when and where to deploy
observers according to management and
conservation needs, with funds
provided through a system of fees based
on the ex-vessel value of groundfish and
halibut in fisheries covered by the new
system. This action was necessary to
resolve data quality and cost equity
concerns with the Observer Program’s
existing funding and deployment
structure. This action was intended to
promote the goals and objectives of the
MSA, the Northern Pacific Halibut Act
of 1982, the fishery management plans,
and other applicable law.
39. Taking of Marine Mammals
Incidental to Commercial Fishing
Operations: False Killer Whale Take
Reduction Plan. RIN 0648–BA30 (77 FR
71260; November 29, 2012). The final
rule issued the False Killer Whale Take
Reduction Plan (FKWTRP), and
regulatory measures and non-regulatory
measures and recommendations to
reduce mortalities and serious injuries
of false killer whales in Hawaii-based
longline fisheries. Regulatory measures
include gear requirements, longline
prohibited areas, training and
certification in marine mammal
handling and release, captains’
supervision of marine mammal
handling and release, and posting of
NMFS-approved placards on longline
vessels. In this rule, NMFS also
recommended research and data
collection programs. This final rule also
revised the boundaries of the longline
prohibited area around the main
Hawaiian Islands to be consistent with
the prohibited area established under
the FKWTRP regulations. The FKWTRP
was based on consensus
recommendations submitted to NMFS
by the False Killer Whale Take
Reduction Team (Team), with certain
modifications described herein that
were determined to be necessary to meet
the requirements of the MMPA. This
final rule was necessary because current
mortality and serious injury levels of the
Hawaii Pelagic and Hawaii Insular
stocks of false killer whales incidental
to the Hawaii-based pelagic longline
fisheries are above the stocks’ potential
biological removal (PBR) levels, and are
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therefore inconsistent with the shortand long-term goals of the Marine
Mammal Protection Act (MMPA). The
FKWTRP was intended to meet the
requirements of the MMPA.
40. International Fisheries; Western
and Central Pacific Fisheries for Highly
Migratory Species: Transshipping,
Bunkering, Reporting, and Purse Seine
Discard Requirements. RIN 0648–BA85
(77 FR 71501; December 3, 2012). NMFS
issued regulations under the authority
of the Western and Central Pacific
Fisheries Convention Implementation
Act (WCPFC Implementation Act) to
implement requirements for U.S. fishing
vessels used for commercial fishing that
offload or receive transshipments of
HMS, U.S. fishing vessels used for
commercial fishing that provide
bunkering or other support services to
fishing vessels, and U.S. fishing vessels
used for commercial fishing that receive
bunkering or engage in other support
services, in the area of application of the
Convention on the Conservation and
Management of Highly Migratory Fish
Stocks in the Western and Central
Pacific Ocean (Convention). Some of the
requirements also applied to
transshipments of fish caught in the area
of application of the Convention
(Convention Area) and transshipped
elsewhere. NMFS also issued
requirements regarding notification of
entry into and exit from the ‘‘Eastern
High Seas Special Management Area’’
(Eastern SMA) and requirements
relating to discards from purse seine
fishing vessels. This action was
necessary for the United States to
implement decisions of the Commission
for the Conservation and Management of
Highly Migratory Fish Stocks in the
Western and Central Pacific Ocean
(Commission or WCPFC) and to satisfy
its obligations under the Convention, to
which it is a Contracting Party.
41. Fisheries Off West Coast States;
Pacific Coast Groundfish Fishery: 2013–
2014 Biennial Specifications and
Management Measures. RIN 0648–BC35
(78 FR 580; January 3, 2013). This final
rule established the 2013–2014 harvest
specifications and management
measures for groundfish taken in the
U.S. exclusive economic zone off the
coasts of Washington, Oregon, and
California consistent with the MSA and
the PCGFMP. This final rule also
revised the collection of management
measures in the groundfish fishery
regulations that are intended to keep the
total catch of each groundfish species or
species complex within the harvest
specifications.
42. Fisheries of the Exclusive
Economic Zone Off Alaska: Bering Sea
and Aleutian Islands Management Area;
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Groundfish Retention Standard. RIN
0648–BA93 (78 FR 12627; February 25,
2013). NMFS published a regulatory
amendment to modify the groundfish
retention standard (GRS) program in the
Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands
Management Area (BSAI). This final
rule removed certain regulatory
requirements that mandate minimum
levels of groundfish retention by the
owners and operators of trawl catcher/
processor (C/P) vessels not listed in the
AFA, commonly referred to as either
non-AFA trawl C/Ps or Amendment 80
vessels, and Amendment 80
cooperatives participating in the BSAI
groundfish fisheries. The GRS program
was implemented to increase the
retention and utilization of groundfish;
however, NMFS discovered that the
regulatory methodology used to
calculate compliance with the GRS
requires individual Amendment 80
vessels and Amendment 80 cooperatives
to retain groundfish at rates well above
the minimum retention rates
recommended by the Council or
implemented by NMFS. As a result, the
GRS imposed significantly higher than
predicted compliance costs on vessel
owners and operators due to the
increased level of retention needed to
meet the minimum retention rates.
Additionally, NMFS discovered that
enforcement of the GRS had proven far
more complex, challenging, and
potentially costly than anticipated by
NMFS. This action was necessary to
relieve Amendment 80 vessels and
Amendment 80 cooperatives from
undue compliance costs stemming from
the minimum retention rates while
continuing to promote the GRS program
goals of increased groundfish retention
and utilization. This action maintained
current monitoring requirements for the
Amendment 80 fleet and established a
new requirement for Amendment 80
cooperatives to annually report
groundfish retention performance as
part of the report submitted to NMFS.
This action was intended to promote the
goals and objectives of the MSA, the
fishery management plan, and other
applicable law.
43. Fisheries of the Northeastern
United States: Northeast Multispecies
Fishery Management Plan; Amendment
19. RIN 0648–BC48 (78 FR 20260; April
4, 2013). This final rule implemented
Amendment 19 to the Northeast
Multispecies Fishery Management Plan.
The New England Fishery Management
Council developed Amendment 19 to
modify management measures that
governed the small-mesh multispecies
fishery, including the accountability
measures, the year-round possession
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limits, and total allowable landings
process. Amendment 19 was approved
by NMFS on January 15, 2013. This
action was conducted by NMFS under
the authority of the MSA.
44. Fisheries of the Caribbean, Gulf of
Mexico, and South Atlantic: SnapperGrouper Fishery off Southern Atlantic
States; Amendment 18B. RIN 0648–
BB58 (78 FR 23858; April 23, 2013).
NMFS issued this final rule to
implement management measures
described in Amendment 18B to the
FMP for the Snapper-Grouper Fishery of
the South Atlantic Region (Amendment
18B), as prepared by the South Atlantic
Fishery Management Council. This final
rule: Established a longline
endorsement program for the
commercial golden tilefish component
of the snapper-grouper fishery;
established initial eligibility
requirements for a golden tilefish
longline endorsement; established an
appeals process; allocated the
commercial golden tilefish ACL among
gear groups; established a procedure for
the transfer of golden tilefish
endorsements; and modified the golden
tilefish trip limits; and established a trip
limit for commercial fishermen who did
not receive a golden tilefish longline
endorsement. The intent of this rule was
to reduce overcapacity in the
commercial golden tilefish component
of the snapper-grouper fishery. This
action was conducted by NMFS under
the authority of the MSA.
45. Fisheries of the Northeastern
United States: Northeast Multispecies
Fishery. RIN 0648–BC27 78 FR 26118;
May 3, 2013). This rule announced that
NMFS partially approved Framework
Adjustment 48 to the NE Multispecies
FMP and implemented the approved
measures in the regulations. Framework
48 was the first of two parallel and
related actions developed by the New
England Fishery Management Council
to respond to updated stock status
information and to adjust other
management measures in the NE
multispecies (groundfish) fishery
beginning in FY 2013. This action
implemented new status determination
criteria for GOM cod, GB cod, Southern
New England/Mid-Atlantic (SNE/MA)
yellowtail flounder, and white hake
based on new benchmark assessments
completed for these stocks in 2012 and
2013. NMFS approved and
implemented updated status
determination criteria for white hake
through this interim final rule and
accepted further comment on this
measure since it was not available for
comment in the Framework 48 proposed
rule. Through this action, NMFS also
approved and implemented the
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following Framework 48 measures:
Elimination of dockside monitoring
requirements for the groundfish fishery;
lower minimum fish sizes for several
groundfish stocks; clarified goals and
performance standard for groundfish
monitoring programs; revisions to the
allocation of GB yellowtail flounder to
the scallop fishery; and establishment of
sub-ACLs of GB yellowtail flounder and
SNE/MA windowpane flounder for the
scallop and other non-groundfish
fisheries. NMFS also approved revisions
to recreational and commercial
accountability measures (AMs),
including amendments to existing AMs
for windowpane flounder, ocean pout,
and Atlantic halibut, and new
‘‘reactive’’ AMs for Atlantic wolffish
and SNE/MA winter flounder, to
address a remand by the U.S. District
Court of Appeals. NMFS disapproved
some measures in Framework 48: A
provision for cost-sharing of monitoring
costs between the industry and NMFS;
a provision to delay industry-funded
monitoring to FY 2014; finer scale
discard rate strata for GB yellowtail
flounder; and a provision to remove
requirements for groundfish trawlers to
stow their gear when transiting closed
areas. Through this interim final rule,
NMFS also withdrew a proposed
correction to the regulations specific to
monitoring of the Eastern U.S./Canada
quotas, and accepted additional public
comment on this issue. These measures
were necessary to meet the requirements
of the FMP and the MSA, most notably
preventing overfishing, ensuring that
management measures are based on the
best available science, and mitigating, to
the extent practicable, potential negative
economic impacts from reductions in
catch limits anticipated for fishing year
FY 2013. This action was conducted by
NMFS under the authority of the MSA.
46. Fisheries of the Northeastern
United States: Northeast Multispecies
Fishery. RIN 0648–BC97 (78 FR 26172;
May 3, 2013). NMFS partially approved
Framework Adjustment 50 (Framework
50) to the NE Multispecies FMP, and
implemented the approved measures.
NMFS also implemented three parallel
emergency actions to set FY 2013 catch
limits for GB yellowtail flounder and
white hake, and to modify the
maximum GOM cod carryover available
to sectors from FY 2012 to FY 2013.
Framework 50 set specifications for FYs
2013–2015, including 2013 TACs for
U.S./Canada stocks, and revised the
rebuilding program and management
measures for Southern New England/
Mid-Atlantic (SNE/MA) winter
flounder. This final rule also
implemented FY 2013 management
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measures for the recreational and
common pool fisheries and clarified
how to account for sector carryover for
FY 2013 and for FY 2014 and beyond.
