Fisheries of the Northeastern United States; Recreational Management Measures for the Summer Flounder Fishery; Fishing Year 2021, 17764-17766 [2021-07030]
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17764
Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 64 / Tuesday, April 6, 2021 / Proposed Rules
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implications as specified in Executive
Order 13132 (64 FR 43255, August 10,
1999);
• Is not an economically significant
regulatory action based on health or
safety risks subject to Executive Order
13045 (62 FR 19885, April 23, 1997);
• Is not a significant regulatory action
subject to Executive Order 13211 (66 FR
28355, May 22, 2001);
• Is not subject to requirements of
section 12(d) of the National
Technology Transfer and Advancement
Act of 1995 (15 U.S.C. 272 note) because
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• Does not provide EPA with the
discretionary authority to address, as
appropriate, disproportionate human
health or environmental effects, using
practicable and legally permissible
methods, under Executive Order 12898
(59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994).
In addition, the SIP is not approved
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not have tribal implications and will not
impose substantial direct costs on tribal
governments or preempt tribal law as
specified by Executive Order 13175 (65
FR 67249, November 9, 2000).
List of Subjects
40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air
pollution control, Carbon monoxide,
Greenhouse gases, Incorporation by
reference, Intergovernmental relations,
Lead, Nitrogen dioxide, Ozone,
Particulate matter, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Sulfur
oxides, Volatile organic compounds.
40 CFR Part 81
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with PROPOSALS
Environmental protection, Air
pollution control, National parks, and
Wilderness areas.
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
Dated: March 29, 2021.
Debra H. Thomas,
Acting Regional Administrator, Region 8.
[FR Doc. 2021–06844 Filed 4–5–21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
50 CFR Part 648
[Docket No. 210331–0074]
RIN 0648–BK32
Fisheries of the Northeastern United
States; Recreational Management
Measures for the Summer Flounder
Fishery; Fishing Year 2021
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Proposed rule; request for
comments.
AGENCY:
NMFS proposes management
measures for the 2021 summer flounder
recreational fishery. The implementing
regulations for this fishery require
NMFS to publish recreational measures
for the fishing year and to provide an
opportunity for public comment. The
intent of this action is to constrain
recreational catch to the summer
flounder recreational harvest limit and
thereby prevent overfishing on the
summer flounder stock.
DATES: Comments must be received by
April 21, 2021.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments
on this document, identified by NOAA–
NMFS–2021–0034, by the following
method:
• Electronic Submission: Submit all
electronic public comments via the
Federal e-Rulemaking Portal. Go to
https://www.regulations.gov and enter
NOAA–NMFS–2021–0034 in the Search
box. Click on the ‘‘Comment ’’ icon,
complete the required fields, and enter
or attach your comments.
Instructions: Comments sent by any
other method, to any other address or
individual or received after the end of
the comment period, may not be
considered by NMFS. All comments
received are a part of the public record
and will generally be posted for public
viewing on www.regulations.gov
without change. All personal identifying
information (e.g., name, address, etc.),
confidential business information, or
otherwise sensitive information
submitted voluntarily by the sender will
be publicly accessible. NMFS will
accept anonymous comments (enter ‘‘N/
A’’ in the required fields if you wish to
remain anonymous).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Emily Keiley, Fishery Policy Analyst,
(978) 281–9116.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
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Background
Summer flounder is cooperatively
managed by the Mid-Atlantic Fishery
Management Council and the Atlantic
States Marine Fisheries Commission.
The Council and the Commission’s
Summer Flounder Management Board
meet jointly each year to recommend
recreational management measures for
summer flounder. NMFS must
implement coastwide measures or
approve conservation equivalent
measures per 50 CFR 648.102(d) as soon
as possible following the Council and
Commission’s recommendation. This
action proposes maintaining
conservation equivalency for 2021, as
jointly recommended by the Council
and Board.
