Fisheries off West Coast States; Pacific Coast Groundfish Fishery; Electronic Monitoring Program Regulations for Bottom Trawl and Non-Whiting Midwater Trawl Vessels, 11382-11394 [2022-03516]
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Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 40 / Tuesday, March 1, 2022 / Proposed Rules
compliance and reporting requirements
under the rule for such small entities;
(3) the use of performance rather than
design standards; and (4) an exemption
from coverage of the rule, or any part
thereof, for such small entities.
17. OEA and WTB have taken steps to
minimize any economic impact of the
auction procedures on small entities
through, among other things, the
Commission’s potential use of
previously detailed auction procedures
under the revised inventory. The
Commission received comments noting
discrepancies in the initial Auction 108
inventory that the Commission released
with the Auction 108 Comment Pubic
Notice. The revised inventory will allow
all interested parties, including small
entities, to further evaluate the potential
procedures for Auction 108 in light of
the new licenses included in the revised
inventory and provide small entities
with information about the available
licenses essential to conducting their
own due diligence.
18. OEA and WTB have also taken
steps to minimize any economic impact
of the auction procedures on small
entities through, among other things, the
many resources the Commission
provides potential auction participants.
These resources, which are described in
detail in the Supplemental IRFA
incorporated into the Auction 108
Comment Public Notice are provided at
no cost and include, for example, access
to an FCC Auctions Hotline for
information about the auction process
and procedures; an FCC Auctions
Technical Support Hotline for technical
assistance on issues such as access to or
navigation within the electronic FCC
Form 175 and use of the FCC’s auction
bidding system; a web-based, interactive
online tutorial produced by Commission
staff to familiarize applicants with
auction procedures, filing requirements,
bidding procedures, and other matters
related to an auction; the opportunity to
participate in a mock auction; and the
opportunity to participate in Auction
108 electronically via the internet.
Additionally, eligible small businesses
and rural service providers will be able
to participate in the bidding credit
program for Auction 108, which may
lower their relative costs of
participation. In the Auction 108
Revised Inventory Comment Public
Notice, OEA and WTB incorporate by
reference the description of the
additional steps taken to minimize the
significant economic impact on small
entities, and significant alternatives
considered, from the Regulatory
Flexibility Analysis in the Auction 108
Comment Public Notice and Auction
108 Further Comment Public Notice.
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19. These procedures for the conduct
of Auction 108 on which the Auction
108 Revised Inventory Comment Public
Notice seeks comment constitute the
more specific implementation of the
competitive bidding rules contemplated
by 47 CFR parts 1 and 27, the 2.5 GHz
Report and Order, and relevant
competitive bidding orders, and are
fully consistent therewith.
20. Federal Rules that May Duplicate,
Overlap, or Conflict with the Proposed
Rules. None.
B. Deadlines and Filing Procedures
21. Pursuant to 47 CFR 1.415(d) and
1.419, interested parties may file
comments on or before the date
indicated on the first page of the
Auction 108 Revised Inventory
Comment Public Notice, in AU Docket
No. 20–429. Comments may be filed
using the Commission’s Electronic
Comment Filing System (ECFS) or by
filing paper copies.
22. Ex Parte Requirements. This
proceeding has been designated as a
permit-but-disclose proceeding in
accordance with the Commission’s ex
parte rules. Persons making oral ex parte
presentations must file a copy of any
written presentations or memoranda
summarizing any oral presentation
within two business days after the
presentation (unless a different deadline
applicable to the Sunshine Period
applies). Persons making oral ex parte
presentations are reminded that
memoranda summarizing the
presentations must (1) list all persons
attending or otherwise participating in
the meeting at which the ex parte
presentation was made, and (2)
summarize all data presented and
arguments made during the
presentation. If the presentation
consisted in whole or in part of the
presentation of data or arguments
already reflected in the presenter’s
written comments, memoranda, or other
filings in the proceeding, the presenter
may provide citations to such data or
arguments in his or her prior comments,
memoranda, or other filings (specifying
the relevant page and/or paragraph
numbers where such data or arguments
can be found) in lieu of summarizing
them in the memorandum. Documents
shown or given to the Commission staff
during ex parte meetings are deemed to
be written ex parte presentations and
must be filed consistent with 47 CFR
1.1206(b). In proceedings governed by
47 CFR 1.49(f) or for which the
Commission has made available a
method of electronic filing, written ex
parte presentations and memoranda
summarizing oral ex parte
presentations, and all attachments
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thereto, must be filed through the
electronic comment filing system
available for that proceeding, and must
be filed in their native format (e.g., .doc,
.xml, .ppt, searchable .pdf). Participants
in this proceeding should familiarize
themselves with the Commission’s ex
parte rules.
Federal Communications Commission.
William Huber,
Associate Chief, Auctions Division, Office of
Economics and Analytics.
[FR Doc. 2022–04006 Filed 2–28–22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6712–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
50 CFR Part 660
[Docket No. 220204–0040]
RIN 0648–BH70
Fisheries off West Coast States;
Pacific Coast Groundfish Fishery;
Electronic Monitoring Program
Regulations for Bottom Trawl and NonWhiting Midwater Trawl Vessels
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Proposed rule; request for
comments.
AGENCY:
This proposed rule would
implement electronic monitoring (EM)
program regulations for vessels using
groundfish bottom trawl and nonwhiting midwater trawl gear in the
Pacific Coast Groundfish Trawl Catch
Share Program. The proposed action
would allow vessels using bottom trawl
and non-whiting midwater trawl gear to
use EM in place of human observers to
meet requirements for 100 percent at-sea
catch monitoring. The proposed action
is intended to increase operational
flexibility and reduce monitoring costs
for vessels in the groundfish trawl
fishery. The proposed rule would also
revise some existing regulations for EM
vessels and EM service providers to
clarify and streamline EM program
requirements.
SUMMARY:
Comments on this proposed rule
must be received no later than March
31, 2022.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments
on this document, identified by NOAA–
NMFS–2021–0127 by any of the
following methods:
• Electronic Submission: Submit all
electronic public comments via the
DATES:
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Federal e-Rulemaking Portal. Go to
https://www.regulations.gov and enter
NOAA–NMFS–2021–0127 in the Search
box, click 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).
Written comments regarding the
burden-hour estimates or other aspects
of the collection-of-information
requirements contained in this proposed
rule may be submitted to NMFS and to
www.reginfo.gov/public/do/PRAMain.
Find this particular information
collection by selecting ‘‘Currently under
30-day Review—Open for Public
Comments’’ or by using the search
function.
Electronic Access
This proposed rule is accessible at the
Office of the Federal Register website at
https://www.federalregister.gov.
Background information and documents
are available at the NMFS West Coast
Region website at: https://
www.fisheries.noaa.gov/species/westcoast-groundfish and at the Pacific
Fishery Management Council’s website
at https://www.pcouncil.org/managed_
fishery/electronic-monitoring/.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Colin Sayre, phone: 206–526–4656, or
email: colin.sayre@noaa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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I. Background
The Pacific Coast Groundfish Fishery
Management Plan (FMP) specifies
management measures for over 90
different groundfish species in Federal
waters off the West Coast states. Target
species in the commercial fishery
include Pacific whiting (hake),
sablefish, dover sole, and rockfish,
which are harvested by vessels
primarily using midwater trawl and
bottom trawl gear, and to a lesser extent
‘‘fixed gear’’ fish pots and longline. The
trawl fishery is managed under the West
Coast Groundfish Trawl Catch Share
Program (Catch Share Program), which
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was implemented through Amendment
20 to the FMP in January 2011. The
Catch Share Program consists of an
individual fishing quota (IFQ) program
for the shorebased trawl fishery
(including whiting and non-whiting
sectors), and cooperatives for the at-sea
mothership (MS) and catcher/processor
(C/P) trawl fisheries (whiting only). The
Catch Share Program requires 100
percent monitoring of vessels at-sea, and
dockside when offloading, to ensure
accountability for all landings and
discards of allocated IFQ species. The
West Coast Groundfish Observer
Program (WCGOP) is responsible for the
training, briefing, and in-season support
of at-sea observers in the Catch Share
Program. WCGOP helps to manage and
review the catch data collected by
observers while at-sea.
Vessel owners and first receivers are
responsible for obtaining and funding
catch share observers and catch
monitors as a condition of participating
in the Catch Share Program. To provide
a potential cost-saving alternative to
human observers, the Pacific Fishery
Management Council, NMFS, and
groundfish stakeholders have been
developing an electronic monitoring
(EM) program as an option to meet atsea monitoring requirements of the
Catch Share Program. EM uses cameras
and associated sensors to record and
monitor fishing activities while a vessel
is operating at sea. Video data is later
reviewed by an analyst onshore to
collect catch and effort information. EM
can reduce monitoring costs for some
vessels because it does not require
deploying a human observer to the
vessel, and associated, labor, travel, and
logistical expenses.
On September 6, 2016, NMFS
published the proposed rule providing a
regulatory framework for EM in the
Pacific Coast groundfish fisheries, and
specific regulations for EM use with
whiting midwater trawl gear and fixed
gear (81 FR 61161). As discussed in that
proposed rule, the Council originally
contemplated including regulations for
all gear types used in the Catch Share
Program (whiting, non-whiting
midwater, bottom trawl, and fixed gear)
in one regulatory amendment. However,
at the time, additional information was
needed to finalize protocols for the use
of EM on trips using bottom-trawl and
non-whiting midwater gear. In April,
September, and November 2017, the
Council discussed various aspects of the
EM program and took final action to
recommend the use of EM with bottom
trawl and non-whiting midwater trawl
gear.
On June 28, 2019, NMFS published
the final rule to allow the use of EM on
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whiting and fixed gear trips (84 FR
31146). The final rule established the
overall EM program requirements,
including an application process and
responsibilities for participating vessel
owners and operators and EM service
providers, requirements for first
receivers receiving catch from EM trips,
and detailed gear-specific protocols for
the use of EM on whiting and fixed gear
trips. The final rule also set the
implementation of third party EM
service provider data services to January
1, 2021, to provide additional time to
prepare for implementation.
At the April and June 2020 meetings,
the Council considered and ultimately
recommended other minor regulatory
changes to existing EM program
regulations implemented under the June
2019 final rule (84 FR 31146; June 28,
2019). These regulatory changes were
identified and developed from
information collected through exempted
fishing permits (EFPs) used to test EM
systems and protocols, and are intended
to clarify and streamline EM program
requirements. These proposed
regulatory changes are included under
this proposed rule, and are described in
the following sections of this preamble.
At its April and June 2020 meetings
the Council also recommended a delay
in program implementation until
January 1, 2022. NMFS approved the
recommendation, to strengthen Council
and industry support for the EM
program, and to increase participation
when the program is implemented.
NMFS published a subsequent proposed
rule (85 FR 53313; August 28, 2020) and
final rule (85 FR 74614; November 23,
2020) that delayed implementation of
the EM program by one year until
January 1, 2022, to provide additional
time for industry and prospective
service providers to prepare for
implementation.
At the June 2021 meeting, the Council
again discussed delaying
implementation of all EM program
regulations, and took action at the
September 2021 meeting to recommend
that NMFS delay implementation of the
entire EM program until January 1,
2024. NMFS published an interim final
rule on October 6, 2021 (86 FR 55525)
that changed effective dates in
regulations in order to delay all other
EM program regulations until at least
January 1, 2024, and only after NMFS
issues a public notice at least 90
calendar days before it will begin
accepting applications for EM
Authorizations for the first year of the
Program. The Council and the industry
have expressed the need to further
develop a mechanism for the industry to
fund video review and storage by Pacific
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States Marine Fishery Commission
(PSMFC). The Council and members of
the fishing industry would like PSMFC
to continue participating as a NMFScertified, sole-source service provider
under the EM regulatory program. They
assert that PSMFC can provide video
review services at lower cost than
private sector service provider
companies. Consistent with the existing
regulations implemented under the
October 6, 2021 interim final rule (86 FR
55525), these proposed regulations
would similarly not be implemented
before January 1, 2024.