These actions were necessary to prevent
overfishing, rebuild overfished stocks,
achieve OY, and ensure that
management measures were based on
the best available scientific information.
This action was conducted by NMFS
under the authority of the MSA.
47. Fisheries of the Northeastern
United States: Northeast Multispecies
Fishery; Exempted Fishery for the Spiny
Dogfish Fishery in the Waters East and
West of Cape Cod, MA. RIN 0648–BC50
(78 FR 26518; May 7, 2013). This
interim final rule modified the
regulations implementing the NE
Multispecies FMP to allow vessels
fishing with a NE Federal spiny dogfish
permit to fish in an area east of Cape
Cod, MA (Eastern Exemption Area) with
gillnet and longline gear, from June
through December and with handgear
from June through August, and to fish
in Cape Cod Bay (Western Exemption
Area) with longline gear and handgear
from June through August. This action
allowed vessels to harvest spiny dogfish
in a manner that is consistent with the
bycatch reduction objectives of the NE
Multispecies FMP. This action was
conducted by NMFS under the authority
of the MSA.
48. Fisheries of the Exclusive
Economic Zone Off Alaska: Bering Sea
and Aleutian Islands Crab
Rationalization Program. RIN 0648–
BA82 (78 FR 28523; May 15, 2013).
NMFS issued regulations to implement
Amendment 41 to the FMP for Bering
Sea/Aleutian Islands King and Tanner
Crabs. These regulations amended the
Bering Sea/Aleutian Islands Crab
Rationalization Program (CR Program)
by establishing a process whereby
holders of regionally designated IFQ
and IPQ in six CR Program fisheries may
receive an exemption from regional
delivery requirements in the North or
South Regions. The six CR Program
fisheries were Bristol Bay red king crab,
Bering Sea snow crab, Saint Matthew
Island blue king crab, Eastern Aleutian
Islands golden king crab, Western
Aleutian Islands red king crab, and
Pribilof Islands red and blue king crab.
This action was necessary to mitigate
disruptions in a CR Program fishery that
prevented participants from complying
with regional delivery requirements.
This action was intended to promote the
goals and objectives of the MSA, the
FMP, and other applicable law.
49. Fisheries of the Exclusive
Economic Zone Off Alaska: Revised
Maximum Retainable Amounts of
Groundfish; Bering Sea and Aleutian
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Islands. RIN 0648–BA43 (78 FR 29248;
May 20, 2013). NMFS issued a
regulation to increase the maximum
retainable amounts (MRAs) of
groundfish using arrowtooth flounder
(Atheresthes stomias) and Kamchatka
flounder (Atheresthes evermanni) as
basis species in the Bering Sea and
Aleutian Islands management area
(BSAI). This action allowed the use of
BSAI arrowtooth flounder and
Kamchatka flounder as basis species for
the retention of species closed to
directed fishing and was necessary to
improve retention of otherwise
marketable groundfish in these BSAI
fisheries. This action also included four
regulatory amendments related to
harvest management of Kamchatka
flounder. Two amendments were
necessary to account for Kamchatka
flounder in the same manner as
arrowtooth flounder in the BSAI and to
aid in the recordkeeping, reporting, and
catch accounting of flatfish in the BSAI.
The third amendment was necessary to
provide NMFS the flexibility to allocate
Kamchatka flounder (and other species
in the future) to the Western Alaska
Community Development Quota (CDQ)
Program in the annual harvest
specifications. Through this action,
NMFS intended to promote the goals
and objectives of the MSA, the Fishery
Management Plan for Groundfish of the
Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands
Management Area, and other applicable
law.
50. Highly Migratory Species: Atlantic
Shark Management Measures;
Amendment 5a. RIN 0648–BB29 (78 FR
40318; July 3, 2013). The final rule
implemented the Final Amendment 5a
to the 2006 Consolidated Atlantic
HMSFMP. In developing Amendment
5a to the 2006 Consolidated HMS FMP,
NMFS examined a full range of
management alternatives to maintain
rebuilding of sandbar sharks; end
overfishing and rebuild scalloped
hammerhead and Atlantic blacknose
sharks; and establish a TAC and
commercial quota and recreational
measures for Gulf of Mexico blacknose
and blacktip sharks, consistent with the
MSA, and other applicable laws. This
final rule implemented the final
conservation and management measures
in Amendment 5a to the 2006
Consolidated HMS FMP for sandbar,
scalloped hammerhead, blacknose, and
Gulf of Mexico blacktip sharks. This
final rule also announced the revised
2013 annual regional quotas for
aggregated large coastal sharks (LCS),
hammerhead, Gulf of Mexico blacktip,
blacknose, and non-blacknose small
coastal sharks (SCS). These changes
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could have affected all commercial and
recreational fishermen who fish for
sharks in the Atlantic Ocean, the Gulf of
Mexico, and the Caribbean Sea.
51. Fisheries of the Caribbean, Gulf of
Mexico, and South Atlantic: Reef Fish
Fishery of Puerto Rico and the U.S.
Virgin Islands; Parrotfish Management
Measures in St. Croix. RIN 0648–BC20
(78 FR 45894; July 30, 2013). NMFS
issued this final rule to implement
management measures described in
Regulatory Amendment 4 to the FMP for
the Reef Fish Fishery of Puerto Rico and
the U.S. Virgin Islands, as prepared by
the Caribbean Fishery Management
Council. This rule established minimum
size limits for parrotfish in the EEZ off
St. Croix in the U.S. Virgin Islands. The
purpose of this final rule was to provide
protection from harvest to parrotfish
and to assist the stock in achieving OY.
This action was conducted by NMFS
under the authority of the MSA.
52. Highly Migratory Species: 2006
Consolidated Atlantic Highly Migratory
Species Fishery Management Plan;
Amendment 8. RIN 0648–BC31 (78 FR
52012; August 21, 2013). This final rule
implemented Amendment 8 to the 2006
Consolidated Atlantic HMS FMP.
Amendment 8 to the 2006 Consolidated
HMS FMP provided additional
opportunities for U.S. fishermen to
harvest swordfish using selective gears
that are low in bycatch, given their
rebuilt status and increased availability.
This final rule created new and
modified commercial fishing vessel
permits that allow permit holders to
retain and sell a limited number of
swordfish caught on rod and reel,
handline, harpoon, green-stick, or
bandit gear. Specific management
measures under this final action
included the establishment of a new
open access commercial swordfish
permit, modification of HMS Charter/
Headboat permit regulations to allow for
the commercial retention of swordfish
on non-for-hire trips, regional swordfish
retention limits for the new and
modified permits, gear authorizations,
and reporting requirements. This action
was conducted by NMFS under the
authority of the MSA.
53. Fisheries of the Northeastern
United States: Northeast Multispecies
Fishery; Framework Adjustment 48,
Framework Adjustment 50; 2013 Sector
Operations Plans, Contracts, and
Allocation Annual Catch Entitlements.
RIN 0648–BC27 (78 FR 53363; August
29, 2013). This final rule finalized
interim measures put in place for the
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May 1, 2013, start of the NE
multispecies fishing year. This action
was intended to do the following:
Finalize interim rule measures put in
place by FW 48, FW 50, and in the 2013
Sector Operations Plan rulemakings;
respond to public comments received
on the interim measures; and notify the
public of changes being made to Eastern
U.S./Canada Area quota monitoring and
associated reporting requirements. This
action was conducted by NMFS under
the authority of the MSA.
54. Atlantic Highly Migratory Species:
Vessel Monitoring Systems. RIN 0648–
BD24 (78 FR 68757; November 15,
2013). NMFS modified the reporting
requirements for vessels required to use
VMS units in Atlantic HMS fisheries.
This final rule required vessel owners or
operators, who have been issued HMS
permits and were required to use VMS,
to provide hourly position reports 24
hours a day, 7 days a week (24/7) via
VMS. The final rule also allowed the
vessel owners or operators of such
vessels to declare out of the HMS
fishery when not fishing for or retaining
HMS for a period of time encompassing
two or more trips. This final action
continued to provide NOAA Office of
Law Enforcement needed information
on the target fishery and gear possessed
in order to facilitate enforcement of
closed areas and other HMS regulations,
while reducing the reporting burden on
vessel owners and operators. This action
brought HMS fisheries regulations in
line with VMS regulations in other
fisheries. This rule affected all owners
and/or operators of permitted vessels
that fish for HMS and are required to
use VMS. This action was conducted by
NMFS under the authority of the MSA.
55. Fisheries of the Caribbean, Gulf of
Mexico, and South Atlantic: Shrimp
Fishery of the Gulf of Mexico; Establish
Funding Responsibilities for the
Electronic Logbook Program. RIN 0648–
BD41 (78 FR 78776; December 27, 2013).
NMFS established funding
responsibilities for an upgrade to the
shrimp electronic logbook (ELB)
program as described in a framework
action to the FMP for the Shrimp
Fishery of the Gulf of Mexico, as
prepared by the Gulf of Mexico Fishery
Management Council. Newer and more
efficient ELB units have been purchased
by NMFS for the Gulf shrimp fleet and
are available for installation on Gulf
shrimp vessels. Therefore, NMFS
established a cost-sharing program to
fund the ELB program. NMFS paid for
the software development, data storage,
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effort estimation analysis, and archival
activities for the new ELB units, and
selected vessel permit holders in the
Gulf shrimp fishery paid for installation
and maintenance of the new ELB units
and for the data transmission from the
ELB units to a NOAA server. The
purpose of these changes was to ensure
that management of the shrimp fishery
is based upon the best scientific
information available and that bycatch
is minimized to the extent practicable.
This action was conducted by NMFS
under the authority of the MSA.
56. Fisheries of the Caribbean, Gulf of
Mexico, and South Atlantic: SnapperGrouper Fishery Off the Southern
Atlantic States; Amendment 27. RIN
0648–BD05 (78 FR 78770; December 27,
2013). NMFS issued this final rule to
implement Amendment 27
(Amendment 27) to the FMP for the
Snapper-Grouper Fishery of the South
Atlantic Region, as prepared and
submitted by the South Atlantic Fishery
Management Council. Amendment 27
and this final rule extended the South
Atlantic Council’s management
responsibility for Nassau grouper into
the Gulf of Mexico (Gulf) EEZ; increased
the number of allowable crew members
to four on dual-permitted snappergrouper vessels (i.e., vessels holding a
South Atlantic Charter Vessel/Headboat
Permit for Snapper-Grouper and a
commercial South Atlantic Unlimited or
a 225-Pound Trip Limit SnapperGrouper Permit) that were fishing
commercially; removed the prohibition
on retaining any fish under the
aggregate bag limit for grouper and
tilefish or the vermilion snapper bag
limit by captains and crew of federally
permitted for-hire vessels; modified the
snapper-grouper framework procedures
to allow ABCs, ACLs, and annual catch
targets (ACTs) to be adjusted via an
abbreviated framework process; and
removed blue runner from the FMP. The
purposes of this final rule were to
streamline management of Nassau
grouper, improve vessel safety for dualpermitted vessels, implement consistent
regulations regarding captains and crew
retention limits for snapper-grouper
species, expedite adjustments to
snapper-grouper catch limits when new
scientific information becomes
available, and minimize socio-economic
impacts to fishermen who harvest and
sell blue runner. This action was
conducted by NMFS under the authority
of the MSA.