Recreational Management Measures
Process
The Summer Flounder, Scup, and
Black Sea Bass Fishery Management
Plan (FMP) establishes a Monitoring
Committee for summer flounder
consisting of representatives from the
Commission, the Council, state marine
fishery agencies from Massachusetts to
North Carolina, and NMFS. The FMP’s
implementing regulations require the
Monitoring Committee to review
scientific and other relevant information
annually. The objective of this review is
to recommend management measures to
the Council that will constrain landings
within the recreational harvest limit
(RHL) for the upcoming fishing year.
The FMP limits the choices for the types
of measures to minimum and/or
maximum fish size, per angler
possession limit, and fishing season.
The Council and the Board then
consider the Monitoring Committee’s
recommendations and any public
comment in making their
recommendations. The Council
forwards its recommendations to NMFS
for review. The Commission similarly
adopts recommendations for the states.
NMFS is required to review the
Council’s recommendations to ensure
that they are consistent with the target
specified for summer flounder in the
FMP and with all applicable laws and
Executive Orders before ultimately
implementing measures for Federal
waters. Commission measures are final
at the time they are adopted.
Summer Flounder Conservation
Equivalency Process
Conservation equivalency, as
established by Framework Adjustment 2
(66 FR 36208; July 11, 2001), allows
each state to establish its own
recreational management measures
(possession limits, size limits, and
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06APP1
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 64 / Tuesday, April 6, 2021 / Proposed Rules
fishing seasons) to achieve its state
management target partitioned by the
Commission from the coastwide RHL, as
long as the combined effect of all of the
states’ management measures achieves
the same level of conservation as would
Federal coastwide measures. Framework
Adjustment 6 (71 FR 42315; July 26,
2006) allowed states to form regions for
conservation equivalency in order to
minimize differences in regulations for
anglers fishing in adjacent waters.
The Council and Board annually
recommend that either state- or regionspecific recreational measures be
developed (conservation equivalency) or
that coastwide management measures be
implemented to ensure that the RHL
will not be exceeded. Even when the
Council and Board recommend
conservation equivalency, the Council
must specify a set of non-preferred
coastwide measures that would apply if
conservation equivalency is not
approved for use in Federal waters.
When conservation equivalency is
recommended, and following
confirmation by the Commission that
the proposed state or regional measures
developed through its technical and
policy review processes achieve
conservation equivalency, NMFS may
waive, for the duration of the fishing
year, the permit condition found at 50
CFR 648.4(b), which requires Federal
permit holders to comply with the more
restrictive management measures when
state and Federal measures differ. In
such a situation, federally permitted
summer flounder charter/party permit
holders and individuals fishing for
summer flounder in the exclusive
economic zone (EEZ) are subject to the
recreational fishing measures
implemented by the state in which they
land summer flounder, rather than the
coastwide measures. Conservation
equivilancy expires at the end of each
fishing year (December 31).
In addition, the Council and the
Board must recommend precautionary
default measures when recommending
conservation equivalency. The
Commission would require adoption of
the precautionary default measures by
any state that either does not submit a
summer flounder management proposal
to the Commission’s Summer Flounder
Technical Committee or that submits
measures that are not conservationally
equivalent to the coastwide measures.
The development of conservation
equivalency measures happens at both
the Commission and the individual state
level. The selection of appropriate data
and analytical techniques for technical
review of potential state conservation
equivalent measures and the process by
which the Commission evaluates and
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recommends proposed conservation
equivalent measures are wholly a
function of the Commission and its
individual member states. Individuals
seeking information regarding the
process to develop specific state or
regional measures or the Commission
process for technical evaluation of
proposed measures should contact the
marine fisheries agency in the state of
interest, the Commission, or both.
Once the states and regions select
their final 2021 summer flounder
management measures through their
respective development, analytical, and
review processes and submit them to
the Commission, the Commission will
conduct further review and evaluation
of the submitted proposals, ultimately
notifying NMFS as to which proposals
have been approved or disapproved.