Despite the delay in implementation
of the EM program, NMFS is proceeding
with this proposed rule that would
allow the use of EM on trips with
bottom-trawl and non-whiting midwater
trawl gear. Should the Council take
action to change EM service provider
regulations to allow PSMFC to function
as a sole-source EM service provider,
NMFS would need to initiate a separate
proposed and final rulemaking to make
necessary changes to the existing
regulations for EM service providers
that were finalized under the June 2019
final rule (84 FR 31146; June 28, 2019).
Whether the Council chooses to take
action to change EM service provider
regulations, or not, completing the
rulemaking process for the use of EM on
bottom-trawl and non-whiting midwater
trawl trips will ensure all regulations
are in place for vessels to use EM with
any legal groundfish gear type in
advance of EM program
implementation.
In the October 2021 interim final rule,
NMFS acknowledged that some permit
applications had already been received
at the time of the rulemaking. NMFS
will consider and review these
applications in advance of the date the
program is fully implemented. Upon
review NMFS will make a
determination regarding the status of the
applicant and may request updated
information.
The Council deemed the proposed
regulations necessary and appropriate to
implement this action in a January 20,
2022, letter from Council Executive
Director, Merrick Burden, to Regional
Administrator Barry Thom. Under the
Magnuson-Stevens Fishery
Conservation and Management Act
(Magnuson-Stevens Act), NMFS is
required to publish proposed rules for
comment after preliminarily
determining whether they are consistent
with applicable law. We are seeking
comment on the proposed regulations in
this action and whether they are
consistent with the Pacific Coast
Groundfish FMP, the Magnuson-Stevens
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Act and its National Standards, and
other applicable laws.
II. Proposed Regulations
Proposed Measures for Using EM on
Bottom Trawl and Non-Whiting
Midwater Trawl Trips
The June 2019 final rule (84 FR
31146; June 28, 2019) implemented the
overall framework and general
requirements for the EM Program,
including an application process for
vessel owners and EM service providers
and responsibilities for all program
participants. This rule proposes to allow
vessels participating in the EM Program
to use bottom trawl gear or midwater
trawl gear targeting non-whiting species,
under the same general program
requirements already in place for trips
targeting whiting or using fixed gear.
Vessel owners would be able to apply to
NMFS to use EM in place of human
observers to meet the 100-percent at-sea
monitoring requirements of the Catch
Share Program for bottom trawl or nonwhiting midwater trawl trips. As is
currently required under the EM
Program regulations, vessel owners
intending to use EM for bottom trawl or
non-whiting midwater trawl trips would
be required to develop a vessel
monitoring plan (VMP) which
documents installation of EM systems,
including specific plans and procedures
for system operation, maintenance, and
catch handling. This information would
be submitted to NMFS for review as part
of the vessel’s application for
authorization to use EM. The vessel
operator would be required to record
discards of IFQ species on a logbook,
which would initially be used to debit
quota pounds from the vessel’s account.
The EM video data would then be
reviewed by the vessel’s EM provider
and used to validate the discards
reported in the logbook. The amount of
video reviewed to audit the logbook
would be as specified by NMFS in
consultation with the Council and based
on performance.
A detailed description of EM program
requirements is contained in the
September 2016 proposed rule (81 FR
61161; September 6, 2016) and June
2019 final rule (84 FR 31146; June 28,
2019) and is not repeated here. This
proposed rule revises the gear-specific
requirements of the EM Program to add
requirements for trips using bottom
trawl and non-whiting midwater trawl
gear, and are described in the following
sections of this preamble.
Catch Retention
Under this proposed rule, two
different discard and catch retention
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rules could be used with EM on bottom
trawl, and non-whiting midwater trawl
trips: ‘‘maximized’’ or ‘‘optimized’’
retention. Vessel operators would be
able choose the preferred retention rule
under which they would plan to operate
for a fishing trip using EM. As part of
the required declaration report, prior to
departing on a fishing trip, vessel
operators would declare whether they
intend to use maximized or optimized
retention rules for the trip. Declaration
reports are described in additional
detail in following sections of this
preamble.
Under proposed ‘‘maximized’’
retention requirements, vessels on
bottom trawl and non-whiting midwater
trawl trips would not sort or discard
catch at-sea, and would be required to
retain all catch until landing, with
exceptions for prohibited and protected
species.
Under ‘‘optimized’’ retention, EM
vessel operators would be allowed to
discard species that can be
differentiated on camera, and retain
those species that cannot be easily
distinguished in video data. Some
groundfish species are difficult to
distinguish from each other without
close inspection of certain physical
features which cannot be easily viewed
using video data. Species easily
differentiated that may be discarded
would be listed in § 660.604(p).
Vessel operators using EM on bottom
trawl and non-whiting midwater trawl
trips would be responsible for ensuring
all discarded catch would be discarded
following catch handling instructions in
the NMFS-accepted VMP. This
proposed rule would allow NMFS to
specify alternate retention requirements
in a NMFS-accepted VMP through the
process described at § 660.604(f), after
consultation with the Council and
issuance of a public notice notifying the
public of the changes.
Both retention rules have trade-offs,
depending on the target species and gear
type used. ‘‘Maximized’’ retention
would simplify catch handling at sea,
and video review as only prohibited and
protected species discards would need
to be differentiated on camera.
‘‘Optimized’’ retention would allow
vessel operators to discard catch that
can be differentiated on camera, and
would reduce the burden of having to
store and later dispose of unmarketable
or otherwise undesirable fish. The
Council originally recommended
‘‘optimized’’ retention rules as the
preferred alternative for bottom trawl
and non-whiting midwater EM trips
because the Council considered
‘‘maximized’’ retention too restrictive.
However, some EFP vessel operators on
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non-whiting midwater trawl trips
targeting rockfish expressed a
preference for ‘‘maximized’’ retention as
it simplified catch handling in a manner
consistent with vessel operation on
midwater whiting trips. The Council
determined that allowing vessel
operators to choose the retention rules
that best fit the operation of gear and
vessel, as well as the characteristics of
the target species, would provide
operational flexibility and ensure the
reliability of EM video data for discard
accounting.
This proposed rule would also
expand the definition of prohibited
species for the purposes of retention
requirements under EM regulations at
§ 660.601. California Department of Fish
and Wildlife (CDFW) recommended this
proposed regulatory change to ensure
state-managed species would be treated
in the same manner as prohibited
species if the vessel operator, or firstreceiver, does not have the appropriate
state permit to land and sell these
particular species of fish. Because the
retention/discard species list can change
through time, CDFW recommended to
the Council regulatory language that
would cover any state-managed species
to eliminate the need for further
revisions should other state-managed
species be added or removed from the
lists.
EM Declaration and Switching Between
EM and Observers
Under the proposed rule, vessels on
bottom trawl and non-whiting midwater
trawl trips would be allowed to switch
between using EM systems on some
trips and human observers on others.
Current West Coast fisheries regulations
at § 660.13(d) require vessel operators to
declare the fishery sector in which they
will participate, the area to be fished,
and the gear and monitoring type (EM
or observers) they intend to use prior to
leaving port, with limited exemptions.
The gear types or sectors, and
monitoring types that must be declared
are listed in regulations at
§ 660.13(d)(4)(iv)(A). These declarations
are sent to the NMFS Office of Law
Enforcement (OLE), and are binding for
the duration of the fishing trip for which
they have been made. This proposed
rule would modify the list of
declarations to include EM as a
monitoring type that may be selected
and declared on trips with bottom trawl
and non-whiting midwater trawl gear.
Under current regulations at
§ 660.604(e)(3)(ii), EM vessel operators
are required to submit annual tentative
fishing plans to NMFS. Tentative fishing
plans are used by WCGOP and observer
providers to plan training and
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deployment of observers. Tentative
fishing plans are a description of the
vessel owner’s fishing plans for the year,
including which fishery the vessel
owner plans to participate in, from what
ports, and when the vessel owner
intends to use EM and observers. The
information provided in tentative
fishing plans is for purposes of planning
observer training and deployments, and
is not binding.
Under this proposed rule, vessel
owners and operators taking bottom
trawl and non-whiting midwater trawl
trips would not be restricted on the
number of times they could switch
between EM and observers during the
year. Vessel operators are required to
communicate their intent to use either
monitoring type before fishing through
declarations to NMFS OLE. The Council
determined that by using tentative
fishing plans, disruption to observer
training and deployment would be
mitigated should vessel operators
choose to switch monitoring types,
therefore eliminating the need to require
limits on switching monitoring types.
The option to switch between EM and
observers provides vessel operators
flexibility to use the best monitoring
strategy when considering efficiency,
cost, or other operational factors of their
individual fishing and business plans at
a given time. There would be no limit
on switching between observers and EM
for non-whiting midwater trawl and
groundfish bottom trawl vessels.
Observer Program Declaration
Under existing regulations at
§ 660.604(n), as described above, a
vessel operator must declare their intent
to use either EM or observers 48 hours
prior to leaving port. Under proposed
regulations for ‘‘maximized’’ and
‘‘optimized’’ retention, the operator
would also be required to include the
retention rules they intend to use in
their declaration to WCGOP 48 hours
prior to leaving port on a trip using EM
with bottom trawl or non-whiting
midwater trawl gear. This timeframe
and declaration allows for the planning
of observer deployment. ‘‘Optimized’’
retention EM trips would continue to
require partial observer coverage for the
purpose of collecting biological samples
of discarded catch. Biological samples
include age, sex, and length specimen
data which cannot be obtained through
EM systems. Requiring the vessel
operator to notify WCGOP of their
intended retention type will ensure
optimized retention trips can be
selected for biological sampling.
WCGOP does not require partial
observer coverage on maximized
retention EM trips for biological
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sampling at this time, but could
potentially in the future.
Group EM Authorization and SelfEnforcing Agreements
Under the proposed regulations, a
group of eligible vessel owners
participating in the shorebased IFQ
sector, including those that take bottom
trawl and non-whiting midwater trawl
trips, may obtain a group EM
authorization through a self-enforcing
agreement. Through a private,
contractual arrangement, a selfenforcing agreement allows a co-signed
group of vessels, owners, operators, and
other interested parties to cooperatively
encourage, and enforce, compliance of
EM program requirements by members.
To be considered for a group EM
authorization, a group of vessel owners
must submit a complete initial EM
authorization application package to
NMFS for review and approval. The
package must include a copy of the selfenforcing agreement to be eligible to
receive a group EM authorization.
Participating vessel owners would be
required to agree to conduct fishing
operations according to the terms of the
self-enforcing agreement. NMFS would
still bear the ultimate responsibility for
enforcing the EM regulations.
The self-enforcing agreement would
need to include a description of
participating members, responsibilities,
procedures for communication with
members and NMFS, equipment
performance standards, provisions for
the use and protection of confidential
data, measures to enforce compliance,
procedures for addressing noncompliance of members, and annual
reports to the Council.
Under these proposed regulations,
NMFS would have the authority to
invalidate a group EM authorization if
determined that any of the vessels,
owners, and/or operators no longer meet
the eligibility criteria for the selfenforcing agreement. NMFS would first
notify the members of the group EM
authorization of the deficiencies in
writing, providing instructions, for
members to correct the deficiencies. If
the deficiencies are not resolved upon
review of the first trip following the
notification, NMFS will notify the
members in writing that the group EM
authorization is invalid and that the
members are no longer exempt from
observer coverage at §§ 660.140(h)(1)(i)
and 660.150(j)(1)(i)(B) for that
authorization period. After the
invalidation of a group EM
authorization, individual vessels would
be able to apply for individual
authorizations.
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The Council recommended the
allowance of self-enforcing cooperative
agreements for shorebased IFQ vessels
in the EM program based on prior
participation in EM EFPs by fishing
cooperatives. Under proposed
regulations, a fishing collective that has
operated under a cooperative selfenforcing agreement to test EM under
EFPs would be able to apply for
authorization to continue self-enforced
compliance with the EM program. This
proposed rule would allow additional
groups of shorebased IFQ vessels
applying for EM authorization to enter
in the self-enforcing cooperative
agreements. These agreements would
help to encourage compliance with the
many day-to-day responsibilities for EM
system maintenance and catch handling
requirements of the EM program.