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Availability of Completed Reviews
NMFS will make available a copy of
this notice and the reviews when
complete to the public at: https://
www.fisheries.noaa.gov/national/lawsand-policies/guidance-conductingeconomic-and-social-analysesregulatory-actions.
Dated: September 17, 2020.
Jennifer M. Wallace,
Acting Director, Office of Sustainable
Fisheries, National Marine Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2020–21075 Filed 9–22–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 85, Number 186 (Thursday, September 24, 2020)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 60079-60089]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2020-21075]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
50 CFR Chapters II, III, and VI
[RTID 0648-XA387]
Plan for Periodic Review of Regulations
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Request for comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: NMFS announces the availability of a list of the rules it is
reviewing, as required, under section 610 of the Regulatory Flexibility
Act. We are required to notify the public of our review of existing
regulations that we have determined had, or will have, a significant
impact on a substantial number of small entities, such as small
businesses, small organizations, and small governmental jurisdictions.
The intended effect of this notice is to inform the public of the rules
under review, to outline NMFS' review process, and to provide an
opportunity to comment.
DATES: Written comments must be received by October 26, 2020.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments on this document, identified by
NOAA-NMFS-2020-0128, by the following method:
Electronic Submission: Submit all electronic public
comments via the Federal e-Rulemaking Portal. Go to https://www.regulations.gov/#!docketDetail;D=NOAA-NMFS-2020-0128, click the
``Comment Now!'' icon, complete the required fields, and enter or
attach your comments.
Instructions: Comments must be submitted by the above method to
ensure that the comments are received, documented, and considered by
NMFS. Comments sent by any other method, to any other address or
individual, or received after the end of the comment period, may not be
considered. All comments received are a part of the public record and
will generally be posted for public viewing on www.regulations.gov
without change. All personal identifying information (e.g., name,
address, etc.) submitted voluntarily by the sender will be publicly
accessible. Do not submit confidential business information, or
otherwise sensitive or protected information. NMFS will accept
anonymous comments (enter ``N/A'' in the required fields if you wish to
remain anonymous).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Tara Scott, Industry Economist, (301)
427-8579.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA), 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.,
requires that Federal agencies, including NMFS, take into account how
their regulations affect ``small entities,'' including small
businesses, small Governmental jurisdictions, and small organizations.
Under the RFA, we must either prepare a Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
or certify that the regulation, if put in place, will not have a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
This requirement has been in place for any regulation proposed after
January 1, 1981. Section 602 of the RFA requires that NMFS issue an
Agenda of Regulations identifying rules under development that are
likely to have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of
small entities.
Section 610 of the RFA requires Federal agencies to review existing
regulations. It requires that NMFS publish a plan in the Federal
Register explaining how it will review its existing regulations, which
have or will have a significant economic impact on a substantial number
of small entities. Regulations that became effective after January 1,
1981, must be reviewed within 10 years of the publication date of the
final rule. Section 610(c) requires that we annually publish a list of
final rules we will review during the succeeding 12 months in the
Federal Register. The list must describe, explain the need for, and
provide the legal basis for the rules being reviewed, as well as invite
public comment on the rules contained in the list.
Criteria for Review of Existing Regulations
The purpose of the required review is to determine whether existing
rules should be left unchanged, or whether they should be revised or
rescinded to minimize significant economic impacts on a substantial
number of small entities, consistent with the objectives of other
applicable statutes. In deciding whether change is necessary, the RFA
establishes five factors that NMFS must consider:
(1) Whether the rule is still needed;
(2) What type of complaints or comments were received concerning
the rule from the public;
(3) The complexity of the rule;
(4) How much the rule overlaps, duplicates or conflicts with other
[[Page 60080]]
Federal rules, and, to the extent feasible, with State and local
governmental rules; and
(5) How long it has been since the rule has been evaluated or how
much the technology, economic conditions, or other factors have changed
in the area affected by the rule.
Plan for Periodic Review of Rules
We will ensure that all rules, which have or will have a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities,
are reviewed within 10 years of the year in which they were originally
issued. Below is the list of rules, and their summaries, issued between
January 1, 2011, and December 31, 2013, that we will be reviewing
during 2020. We anticipate completing the reviews for all of these
rules by March 31, 2021:
1. Pacific Halibut Fisheries; Guided Sport Charter Vessel Fishery
for Halibut; Recordkeeping and Reporting. RIN 0648-AY38 (76 FR 6567;
February 7, 2011). The final rule amended the recordkeeping and
reporting requirements for the Pacific halibut guided sport fishery in
International Pacific Halibut Commission Regulatory Area 2C (Southeast
Alaska) and Area 3A (Central Gulf of Alaska). These regulations revised
the Federal requirements for submission of Alaska Department of Fish
and Game Saltwater Sport Fishing Charter Trip Logbook data sheets,
modified the logbook recording requirements, and added a definition of
fishing week. This action was necessary to improve consistency between
Federal and State of Alaska requirements for the submission of the
logbook data sheets and address recent changes by the State to the
logbook reporting format. This action was intended to achieve the
halibut fishery management goals of the North Pacific Fishery
Management Council and to support the conservation and management
provisions of the Northern Pacific Halibut Act of 1982.
2. Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic Zone Off Alaska; Gulf of
Alaska License Limitation Program. RIN 0648-AY42 (76 FR 15826; March
22, 2011). The final rule implemented Amendment 86 to the Fishery
Management Plan (FMP) for Groundfish of the Gulf of Alaska. This action
added a Pacific cod endorsement on licenses issued under the License
Limitation Program (LLP) in specific management areas if those licenses
had been used on vessels that met minimum recent landing requirements
using non-trawl gear, commonly known as fixed gear. This action
exempted vessels that use jig gear from the requirement to hold an LLP
license, modified the maximum length designation on a specific set of
fixed gear licenses, and allows entities representing specific
communities to receive a limited number of fixed-gear licenses with
Pacific cod endorsements. This action was intended to promote the goals
and objectives of the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and
Management Act (MSA), the Fishery Management Plan, and other applicable
law.
3. Fisheries of the Northeastern United States; Atlantic Bluefish
Fishery; 2011 Atlantic Bluefish Specifications; Regulatory Amendment.
RIN 0648-BA26 (76 FR 17789; March 31, 2011). NMFS issued final
specifications for the 2011 Atlantic bluefish fishery, including total
allowable landings (TAL), a commercial quota and recreational harvest
limit, and a recreational possession limit. The intent of this action
was to establish the allowable 2011 harvest levels and other management
measures to achieve the target fishing mortality rate (F), consistent
with the Atlantic Bluefish FMP. The final rule also amended the
bluefish regulations that specify the process for setting the annual
TAL and target F to more clearly reflect the intent of the FMP. This
action was conducted by NMFS under the authority of the MSA.
4. Endangered and Threatened Species: Designation of Critical
Habitat for Cook Inlet Beluga Whale; Final Rule. RIN 0648-AX50 (76 FR
20179; April 11, 2011). This rule designated critical habitat for the
Cook Inlet beluga whale (Delphinapterus leucas) distinct population
segment (DPS) under the Endangered Species Act (ESA). Two areas were
designated, comprising 7,800 square kilometers (km\2\) (3,013 square
miles (mi\2\) of marine habitat. In developing this rule, NMFS
considered public and peer review comments, as well as economic impacts
and impacts to national security. NMFS decided in the final rule to
exclude the Port of Anchorage in consideration of national security
interest. Additionally, portions of military lands were determined to
be ineligible for designation as critical habitat.
5. Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act
Provisions; Fisheries of the Northeastern United States; Northeast (NE)
Multispecies Fishery; Framework Adjustment 45; Final Rule and Interim
Final Rule. RIN 0648-BA27 (76 FR 23042; April 25, 2011). This final
rule partially approved Framework Adjustment (FW) 45 to the NE
Multispecies FMP and implements the approved measures. FW 45 was
developed by the New England Fishery Management Council (Council) to
make adjustments necessary to ensure that conservation and management
objectives of the FMP, including preventing overfishing, rebuilding
overfished stocks, achieving optimum yield (OY), and minimizing the
economic impact of management measures on affected vessels, were being
met in accordance with the MSA. Specifically, this action revised the
biological reference points and stock status for pollock, updated
annual catch limits (ACL) for several stocks for fishing years (FYs)
2011-2012, adjusted the rebuilding program for Georges Bank (GB)
yellowtail flounder, increased scallop vessel access to the Great South
Channel Exemption Area, approved five new sectors, modified the
existing dockside and at-sea monitoring requirements, revised several
sector administrative provisions, established a Gulf of Maine (GOM) Cod
Spawning Protection Area, and refined measures affecting the operations
of NE multispecies vessels fishing with handgear. This action approved
the Council's proposed FY 2011 U.S./Canada Management Area total
allowable catch (TAC), acceptable biological catch (ABC), and ACL for
GB yellowtail flounder, but replaced them with new catch limits for
this stock through a parallel emergency action, included as part of
this final rule, based on the International Fisheries Agreement
Clarification Act (IFACA) that provided new flexibility in setting
catch limits for this stock. In addition, this action disapproved a
measure to delay fishing industry responsibility for paying for at-sea
monitoring coverage costs in FY 2012. This action was necessary to
ensure that the fishery is managed on the basis of the best available
science, to comply with the ABC control rules adopted in Amendment 16
to the FMP, and to enhance the viability of the fishery. This action
was conducted by NMFS under the authority of the MSA.
6. Fisheries Off West Coast States: Pacific Coast Groundfish
Fishery; Biennial Specifications and Management Measure. RIN 0648-BA01
(76 FR 27508; May 11, 2011). This final rule established the 2011-2012
harvest specifications for most of the species in the groundfish
fishery and management measures for that fishery off the coasts of
Washington, Oregon, and California consistent with the MSA and the
Pacific Coast Groundfish Fishery Management Plan (PCGFMP). This rule
also established, under emergency authority in section 305 of the MSA,
harvest specifications for eight overfished species, and for flatfish.