NMFS has no overarching authority in
the development of state or Commission
management measures but is an equal
participant in the review process, along
with all the member states. NMFS
neither approves nor implements
individual states’ measures, but retains
the final authority either to approve or
to disapprove the use in Federal waters
of conservation equivalency in place of
the coastwide measures. NMFS will
publish its determination on 2021
conservational equivalency as a final
rule in the Federal Register following
review of the Commission’s
determination and any public comment
on this proposed rule.
2021 Summer Flounder Recreational
Management Measures
In a typical year, preliminary catch
and effort data through Wave 5
(September–October) are used to
evaluate the performance of recreational
management measures and propose any
changes for the following year to
achieve the RHL. However, due to the
COVID–19 pandemic, no recreational
catch estimates are available for 2020.
Nevertheless, regional effort data are
available for consideration because the
Fishing Effort Survey had no
interruption in distribution, and
response rates are similar or higher than
usual. Preliminary data suggest that
effort in 2020 was similar to 2019 effort.
In fishing year 2019, recreational
summer flounder landings exceeded the
RHL by only 1 percent. The 2021 RHL
(8.32 million lb, 3,774 mt) is 8 percent
higher than the 2019 and 2020 RHLs.
Based on the Council’s and the
Board’s recommendations, and as part
of the conservation equivalency process,
NMFS also proposes a suite of nonpreferred coastwide measures identified
by the Council and Board, which would
be in effect should NMFS not approve
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Sfmt 4702
17765
conservation equivalency. These
measures are expected to constrain the
overall recreational landings to the 2021
recreational harvest limit, should
conservation equivalency be
disapproved based on the Commission’s
recommendation letter. For 2021, nonpreferred coastwide measures approved
by the Council and Board are a 19-inch
(48.3-cm) minimum fish size, a 4-fish
per person possession limit, and an
open season of May 15–September 15.
These measures are identical to the nonpreferred 2020 coastwide measures. The
coastwide measures become the default
management measures in the
subsequent fishing year, in this case
2022, until the joint process establishes
either coastwide or conservation
equivalency measures for the next year.
The 2021 precautionary default
measures recommended by the Council
and Board are identical to those in place
for 2020: A 20.0-inch (50.8-cm)
minimum fish size; a 2-fish per person
possession limit; and an open season of
July 1–August 31, 2021. These measures
may be assigned by the Commission in
the event that conservation equivalency
is approved but a state or region does
not submit a conservationally
equivalent proposal.
Similar to 2016–2020, the 2021
management program adopted by the
Commission divides the coastline into
six management regions: (1)
Massachusetts; (2) Rhode Island; (3)
Connecticut and New York; (4) New
Jersey; (5) Delaware, Maryland, and
Virginia; and (6) North Carolina. Each
state within a region must implement
identical or equivalent measures (size
limit, bag limit, and fishing season
length), and the combination of those
measures must be sufficient to constrain
landings to the RHL.
All state regulations are expected to
remain at the status quo from 2020, with
the exception of minor changes in New
Jersey and Massachusetts. New Jersey is
proposing an adjustment to the season
to allow for a start date of May 28, 2021,
coinciding with the Friday before
Memorial Day, as was practiced over the
last several years. Massachusetts is
considering changing the opening date
so that it is a Saturday, consistent with
prior years. Saturday, May 15 and
Saturday, May 22 are the two Saturday
alternatives under consideration. The
final combination of state measures will
be detailed in a letter from the
Commission to the Regional Office
certifying that the combination of state
and regional measures have met the
conservation objectives under
Addendum XXXII to the Commission’s
Interstate FMP and are expected to
constrain catch to the 2021 RHL. After
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17766
Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 64 / Tuesday, April 6, 2021 / Proposed Rules
that letter is received, NMFS will
publish a final recreational management
measures rule with a conservation
equivalency determination for 2021.
Classification
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with PROPOSALS
Pursuant to section 304(b)(1)(A) of the
Magnuson-Stevens Act, the Assistant
Administrator has determined that this
proposed rule is consistent with the
Summer Flounder, Scup, and Black Sea
Bass FMP, other provisions of the
Magnuson-Stevens Act, and other
applicable law, subject to further
consideration after public comment.