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Regulatory Changes To Refine Existing
EM Program
In June 2019, NMFS published the
final rule to implement an EM program
for whiting and fixed gear vessels
operating within the trawl fishery (84
FR 31146; June 28, 2019), establishing
responsibility requirements for vessel
operators using EM systems, and for EM
service providers. These responsibilities
are detailed in the final rule, and
include declaration of EM system use by
vessel operators, protocols for
transferring and handling EM data,
logbook processing requirements, and
technical reports by EM service
providers. Minor changes necessary to
clarify these regulations were identified
after the publication of the 2019 final
rule. The regulatory changes described
below were developed through Council
discussion with NMFS and members of
industry at the Council’s April and June
2020 meetings. The Council’s intent in
developing these regulatory changes is
to refine and clarify certain EM program
requirements and improve the
effectiveness of the EM program overall
in meeting its intended monitoring goals
for the Trawl Catch Share Program.
1. Hard Drive Deadline
This proposed regulatory change
would increase the hard drive
submission deadline to 72 hours from
the beginning of the offload following a
fishing trip in which EM was used.
Under current EM program regulations
at § 660.604(s)(3), vessels using EM
systems are required to submit hard
drives storing EM video data within 24
hours of beginning an offload after a
fishing trip. Increasing this deadline to
72 hours would align it with the hard
drive submission requirements used
under EM EFPs. This change would
provide additional time for vessel
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operators to comply with hard drive
submission requirements with minimal
impact to the timeliness of data. This
change would also ensure a smooth
transition for vessels operating under
EFPs to the full EM program regulations
when they become effective.
2. Reusing Hard Drives
This proposed regulatory change
would require the scrubbing of EM hard
drives only if end-to-end encryption is
not used. Current EM regulations at
§ 660.603(m)(3) require service
providers to remove all EM data before
hard drives can be reused in the field.
This requirement was intended to
ensure protection of confidential
information for vessel owners and
operators. However, regular scrubbing of
hard drives can shorten their functional
life, and require their replacement more
frequently, increasing operational costs
for EM users. NMFS and the Council
determined that the use of end-to-end
encryption would sufficiently protect
sensitive information and extend the life
of EM hard drives. End-to-end
encryption protects information
encrypted by the sender, allowing only
recipients with the encryption key to
decrypt and access the information.
Third parties without the encryption
key would not have the means to read
the files. Starting in 2017, NMFS
stopped requiring scrubbing of hard
drives that use end-to-end encryption in
the EM EFP, which is consistent with
practices in other regions. This
regulatory change would reduce
program costs, and still allow vessel
owners to work with service providers
to develop more strict requirements for
the treatment of hard drives.
3. Limit on Switching Between EM and
Observers for Whiting Vessels
The Council is recommending
removing the limit on switching
between observers and EM for whiting
trips. Current regulations at
§ 660.604(m) restrict vessel operators on
whiting trips from revising a monitoring
declaration more than twice per
calendar year, except in the case of an
EM system malfunction. The limit was
intended to prevent frequent switching
that could disrupt deployment planning
and affect the availability of observers.
As NMFS described in the September
2016 proposed rule (81 FR 61161;
September 6, 2016), and finalized in the
June 2019 final rule (84 FR 31146; June
28, 2019), NMFS may waive the limit on
switching between monitoring types if it
is not necessary for planning observer
deployment. After the final rule
published, NMFS and the Council
determined that a regulatory restriction
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on how many times a vessel taking
whiting trips can switch between
observers and EM was unnecessary.
Under current regulations, vessels
owners are required to provide a
tentative fishing plan when they apply
for their annual EM Authorization, in
which the vessel owner gives NMFS
advance notice of their plans to use EM
and observers for the upcoming fishing
year. WCGOP and observer providers
then can use this information for
planning purposes. This information
negates the need for restrictions on
switching between observers and EM.
Therefore, the Council recommended,
and NMFS proposes eliminating the
limit on switching between EM and
observers for whiting trips under this
proposed rule. This proposed change
would align the flexibility in moving
between EM and observer coverage for
all trip types (bottom trawl, whiting
midwater, non-whiting midwater, and
fixed gear).
4. Mothership/Catcher Vessel (MS/CV)
Endorsement
Current EM regulations at
§ 660.604(e)(1)(iii) require a vessel
applying to use EM in the mothership
sector to have a valid mothership/
catcher vessel (MS/CV) endorsement to
qualify for authorization. This
requirement was initially included for
vessels testing EM under EFPs, as
having valid permits for all intended
fishing activities is a standard
requirement for EFP eligibility.
However, the regulations governing
Mothership cooperatives at
§ 660.150(g)(1) allow for a vessel
without an MS/CV endorsement, but
that is enrolled in the mothership
cooperative to deliver to a mothership.
It was not the Council’s and NMFS’s
intent to restrict participation in EM to
only those vessels with MS/CV
endorsement. Including this eligibility
criterion was a holdover from the EFP
terms and conditions and is not
consistent with Council intent.
Therefore, this proposed rule would
remove the eligibility requirement at
§ 660.604(e)(1)(iii) for an MS/CV
endorsement to be eligible to use EM on
MS/CV trips.
5. Logbook Processing
This proposed regulatory change
would require all vessel owners to
submit discard logbooks directly to their
EM service providers following a fishing
trip in which EM was used. EM service
providers would receive and process
discard logbooks by entering data,
performing quality assurance and
control, and subsequently submit
logbook data to NMFS for review.
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Service providers would be required to
submit initial logbook data to NMFS
within two business days of receipt
from vessel operators.
Current EM regulations at § 660.604(s)
assume vessel operators would submit
discard logbooks directly to NMFS or its
agent for processing. Under this model,
NMFS would data enter, and check
logbooks for accuracy and issues, which
would then be used to initially debit
discarded catch from vessel IFQ
accounts. EM service providers review
video data separately, with WCGOP
providing some logbook data to EM
service providers that is necessary for
completing the video review, such as
trawl gear codend capacity, but with
most identifying logbook data withheld
to ensure video review is done blind.
Under current regulations, having
NMFS process logbooks directly would
require back-and-forth with EM service
providers to accurately match logbooks
with EM trips, select trips or hauls for
review, compare logbook and EM
discard estimates, and investigate any
discrepancies. Vessel owners must
submit logbooks directly to NMFS via a
secure transmission method to comply
with confidentiality and data security
requirements, limiting the methods by
which NMFS can receive logbooks.
At the November 2020 Groundfish
Electronic Monitoring Program
Advisory Committee (GEMPAC)
meeting, GEMPAC members proposed
an alternative procedure in which EM
service providers would receive,
complete data entry, review logbook
data, and submit results to NMFS.
NMFS and the Council determined it
would be more efficient and cost
effective to have EM service providers
receive both logbooks and EM data
directly from vessel owners for initial
processing, entry, and quality control,
and simply report final data to NMFS.
NMFS would also receive logbooks, and
use its debriefing procedures to carry
out quality control on the logbook data
and to check for potential bias in the
video review. Having EM service
providers process logbooks would also
allow individual vessel operators to
develop optimal submission methods
for discard logbooks with their
respective EM service providers. NMFS
supports the Council recommendation
and therefore proposes the change
through this proposed rule.
6. Reporting Deadlines for EM Service
Providers
Under current regulations at
§ 660.603, EM service providers are
responsible for providing various
feedback reports to vessel operators, and
summaries to NMFS. These reports
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include logbook data, technical
assistance, vessel operator feedback, EM
summary data, and compliance reports.
Submission of this information by
service providers has been required in
regulations as of June 2019, however,
deadlines for the submission of these
reports were not originally specified in
regulation. Under this proposed rule,
NMFS would establish submission
deadlines for these required EM service
providers’ reports. This proposed
change would allow NMFS to enforce
timely submission of EM data. The
submission deadlines for each report are
specified below.
A. Discard Logbooks
As described previously in this
proposed rule, vessel operators would
submit discard logbooks directly to EM
service providers for processing. The
Council recommended, and NMFS is
proposing, that service providers would
submit the initial logbook data to NMFS
within two days of receipt from vessel
operators. This deadline would help to
ensure timely debiting of discards from
vessel IFQ accounts, and is consistent
with submission timelines used for EM
EFPs, and WCGOP observer data.
Setting the deadline based on the
receipt of initial, rather than final,
logbook data would ensure service
providers are not held responsible for
late or incomplete submissions from
vessel operators. After initial logbook
submission, the EM service provider
would work with the vessel operator to
review data and, if necessary, revise and
submit updated logbook data. Under
these proposed regulatory changes,
requiring concrete deadlines for these
reports in the regulations would ensure
the timely submission of discard
estimates from logbook data, which is
essential for discard accounting in the
Catch Share program, and to provide
clear expectations for all participants.
B. Reports of Technical Assistance
Under current regulations at
§ 660.603(k), EM service providers are
required to submit reports to NMFS
when technical assistance is requested
by vessels on EM trips. These reports of
technical assistance allow NMFS to
monitor the performance of EM systems
and field services, and follow up should
any potential enforcement issues arise.
Under this proposed rule, NMFS would
require technical assistance reports to be
submitted within 24 hours of the EM
service provider being notified by the
vessel operator. This change would be
consistent with how these notifications
have occurred in the EM EFP.
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C. Vessel Feedback Reports
Under current regulations at
§ 660.603(m)(4), EM service providers
are required to provide feedback reports
to vessel operators and field services
staff. Feedback is required on EM
systems, crew responsibilities, and any
other information that would improve
the quality and effectiveness of data
collection on the vessel. Through this
proposed rule, NMFS would require
feedback to be submitted to vessels
within three weeks of the date EM data
is received from the vessel operator for
processing by the service provider.
Prospective service providers, EFP
vessel operators, and industry members
have provided feedback through the
Council process that three weeks is a
reasonable timeline for the submission
vessel feedback reports. Specifically, a
submission deadline of three weeks
after the service provider receives the
hard drive from a vessel would ensure
that EM service providers are not held
responsible for late submissions by
vessel operators. A shorter timeline may
be more difficult for EM service
providers to meet if they receive several
hard drives at once, such as during busy
times of the year. However, a longer
timeline may not provide timely
feedback to vessel operators and
updates to discard data. Concrete and
enforceable deadlines are necessary to
ensure service providers submit
feedback reports in a timely manner,
and establish the data processing
procedures to meet these deadlines. It is
critically important to provide timely
feedback to vessel captains and crew on
catch handling, EM system care, and
other aspects of operations that affect
data quality. Timely feedback to vessels
would help to ensure the quality of EM
data, and reliability of the EM program
in meeting monitoring goals of the Catch
Share program.
D. EM Summary Data and Compliance
Reports
Current regulations at § 660.603(m)(5)
require service providers to submit EM
summary data and compliance reports
to NMFS following completion of video
review. EM summary data includes
discard estimates, fishing activity
information, and trip metadata. This
proposed rule would require EM
summary data and compliance reports
to be submitted to NMFS three weeks
from the date the vessel operator
submits EM data for processing. EM
summary data and compliance reports
are used by NMFS to debit vessel
accounts, monitor program and vessel
performance, and enforce requirements
of the EM program. Trip metadata is an
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essential record of when and where EM
data were created by the vessel,
submission time, date and location of
review, and point of contacts for
reviewers. Trip metadata ensures fishing
data can be accurately corroborated with
logbook data and is necessary for a
complete chain of custody and
accountability between the vessel,
service provider, and NMFS. Catch
discards would initially be debited from
vessel accounts in the IFQ database
using logbook data, as described
previously; discards would largely be
accounted for following logbook
processing, and audited using EM data.
If there are large discrepancies between
the logbook and EM summary data, then
a longer reporting timeline may result in
vessel account owners experiencing
unexpected debits, or being unable to
‘‘close-out’’ an account for a fishing trip
until the EM data are received. In the
EM EFP, reporting timelines have
ranged from one to two weeks after
receipt of the hard drive in 2015 to one
to two months during periods of higher
fishing activity in 2019. Feedback from
prospective EM service providers is that
three weeks after receipt of the hard
drive may be a reasonable timeline for
completion of the video review and
submission of reports. NMFS
recommended three weeks, with
support from the Council’s GEMPAC
and Groundfish Management Team, as
being a reasonable amount of time for
service providers to complete review
and subsequently prepare summary data
and compliance reports.