Emergency authority was being invoked to
[[Page 60081]]
implement measures that were included in Amendment 16-5 to the PCGFMP,
which NMFS disapproved in December 2010. These included a new
rebuilding plan for petrale sole, revised rebuilding plans for the
remaining seven overfished species, and revised status determination
criteria and precautionary harvest control rule for flatfish.
7. Fisheries of the Northeastern United States; Northeast Skate
Complex Fishery; Framework Adjustment 1. RIN 0648-BA91 (76 FR 28328;
May 17, 2011). This final rule implemented approved measures in
Framework Adjustment 1 to the Northeast Skate Complex Fishery
Management Plan. Framework Adjustment 1 was developed by the New
England Fishery Management Council (Council) to adjust the possession
limits for the skate wing fishery in order to slow the rate of skate
wing landings, so that the available TAL was taken by the fishery over
a longer duration in the FY than occurred in FY 2010, thus ensuring a
steady market supply. The action also allowed vessels that process
skate wings at sea to land skate carcasses for sale into the bait
market, without counting the carcass landings against the TAL (skate
wings are already converted to live weight for monitoring). Although
recommended by the Council as part of Framework 1, this final rule
announced that NMFS had disapproved a proposal to increase the
incidental possession limit for skate wings that would have applied
after the skate wing possession limit trigger was reached. This final
rule did not adjust the skate fishery specifications for FY 2011. This
action was conducted by NMFS under the authority of the MSA.
8. Fisheries of the Northeastern United States; Monkfish; Amendment
5. RIN 0648-AX70 (76 FR 30265; May 25, 2011). This final rule
implemented measures that were approved in Amendment 5 to the Monkfish
FMP. The New England and Mid-Atlantic Fishery Management Councils
developed Amendment 5 to bring the FMP into compliance with the ACL and
accountability measure (AM) requirements of the MSA. This rule
established the mechanisms for specifying ACLs and AMs and set the ACT
and associated measures for days-at-sea (DAS) and trip limits for the
Southern Fishery Management Area. NMFS disapproved the proposed ACT,
and associated measures, for the Northern Fishery Management Area on
the grounds that they were not consistent with the most recent
scientific advice. This final rule implemented three additional
Amendment 5 management measures to promote efficiency and reduce waste,
bring the biological and management reference points in the Monkfish
FMP into compliance with revised National Standard 1 Guidelines, and
made one correction to the monkfish weight conversion factors.
9. Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic Zone Off Alaska: Bering Sea
and Aleutian Islands Crab Rationalization Program. RIN 0648-BA11 (76 FR
35781; June 20, 2011). NMFS issued regulations to implement Amendment
37 to the Fishery Management Plan for Bering Sea/Aleutian Islands King
and Tanner Crabs FMP. This action amended the Bering Sea/Aleutian
Islands Crab Rationalization Program by establishing a process for
eligible contract signatories to request that NMFS exempt holders of
West-designated individual fishing quota (IFQ) and individual processor
quota (IPQ) in the Western Aleutian Islands golden king crab fishery
from the West regional delivery requirements. Federal regulations
require West-designated golden king crab IFQ to be delivered to a
processor in the West region of the Aleutian Islands with an exact
amount of unused West-designated IPQ. However, sufficient processing
capacity may not be available each season. This rule was necessary to
prevent disruption to the Western Aleutian Islands golden king crab
fishery, while providing for the sustained participation of
municipalities in the region. This action was intended to promote the
goals and objectives of the MSA, the FMP, and other applicable law.
10. Atlantic Highly Migratory Species (HMS): Atlantic Bluefin Tuna
Quotas and Atlantic Tuna Fisheries Management Measures. RIN 0648-BA65
(76 FR 39019; July 5, 2011). NMFS modified Atlantic bluefin tuna (BFT)
base quotas for all domestic fishing categories; established BFT quota
specifications for the 2011 fishing year; reinstated pelagic longline
target catch requirements for retaining BFT in the Northeast Distant
Gear Restricted Area (NED); amended the Atlantic tunas possession-at-
sea and landing regulations to allow removal of Atlantic tunas tail
lobes; and clarified the transfer-at-sea regulations for Atlantic
tunas. This action was necessary to implement recommendations of the
International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas
(ICCAT), as required by the Atlantic Tunas Convention Act (ATCA), and
to achieve domestic management objectives under the MSA.
11. Atlantic Highly Migratory Species: Modification of the
Retention of Incidentally-Caught Highly Migratory Species in Atlantic
Trawl Fisheries. RIN 0648-BA45 (76 FR 49368; August 10, 2011). This
final rule modified the permitting requirements and retention limits
for Atlantic HMS that were incidentally-caught in Atlantic trawl
fisheries. This action reduced regulatory dead discards of
incidentally-caught Atlantic swordfish in the Illex squid trawl fishery
by establishing a new Incidental HMS Squid Trawl permit for all valid
Illex squid moratorium permit holders. The Incidental HMS Squid Trawl
permit allowed up to 15 swordfish per trip to be retained. The final
rule also established a retention limit for smoothhound sharks in all
Atlantic trawl fisheries. These actions were necessary to achieve
domestic management objectives under the MSA, and implemented the 2006
Consolidated HMS Fishery Management Plan (Consolidated HMS FMP), which
included objectives in the FMP to monitor and control all components of
fishing mortality, both directed and incidental, so as to ensure the
long-term sustainability of HMS stocks, and to provide the data
necessary for assessing HMS fish stocks and managing HMS, including
addressing inadequacies in current data collection and the ongoing
collection of economic and bycatch data in Atlantic HMS fisheries.
12. Atlantic Highly Migratory Species: Atlantic Shark Management
Measures. RIN 0648-BA69 (76 FR 53652; August 29, 2011). NMFS
implemented the ICCAT recommendations 10-07 and 10-08, which prohibited
the retention, transshipping, landing, storing, or selling of
hammerhead sharks in the family Sphyrnidae (except for Sphyrna tiburo)
and oceanic whitetip sharks (Carcharhinus longimanus) caught in
association with ICCAT fisheries. This rule affected the commercial HMS
pelagic longline (PLL) fishery and recreational fisheries for tunas,
swordfish, and billfish in the Atlantic Ocean, including the Caribbean
Sea and Gulf of Mexico. This action implemented ICCAT recommendations,
consistent with the ATCA, and furthers domestic management objectives
under the MSA.
13. Fisheries of Northeastern United States: Atlantic Herring
Fishery; Regulatory Amendment. RIN 0648-BA79 (76 FR 54385; September 1,
2011). NMFS revised the reporting requirements for vessels issued
Atlantic herring (herring) permits, because more timely catch
information was necessary to monitor herring catch against the stock-
wide herring ACL and herring management area sub-ACLs, to help prevent
sub-ACLs overages and the chance of premature fishery closures.
[[Page 60082]]
This action required limited access herring vessels to report catch
daily via vessel monitoring systems (VMS), open access herring vessels
to report catch weekly via the interactive voice response system, and
all herring-permitted vessels to submit vessel trip reports weekly.
14. Fisheries of the Northeastern United States: Atlantic Deep-Sea
Red Crab; Amendment 3. RIN 0648-BA22 (76 FR 60379 September 29, 2011).
This final rule implemented measures that were approved in Amendment 3
to the Atlantic Deep-Sea Red Crab FMP. The New England Fishery
Management Council developed Amendment 3 to bring the FMP into
compliance with the ACL and AM requirements of the MSA. This rule
established the mechanisms for specifying an ACL and AMs and set the
TAL for red crab for the 2011-2013 FY. NMFS disapproved two proposed
measures in Amendment 3. This final rule implemented additional
management measures to promote efficiency in the red crab fishery.
15. Fishing Capacity Reduction Program for the Southeast Alaska
Purse Seine Salmon Fishery. RIN 0648-BA13 (76 FR 61985, October 6,
2011). NMFS established regulations to implement a fishing capacity
reduction (buyback) program and an industry fee system to repay a
$23,476,500 loan for the Southeast Alaska Purse Seine Salmon Fishery
(Reduction Fishery). The fee system involves future landings of the
Reduction Fishery. This action's intent was to permanently reduce the
most fishing capacity at the least cost and establish the fee system.
This action was conducted by NMFS under the authority of the MSA.
16. Endangered and Threatened Species: Designation of Critical
Habitat for the Southern Distinct Population Segment of Eulachon. RIN
0648-XF87 (76 FR 65324; October 20, 2011). NMFS issued a final rule to
designate critical habitat for the southern DPS of Pacific eulachon
(Thaleichthys pacificus), pursuant to section 4 of the ESA. NMFS
designated 16 specific areas as critical habitat within the states of
California, Oregon, and Washington. The designated areas were a
combination of freshwater creeks and rivers and their associated
estuaries, comprising approximately 539 km (335 mi) of habitat. The
Tribal lands of four Indian Tribes were excluded from designation after
the evaluation of the impacts of designation and benefits of exclusion
associated with Tribal land ownership and management by the Tribes. No
areas were excluded from designation based on economic impacts. This
final rule responded to and incorporated public comments received on
the proposed rule and supporting documents, as well as peer reviewer
comments received on our draft biological report and draft economic
report.
17. Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants: Designation of
Critical Habitat for Black Abalone. RIN 0648-AY62 (76 FR 66806; October
27, 2011). NMFS designated critical habitat for the endangered black
abalone under the ESA. This designation included approximately 360
km\2\ of rocky intertidal and subtidal habitat within five segments of
the California coast between the Del Mar Landing Ecological Reserve to
the Palos Verdes Peninsula, as well as on the Farallon Islands,
A[ntilde]o Nuevo Island, San Miguel Island, Santa Rosa Island, Santa
Cruz Island, Anacapa Island, Santa Barbara Island, and Santa Catalina
Island. This designation included rocky intertidal and subtidal
habitats from the mean higher high water (MHHW) line to a depth of -6
meters (m) (relative to the mean lower low water (MLLW) line), as well
as the coastal marine waters encompassed by these areas. NMFS did not
designate the specific area from Corona Del Mar State Beach to Dana
Point, California, because they concluded that the economic benefits of
exclusion from the critical habitat designation outweigh the benefits
of inclusion and that exclusion of this specific area would not result
in the extinction of the species. NMFS also concluded that two of the
specific areas proposed for designation (San Nicolas Island and San
Clemente Island) were no longer eligible for designation, based on
determinations that the U.S. Navy's revised integrated natural resource
management plans (INRMPs) for these areas provide benefits to black
abalone.
18. Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic Zone Off Alaska: Bering Sea
and Aleutian Islands Management Area; Limited Access Privilege Program.