This proposed rule has been
determined to be not significant for
purposes of Executive Order 12866.
The Chief Counsel for Regulation of
the Department of Commerce certified
to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the
Small Business Administration (SBA)
that this proposed rule, if adopted,
would not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities. The Council conducted an
evaluation of the potential
socioeconomic impacts of the proposed
measures. According to the commercial
ownership database, 379 for-hire
affiliate firms generated revenues from
recreational fishing for various species
during the 2017–2019 period. All of
those business affiliates are categorized
as small businesses. The SBA defines a
small for-hire recreational fishing
business as a firm with receipts of up to
$7.5 million. Estimating what
proportion of the overall revenues of
these for-hire firms came from fishing
activities for an individual species is not
possible. Nevertheless, given the
popularity of summer flounder as a
recreational species in the Mid-Atlantic
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17:04 Apr 05, 2021
Jkt 253001
and New England, revenues generated
from summer flounder are likely very
important for many of these firms at
certain times of the year. The 3-year
average (2017–2019) combined gross
receipts (all for-hire fishing activity
combined) for these small entities was
$50,625,923, ranging from less than
$10,000 for 111 entities (lowest value
$85) to over $1,000,000 for 9 entities
(highest value $3.1 million).
This proposed action would waive
Federal measures in lieu of state
measures designed to reach the 2021
harvest limit. The economic impacts of
the proposed measures in this action
will be affected in part by the specific
set of measures implemented at the state
level for summer flounder conservation
equivalency. The impacts are likely to
vary by state, but with two minor
exceptions, measures are the same as
those in place for 2020. The summer
flounder recreational measures under
conservation equivalency are expected
to neither reduce nor increase
recreational satisfaction or for-hire
revenues when compared to 2020.
Demand for for-hire trips is expected to
remain approximately the same as in
2020. Thus, market demand is expected
to be similar in 2021, although this is
likely to vary by state, depending on
each state’s current measures and how
they choose to modify them in 2021.
Because the 2021 measures are
expected to be mostly identical to 2020,
this rule will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. Therefore, an
initial regulatory flexibility analysis is
not required and none has been
prepared.
PO 00000
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This proposed rule contains no
information collection requirements
under the Paperwork Reduction Act of
1995.
List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 648
Fisheries, Fishing, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
Dated: March 31, 2021.
Samuel D. Rauch, III
Deputy Assistant Administrator for
Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
For the reasons set out in the
preamble, 50 CFR part 648 is proposed
to be amended as follows:
PART 648—FISHERIES OF THE
NORTHEASTERN UNITED STATES
1. The authority citation for part 648
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
2. In § 648.107, revise paragraph (a)
introductory text to read as follows:
■
§ 648.107 Conservation equivalent
measures for the summer flounder fishery.
(a) The Regional Administrator has
determined that the recreational fishing
measures proposed to be implemented
by the states of Maine through North
Carolina for 2021 are the conservation
equivalent of the season, size limits, and
possession limit prescribed in
§§ 648.104(b), 648.105, and 648.106.
This determination is based on a
recommendation from the Summer
Flounder Board of the Atlantic States
Marine Fisheries Commission.
*
*
*
*
*
[FR Doc. 2021–07030 Filed 4–5–21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
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06APP1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 86, Number 64 (Tuesday, April 6, 2021)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 17764-17766]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2021-07030]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
50 CFR Part 648
[Docket No. 210331-0074]
RIN 0648-BK32
Fisheries of the Northeastern United States; Recreational
Management Measures for the Summer Flounder Fishery; Fishing Year 2021
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Proposed rule; request for comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: NMFS proposes management measures for the 2021 summer flounder
recreational fishery. The implementing regulations for this fishery
require NMFS to publish recreational measures for the fishing year and
to provide an opportunity for public comment. The intent of this action
is to constrain recreational catch to the summer flounder recreational
harvest limit and thereby prevent overfishing on the summer flounder
stock.