7. Retention of EM Data
This proposed rule would change the
minimum length of time service
providers are required to retain EM data
records. Under current regulations,
service providers must maintain all of a
vessel’s EM data, reports, and other
records specified in regulations at
§ 660.603(m) Data services for a period
of not less than three years after the date
of landing for that trip. The rationale for
originally adopting a three-year
minimum retention period for EM data
is detailed in the June 2019 final rule
(84 FR 31146; June 28, 2019). Since that
final rule, NMFS evaluated the
feasibility and cost effectiveness of a
shorter retention period, and has
developed a national policy on the
minimum time that EM data must be
retained.
Under this proposed rule, EM service
providers would be required to maintain
EM data for a period of not less than 12
months starting after NMFS has
officially completed end-of-year account
reconciliation and catch monitoring.
This proposed regulatory change would
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align with the 12-month minimum data
retention period in the NMFS
Procedural Directive 04–115–03 (see
ADDRESSES) for third-party minimum
data retention in EM programs for
federally managed U.S. fisheries.
Review of catch monitoring data,
including EM data, usually extends
beyond the close of the fishery at the
end of the calendar year. Starting the
clock for the minimum retention period
following end-of-the-year data
reconciliation would best meet the
recommendations of the procedural
directive.
§ 660.603(b)(1)(vii). The second
correction would change a reference to
‘‘owner or operator’’ to instead be
‘‘authorized representative of the
vessel’’ in § 660.603(n)(3), which is
consistent with language in other
regulations in 50 CFR 660—Fisheries
Off West Coast States. This correction
would clarify that a representative
designated by the vessel owner, rather
than solely the vessel owner or operator,
is allowed to transfer EM data to service
providers for review. NMFS supports
these changes, and is proposing these
changes through this proposed rule.
8. Change in Definition of Conflict of
Interest for EM Service Providers
This proposed change would revise
regulations at § 660.603(h) defining
limitations on conflicts of interest for
EM service providers to exclude
providing other types of technical and
equipment services to fishing
companies. The definition in
regulations currently excludes ‘‘the
provision of observer, catch monitor,
EM or other biological sampling
services, in any Federal or statemanaged fisheries’’ from the definition
of a ‘‘direct financial interest.’’ After the
final rule was published, an EM service
provider brought to the Council’s
attention that many EM vendors provide
a range of other services to fishing
companies, including vessel monitoring
systems (VMS), automatic identification
system (AIS) transponders, telemetry
(such as product temperature
monitoring for seafood safety), buoy and
gear monitoring, sonar systems, and
mandatory safety services. Under the
current regulatory definition, such EM
vendors would be ineligible to provide
EM services. The EM service provider
noted that there is no evidence to
suggest that providing such technical
services to fishing companies creates
any greater conflict of interest than
providing biological sampling services,
and requested that the definition be
revised. Therefore, the Council
recommended, and NMFS is proposing,
revising the definition of a conflict of
interest at § 660.603(h) to exclude
providing other types of technical and
equipment services to fishing
companies.
III. Classification
Pursuant to section 304(b)(1)(A) of the
Magnuson-Stevens Act, the NMFS
Assistant Administrator has determined
that this proposed rule is consistent
with the Pacific Coast Groundfish FMP,
Magnuson-Stevens Act, and other
applicable laws, subject to further
consideration after public comment. In
making the final determination, NMFS
will take into account the complete
record, including the data, views, and
comments received during the comment
period.
Pursuant to Executive Order 13175,
this proposed rule was developed after
meaningful consultation and
collaboration with tribal officials from
the area covered by the Pacific Coast
Groundfish FMP. Under the MagnusonStevens Act at 16 U.S.C. 1852(b)(5), one
of the voting members of the Pacific
Council must be a representative of an
Indian tribe with federally recognized
fishing rights from the area of the
Council’s jurisdiction.
This proposed rule has been
determined to be not significant for the
purposes of Executive Order 12866.
This proposed rule does not contain
policies with Federalism or ‘‘takings’’
implications as those terms are defined
in Executive Orders 13132 and 12630,
respectively.
An initial regulatory flexibility
analysis (IRFA) was prepared, as
required by section 603 of the
Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) (5
U.S.C. 603). The IRFA describes the
economic impact this proposed rule, if
adopted, would have on small entities.
A description of the action, why it is
being considered, and the legal basis for
this action are contained in the
Background section of the preamble. A
summary of the IRFA follows. A copy of
the IRFA is available from NMFS (see
ADDRESSES).
When an agency proposes regulations,
the RFA requires the agency to prepare
and make available for public comment
an IRFA that describes the impact on
small businesses, non-profit enterprises,
9. Technical Corrections
In addition to the proposed regulatory
changes already described, the Council
also recommended two clarifying
corrections to language in the EM
program regulations. The first correction
is technical and would change the
reference to ‘‘a NMFS-accepted EM
Service Plan’’ under § 660.603(a)(1) to
correctly refer to paragraph
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local governments, and other small
entities. The IRFA is to aid the agency
in considering all reasonable regulatory
alternatives that would minimize the
economic impact on affected small
entities.
The RFA (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.)
requires government agencies to assess
the effects that regulatory alternatives
would have on small entities, defined as
any business/organization
independently owned and operated and
not dominant in its field of operation
(including its affiliates). A small
harvesting business has combined
annual receipts of $11 million or less for
all affiliated operations worldwide. A
small fish-processing business is one
that employs 750 or fewer persons for
all affiliated operations worldwide.
For marinas and charter/party boats, a
small business is one that has annual
receipts not in excess of $7.5 million. A
wholesale business servicing the fishing
industry is a small business if it
employs 100 or fewer persons on a full
time, part time, temporary, or other
basis, at all its affiliated operations
worldwide. A nonprofit organization is
determined to be ‘‘not dominant in its
field of operation’’ if it is considered
small under one of the following Small
Business Administration (SBA) size
standards: Environmental, conservation,
or professional organizations are
considered small if they have combined
annual receipts of $15 million or less,
and other organizations are considered
small if they have combined annual
receipts of $7.5 million or less.
The RFA defines small governmental
jurisdictions as governments of cities,
counties, towns, townships, villages,
school districts, or special districts with
populations of less than 50,000.
Description and Estimate of Number of
Small Entities to Which the Rule Will
Apply
This proposed rule would impact
mainly commercial harvesting entities
engaged in the groundfish limited entry
trawl fishery. Although this action
proposes an EM program regulations for
only two trip types in the limited entry
trawl fishery—non-whiting midwater
trawl, and bottom trawl—any limited
entry trawl vessel may participate in
these components, provided they
comply with its requirements, and
therefore may be eligible to use EM as
applied to these two trawl gear sectors.
In addition, vessels deploying EM are
likely to be a subset of the overall trawl
fleet, as some vessels would likely
choose to continue to use observers.
However, as all trawl vessels could
potentially use EM in the future under
the proposed action, this IRFA analyzes
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impacts to the entire trawl fleet. The
total number of vessels that may be
eligible to use EM is 175, the total
number of limited entry trawl permits in
2021, and includes those vessels that do
use bottom trawl and non-whiting
midwater trawl gear, and those that do
not. Given these entities participate in
the program, they are most likely to be
impacted by this rule in the short term.
This number may be an underestimate
if additional vessels elect to participate
in the EM program in the future.
Federal Rules Which May Duplicate,
Overlap, or Conflict With This Proposed
Rule
The proposed regulations do not
create overlapping regulations with any
state regulations or other Federal laws.
A Description of any Significant
Alternatives to the Proposed Rule That
Accomplish the Stated Objectives of
Applicable Statutes and That Minimize
any Significant Economic Impact of the
Proposed Rule on Small Entities
The RFA requires Federal agencies to
conduct a full RFA analysis unless the
agency can certify that the proposed
and/or final rule would not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
This determination can be made at
either the proposed or final rule stage.
If the agency can certify, it need not
prepare an IRFA, a final regulatory
flexibility analysis (FRFA), or a Small
Entity Compliance Guide or undertake a
subsequent periodic review of such
rules. The NMFS Guidelines for
Economic Analysis of Fishery
Management Actions suggest two
criteria to consider in determining the
significance of regulatory impacts,
namely, disproportionality and
profitability. These criteria relate to the
basic purpose of the RFA, i.e., to
consider the effect of regulations on
small businesses and other small
entities, recognizing that regulations are
frequently unable to provide short-term
cash reserves to finance operations
through several months or years until
their positive effects start paying off. If
either criterion is met for a substantial
number of small entities, then the rule
should not be certified for not having an
effect on small entities. These criterion
raise two questions: Do the regulations
place a substantial number of small
entities at a significant competitive
disadvantage to large entities? Do the
regulations significantly reduce profit
for a substantial number of small
entities?
The preferred alternative for this rule
will not have a significant impact when
comparing small versus large businesses
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in terms of disproportionality and
profitability given available information.
These regulations are likely to reduce
fishing costs for both small and large
businesses. EM is an optional
monitoring alternative to observers, and
may provide cost savings for some
vessels. Economic effects of the
proposed action are expected to range
from neutral to positive when compared
to the status quo. Nonetheless, NMFS
has prepared this IRFA. Through the
rulemaking process associated with this
action, NMFS is requesting comments
on this conclusion.
The economic impacts on small
entities resulting from the proposed
action range from neutral to positive;
these entities will have a choice
between hiring an observer, as is status
quo, or using EM. The choice is
expected to be based on relative costs
and operational flexibility. Observer
costs are currently $499 to $537 per
seaday. Under EM, NMFS estimates
vessels in the bottom trawl fishery will
spend between $342/seaday (which
include the cost of new equipment and
installation) or $285/seaday (without
equipment costs). These estimates are
based on 412 seadays for 10 bottom
trawl vessels participating in EFPs from
2019–2020. Under EM, NMFS estimates
per seaday costs for non-whiting
midwater trawl trips to range from
$142/seaday (with equipment costs),
and $120/seaday (without equipment
costs). These estimates are based on
3,215 seadays for 30 midwater trawl
vessels participating in EFPs from 2091–
2020, and averaged cost estimates from
four prospective EM service providers.
These cost estimates are detailed in
section 4.2 ‘‘Industry Costs’’ of the IRFA
included in the supporting documents
for this proposed rule. These costs are
likely an overestimate and not an
accurate estimate of seaday costs for this
gear type because it does not
incorporate revenue from seadays
pursuing bottom trawl and whiting
activities that are also part of these
vessels’ portfolios. Cost of EM service,
including equipment installation and
maintenance, along with video review
and data service is expected to vary by
service provider. Entities participating
this fishery are not required to use EM,
and have the choice to use a human
observer instead of EM. Furthermore,
the cost of EM is likely to decrease as
technology used in EM systems
(cameras, sensors, and electronic storage
devices) that meets current specification
necessary to meet monitoring
requirements becomes cheaper over
time. Therefore, this proposed action
would not impose new costs on these
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small entities, and will likely provide
measurable cost savings over time as
individual vessels choose the most
affordable at-sea monitoring systems
relative to their fishing operations.
The components of this rule have the
potential to positively impact all entities
in the catch share sector of the fishery,
regardless of size. Therefore, the rule
would impose effects on ‘‘a substantial
number’’ of small entities, however,
these effects are expected to range from
neutral (if entities choose not to use the
added flexibility of the provisions in
this rule) to positive. Data used to
inform this analysis was collected
through EFPs and collaboration with
industry and non-government
organizations from 2012 to present.
There are no relevant Federal rules
that may duplicate, overlap, or conflict
with this action nor are there are no
significant alternative to the proposed
rule that will accomplish the stated
objectives and that minimize any
significant economic impact of the
proposed rule on small entities. As
fishermen are given a choice between
two alternative monitoring systems
(observers vs EM), this rule is likely to
have neutral to positive effects on small
entities.
These regulations are likely to reduce
fishing costs for both small and large
businesses. Through this proposed rule,
NMFS is requesting comments on this
conclusion. The proposed action and
alternatives are described in detail in
the Council’s regulatory amendment
and the accompanying regulatory
impact review (RIR)/IRFA (see
ADDRESSES).