RIN 0648-BA18 (76 FR 68354; November 4, 2011). NMFS issued regulations
implementing Amendment 93 to the FMP for Groundfish of the Bering Sea
and Aleutian Islands Management Area. These regulations amended the
Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands Amendment 80 Program to modify the
criteria for forming and participating in a harvesting cooperative.
This action was necessary to encourage greater participation in
harvesting cooperatives, which enable members to more efficiently
target species, avoid areas with undesirable bycatch, and improve the
quality of products produced. This action was intended to promote the
goals and objectives of the MSA, the FMP, and other applicable law.
19. Fisheries of the Northeastern United States: Atlantic Mackerel,
Squid, and Butterfish Fisheries; Amendment 11. RIN 0648-AX05 (76 FR
68642; November 7, 2011). NMFS implemented approved measures in
Amendment 11 to the Atlantic Mackerel, Squid, and Butterfish Fishery
Management Plan, developed by the Mid-Atlantic Fishery Management
Council. The approved measures included: A tiered limited access
program for the Atlantic mackerel fishery; an open access incidental
catch permit for mackerel; an update to essential fish habitat
designations for all life stages of mackerel, longfin squid, Illex
squid, and butterfish; and the establishment of a recreational
allocation for mackerel. This action was conducted by NMFS under the
authority of the MSA.
20. Fisheries of Exclusive Economic Zone Off Alaska: Revisions to
Pacific Cod Fishing in Parallel Fishery in Bering Sea and Aleutian
Islands Management Area. RIN 0648-AY65 (76 FR 73513; November 29,
2011). NMFS issued regulations to limit access of federally permitted
pot and hook-and-line catcher/processors (C/Ps) to the Pacific cod
fishery in Alaska State waters within three nautical miles of shore
adjacent to the Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands management area (BSAI).
The affected fishery is commonly known as the ``parallel'' fishery. The
parallel fishery is managed by the State of Alaska concurrent with the
Federal pot and hook-and-line fishery for Pacific cod in the BSAI. This
rule limited access by federally permitted vessels to the parallel
fishery for Pacific cod in three ways. First, it required an owner of a
federally permitted pot or hook-and-line C/P vessel used to catch
Pacific cod in the State of Alaska parallel fishery to be issued the
same endorsements on his or her Federal fisheries permit (FFP) or
license limitation program (LLP) license as currently were required for
catching Pacific cod in the Federal waters of the BSAI. Second, it
provided that the owner of a pot or hook-and-line C/P vessel who
surrenders an FFP would not be reissued a new FFP for that vessel
within the 3-year term of the permit. Third, it required an operator of
any federally permitted pot or hook-and-line C/P vessel used to catch
Pacific cod in the parallel fishery to comply with the same seasonal
closures of Pacific cod that apply in the Federal fishery. These three
measures were necessary to limit some C/Ps from catching a greater
amount of Pacific cod in the parallel fishery than has been allocated
to their sector from the BSAI
[[Page 60083]]
total allowable catch. Maintaining Pacific cod catch amounts within
BSAI sector allocations also would reduce the potential for shortened
Pacific cod seasons for C/Ps in the Federal fishery. These three
measures would improve the effectiveness of NMFS' catch accounting and
monitoring requirements on vessels participating in the parallel
fishery. This action was intended to promote the goals and objectives
of the Fishery Management Plan for Groundfish of the Bering Sea and
Aleutian Islands Management Area, the MSA, and other applicable laws.
21. Atlantic Highly Migratory Species: Adjustments to the Atlantic
Bluefin Tuna General and Harpoon Category Regulations. RIN 0648-AX85
(76 FR 74003; November 30, 2011). NMFS adjusted the Atlantic BFT
fishery regulations to: Increase the General category maximum daily
retention limit; allow the General category season to remain open until
the January subquota was reached, or March 31, whichever happens first;
and increase the Harpoon category daily incidental retention limit.
This action was intended to enable more thorough utilization of the
available U.S. BFT quota for the General and Harpoon (commercial
handgear) categories; minimize bycatch and bycatch mortality to the
extent practicable; expand fishing opportunities for participants in
the commercial winter General category fishery; and increase NMFS'
flexibility for setting the General category retention limit depending
on available quota. This action was conducted by NMFS under the
authority of the MSA.
22. Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic Zone Off Alaska: Pacific
Cod Allocations in the Gulf of Alaska; Amendment 83. RIN 0648-AY53 (76
FR 74670; December 1, 2011). NMFS published regulations to implement
Amendment 83 to the Fishery Management Plan for Groundfish of the Gulf
of Alaska (GOA). Amendment 83 allocated Western and Central GOA Pacific
cod TAC limits among various gear and operational sectors. Sector
allocations limit the amount of Western and Central GOA Pacific cod
that each sector was authorized to harvest. This action reduced
competition among sectors and supported stability in the Pacific cod
fishery. This rule limited access to the Federal Pacific cod TAC
fisheries prosecuted in State of Alaska waters, commonly known as the
parallel fishery, adjacent to the Western and Central GOA. This action
was intended to promote community participation and provide incentives
for new entrants in the jig sector. It also promoted the goals and
objectives of the MSA, the Fishery Management Plan, and other
applicable laws.
23. Atlantic Highly Migratory Species: Vessel Monitoring Systems.
RIN 0648-BA64 (76 FR 75492; December 2, 2011). NMFS finalized
requirements for fishermen to replace currently required Mobile
Transmitting Unit (MTU) VMS units with Enhanced Mobile Transmitting
Unit (E-MTU) VMS in Atlantic HMS fisheries. The key difference between
MTU and E-MTU VMS units was that the E-MTU VMS units were capable of
two-way communication. The purpose of this final action was to
facilitate enhanced communication with HMS vessels at sea, provide HMS
fishery participants with an additional means of sending and receiving
information at sea, ensure that HMS VMS units are consistent with the
current VMS technology and type approval requirements that apply to
newly installed units, and to provide NMFS enforcement with additional
information describing gear onboard and target species. This rule
affected all HMS PLL, bottom longline (BLL), and shark gillnet
fishermen who are currently required to have VMS onboard their vessels.
This action was conducted by NMFS under the authority of the MSA.
24. Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic Zone Off Alaska: Groundfish
of the Gulf of Alaska; Amendment Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic
Zone Off Alaska: Groundfish of the Gulf of Alaska; Amendment 88. RIN
0648-BA97 (76 FR 81248; December 27, 2011). This final rule implemented
Amendment 88 to the FMP for Groundfish of the Gulf of Alaska (GOA FMP).
Amendment 88 was the Central Gulf of Alaska Rockfish Program (Rockfish
Program). These regulations allocated exclusive harvest privileges to a
specific group of license limitation program license holders who used
trawl gear to target Pacific ocean perch, pelagic shelf rockfish, and
northern rockfish during particular qualifying years. The Rockfish
Program retained the conservation, management, safety, and economic
gains realized under the Central Gulf of Alaska Rockfish Pilot Program
(Pilot Program) and resolved identified issues in the management and
viability of the rockfish fisheries. This action was necessary to
replace particular Pilot Program regulations that were scheduled to
expire at the end of 2011. This action was intended to promote the
goals and objectives of the MSA, the GOA FMP, and other applicable law.
25. Endangered and Threatened Species: Critical Habitat Designation
for Endangered Leatherback Sea Turtle. RIN 0648-AX06 (77 FR 4170;
January 26, 2012). NMFS issued a final rule to revise the current
critical habitat for the leatherback sea turtle (Dermochelys coriacea)
by designating additional areas within the Pacific Ocean. This
designation included approximately 16,910 mi\2\ (43,798 km\2\)
stretching along the California coast from Point Arena to Point
Arguello east of the 3,000 meter depth contour; and 25,004 mi\2\
(64,760 km\2\) stretching from Cape Flattery, Washington to Cape
Blanco, Oregon east of the 2,000 meter depth contour. The designated
areas comprised approximately 41,914 mi\2\ (108,558 km\2\) of marine
habitat and include waters from the ocean surface down to a maximum
depth of 262 feet (80 m). Other Pacific waters within the U.S.
Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) were evaluated based on the geographical
area occupied by the species, but NMFS determined that they were not
eligible for designation, as they did not contain the feature
identified as essential to the conservation of the species. The total
estimated annualized economic impact associated with this designation
was estimated to range between $188,000 and $9.1 million U.S. dollars.
This action was conducted by NMFS under the authority of the ESA.
26. Fisheries of Exclusive Economic Zone Off Alaska: Chinook Salmon
Bycatch Management in Bering Sea Pollock Fishery; Economic Data
Collection. RIN 0648-BA80 (77 FR 5389; February 3, 2012). NMFS issued a
final rule to implement the Chinook Salmon Economic Data Report
Program, which would evaluate the effectiveness of Chinook salmon
bycatch management measures for the Bering Sea pollock fishery that
were implemented under Amendment 91 to the FMP for Groundfish of the
Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands Management Area. Members of the
American Fisheries Act catcher vessels, catcher/processor, and
mothership sectors as well as representatives for the six western
Alaska Community Development Quota Program organizations that were
receiving allocations of Bering Sea pollock would submit the data
collected for this program. This rule was intended to promote the goals
and objectives of the FMP, the MSA, and other applicable law.
27. Fisheries of Exclusive Economic Zone Off Alaska: Community
Development Quota Program. RIN 0648-AV33 (77 FR 6492; February 8,
2012). NMFS issued regulations that govern fisheries managed under the
Western Alaska Community Development Quota (CDQ) Program. These
revisions were needed to comply with certain changes
[[Page 60084]]
made to the MSA in 2006. Changes included revision to regulations
associated with recordkeeping, vessel licensing, catch retention
requirements, and fisheries observer requirements to ensure that they
were no more restrictive than the regulations in effect for comparable
non-CDQ fisheries managed under individual fishing quotas or
cooperative allocations. In addition, NMFS removed CDQ Program
regulations that were inconsistent with the MSA, including regulations
associated with the CDQ allocation process, the transfer of groundfish
CDQ and halibut prohibited species quota, and the oversight of CDQ
groups' expenditures. This action was conducted by NMFS under the
authority of the MSA.
28. Fisheries of the Northeastern United States: Northeast
Multispecies Fishery; Framework Adjustment 47. RIN 0648-BB62 (77 FR
26104; May 2, 2012). NMFS approved Framework Adjustment 47 (Framework
47) to NE Multispecies FMP and implemented the approved measures. The
New England Fishery Management Council developed and adopted Framework
47 based on the biennial review process established in the NE
Multispecies FMP to develop ACLs and revise management measures
necessary to rebuild overfished groundfish stocks and achieve the goals
and objectives of the FMP. This action also implemented management
measures and revised existing regulations that were not included in
Framework 47, including common pool management measures for fishing
year (FY) 2012, modification of the Ruhle trawl definition, and
clarification of the regulations for charter/party and recreational
groundfish vessels fishing in groundfish closed areas. This action was
intended to prevent overfishing, rebuild overfished stocks, achieve OY,
and ensure that management measures were based on the best available
scientific information at the time Framework 47 was submitted. This
action was conducted by NMFS under the authority of the MSA.
29. Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic Zone Off Alaska: Pacific
Halibut and Sablefish Individual Fishing Quota Program. RIN 0648-AX91
(77 FR 29556; May 18, 2012). NMFS issued a final rule to modify the IFQ
Program for the Fixed-Gear Commercial Fisheries for Pacific Halibut and
Sablefish in Waters in and off Alaska (IFQ Program) by revoking quota
share (QS) that had been inactive since they were originally issued in
1995. Inactive QS were those held by persons that have never harvested
their IFQ and had never transferred QS or IFQ into or out of their IFQ
accounts. This action was necessary to achieve the catch limit from the
halibut fisheries and optimum yield from the sablefish fisheries in
Alaska in accordance with National Standard 1 of the MSA and to achieve
more efficient use of these species. The intended effect was to promote
the management provisions in the Northern Pacific Halibut Act of 1982,
the Fishery Management Plan for Groundfish of the Bering Sea and
Aleutian Islands Management Area, and the Fishery Management Plan for
Groundfish of the Gulf of Alaska.
30. Atlantic Coastal Fisheries Cooperative Management Act
Provisions: American Lobster Fishery. RIN 0648-BA56 (77 FR 32420; June
1, 2012). This rule implemented new Federal American lobster
regulations that limited entry into the lobster trap fishery in Lobster
Conservation Management Area 1 (Area 1), located in the Federal inshore
waters of the Gulf of Maine. Eligibility was based on specific
eligibility criteria designed to identify active Federal Area 1 lobster
trap permits. If a permit met the eligibility criteria, the permit
holder was authorized to fish in the Federal waters of Area 1 with up
to 800 lobster traps. The limited entry program responded to the
recommendations for Federal action in the Atlantic States Marine
Fisheries Commission's Interstate Fishery Management Plan for American
Lobster.
31. Fisheries of Caribbean, Gulf of Mexico, and South Atlantic:
Snapper-Grouper Fishery off Southern Atlantic States; Amendment 18A.
RIN 0648-BB56 (77 FR 32408; June 1, 2012). NMFS issued this final rule
to implement Amendment 18A to the FMP for the Snapper-Grouper Fishery
of the South Atlantic Region (Amendment 18A), as prepared and submitted
by the South Atlantic Fishery Management Council. This rule modified
the current system of accountability measures for black sea bass,
limited effort in the black sea bass segment of the snapper-grouper
fishery, and improved fisheries data in the for-hire sector of the
snapper-grouper fishery. Amendment 18A also updated the rebuilding plan
and modified the ABC for black sea bass. The rule established a
spawning season closure for black sea bass. It also modified the
rebuilding strategy, ABC, ACL and ACT for black sea bass; modified the
current commercial and/or recreational size limits; established a
commercial trip limit for black sea bass; and limited participation in
the black sea bass pot segment of the snapper grouper fishery through
an endorsement program. The rule also established an appeals process
for fishermen excluded from the black sea bass pot endorsement program.
This final rule was intended to reduce overcapacity in the black sea
bass segment of the snapper-grouper fishery and improve data reporting
in the commercial and for-hire sectors of the snapper grouper fishery.
This action was conducted by NMFS under the authority of the MSA.
32. Fisheries of the Northeastern United States: Northeast
Multispecies Fishery; Exempted Fishery for Southern New England Skate
Bait Trawl Fishery. RIN 0648-BB35 (77 FR 38738; June 29, 2012). This
final rule modified the regulations implementing the NE Multispecies
FMP to allow vessels issued a Federal skate permit and a Skate Bait
Letter of Authorization to fish for skates in a portion of southern New
England (SNE) from July 1 through October 31 of each year, outside of
the NE multispecies DAS program. This action allowed vessels to harvest
skates in a manner that is consistent with the bycatch reduction
objectives of the NE Multispecies FMP. This action was conducted by
NMFS under the authority of the MSA.
33. Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic Zone Off Alaska: Chinook
Salmon Bycatch Management in the Gulf of Alaska Pollock Fishery;
Amendment 93. RIN 0648-BB24 (77 FR 42629; July 20, 2012). NMFS
published regulations to implement Amendment 93 to the FMP for
Groundfish of the Gulf of Alaska. The regulations apply exclusively to
the directed pollock trawl fisheries in the Central and Western
Reporting Areas of the GOA (Central and Western GOA). Amendment 93
established separate prohibited species catch (PSC) limits in the
Central and Western GOA for Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha),
which would cause NMFS to close the directed pollock fishery in the
Central or Western regulatory areas of the GOA, if the applicable limit
was reached. This action also required retention of salmon by all
vessels in the Central and Western GOA pollock fisheries until the
catch was delivered to a processing facility where an observer was
provided the opportunity to count the number of salmon and to collect
scientific data or biological samples from the salmon. This action made
several revisions to the Prohibited Species Donation (PSD) program.
Amendment 93 was intended to promote the goals and objectives of the
MSA, the FMP, and other applicable laws.
34. Atlantic Highly Migratory Species: Electronic Dealer Reporting
Requirements. RIN 0648-BA75 (77 FR 47303; August 8, 2012). This final
rule required that Federal Atlantic
[[Page 60085]]
swordfish, shark, and tuna dealers report receipt of Atlantic sharks,
swordfish, and bigeye, albacore, skipjack, and yellowfin (BAYS) tunas
to NMFS through an electronic reporting system on a weekly basis.
Atlantic HMS dealers would not be required to report bluefin tuna
through this electronic reporting system, as a separate reporting
system was in place for this species. This final rule changed the
current definition of who was considered an Atlantic HMS dealer and
required Atlantic HMS dealers to submit dealer reports to NMFS in a
timely manner in order to be able to purchase commercially-harvested
Atlantic sharks, swordfish, and BAYS tunas. Any delinquent reports
would need to be submitted by the dealer and received by NMFS before a
dealer could purchase commercially-harvested Atlantic sharks,
swordfish, and BAYS tunas from a fishing vessel. These measures were
necessary to ensure timely and accurate reporting, which was critical
for quota monitoring and management of these species. This action was
conducted by NMFS under the authority of the MSA.
35. Second Fishing Capacity Reduction Program: Longline Catcher
Processor Subsector of Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands Non-pollock
Groundfish Fishery. RIN 0648-BB06 (77 FR 58775; September 24, 2012).
NMFS established regulations to implement a second fishing capacity
reduction program (also commonly known as ``buyback'') and an industry
fee system to repay a $2.7 million loan for a single latent permit
within the Longline Catcher Processor Subsector of the Bering Sea and
Aleutian Islands (BSAI) non-pollock groundfish fishery (Reduction
Fishery). The purpose of this action was to permanently reduce the
greatest amount of fishing capacity at the least cost. This was
intended to result in increased harvesting productivity for the permit
holders remaining in the fishery. The loan for this program was added
to the previous program loan of $35,700,000 authorized by the FY 2005
Appropriations Act. For purposes of this regulation, the terms license
and permit were used interchangeably. This action was conducted by NMFS
under the authority of the MSA and other applicable laws.
36. Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic Zone Off Alaska: Bering Sea
and Aleutian Islands Management Area; Amendment 97. RIN 0648-BB18 (77
FR 59852, October 1, 2012). This final rule implemented Amendment 97 to
the FMP for Groundfish of the Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands
Management Area. Amendment 97 allowed the owner of a trawl catcher/
processor vessel authorized to participate in the Amendment 80 catch
share program to replace that vessel with a vessel that meets certain
requirements. This action established the regulatory process for
replacement of vessels in the Amendment 80 fleet and the requirements
for Amendment 80 replacement vessels, such as a limit on the overall
length of a replacement vessel, a prohibition on the use of an American
Fisheries Act (AFA) vessel as a replacement vessel, measures to prevent
a replaced vessel from participating in Federal groundfish fisheries
off Alaska that are not Amendment 80 fisheries, and measures that
extend specific catch limits (known as Amendment 80 sideboards) to a
replacement vessel. This action was necessary to promote safety-at-sea
by allowing Amendment 80 vessel owners to replace their vessels for any
reason at any time and by requiring replacement vessels to meet certain
U.S. Coast Guard vessel safety standards, and to improve the retention
and utilization of groundfish catch by these vessels by facilitating an
increase in the processing capabilities of the fleet. This action was
intended to promote the goals and objectives of the MSA, the FMP, and
other applicable laws.
37. Atlantic Highly Migratory Species: Silky Shark Management
Measures. RIN 0648-BB96 (77 FR 60632; October 4, 2012). NMFS
implemented the ICCAT Recommendation 11-08, which prohibits retaining,
transshipping, or landing of silky sharks (Carcharhinus falciformis)
caught in association with ICCAT fisheries. In order to facilitate
domestic compliance and enforcement, NMFS also prohibited the storing,
selling, and purchasing of the species. This rule primarily affected
the commercial Atlantic HMS pelagic longline fishery for tuna and tuna-
like species in the Atlantic Ocean, including the Caribbean Sea and
Gulf of Mexico. This rule did not affect commercial fishermen fishing
for sharks with bottom longline, gillnet, or handgear, and it does not
further affect recreational fishermen because harvesting silky sharks
was already prohibited in the recreational fishery. This action
implemented the ICCAT recommendation, consistent with the ATCA, and
furthers domestic management objectives under the MSA.
38. Groundfish Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic Zone off Alaska
and Pacific Halibut Fisheries: Observer Program. RIN 0648-BB42 (77 FR
70062; November 21, 2012). This final rule implemented Amendment 86 to
the Fishery Management Plan for Groundfish of the Bering Sea and
Aleutian Islands Management Area and Amendment 76 to the Fishery
Management Plan for Groundfish of the Gulf of Alaska (Amendments 86/
76). Amendments 86/76 add a funding and deployment system for observer
coverage to the existing North Pacific Groundfish Observer Program
(Observer Program) and amend existing observer coverage requirements
for vessels and processing plants. The new funding and deployment
system allowed NMFS to determine when and where to deploy observers
according to management and conservation needs, with funds provided
through a system of fees based on the ex-vessel value of groundfish and
halibut in fisheries covered by the new system. This action was
necessary to resolve data quality and cost equity concerns with the
Observer Program's existing funding and deployment structure. This
action was intended to promote the goals and objectives of the MSA, the
Northern Pacific Halibut Act of 1982, the fishery management plans, and
other applicable law.