DATES: Comments must be received by April 21, 2021.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments on this document, identified by
NOAA-NMFS-2021-0034, by the following method:
Electronic Submission: Submit all electronic public
comments via the Federal e-Rulemaking Portal. Go to https://www.regulations.gov and enter NOAA-NMFS-2021-0034 in the Search box.
Click on the ``Comment '' icon, complete the required fields, and enter
or attach your comments.
Instructions: Comments sent by any other method, to any other
address or individual or received after the end of the comment period,
may not be considered by NMFS. All comments received are a part of the
public record and will generally be posted for public viewing on
www.regulations.gov without change. All personal identifying
information (e.g., name, address, etc.), confidential business
information, or otherwise sensitive information submitted voluntarily
by the sender will be publicly accessible. NMFS will accept anonymous
comments (enter ``N/A'' in the required fields if you wish to remain
anonymous).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Emily Keiley, Fishery Policy Analyst,
(978) 281-9116.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
Summer flounder is cooperatively managed by the Mid-Atlantic
Fishery Management Council and the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries
Commission. The Council and the Commission's Summer Flounder Management
Board meet jointly each year to recommend recreational management
measures for summer flounder. NMFS must implement coastwide measures or
approve conservation equivalent measures per 50 CFR 648.102(d) as soon
as possible following the Council and Commission's recommendation. This
action proposes maintaining conservation equivalency for 2021, as
jointly recommended by the Council and Board.
Recreational Management Measures Process
The Summer Flounder, Scup, and Black Sea Bass Fishery Management
Plan (FMP) establishes a Monitoring Committee for summer flounder
consisting of representatives from the Commission, the Council, state
marine fishery agencies from Massachusetts to North Carolina, and NMFS.
The FMP's implementing regulations require the Monitoring Committee to
review scientific and other relevant information annually. The
objective of this review is to recommend management measures to the
Council that will constrain landings within the recreational harvest
limit (RHL) for the upcoming fishing year. The FMP limits the choices
for the types of measures to minimum and/or maximum fish size, per
angler possession limit, and fishing season.
The Council and the Board then consider the Monitoring Committee's
recommendations and any public comment in making their recommendations.
The Council forwards its recommendations to NMFS for review. The
Commission similarly adopts recommendations for the states. NMFS is
required to review the Council's recommendations to ensure that they
are consistent with the target specified for summer flounder in the FMP
and with all applicable laws and Executive Orders before ultimately
implementing measures for Federal waters. Commission measures are final
at the time they are adopted.
Summer Flounder Conservation Equivalency Process
Conservation equivalency, as established by Framework Adjustment 2
(66 FR 36208; July 11, 2001), allows each state to establish its own
recreational management measures (possession limits, size limits, and
[[Page 17765]]
fishing seasons) to achieve its state management target partitioned by
the Commission from the coastwide RHL, as long as the combined effect
of all of the states' management measures achieves the same level of
conservation as would Federal coastwide measures. Framework Adjustment
6 (71 FR 42315; July 26, 2006) allowed states to form regions for
conservation equivalency in order to minimize differences in
regulations for anglers fishing in adjacent waters.
The Council and Board annually recommend that either state- or
region-specific recreational measures be developed (conservation
equivalency) or that coastwide management measures be implemented to
ensure that the RHL will not be exceeded. Even when the Council and
Board recommend conservation equivalency, the Council must specify a
set of non-preferred coastwide measures that would apply if
conservation equivalency is not approved for use in Federal waters.
When conservation equivalency is recommended, and following
confirmation by the Commission that the proposed state or regional
measures developed through its technical and policy review processes
achieve conservation equivalency, NMFS may waive, for the duration of
the fishing year, the permit condition found at 50 CFR 648.4(b), which
requires Federal permit holders to comply with the more restrictive
management measures when state and Federal measures differ. In such a
situation, federally permitted summer flounder charter/party permit
holders and individuals fishing for summer flounder in the exclusive
economic zone (EEZ) are subject to the recreational fishing measures
implemented by the state in which they land summer flounder, rather
than the coastwide measures. Conservation equivilancy expires at the
end of each fishing year (December 31).