Description of the Proposed Reporting,
Record-Keeping, and Other Compliance
Requirements of This Proposed Rule
Under the Paperwork Reduction Act
(PRA)
The proposed action contains
collection-of-information requirements
that have been previously approved
under OMB control number 0648–0785,
West Coast Region Groundfish Trawl
Fishery Electronic Monitoring Program,
as per the PRA requirements. The
requirements include vessel owner EM
applications, renewals, and reports, EM
service providers applications, renewals
and reports, as well as vessel operator
log-book, and hard drive submission.
This proposed rule would revise
collection-of-information requirements
to include submission of information for
the formation of self-enforcing
cooperative agreements. The proposed
action contains changes to collection-ofinformation requirements that are
subject to review and approval by the
Office of Management and Budget
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(OMB) as per the PRA requirements.
NMFS has submitted these requirements
to OMB for approval under OMB control
number 0648–0785 West Coast Region
Groundfish Trawl Fishery Electronic
Monitoring Program. This proposed rule
would revise collection-of-information
requirements to include submission of
information for the formation of selfenforcing cooperative agreements.
Collection of information for selfenforcing agreements is not mandatory,
as self-enforcing agreements are an
optional provision of the EM program
under collection 0648–0785. Some
vessel owners may choose to apply for
a group EM authorization under a selfenforcing agreement in lieu of
individual vessel authorizations. The
self-enforcing agreement would be
submitted with the initial applications
for vessels in the group, and requires
approval prior to accepting final
applications from the group. One selfenforcing agreement would be
completed and submitted by a
designated representative for each group
of vessel owners applying under a group
authorization. NMFS expects no more
than three such self-enforcing group
agreements for the first three years of
this collection. Each self-enforcing
agreement is expected to take
approximately 3 hours to complete. The
total annualized time burden to prepare
self-enforcing agreements would be 3
hours (3 hours × 3 agreements/3 years).
The burden cost of one copy of the selfenforcing agreement is estimated at
$3.00 ($0.10/page × 30 pages). A
designated representative, or manager of
the self-enforcing cooperative would
hold at least one copy. To be deemed
eligible to operate under the agreement,
vessel owners and operators would be
required to have executed a copy of the
agreement for an adherence agreement
under which they agree to be bound. At
most, 10 vessel owners are expected to
participate in any one self-enforcing
agreement, each would be required to
have a copy of the agreement, plus one
original copy held by the cooperative
manager, is expected to result in a total
annualized burden of $33.00 ($3.00 ×
11).
This proposed rule includes a minor
revision to declaration requirements for
groundfish vessels using EM under West
Coast Region Vessel Monitoring
Requirement in the Pacific Coast
Groundfish Fishery (OMB Control
Number 0648–0573). Vessels in the
Pacific Coast Groundfish Fishery are
required to declare the gear type and
monitoring they will use on a given trip.
Under this proposed rule, vessels would
be able to declare ‘‘electronic
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monitoring’’ or ‘‘observers’’ as possible
monitoring types on trips with bottom
trawl and non-whiting midwater trawl
gear. The change would add additional
potential answers to an existing
declaration questionnaire, which does
not affect the number of entities
required to comply with the declaration
requirement (OMB Control Number
0648–0573). Therefore, the proposed
rule does not increase the time or cost
burden associated with this
requirement.
Similarly, this proposed rule would
adjust the requirement for EM vessels to
notify the West Coast Groundfish
Observer Program before each trip in
place of the existing notification to an
individual vessel’s observer provider
when using a catch share observer. This
change would not be expected to
increase the time or cost burden
associated with the existing notification
requirements approved under the
collection Observer Programs’
Information That Can be Gathered Only
Through Questions (OMB Control
Number 0648–0593).
The requirement for first receivers to
report protected and prohibited species
landings was previously approved
under the collection Northwest Region
Groundfish Trawl Fishery Monitoring
and Catch Accounting Program (OMB
Control Number 0648–0619). Under the
proposed rule, first receivers would
continue to report protected and
prohibited species landings, but would
also report landings of catch from trips
monitored using EM under
‘‘maximized’’ and ‘‘optimized’’
retention rules with bottom trawl and
non-whiting midwater trawl gear. The
change would add additional potential
answers to an existing questionnaire,
and is not be expected to change the
time or cost burden or number of
entities associated with this
requirement.
Public comment is sought regarding:
Whether this proposed collection of
information is necessary for the proper
performance of the functions of the
agency, including whether the
information shall have practical utility;
the accuracy of the burden estimate;
ways to enhance the quality, utility, and
clarity of the information to be
collected; and ways to minimize the
burden of the collection of information,
including through the use of automated
collection techniques or other forms of
information technology. Submit
comments on these or any other aspects
of the collection of information at
www.reginfo.gov/public/do/PRAMain.
For more information, these
collections, and all currently approved
NOAA collections can be viewed at
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PRASearch# by entering the related
OMB control number.
Notwithstanding any other provision
of the law, no person is required to
respond to, nor shall any person be
subject to a penalty for failure to comply
with, a collection of information subject
to the requirements of the PRA, unless
that collection of information displays a
currently valid OMB control number.
List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 660
Fisheries, Fishing, and Indians.
Dated: February 14, 2022.
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 660 is proposed
to be amended as follows:
PART 660—FISHERIES OFF WEST
COAST STATES
1. Authority citation for part 660
continues to read as follows
■
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq., 16
U.S.C. 773 et seq., and 16 U.S.C. 7001 et seq.
2. In § 660.13 revise paragraph
(d)(4)(iv)(A) to read as follows:
■
§ 660.13
Recordkeeping and reporting.
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(d) * * *
(4) * * *
(iv) * * *
(A) * * *
(1) Limited entry fixed gear, not
including shorebased IFQ,
(2) Limited entry groundfish nontrawl, shorebased IFQ, observer,
(3) Limited entry groundfish nontrawl, shorebased IFQ, electronic
monitoring,
(4) Limited entry midwater trawl,
non-whiting shorebased IFQ, observer,
(5) Limited entry midwater trawl,
non-whiting shorebased IFQ, electronic
monitoring,
(6) Limited entry midwater trawl,
Pacific whiting shorebased IFQ,
observer,
(7) Limited entry midwater trawl,
Pacific whiting shorebased IFQ,
electronic monitoring,
(8) Limited entry midwater trawl,
Pacific whiting catcher/processor sector,
(9) Limited entry midwater trawl,
Pacific whiting mothership sector
(catcher vessel or mothership), observer,
(10) Limited entry midwater trawl,
Pacific whiting mothership sector
(catcher vessel), electronic monitoring,
(11) Limited entry bottom trawl,
shorebased IFQ, not including demersal
trawl or selective flatfish trawl,
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(12) Limited entry bottom trawl,
shorebased IFQ, not including demersal
trawl or selective flatfish trawl,
electronic monitoring,
(13) Limited entry demersal trawl,
shorebased IFQ, observer
(14) Limited entry demersal trawl,
shorebased IFQ, electronic monitoring,
(15) Limited entry selective flatfish
trawl, shorebased IFQ, observer,
(16) Limited entry selective flatfish
trawl, shorebased IFQ, electronic
monitoring,
(17) Non-groundfish trawl gear for
pink shrimp,
(18) Non-groundfish trawl gear for
ridgeback prawn,
(19) Non-groundfish trawl gear for
California halibut,
(20) Non-groundfish trawl gear for sea
cucumber,
(21) Open access longline gear for
groundfish,
(22) Open access Pacific halibut
longline gear,
(23) Open access groundfish trap or
pot gear,
(24) Open access Dungeness crab trap
or pot gear,
(25) Open access prawn trap or pot
gear,
(26) Open access sheephead trap or
pot gear,
(27) Open access line gear for
groundfish,
(28) Open access HMS line gear,
(29) Open access salmon troll gear,
(30) Open access California Halibut
line gear,
(31) Open access Coastal Pelagic
Species net gear,
(32) Other gear,
(33) Tribal trawl,
(34) Open access California gillnet
complex gear, or
(35) Gear testing.
*
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■ 3. In § 660.601, add the definition of
‘‘Prohibited species’’ in alphabetical
order to read as follows:
§ 660.601
Definitions.
*
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*
Prohibited species means those
species and species groups defined at
§ 660.11; Dungeness crab caught south
of Point Reyes, California; fish in excess
of state or Federal limits; fish below a
state or Federal minimum size; and
species for which the vessel or vessel
representative does not have a state or
Federal permit.
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■ 4. In § 660.603, revise paragraphs
(a)(1), (h)(1) introductory text, (k)(5), (m)
introductory text, (m)(1), (m)(3), (m)(4)
introductory text, (m)(5), (m)(6) and
(n)(3) to read as follows:
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§ 660.603 Electronic monitoring provider
permits and responsibilities.
(a) * * *
(1) Operate under a NMFS-accepted
EM Service Plan (see paragraph
(b)(1)(vii) of this section).
*
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(h) * * *
(1) EM service providers and their
employees must not have a direct
financial interest, other than the
provision of observer, catch monitor,
EM, other biological sampling services,
VMS, AIS transponders, telemetry (such
as product temperature monitoring for
seafood safety), buoy and gear
monitoring, sonar systems, mandatory
safety services (i.e., GMDSS), or other
technical or equipment services, in any
Federal or state managed fisheries,
including but not limited to:
*
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(k) * * *
(5) The EM service provider must
submit to NMFS reports of requests for
technical assistance from vessels,
including when the call or visit was
made, the nature of the issue, and how
it was resolved. Reports must be
submitted to NMFS within 24 hours of
the EM service provider being notified
of the request for technical assistance.
*
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(m) Data services. For vessels with
which it has a contract (see
§ 660.604(k)), the EM service provider
must provide and manage EM data and
logbook processing, reporting, and
record retention services, as described
below and according to a NMFSapproved EM Service Plan, which is
required under paragraph (b)(1)(vii) of
this section, and as described in the EM
Program Manual or other written and
oral instructions provided by the EM
Program, and such that the EM Program
achieves its purpose as defined at
§ 660.600(b).
(1) The EM service provider must
process vessels’ EM data and logbooks
according to a prescribed coverage level
or sampling scheme, as specified by
NMFS in consultation with the Council,
and determine an estimate of discards
for each trip using standardized
estimation methods specified by NMFS.
NMFS will maintain manuals for EM
and logbook data processing protocols
on its website.
*
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(3) The EM service provider must
track hard drives and EM datasets
throughout their cycles, including
documenting any access and
modifications. If end-to-end encryption
is not used to protect EM data, EM data
must be removed from hard drives or
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other mediums before returning them to
the field.
(4) The EM service provider must
communicate with vessel operators and
NMFS to coordinate data service needs,
resolve specific program issues, and
provide feedback on program
operations. No later than three weeks
from the date of receipt of EM data for
processing from the vessel operator, the
EM service provider must provide
feedback to vessel representatives, field
services staff, and NMFS regarding:
*
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*
(5) Submission of data and reports.
On behalf of vessels with which it has
a contract (see § 660.604(k)), the EM
service provider must submit to NMFS
logbook data, EM summary reports,
including discard estimates, fishing
activity information, and meta data (e.g.,
image quality, reviewer name), and
incident reports of compliance issues
according to a NMFS-accepted EM
Service Plan, which is required under
paragraph (b)(1)(vii) of this section, and
as described in the EM Program Manual
or other written and oral instructions
provided by the EM Program, such that
the EM program achieves its purpose as
defined at § 660.600(b). Logbook data
must be submitted to NMFS within two
business days of receipt from the vessel
operator. EM summary reports must be
submitted within three weeks of the
date the EM data was received by the
EM service provider from the vessel
operator. If NMFS determines that the
information does not meet these
standards, NMFS may require the EM
service provider to correct and resubmit
the datasets and reports.