39. Taking of Marine Mammals Incidental to Commercial Fishing
Operations: False Killer Whale Take Reduction Plan. RIN 0648-BA30 (77
FR 71260; November 29, 2012). The final rule issued the False Killer
Whale Take Reduction Plan (FKWTRP), and regulatory measures and non-
regulatory measures and recommendations to reduce mortalities and
serious injuries of false killer whales in Hawaii-based longline
fisheries. Regulatory measures include gear requirements, longline
prohibited areas, training and certification in marine mammal handling
and release, captains' supervision of marine mammal handling and
release, and posting of NMFS-approved placards on longline vessels. In
this rule, NMFS also recommended research and data collection programs.
This final rule also revised the boundaries of the longline prohibited
area around the main Hawaiian Islands to be consistent with the
prohibited area established under the FKWTRP regulations. The FKWTRP
was based on consensus recommendations submitted to NMFS by the False
Killer Whale Take Reduction Team (Team), with certain modifications
described herein that were determined to be necessary to meet the
requirements of the MMPA. This final rule was necessary because current
mortality and serious injury levels of the Hawaii Pelagic and Hawaii
Insular stocks of false killer whales incidental to the Hawaii-based
pelagic longline fisheries are above the stocks' potential biological
removal (PBR) levels, and are
[[Page 60086]]
therefore inconsistent with the short- and long-term goals of the
Marine Mammal Protection Act (MMPA). The FKWTRP was intended to meet
the requirements of the MMPA.
40. International Fisheries; Western and Central Pacific Fisheries
for Highly Migratory Species: Transshipping, Bunkering, Reporting, and
Purse Seine Discard Requirements. RIN 0648-BA85 (77 FR 71501; December
3, 2012). NMFS issued regulations under the authority of the Western
and Central Pacific Fisheries Convention Implementation Act (WCPFC
Implementation Act) to implement requirements for U.S. fishing vessels
used for commercial fishing that offload or receive transshipments of
HMS, U.S. fishing vessels used for commercial fishing that provide
bunkering or other support services to fishing vessels, and U.S.
fishing vessels used for commercial fishing that receive bunkering or
engage in other support services, in the area of application of the
Convention on the Conservation and Management of Highly Migratory Fish
Stocks in the Western and Central Pacific Ocean (Convention). Some of
the requirements also applied to transshipments of fish caught in the
area of application of the Convention (Convention Area) and
transshipped elsewhere. NMFS also issued requirements regarding
notification of entry into and exit from the ``Eastern High Seas
Special Management Area'' (Eastern SMA) and requirements relating to
discards from purse seine fishing vessels. This action was necessary
for the United States to implement decisions of the Commission for the
Conservation and Management of Highly Migratory Fish Stocks in the
Western and Central Pacific Ocean (Commission or WCPFC) and to satisfy
its obligations under the Convention, to which it is a Contracting
Party.
41. Fisheries Off West Coast States; Pacific Coast Groundfish
Fishery: 2013-2014 Biennial Specifications and Management Measures. RIN
0648-BC35 (78 FR 580; January 3, 2013). This final rule established the
2013-2014 harvest specifications and management measures for groundfish
taken in the U.S. exclusive economic zone off the coasts of Washington,
Oregon, and California consistent with the MSA and the PCGFMP. This
final rule also revised the collection of management measures in the
groundfish fishery regulations that are intended to keep the total
catch of each groundfish species or species complex within the harvest
specifications.
42. Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic Zone Off Alaska: Bering Sea
and Aleutian Islands Management Area; Groundfish Retention Standard.
RIN 0648-BA93 (78 FR 12627; February 25, 2013). NMFS published a
regulatory amendment to modify the groundfish retention standard (GRS)
program in the Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands Management Area (BSAI).
This final rule removed certain regulatory requirements that mandate
minimum levels of groundfish retention by the owners and operators of
trawl catcher/processor (C/P) vessels not listed in the AFA, commonly
referred to as either non-AFA trawl C/Ps or Amendment 80 vessels, and
Amendment 80 cooperatives participating in the BSAI groundfish
fisheries. The GRS program was implemented to increase the retention
and utilization of groundfish; however, NMFS discovered that the
regulatory methodology used to calculate compliance with the GRS
requires individual Amendment 80 vessels and Amendment 80 cooperatives
to retain groundfish at rates well above the minimum retention rates
recommended by the Council or implemented by NMFS. As a result, the GRS
imposed significantly higher than predicted compliance costs on vessel
owners and operators due to the increased level of retention needed to
meet the minimum retention rates. Additionally, NMFS discovered that
enforcement of the GRS had proven far more complex, challenging, and
potentially costly than anticipated by NMFS. This action was necessary
to relieve Amendment 80 vessels and Amendment 80 cooperatives from
undue compliance costs stemming from the minimum retention rates while
continuing to promote the GRS program goals of increased groundfish
retention and utilization. This action maintained current monitoring
requirements for the Amendment 80 fleet and established a new
requirement for Amendment 80 cooperatives to annually report groundfish
retention performance as part of the report submitted to NMFS. This
action was intended to promote the goals and objectives of the MSA, the
fishery management plan, and other applicable law.
43. Fisheries of the Northeastern United States: Northeast
Multispecies Fishery Management Plan; Amendment 19. RIN 0648-BC48 (78
FR 20260; April 4, 2013). This final rule implemented Amendment 19 to
the Northeast Multispecies Fishery Management Plan. The New England
Fishery Management Council developed Amendment 19 to modify management
measures that governed the small-mesh multispecies fishery, including
the accountability measures, the year-round possession limits, and
total allowable landings process. Amendment 19 was approved by NMFS on
January 15, 2013. This action was conducted by NMFS under the authority
of the MSA.
44. Fisheries of the Caribbean, Gulf of Mexico, and South Atlantic:
Snapper-Grouper Fishery off Southern Atlantic States; Amendment 18B.
RIN 0648-BB58 (78 FR 23858; April 23, 2013). NMFS issued this final
rule to implement management measures described in Amendment 18B to the
FMP for the Snapper-Grouper Fishery of the South Atlantic Region
(Amendment 18B), as prepared by the South Atlantic Fishery Management
Council. This final rule: Established a longline endorsement program
for the commercial golden tilefish component of the snapper-grouper
fishery; established initial eligibility requirements for a golden
tilefish longline endorsement; established an appeals process;
allocated the commercial golden tilefish ACL among gear groups;
established a procedure for the transfer of golden tilefish
endorsements; and modified the golden tilefish trip limits; and
established a trip limit for commercial fishermen who did not receive a
golden tilefish longline endorsement. The intent of this rule was to
reduce overcapacity in the commercial golden tilefish component of the
snapper-grouper fishery. This action was conducted by NMFS under the
authority of the MSA.
45. Fisheries of the Northeastern United States: Northeast
Multispecies Fishery. RIN 0648-BC27 78 FR 26118; May 3, 2013). This
rule announced that NMFS partially approved Framework Adjustment 48 to
the NE Multispecies FMP and implemented the approved measures in the
regulations. Framework 48 was the first of two parallel and related
actions developed by the New England Fishery Management Council to
respond to updated stock status information and to adjust other
management measures in the NE multispecies (groundfish) fishery
beginning in FY 2013. This action implemented new status determination
criteria for GOM cod, GB cod, Southern New England/Mid-Atlantic (SNE/
MA) yellowtail flounder, and white hake based on new benchmark
assessments completed for these stocks in 2012 and 2013. NMFS approved
and implemented updated status determination criteria for white hake
through this interim final rule and accepted further comment on this
measure since it was not available for comment in the Framework 48
proposed rule. Through this action, NMFS also approved and implemented
the
[[Page 60087]]
following Framework 48 measures: Elimination of dockside monitoring
requirements for the groundfish fishery; lower minimum fish sizes for
several groundfish stocks; clarified goals and performance standard for
groundfish monitoring programs; revisions to the allocation of GB
yellowtail flounder to the scallop fishery; and establishment of sub-
ACLs of GB yellowtail flounder and SNE/MA windowpane flounder for the
scallop and other non-groundfish fisheries. NMFS also approved
revisions to recreational and commercial accountability measures (AMs),
including amendments to existing AMs for windowpane flounder, ocean
pout, and Atlantic halibut, and new ``reactive'' AMs for Atlantic
wolffish and SNE/MA winter flounder, to address a remand by the U.S.
District Court of Appeals. NMFS disapproved some measures in Framework
48: A provision for cost-sharing of monitoring costs between the
industry and NMFS; a provision to delay industry-funded monitoring to
FY 2014; finer scale discard rate strata for GB yellowtail flounder;
and a provision to remove requirements for groundfish trawlers to stow
their gear when transiting closed areas. Through this interim final
rule, NMFS also withdrew a proposed correction to the regulations
specific to monitoring of the Eastern U.S./Canada quotas, and accepted
additional public comment on this issue. These measures were necessary
to meet the requirements of the FMP and the MSA, most notably
preventing overfishing, ensuring that management measures are based on
the best available science, and mitigating, to the extent practicable,
potential negative economic impacts from reductions in catch limits
anticipated for fishing year FY 2013. This action was conducted by NMFS
under the authority of the MSA.
46. Fisheries of the Northeastern United States: Northeast
Multispecies Fishery. RIN 0648-BC97 (78 FR 26172; May 3, 2013). NMFS
partially approved Framework Adjustment 50 (Framework 50) to the NE
Multispecies FMP, and implemented the approved measures. NMFS also
implemented three parallel emergency actions to set FY 2013 catch
limits for GB yellowtail flounder and white hake, and to modify the
maximum GOM cod carryover available to sectors from FY 2012 to FY 2013.
Framework 50 set specifications for FYs 2013-2015, including 2013 TACs
for U.S./Canada stocks, and revised the rebuilding program and
management measures for Southern New England/Mid-Atlantic (SNE/MA)
winter flounder. This final rule also implemented FY 2013 management
measures for the recreational and common pool fisheries and clarified
how to account for sector carryover for FY 2013 and for FY 2014 and
beyond. These actions were necessary to prevent overfishing, rebuild
overfished stocks, achieve OY, and ensure that management measures were
based on the best available scientific information. This action was
conducted by NMFS under the authority of the MSA.