In addition, the Council and the Board must recommend precautionary
default measures when recommending conservation equivalency. The
Commission would require adoption of the precautionary default measures
by any state that either does not submit a summer flounder management
proposal to the Commission's Summer Flounder Technical Committee or
that submits measures that are not conservationally equivalent to the
coastwide measures.
The development of conservation equivalency measures happens at
both the Commission and the individual state level. The selection of
appropriate data and analytical techniques for technical review of
potential state conservation equivalent measures and the process by
which the Commission evaluates and recommends proposed conservation
equivalent measures are wholly a function of the Commission and its
individual member states. Individuals seeking information regarding the
process to develop specific state or regional measures or the
Commission process for technical evaluation of proposed measures should
contact the marine fisheries agency in the state of interest, the
Commission, or both.
Once the states and regions select their final 2021 summer flounder
management measures through their respective development, analytical,
and review processes and submit them to the Commission, the Commission
will conduct further review and evaluation of the submitted proposals,
ultimately notifying NMFS as to which proposals have been approved or
disapproved. NMFS has no overarching authority in the development of
state or Commission management measures but is an equal participant in
the review process, along with all the member states. NMFS neither
approves nor implements individual states' measures, but retains the
final authority either to approve or to disapprove the use in Federal
waters of conservation equivalency in place of the coastwide measures.
NMFS will publish its determination on 2021 conservational equivalency
as a final rule in the Federal Register following review of the
Commission's determination and any public comment on this proposed
rule.
2021 Summer Flounder Recreational Management Measures
In a typical year, preliminary catch and effort data through Wave 5
(September-October) are used to evaluate the performance of
recreational management measures and propose any changes for the
following year to achieve the RHL. However, due to the COVID-19
pandemic, no recreational catch estimates are available for 2020.
Nevertheless, regional effort data are available for consideration
because the Fishing Effort Survey had no interruption in distribution,
and response rates are similar or higher than usual. Preliminary data
suggest that effort in 2020 was similar to 2019 effort. In fishing year
2019, recreational summer flounder landings exceeded the RHL by only 1
percent. The 2021 RHL (8.32 million lb, 3,774 mt) is 8 percent higher
than the 2019 and 2020 RHLs.
Based on the Council's and the Board's recommendations, and as part
of the conservation equivalency process, NMFS also proposes a suite of
non-preferred coastwide measures identified by the Council and Board,
which would be in effect should NMFS not approve conservation
equivalency. These measures are expected to constrain the overall
recreational landings to the 2021 recreational harvest limit, should
conservation equivalency be disapproved based on the Commission's
recommendation letter. For 2021, non-preferred coastwide measures
approved by the Council and Board are a 19-inch (48.3-cm) minimum fish
size, a 4-fish per person possession limit, and an open season of May
15-September 15. These measures are identical to the non-preferred 2020
coastwide measures. The coastwide measures become the default
management measures in the subsequent fishing year, in this case 2022,
until the joint process establishes either coastwide or conservation
equivalency measures for the next year.
The 2021 precautionary default measures recommended by the Council
and Board are identical to those in place for 2020: A 20.0-inch (50.8-
cm) minimum fish size; a 2-fish per person possession limit; and an
open season of July 1-August 31, 2021. These measures may be assigned
by the Commission in the event that conservation equivalency is
approved but a state or region does not submit a conservationally
equivalent proposal.
Similar to 2016-2020, the 2021 management program adopted by the
Commission divides the coastline into six management regions: (1)
Massachusetts; (2) Rhode Island; (3) Connecticut and New York; (4) New
Jersey; (5) Delaware, Maryland, and Virginia; and (6) North Carolina.
Each state within a region must implement identical or equivalent
measures (size limit, bag limit, and fishing season length), and the
combination of those measures must be sufficient to constrain landings
to the RHL.
All state regulations are expected to remain at the status quo from
2020, with the exception of minor changes in New Jersey and
Massachusetts. New Jersey is proposing an adjustment to the season to
allow for a start date of May 28, 2021, coinciding with the Friday
before Memorial Day, as was practiced over the last several years.