(6) Retention of records. Following an
EM trip, the EM service provider must
maintain all of a vessel’s EM data and
other records specified in this section,
or used in the preparation of records or
reports specified in this section or
corrections to these reports. The EM
service provider must maintain EM data
for a period of not less than 12 months
after NMFS has completed its
determination of the total base year IFQ
catch for all vessels for end-of-year
account reconciliation (i.e., base year is
the year in which the EM trip was
taken). NMFS will issue a public notice
when end-of-the-year account
reconciliation has been completed, on
or about March 1 of each year. The EM
service provider must maintain
summary EM data and other records for
a period of not less than three years after
the date of landing for that trip. EM data
and other records must be stored such
that the integrity and security of the
records is maintained for the duration of
the retention period. The EM service
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provider must produce EM data and
other records immediately upon request
by NMFS or an authorized officer.
(n) * * *
(3) Must not release a vessel’s EM data
and other records specified in this
section (including documents
containing such data and observations
or summaries thereof) except to NMFS
and authorized officers as provided in
paragraph (m)(6) of this section, or as
authorized by an authorized
representative of the vessel.
■ 5. In § 660.604,
■ a. Revise paragraphs (e) introductory
text and (e)(1);
■ b. Remove paragraph (e)(5);
■ c. Revise paragraphs (f), (i), (m), and
(n);
■ d. Add paragraphs (p)(3) and (4);
■ e. Revise paragraphs (q), (s)(2), (s)(3)(i)
through (ii); and
■ f. Remove and reserve paragraph
(s)(3)(iii).
The revisions and additions read as
follows:
§ 660.604 Vessel and first receiver
responsibilities.
*
*
*
*
*
(e) Electronic Monitoring
Authorization. To obtain an EM
Authorization, a vessel owner must
submit an initial application to the
NMFS West Coast Region Fisheries
Permit Office, and then a final
application that includes an EM system
certification and a vessel monitoring
plan (VMP). NMFS will only review
complete applications. NMFS will issue
a public notice at least 90 calendar days
prior to when it will begin accepting
applications for EM Authorizations for
the first year of the Program. Once
NMFS begins accepting applications,
vessel owners that want to have their
EM Authorizations effective for January
1 of the following calendar year must
submit their complete application to
NMFS by October 1 of the preceding
calendar year. Vessel owners that want
to have their EM Authorizations
effective for May 15 must submit their
complete application to NMFS by
February 15 of the same year. In lieu of
individual EM Authorizations, a group
of eligible vessel owners participating in
the shorebased IFQ sector may obtain a
group EM Authorization through a selfenforcing agreement. This agreement
allows a group of eligible vessels to
encourage compliance with the
requirements of this section through a
private, contractual arrangement. To be
considered for a group EM
Authorization, a group of vessel owners
must submit a completed application
package to NMFS for review and
approval. As part of a group EM
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Authorization application, participating
vessel owners must agree to conduct
fishing operations according to the selfenforcement agreement. For a vessel to
be deemed eligible to operate under the
agreement, its owner(s) and its
operator(s) must have executed a copy
of the agreement or an adherence
agreement under which they agree to be
bound by the agreement’s terms. The
existence of a self-enforcing agreement
among EM vessels does not foreclose the
possibility of independent enforcement
action by NMFS OLE or authorized
officers.
(1) Initial application. To be
considered for an EM Authorization, the
vessel owner must:
(i) Submit a completed application
form provided by NMFS, signed and
dated by an authorized representative of
the vessel;
(ii) Meet the following eligibility
criteria:
(A) The applicant owns the vessel
proposed to be used;
(B) The vessel has a valid Pacific
Coast Groundfish limited entry, trawlendorsed permit registered to it;
(C) The vessel is participating in the
Pacific whiting IFQ fishery, mothership
sector, or the Shorebased IFQ sector;
(D) The vessel is able to accommodate
the EM system, including providing
sufficient uninterrupted electrical
power, suitable camera mounts,
adequate lighting, and fittings for
hydraulic lines to enable connection of
a pressure transducer;
(E) The vessel owner and operator are
willing and able to comply with all
applicable requirements of this section
and to operate under a NMFS-accepted
VMP; and
(F) The vessel owner and operator are
willing and able to comply with the
terms and conditions of a self-enforcing
agreement that was submitted as part of
a group authorization application, if
applicable.
(iii) If applying for a group EM
Authorization, submit a complete
proposed self-enforcing agreement that
describes how the group’s operations
will be conducted to meet the
requirements of this section. NMFS will
develop EM Program Guidelines
containing best practices and templates
and make them available on NMFS’s
website to assist vessel owners in
developing a self-enforcing agreement.
The self-enforcing agreement must
include descriptions of the following:
(A) A list of all participating vessels,
owners, operators, and other parties;
(B) The name and contact information
of a designated representative who will
be responsible for ensuring that each
vessel is complying with the terms and
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conditions of the agreement and the
requirements of this section, and who
will promptly inform the appropriate
parties and NMFS if any vessel fails to
comply;
(C) Eligibility criteria for participating
vessels, owners, and operators;
(D) The roles and responsibilities of
participating vessels, owners, operators,
the designated representative, and any
other parties to the agreement;
(E) Procedures for communication
between participating vessels, owners,
operators, the designated representative,
and any other parties to the agreement,
NMFS or its designated agent, and EM
service providers, for the execution of
the agreement and the requirements of
this section;
(F) Performance standards or
requirements for equipment, if
applicable;
(G) Reporting requirements, if
applicable;
(H) Time and area restrictions, if
applicable;
(I) Provisions for the use and
protection of confidential data necessary
for execution of the agreement;
(J) Provisions to encourage or enforce
the compliance of members with the
agreement and the requirements of this
section;
(K) Procedures for addressing the noncompliance of members with the
agreement and the requirements of this
section, including procedures for
restricting or terminating vessel’s
participation in the agreement;
(L) Procedures for notifying NMFS
when a participating vessel or its
owner(s) or operator(s) are not
complying with the terms of the
agreement or the requirements of this
section;
(M) Procedures for participating
vessels, owners, operators, the
designated representative, or other
parties to the agreement, to exit the
agreement;
(N) Any other provisions that the
applicants deem necessary for the
execution of the agreement; and
(O) Procedures for the designated
representative to submit an annual
report to the Council prior to applying
to renew a group EM authorization
containing information about the
group’s performance from the previous
year, including a description of any
actions taken by the self-enforcing group
in response to the non-compliance of
members with the agreement.
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(f) Changes to a NMFS-accepted VMP
or NMFS-approved self-enforcing
agreement. A vessel owner may make
changes to a NMFS-accepted VMP by
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submitting a revised plan or plan
addendum to NMFS in writing. A group
may make changes to an approved selfenforcing agreement by submitting a
revised agreement or agreement
addendum to NMFS in writing. NMFS
will review and accept the change if it
meets all the requirements of this
section. A VMP or self-enforcing
agreement addendum must contain:
(1) The date and the name and
signature of the vessel owner, or
designated representative for a selfenforcing agreement;
(2) Address, telephone number, fax
number and email address of the person
submitting the revised plan or
addendum; and
(3) A complete description of the
proposed change.
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*
(i) Renewing an EM Authorization. To
maintain a valid EM Authorization,
vessel owners must renew annually
prior to the permit expiration date.
NMFS will mail EM Authorization
renewal forms to existing EM
Authorization holders each year on or
about: September 1 for shorebased IFQ
vessels, and January 1 for Pacific
whiting IFQ and MS/CV vessels. Vessel
owners who want to have their
Authorizations effective for January 1 of
the following calendar year must submit
their complete renewal form to NMFS
by October 15. Vessel owners who want
to have their EM Authorizations
effective for May 15 of the following
calendar year must submit their
complete renewal form to NMFS by
February 15.
*
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*
(m) Declaration reports. The operator
of a vessel with a valid EM
Authorization must make a declaration
report to NMFS OLE prior to leaving
port following the process described at
§ 660.13(d)(4). A declaration report will
be valid until another declaration report
revising the existing gear or monitoring
declaration is received by NMFS OLE.
(n) Observer requirements. The
operator of a vessel with a valid EM
Authorization must provide advanced
notice to NMFS, at least 48 hours prior
to departing port, of the vessel
operator’s intent to take a trip under
EM, including: Vessel name, permit
number; contact name and telephone
number for coordination of observer
deployment; date, time, and port of
departure; and the vessel’s trip plan,
including area to be fished, gear type to
be used, and whether the vessel will use
maximized or optimized retention rules
for the trip as defined at paragraphs
(p)(3) and (4) of this section. NMFS may
waive this requirement for vessels
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11393
declared into the Pacific whiting IFQ
fishery or mothership sector with prior
notice. If NMFS notifies the vessel
owner, operator, or manager of any
requirement to carry an observer, the
vessel may not be used to fish for
groundfish without carrying an
observer. The vessel operator must
comply with the following requirements
on a trip that the vessel owner, operator,
or manager has been notified is required
to carry an observer.
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*
(p) * * *
(3) Maximized retention bottom trawl
and non-whiting midwater trawl trips. A
vessel operator on a declared
maximized retention trip using bottom
trawl gear, or midwater trawl gear in
which Pacific whiting constitutes less
than 50 percent of the catch by weight
at landing, the vessel must not sort
catch at-sea and must retain all catch
until landing, with exceptions listed
below in paragraphs (p)(3)(i) through (v)
of this section. All discards must be
discarded following instructions in the
VMP per paragraph (e)(iii) of this
section. All discards, regardless of the
source, must be reported in the bottom
trawl logbook, including the species
(where possible), estimated weight, and
reason for discard. The vessel operator
is responsible for ensuring that all catch
is handled in a manner that enables the
EM system to record it.
(i) Minor operational discards are
permitted. Minor operational discards
include mutilated fish; fish vented from
an overfull codend; and fish removed
from the deck and fishing gear during
cleaning. Minor operational discards do
not include discards that result when
more catch is taken than is necessary to
fill the hold or catch from a tow that is
not delivered.
(ii) Large individual marine organisms
(i.e., all marine mammals, sea turtles,
and non-ESA-listed seabirds, and fish
species longer than 6 ft (1.8 m) in
length) may be discarded. For any ESAlisted seabirds that are brought on
board, vessel operators must follow any
relevant instructions for handling and
disposition under § 660.21(c)(1)(v).
(iii) Crabs, starfish, coral, sponges,
and other invertebrates may be
discarded.
(iv) Trash, mud, rocks, and other
inorganic debris may be discarded.
(v) A discard that is the result of an
event that is beyond the control of the
vessel operator or crew, such as a safety
issue or mechanical failure, is
permitted.
(4) Optimized retention bottom trawl
and non-whiting midwater trawl trips.
On a declared optimized retention trip
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using bottom trawl gear, or midwater
trawl gear in which Pacific whiting
constitutes less than 50 percent of the
catch by weight at landing, the vessel
owner and operator are responsible for
the following:
(i) The vessel must retain IFQ species
(as defined at § 660.140(c)), except for
Arrowtooth flounder, English sole,
Dover sole, deep sea sole, Pacific
sanddab, Pacific whiting, lingcod and
starry flounder; must retain salmon and
eulachon; and must retain the following
non-IFQ species greenland turbot;
slender sole; hybrid sole; c-o sole;
bigmouth sole; fantail sole; hornyhead
turbot; spotted turbot; California
halibut; northern rockfish; black
rockfish; blue rockfish; shortbelly
rockfish; olive rockfish; Puget Sound
rockfish; semaphore rockfish; walleye
pollock; slender codling; Pacific tom
cod; with exceptions listed in
paragraphs (p)(4)(i)(A) and (B) of this
section.
(A) Mutilated and depredated fish
may be discarded.
(B) A discard that is the result of an
event that is beyond the control of the
vessel operator or crew, such as a safety
issue or mechanical failure, is
permitted.
(ii) The vessel must discard Pacific
halibut, green sturgeon, California
halibut (except as allowed by state
regulations), and nearshore groundfish
species below state commercial
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:06 Feb 28, 2022
Jkt 256001
minimum size limits, following
instructions in the NMFS-accepted
VMP.
(iii) Incidentally caught marine
mammals, non-ESA-listed seabirds, sea
turtles, other ESA-listed fish, and
Dungeness crab caught seaward of
Washington or Oregon or south of Point
Reyes, California, as described at
§ 660.11 Prohibited species, must be
discarded following instructions in the
NMFS-accepted VMP per paragraph
(e)(iii) of this section. For any ESAlisted seabirds that are brought on
board, vessel operators must follow any
relevant instructions for handling and
disposition under § 660.21(c)(1)(v).