47. Fisheries of the Northeastern United States: Northeast
Multispecies Fishery; Exempted Fishery for the Spiny Dogfish Fishery in
the Waters East and West of Cape Cod, MA. RIN 0648-BC50 (78 FR 26518;
May 7, 2013). This interim final rule modified the regulations
implementing the NE Multispecies FMP to allow vessels fishing with a NE
Federal spiny dogfish permit to fish in an area east of Cape Cod, MA
(Eastern Exemption Area) with gillnet and longline gear, from June
through December and with handgear from June through August, and to
fish in Cape Cod Bay (Western Exemption Area) with longline gear and
handgear from June through August. This action allowed vessels to
harvest spiny dogfish in a manner that is consistent with the bycatch
reduction objectives of the NE Multispecies FMP. This action was
conducted by NMFS under the authority of the MSA.
48. Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic Zone Off Alaska: Bering Sea
and Aleutian Islands Crab Rationalization Program. RIN 0648-BA82 (78 FR
28523; May 15, 2013). NMFS issued regulations to implement Amendment 41
to the FMP for Bering Sea/Aleutian Islands King and Tanner Crabs. These
regulations amended the Bering Sea/Aleutian Islands Crab
Rationalization Program (CR Program) by establishing a process whereby
holders of regionally designated IFQ and IPQ in six CR Program
fisheries may receive an exemption from regional delivery requirements
in the North or South Regions. The six CR Program fisheries were
Bristol Bay red king crab, Bering Sea snow crab, Saint Matthew Island
blue king crab, Eastern Aleutian Islands golden king crab, Western
Aleutian Islands red king crab, and Pribilof Islands red and blue king
crab. This action was necessary to mitigate disruptions in a CR Program
fishery that prevented participants from complying with regional
delivery requirements. This action was intended to promote the goals
and objectives of the MSA, the FMP, and other applicable law.
49. Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic Zone Off Alaska: Revised
Maximum Retainable Amounts of Groundfish; Bering Sea and Aleutian
Islands. RIN 0648-BA43 (78 FR 29248; May 20, 2013). NMFS issued a
regulation to increase the maximum retainable amounts (MRAs) of
groundfish using arrowtooth flounder (Atheresthes stomias) and
Kamchatka flounder (Atheresthes evermanni) as basis species in the
Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands management area (BSAI). This action
allowed the use of BSAI arrowtooth flounder and Kamchatka flounder as
basis species for the retention of species closed to directed fishing
and was necessary to improve retention of otherwise marketable
groundfish in these BSAI fisheries. This action also included four
regulatory amendments related to harvest management of Kamchatka
flounder. Two amendments were necessary to account for Kamchatka
flounder in the same manner as arrowtooth flounder in the BSAI and to
aid in the recordkeeping, reporting, and catch accounting of flatfish
in the BSAI. The third amendment was necessary to provide NMFS the
flexibility to allocate Kamchatka flounder (and other species in the
future) to the Western Alaska Community Development Quota (CDQ) Program
in the annual harvest specifications. Through this action, NMFS
intended to promote the goals and objectives of the MSA, the Fishery
Management Plan for Groundfish of the Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands
Management Area, and other applicable law.
50. Highly Migratory Species: Atlantic Shark Management Measures;
Amendment 5a. RIN 0648-BB29 (78 FR 40318; July 3, 2013). The final rule
implemented the Final Amendment 5a to the 2006 Consolidated Atlantic
HMSFMP. In developing Amendment 5a to the 2006 Consolidated HMS FMP,
NMFS examined a full range of management alternatives to maintain
rebuilding of sandbar sharks; end overfishing and rebuild scalloped
hammerhead and Atlantic blacknose sharks; and establish a TAC and
commercial quota and recreational measures for Gulf of Mexico blacknose
and blacktip sharks, consistent with the MSA, and other applicable
laws. This final rule implemented the final conservation and management
measures in Amendment 5a to the 2006 Consolidated HMS FMP for sandbar,
scalloped hammerhead, blacknose, and Gulf of Mexico blacktip sharks.
This final rule also announced the revised 2013 annual regional quotas
for aggregated large coastal sharks (LCS), hammerhead, Gulf of Mexico
blacktip, blacknose, and non-blacknose small coastal sharks (SCS).
These changes
[[Page 60088]]
could have affected all commercial and recreational fishermen who fish
for sharks in the Atlantic Ocean, the Gulf of Mexico, and the Caribbean
Sea.
51. Fisheries of the Caribbean, Gulf of Mexico, and South Atlantic:
Reef Fish Fishery of Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands;
Parrotfish Management Measures in St. Croix. RIN 0648-BC20 (78 FR
45894; July 30, 2013). NMFS issued this final rule to implement
management measures described in Regulatory Amendment 4 to the FMP for
the Reef Fish Fishery of Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands, as
prepared by the Caribbean Fishery Management Council. This rule
established minimum size limits for parrotfish in the EEZ off St. Croix
in the U.S. Virgin Islands. The purpose of this final rule was to
provide protection from harvest to parrotfish and to assist the stock
in achieving OY. This action was conducted by NMFS under the authority
of the MSA.
52. Highly Migratory Species: 2006 Consolidated Atlantic Highly
Migratory Species Fishery Management Plan; Amendment 8. RIN 0648-BC31
(78 FR 52012; August 21, 2013). This final rule implemented Amendment 8
to the 2006 Consolidated Atlantic HMS FMP. Amendment 8 to the 2006
Consolidated HMS FMP provided additional opportunities for U.S.
fishermen to harvest swordfish using selective gears that are low in
bycatch, given their rebuilt status and increased availability. This
final rule created new and modified commercial fishing vessel permits
that allow permit holders to retain and sell a limited number of
swordfish caught on rod and reel, handline, harpoon, green-stick, or
bandit gear. Specific management measures under this final action
included the establishment of a new open access commercial swordfish
permit, modification of HMS Charter/Headboat permit regulations to
allow for the commercial retention of swordfish on non-for-hire trips,
regional swordfish retention limits for the new and modified permits,
gear authorizations, and reporting requirements. This action was
conducted by NMFS under the authority of the MSA.
53. Fisheries of the Northeastern United States: Northeast
Multispecies Fishery; Framework Adjustment 48, Framework Adjustment 50;
2013 Sector Operations Plans, Contracts, and Allocation Annual Catch
Entitlements. RIN 0648-BC27 (78 FR 53363; August 29, 2013). This final
rule finalized interim measures put in place for the May 1, 2013, start
of the NE multispecies fishing year. This action was intended to do the
following: Finalize interim rule measures put in place by FW 48, FW 50,
and in the 2013 Sector Operations Plan rulemakings; respond to public
comments received on the interim measures; and notify the public of
changes being made to Eastern U.S./Canada Area quota monitoring and
associated reporting requirements. This action was conducted by NMFS
under the authority of the MSA.
54. Atlantic Highly Migratory Species: Vessel Monitoring Systems.
RIN 0648-BD24 (78 FR 68757; November 15, 2013). NMFS modified the
reporting requirements for vessels required to use VMS units in
Atlantic HMS fisheries. This final rule required vessel owners or
operators, who have been issued HMS permits and were required to use
VMS, to provide hourly position reports 24 hours a day, 7 days a week
(24/7) via VMS. The final rule also allowed the vessel owners or
operators of such vessels to declare out of the HMS fishery when not
fishing for or retaining HMS for a period of time encompassing two or
more trips. This final action continued to provide NOAA Office of Law
Enforcement needed information on the target fishery and gear possessed
in order to facilitate enforcement of closed areas and other HMS
regulations, while reducing the reporting burden on vessel owners and
operators. This action brought HMS fisheries regulations in line with
VMS regulations in other fisheries. This rule affected all owners and/
or operators of permitted vessels that fish for HMS and are required to
use VMS. This action was conducted by NMFS under the authority of the
MSA.
55. Fisheries of the Caribbean, Gulf of Mexico, and South Atlantic:
Shrimp Fishery of the Gulf of Mexico; Establish Funding
Responsibilities for the Electronic Logbook Program. RIN 0648-BD41 (78
FR 78776; December 27, 2013). NMFS established funding responsibilities
for an upgrade to the shrimp electronic logbook (ELB) program as
described in a framework action to the FMP for the Shrimp Fishery of
the Gulf of Mexico, as prepared by the Gulf of Mexico Fishery
Management Council. Newer and more efficient ELB units have been
purchased by NMFS for the Gulf shrimp fleet and are available for
installation on Gulf shrimp vessels. Therefore, NMFS established a
cost-sharing program to fund the ELB program. NMFS paid for the
software development, data storage, effort estimation analysis, and
archival activities for the new ELB units, and selected vessel permit
holders in the Gulf shrimp fishery paid for installation and
maintenance of the new ELB units and for the data transmission from the
ELB units to a NOAA server. The purpose of these changes was to ensure
that management of the shrimp fishery is based upon the best scientific
information available and that bycatch is minimized to the extent
practicable. This action was conducted by NMFS under the authority of
the MSA.
56. Fisheries of the Caribbean, Gulf of Mexico, and South Atlantic:
Snapper-Grouper Fishery Off the Southern Atlantic States; Amendment 27.
RIN 0648-BD05 (78 FR 78770; December 27, 2013). NMFS issued this final
rule to implement Amendment 27 (Amendment 27) to the FMP for the
Snapper-Grouper Fishery of the South Atlantic Region, as prepared and
submitted by the South Atlantic Fishery Management Council. Amendment
27 and this final rule extended the South Atlantic Council's management
responsibility for Nassau grouper into the Gulf of Mexico (Gulf) EEZ;
increased the number of allowable crew members to four on dual-
permitted snapper-grouper vessels (i.e., vessels holding a South
Atlantic Charter Vessel/Headboat Permit for Snapper-Grouper and a
commercial South Atlantic Unlimited or a 225-Pound Trip Limit Snapper-
Grouper Permit) that were fishing commercially; removed the prohibition
on retaining any fish under the aggregate bag limit for grouper and
tilefish or the vermilion snapper bag limit by captains and crew of
federally permitted for-hire vessels; modified the snapper-grouper
framework procedures to allow ABCs, ACLs, and annual catch targets
(ACTs) to be adjusted via an abbreviated framework process; and removed
blue runner from the FMP. The purposes of this final rule were to
streamline management of Nassau grouper, improve vessel safety for
dual-permitted vessels, implement consistent regulations regarding
captains and crew retention limits for snapper-grouper species,
expedite adjustments to snapper-grouper catch limits when new
scientific information becomes available, and minimize socio-economic
impacts to fishermen who harvest and sell blue runner. This action was
conducted by NMFS under the authority of the MSA.
[[Page 60089]]
Availability of Completed Reviews
NMFS will make available a copy of this notice and the reviews when
complete to the public at: https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/national/laws-and-policies/guidance-conducting-economic-and-social-analyses-regulatory-actions.
Dated: September 17, 2020.
Jennifer M. Wallace,
Acting Director, Office of Sustainable Fisheries, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
[FR Doc. 2020-21075 Filed 9-22-20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-22-P