Massachusetts is considering changing the opening date so that it is a
Saturday, consistent with prior years. Saturday, May 15 and Saturday,
May 22 are the two Saturday alternatives under consideration. The final
combination of state measures will be detailed in a letter from the
Commission to the Regional Office certifying that the combination of
state and regional measures have met the conservation objectives under
Addendum XXXII to the Commission's Interstate FMP and are expected to
constrain catch to the 2021 RHL. After
[[Page 17766]]
that letter is received, NMFS will publish a final recreational
management measures rule with a conservation equivalency determination
for 2021.
Classification
Pursuant to section 304(b)(1)(A) of the Magnuson-Stevens Act, the
Assistant Administrator has determined that this proposed rule is
consistent with the Summer Flounder, Scup, and Black Sea Bass FMP,
other provisions of the Magnuson-Stevens Act, and other applicable law,
subject to further consideration after public comment.
This proposed rule has been determined to be not significant for
purposes of Executive Order 12866.
The Chief Counsel for Regulation of the Department of Commerce
certified to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small Business
Administration (SBA) that this proposed rule, if adopted, would not
have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small
entities. The Council conducted an evaluation of the potential
socioeconomic impacts of the proposed measures. According to the
commercial ownership database, 379 for-hire affiliate firms generated
revenues from recreational fishing for various species during the 2017-
2019 period. All of those business affiliates are categorized as small
businesses. The SBA defines a small for-hire recreational fishing
business as a firm with receipts of up to $7.5 million. Estimating what
proportion of the overall revenues of these for-hire firms came from
fishing activities for an individual species is not possible.
Nevertheless, given the popularity of summer flounder as a recreational
species in the Mid-Atlantic and New England, revenues generated from
summer flounder are likely very important for many of these firms at
certain times of the year. The 3-year average (2017-2019) combined
gross receipts (all for-hire fishing activity combined) for these small
entities was $50,625,923, ranging from less than $10,000 for 111
entities (lowest value $85) to over $1,000,000 for 9 entities (highest
value $3.1 million).
This proposed action would waive Federal measures in lieu of state
measures designed to reach the 2021 harvest limit. The economic impacts
of the proposed measures in this action will be affected in part by the
specific set of measures implemented at the state level for summer
flounder conservation equivalency. The impacts are likely to vary by
state, but with two minor exceptions, measures are the same as those in
place for 2020. The summer flounder recreational measures under
conservation equivalency are expected to neither reduce nor increase
recreational satisfaction or for-hire revenues when compared to 2020.
Demand for for-hire trips is expected to remain approximately the same
as in 2020. Thus, market demand is expected to be similar in 2021,
although this is likely to vary by state, depending on each state's
current measures and how they choose to modify them in 2021.
Because the 2021 measures are expected to be mostly identical to
2020, this rule will not have a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities. Therefore, an initial regulatory
flexibility analysis is not required and none has been prepared.
This proposed rule contains no information collection requirements
under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995.
List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 648
Fisheries, Fishing, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
Dated: March 31, 2021.
Samuel D. Rauch, III
Deputy Assistant Administrator for Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
For the reasons set out in the preamble, 50 CFR part 648 is
proposed to be amended as follows:
PART 648--FISHERIES OF THE NORTHEASTERN UNITED STATES
0
1. The authority citation for part 648 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
0
2. In Sec. 648.107, revise paragraph (a) introductory text to read as
follows:
Sec. 648.107 Conservation equivalent measures for the summer flounder
fishery.
(a) The Regional Administrator has determined that the recreational
fishing measures proposed to be implemented by the states of Maine
through North Carolina for 2021 are the conservation equivalent of the
season, size limits, and possession limit prescribed in Sec. Sec.
648.104(b), 648.105, and 648.106. This determination is based on a
recommendation from the Summer Flounder Board of the Atlantic States
Marine Fisheries Commission.
* * * * *
[FR Doc. 2021-07030 Filed 4-5-21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-22-P