(iv) Crabs, starfish, coral, sponges, and
other invertebrates may be discarded.
(v) Trash, mud, rocks, and other
inorganic debris may be discarded.
(vi) All discards must be discarded
following instructions in the VMP per
paragraph (e)(iii) of this section. All
discards, regardless of the source, must
be reported in the bottom trawl logbook,
including the species (where possible),
estimated weight, and reason for
discard. The vessel operator is
responsible for ensuring that all catch is
handled in a manner that enables the
EM system to record it.
(q) Changes to retention requirements.
NMFS may specify alternate retention
requirements in a NMFS-accepted VMP
through the process described in
paragraph (f) of this section, after
PO 00000
Frm 00069
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 9990
consultation with the Council and
issuance of a public notice notifying the
public of the changes. Alternate
retention requirements must be
sufficient to provide NMFS with the
best available information to determine
individual accountability for catch,
including discards, of IFQ species and
compliance with requirements of the
Shorebased IFQ Program (§ 660.140) and
MS Coop Program (§ 660.150).
*
*
*
*
*
(s) * * *
(2) Submission of logbooks. Vessel
operators must submit copies of the
Federal discard logbook and state
retained logbook to the vessel owner’s
contracted EM service provider and to
NMFS or its agent within 24 hours of
the end of each EM trip.
(3) * * *
(i) Shorebased IFQ vessels. EM data
from an EM trip must be submitted
within 72 hours after the beginning of
the offload (and no more than 10 days
after the end of the first trip on the hard
drive).
(ii) Mothership catcher vessels. EM
data from an EM trip must be submitted
within 72 hours of the catcher vessel’s
return to port.
*
*
*
*
*
[FR Doc. 2022–03516 Filed 2–28–22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
E:\FR\FM\01MRP1.SGM
01MRP1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 87, Number 40 (Tuesday, March 1, 2022)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 11382-11394]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2022-03516]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
50 CFR Part 660
[Docket No. 220204-0040]
RIN 0648-BH70
Fisheries off West Coast States; Pacific Coast Groundfish
Fishery; Electronic Monitoring Program Regulations for Bottom Trawl and
Non-Whiting Midwater Trawl Vessels
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Proposed rule; request for comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This proposed rule would implement electronic monitoring (EM)
program regulations for vessels using groundfish bottom trawl and non-
whiting midwater trawl gear in the Pacific Coast Groundfish Trawl Catch
Share Program. The proposed action would allow vessels using bottom
trawl and non-whiting midwater trawl gear to use EM in place of human
observers to meet requirements for 100 percent at-sea catch monitoring.
The proposed action is intended to increase operational flexibility and
reduce monitoring costs for vessels in the groundfish trawl fishery.
The proposed rule would also revise some existing regulations for EM
vessels and EM service providers to clarify and streamline EM program
requirements.
DATES: Comments on this proposed rule must be received no later than
March 31, 2022.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments on this document, identified by
NOAA-NMFS-2021-0127 by any of the following methods:
Electronic Submission: Submit all electronic public
comments via the
[[Page 11383]]
Federal e-Rulemaking Portal. Go to https://www.regulations.gov and
enter NOAA-NMFS-2021-0127 in the Search box, click 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).
Written comments regarding the burden-hour estimates or other
aspects of the collection-of-information requirements contained in this
proposed rule may be submitted to NMFS and to www.reginfo.gov/public/do/PRAMain. Find this particular information collection by selecting
``Currently under 30-day Review--Open for Public Comments'' or by using
the search function.
Electronic Access
This proposed rule is accessible at the Office of the Federal
Register website at https://www.federalregister.gov. Background
information and documents are available at the NMFS West Coast Region
website at: https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/species/west-coast-groundfish and at the Pacific Fishery Management Council's website at
https://www.pcouncil.org/managed_fishery/electronic-monitoring/.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Colin Sayre, phone: 206-526-4656, or
email: [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
The Pacific Coast Groundfish Fishery Management Plan (FMP)
specifies management measures for over 90 different groundfish species
in Federal waters off the West Coast states. Target species in the
commercial fishery include Pacific whiting (hake), sablefish, dover
sole, and rockfish, which are harvested by vessels primarily using
midwater trawl and bottom trawl gear, and to a lesser extent ``fixed
gear'' fish pots and longline. The trawl fishery is managed under the
West Coast Groundfish Trawl Catch Share Program (Catch Share Program),
which was implemented through Amendment 20 to the FMP in January 2011.
The Catch Share Program consists of an individual fishing quota (IFQ)
program for the shorebased trawl fishery (including whiting and non-
whiting sectors), and cooperatives for the at-sea mothership (MS) and
catcher/processor (C/P) trawl fisheries (whiting only). The Catch Share
Program requires 100 percent monitoring of vessels at-sea, and dockside
when offloading, to ensure accountability for all landings and discards
of allocated IFQ species. The West Coast Groundfish Observer Program
(WCGOP) is responsible for the training, briefing, and in-season
support of at-sea observers in the Catch Share Program. WCGOP helps to
manage and review the catch data collected by observers while at-sea.
Vessel owners and first receivers are responsible for obtaining and
funding catch share observers and catch monitors as a condition of
participating in the Catch Share Program. To provide a potential cost-
saving alternative to human observers, the Pacific Fishery Management
Council, NMFS, and groundfish stakeholders have been developing an
electronic monitoring (EM) program as an option to meet at-sea
monitoring requirements of the Catch Share Program. EM uses cameras and
associated sensors to record and monitor fishing activities while a
vessel is operating at sea. Video data is later reviewed by an analyst
onshore to collect catch and effort information. EM can reduce
monitoring costs for some vessels because it does not require deploying
a human observer to the vessel, and associated, labor, travel, and
logistical expenses.
On September 6, 2016, NMFS published the proposed rule providing a
regulatory framework for EM in the Pacific Coast groundfish fisheries,
and specific regulations for EM use with whiting midwater trawl gear
and fixed gear (81 FR 61161). As discussed in that proposed rule, the
Council originally contemplated including regulations for all gear
types used in the Catch Share Program (whiting, non-whiting midwater,
bottom trawl, and fixed gear) in one regulatory amendment. However, at
the time, additional information was needed to finalize protocols for
the use of EM on trips using bottom-trawl and non-whiting midwater
gear. In April, September, and November 2017, the Council discussed
various aspects of the EM program and took final action to recommend
the use of EM with bottom trawl and non-whiting midwater trawl gear.
On June 28, 2019, NMFS published the final rule to allow the use of
EM on whiting and fixed gear trips (84 FR 31146). The final rule
established the overall EM program requirements, including an
application process and responsibilities for participating vessel
owners and operators and EM service providers, requirements for first
receivers receiving catch from EM trips, and detailed gear-specific
protocols for the use of EM on whiting and fixed gear trips. The final
rule also set the implementation of third party EM service provider
data services to January 1, 2021, to provide additional time to prepare
for implementation.
At the April and June 2020 meetings, the Council considered and
ultimately recommended other minor regulatory changes to existing EM
program regulations implemented under the June 2019 final rule (84 FR
31146; June 28, 2019). These regulatory changes were identified and
developed from information collected through exempted fishing permits
(EFPs) used to test EM systems and protocols, and are intended to
clarify and streamline EM program requirements. These proposed
regulatory changes are included under this proposed rule, and are
described in the following sections of this preamble.
At its April and June 2020 meetings the Council also recommended a
delay in program implementation until January 1, 2022. NMFS approved
the recommendation, to strengthen Council and industry support for the
EM program, and to increase participation when the program is
implemented. NMFS published a subsequent proposed rule (85 FR 53313;
August 28, 2020) and final rule (85 FR 74614; November 23, 2020) that
delayed implementation of the EM program by one year until January 1,
2022, to provide additional time for industry and prospective service
providers to prepare for implementation.
At the June 2021 meeting, the Council again discussed delaying
implementation of all EM program regulations, and took action at the
September 2021 meeting to recommend that NMFS delay implementation of
the entire EM program until January 1, 2024. NMFS published an interim
final rule on October 6, 2021 (86 FR 55525) that changed effective
dates in regulations in order to delay all other EM program regulations
until at least January 1, 2024, and only after NMFS issues a public
notice at least 90 calendar days before it will begin accepting
applications for EM Authorizations for the first year of the Program.
The Council and the industry have expressed the need to further develop
a mechanism for the industry to fund video review and storage by
Pacific
[[Page 11384]]
States Marine Fishery Commission (PSMFC). The Council and members of
the fishing industry would like PSMFC to continue participating as a
NMFS-certified, sole-source service provider under the EM regulatory
program. They assert that PSMFC can provide video review services at
lower cost than private sector service provider companies. Consistent
with the existing regulations implemented under the October 6, 2021
interim final rule (86 FR 55525), these proposed regulations would
similarly not be implemented before January 1, 2024.
Despite the delay in implementation of the EM program, NMFS is
proceeding with this proposed rule that would allow the use of EM on
trips with bottom-trawl and non-whiting midwater trawl gear. Should the
Council take action to change EM service provider regulations to allow
PSMFC to function as a sole-source EM service provider, NMFS would need
to initiate a separate proposed and final rulemaking to make necessary
changes to the existing regulations for EM service providers that were
finalized under the June 2019 final rule (84 FR 31146; June 28, 2019).
Whether the Council chooses to take action to change EM service
provider regulations, or not, completing the rulemaking process for the
use of EM on bottom-trawl and non-whiting midwater trawl trips will
ensure all regulations are in place for vessels to use EM with any
legal groundfish gear type in advance of EM program implementation.
In the October 2021 interim final rule, NMFS acknowledged that some
permit applications had already been received at the time of the
rulemaking. NMFS will consider and review these applications in advance
of the date the program is fully implemented. Upon review NMFS will
make a determination regarding the status of the applicant and may
request updated information.
The Council deemed the proposed regulations necessary and
appropriate to implement this action in a January 20, 2022, letter from
Council Executive Director, Merrick Burden, to Regional Administrator
Barry Thom. Under the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and
Management Act (Magnuson-Stevens Act), NMFS is required to publish
proposed rules for comment after preliminarily determining whether they
are consistent with applicable law. We are seeking comment on the
proposed regulations in this action and whether they are consistent
with the Pacific Coast Groundfish FMP, the Magnuson-Stevens Act and its
National Standards, and other applicable laws.
II. Proposed Regulations
Proposed Measures for Using EM on Bottom Trawl and Non-Whiting Midwater
Trawl Trips
The June 2019 final rule (84 FR 31146; June 28, 2019) implemented
the overall framework and general requirements for the EM Program,
including an application process for vessel owners and EM service
providers and responsibilities for all program participants. This rule
proposes to allow vessels participating in the EM Program to use bottom
trawl gear or midwater trawl gear targeting non-whiting species, under
the same general program requirements already in place for trips
targeting whiting or using fixed gear. Vessel owners would be able to
apply to NMFS to use EM in place of human observers to meet the 100-
percent at-sea monitoring requirements of the Catch Share Program for
bottom trawl or non-whiting midwater trawl trips. As is currently
required under the EM Program regulations, vessel owners intending to
use EM for bottom trawl or non-whiting midwater trawl trips would be
required to develop a vessel monitoring plan (VMP) which documents
installation of EM systems, including specific plans and procedures for
system operation, maintenance, and catch handling. This information
would be submitted to NMFS for review as part of the vessel's
application for authorization to use EM. The vessel operator would be
required to record discards of IFQ species on a logbook, which would
initially be used to debit quota pounds from the vessel's account. The
EM video data would then be reviewed by the vessel's EM provider and
used to validate the discards reported in the logbook. The amount of
video reviewed to audit the logbook would be as specified by NMFS in
consultation with the Council and based on performance.
A detailed description of EM program requirements is contained in
the September 2016 proposed rule (81 FR 61161; September 6, 2016) and
June 2019 final rule (84 FR 31146; June 28, 2019) and is not repeated
here. This proposed rule revises the gear-specific requirements of the
EM Program to add requirements for trips using bottom trawl and non-
whiting midwater trawl gear, and are described in the following
sections of this preamble.
Catch Retention
Under this proposed rule, two different discard and catch retention
rules could be used with EM on bottom trawl, and non-whiting midwater
trawl trips: ``maximized'' or ``optimized'' retention. Vessel operators
would be able choose the preferred retention rule under which they
would plan to operate for a fishing trip using EM. As part of the
required declaration report, prior to departing on a fishing trip,
vessel operators would declare whether they intend to use maximized or
optimized retention rules for the trip. Declaration reports are
described in additional detail in following sections of this preamble.
Under proposed ``maximized'' retention requirements, vessels on
bottom trawl and non-whiting midwater trawl trips would not sort or
discard catch at-sea, and would be required to retain all catch until
landing, with exceptions for prohibited and protected species.
Under ``optimized'' retention, EM vessel operators would be allowed
to discard species that can be differentiated on camera, and retain
those species that cannot be easily distinguished in video data. Some
groundfish species are difficult to distinguish from each other without
close inspection of certain physical features which cannot be easily
viewed using video data. Species easily differentiated that may be
discarded would be listed in Sec. 660.604(p).
Vessel operators using EM on bottom trawl and non-whiting midwater
trawl trips would be responsible for ensuring all discarded catch would
be discarded following catch handling instructions in the NMFS-accepted
VMP. This proposed rule would allow NMFS to specify alternate retention
requirements in a NMFS-accepted VMP through the process described at
Sec. 660.604(f), after consultation with the Council and issuance of a
public notice notifying the public of the changes.
Both retention rules have trade-offs, depending on the target
species and gear type used. ``Maximized'' retention would simplify
catch handling at sea, and video review as only prohibited and
protected species discards would need to be differentiated on camera.
``Optimized'' retention would allow vessel operators to discard catch
that can be differentiated on camera, and would reduce the burden of
having to store and later dispose of unmarketable or otherwise
undesirable fish. The Council originally recommended ``optimized''
retention rules as the preferred alternative for bottom trawl and non-
whiting midwater EM trips because the Council considered ``maximized''
retention too restrictive. However, some EFP vessel operators on
[[Page 11385]]
non-whiting midwater trawl trips targeting rockfish expressed a
preference for ``maximized'' retention as it simplified catch handling
in a manner consistent with vessel operation on midwater whiting trips.
The Council determined that allowing vessel operators to choose the
retention rules that best fit the operation of gear and vessel, as well
as the characteristics of the target species, would provide operational
flexibility and ensure the reliability of EM video data for discard
accounting.
This proposed rule would also expand the definition of prohibited
species for the purposes of retention requirements under EM regulations
at Sec. 660.601. California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW)
recommended this proposed regulatory change to ensure state-managed
species would be treated in the same manner as prohibited species if
the vessel operator, or first-receiver, does not have the appropriate
state permit to land and sell these particular species of fish. Because
the retention/discard species list can change through time, CDFW
recommended to the Council regulatory language that would cover any
state-managed species to eliminate the need for further revisions
should other state-managed species be added or removed from the lists.
EM Declaration and Switching Between EM and Observers
Under the proposed rule, vessels on bottom trawl and non-whiting
midwater trawl trips would be allowed to switch between using EM
systems on some trips and human observers on others. Current West Coast
fisheries regulations at Sec. 660.13(d) require vessel operators to
declare the fishery sector in which they will participate, the area to
be fished, and the gear and monitoring type (EM or observers) they
intend to use prior to leaving port, with limited exemptions. The gear
types or sectors, and monitoring types that must be declared are listed
in regulations at Sec. 660.13(d)(4)(iv)(A). These declarations are
sent to the NMFS Office of Law Enforcement (OLE), and are binding for
the duration of the fishing trip for which they have been made. This
proposed rule would modify the list of declarations to include EM as a
monitoring type that may be selected and declared on trips with bottom
trawl and non-whiting midwater trawl gear.
Under current regulations at Sec. 660.604(e)(3)(ii), EM vessel
operators are required to submit annual tentative fishing plans to
NMFS. Tentative fishing plans are used by WCGOP and observer providers
to plan training and deployment of observers. Tentative fishing plans
are a description of the vessel owner's fishing plans for the year,
including which fishery the vessel owner plans to participate in, from
what ports, and when the vessel owner intends to use EM and observers.
The information provided in tentative fishing plans is for purposes of
planning observer training and deployments, and is not binding.
Under this proposed rule, vessel owners and operators taking bottom
trawl and non-whiting midwater trawl trips would not be restricted on
the number of times they could switch between EM and observers during
the year. Vessel operators are required to communicate their intent to
use either monitoring type before fishing through declarations to NMFS
OLE. The Council determined that by using tentative fishing plans,
disruption to observer training and deployment would be mitigated
should vessel operators choose to switch monitoring types, therefore
eliminating the need to require limits on switching monitoring types.
The option to switch between EM and observers provides vessel operators
flexibility to use the best monitoring strategy when considering
efficiency, cost, or other operational factors of their individual
fishing and business plans at a given time. There would be no limit on
switching between observers and EM for non-whiting midwater trawl and
groundfish bottom trawl vessels.
Observer Program Declaration
Under existing regulations at Sec. 660.604(n), as described above,
a vessel operator must declare their intent to use either EM or
observers 48 hours prior to leaving port. Under proposed regulations
for ``maximized'' and ``optimized'' retention, the operator would also
be required to include the retention rules they intend to use in their
declaration to WCGOP 48 hours prior to leaving port on a trip using EM
with bottom trawl or non-whiting midwater trawl gear. This timeframe
and declaration allows for the planning of observer deployment.
``Optimized'' retention EM trips would continue to require partial
observer coverage for the purpose of collecting biological samples of
discarded catch. Biological samples include age, sex, and length
specimen data which cannot be obtained through EM systems. Requiring
the vessel operator to notify WCGOP of their intended retention type
will ensure optimized retention trips can be selected for biological
sampling. WCGOP does not require partial observer coverage on maximized
retention EM trips for biological sampling at this time, but could
potentially in the future.
Group EM Authorization and Self-Enforcing Agreements
Under the proposed regulations, a group of eligible vessel owners
participating in the shorebased IFQ sector, including those that take
bottom trawl and non-whiting midwater trawl trips, may obtain a group
EM authorization through a self-enforcing agreement. Through a private,
contractual arrangement, a self-enforcing agreement allows a co-signed
group of vessels, owners, operators, and other interested parties to
cooperatively encourage, and enforce, compliance of EM program
requirements by members. To be considered for a group EM authorization,
a group of vessel owners must submit a complete initial EM
authorization application package to NMFS for review and approval. The
package must include a copy of the self-enforcing agreement to be
eligible to receive a group EM authorization. Participating vessel
owners would be required to agree to conduct fishing operations
according to the terms of the self-enforcing agreement. NMFS would
still bear the ultimate responsibility for enforcing the EM
regulations.
The self-enforcing agreement would need to include a description of
participating members, responsibilities, procedures for communication
with members and NMFS, equipment performance standards, provisions for
the use and protection of confidential data, measures to enforce
compliance, procedures for addressing non-compliance of members, and
annual reports to the Council.
Under these proposed regulations, NMFS would have the authority to
invalidate a group EM authorization if determined that any of the
vessels, owners, and/or operators no longer meet the eligibility
criteria for the self-enforcing agreement. NMFS would first notify the
members of the group EM authorization of the deficiencies in writing,
providing instructions, for members to correct the deficiencies. If the
deficiencies are not resolved upon review of the first trip following
the notification, NMFS will notify the members in writing that the
group EM authorization is invalid and that the members are no longer
exempt from observer coverage at Sec. Sec. 660.140(h)(1)(i) and
660.150(j)(1)(i)(B) for that authorization period. After the
invalidation of a group EM authorization, individual vessels would be
able to apply for individual authorizations.
[[Page 11386]]
The Council recommended the allowance of self-enforcing cooperative
agreements for shorebased IFQ vessels in the EM program based on prior
participation in EM EFPs by fishing cooperatives. Under proposed
regulations, a fishing collective that has operated under a cooperative
self-enforcing agreement to test EM under EFPs would be able to apply
for authorization to continue self-enforced compliance with the EM
program. This proposed rule would allow additional groups of shorebased
IFQ vessels applying for EM authorization to enter in the self-
enforcing cooperative agreements. These agreements would help to
encourage compliance with the many day-to-day responsibilities for EM
system maintenance and catch handling requirements of the EM program.
Regulatory Changes To Refine Existing EM Program
In June 2019, NMFS published the final rule to implement an EM
program for whiting and fixed gear vessels operating within the trawl
fishery (84 FR 31146; June 28, 2019), establishing responsibility
requirements for vessel operators using EM systems, and for EM service
providers. These responsibilities are detailed in the final rule, and
include declaration of EM system use by vessel operators, protocols for
transferring and handling EM data, logbook processing requirements, and
technical reports by EM service providers. Minor changes necessary to
clarify these regulations were identified after the publication of the
2019 final rule. The regulatory changes described below were developed
through Council discussion with NMFS and members of industry at the
Council's April and June 2020 meetings. The Council's intent in
developing these regulatory changes is to refine and clarify certain EM
program requirements and improve the effectiveness of the EM program
overall in meeting its intended monitoring goals for the Trawl Catch
Share Program.
1. Hard Drive Deadline
This proposed regulatory change would increase the hard drive
submission deadline to 72 hours from the beginning of the offload
following a fishing trip in which EM was used. Under current EM program
regulations at Sec. 660.604(s)(3), vessels using EM systems are
required to submit hard drives storing EM video data within 24 hours of
beginning an offload after a fishing trip. Increasing this deadline to
72 hours would align it with the hard drive submission requirements
used under EM EFPs. This change would provide additional time for
vessel operators to comply with hard drive submission requirements with
minimal impact to the timeliness of data. This change would also ensure
a smooth transition for vessels operating under EFPs to the full EM
program regulations when they become effective.
2. Reusing Hard Drives
This proposed regulatory change would require the scrubbing of EM
hard drives only if end-to-end encryption is not used. Current EM
regulations at Sec. 660.603(m)(3) require service providers to remove
all EM data before hard drives can be reused in the field. This
requirement was intended to ensure protection of confidential
information for vessel owners and operators. However, regular scrubbing
of hard drives can shorten their functional life, and require their
replacement more frequently, increasing operational costs for EM users.
NMFS and the Council determined that the use of end-to-end encryption
would sufficiently protect sensitive information and extend the life of
EM hard drives. End-to-end encryption protects information encrypted by
the sender, allowing only recipients with the encryption key to decrypt
and access the information. Third parties without the encryption key
would not have the means to read the files. Starting in 2017, NMFS
stopped requiring scrubbing of hard drives that use end-to-end
encryption in the EM EFP, which is consistent with practices in other
regions. This regulatory change would reduce program costs, and still
allow vessel owners to work with service providers to develop more
strict requirements for the treatment of hard drives.
3. Limit on Switching Between EM and Observers for Whiting Vessels
The Council is recommending removing the limit on switching between
observers and EM for whiting trips. Current regulations at Sec.
660.604(m) restrict vessel operators on whiting trips from revising a
monitoring declaration more than twice per calendar year, except in the
case of an EM system malfunction. The limit was intended to prevent
frequent switching that could disrupt deployment planning and affect
the availability of observers. As NMFS described in the September 2016
proposed rule (81 FR 61161; September 6, 2016), and finalized in the
June 2019 final rule (84 FR 31146; June 28, 2019), NMFS may waive the
limit on switching between monitoring types if it is not necessary for
planning observer deployment. After the final rule published, NMFS and
the Council determined that a regulatory restriction on how many times
a vessel taking whiting trips can switch between observers and EM was
unnecessary. Under current regulations, vessels owners are required to
provide a tentative fishing plan when they apply for their annual EM
Authorization, in which the vessel owner gives NMFS advance notice of
their plans to use EM and observers for the upcoming fishing year.
WCGOP and observer providers then can use this information for planning
purposes. This information negates the need for restrictions on
switching between observers and EM. Therefore, the Council recommended,
and NMFS proposes eliminating the limit on switching between EM and
observers for whiting trips under this proposed rule. This proposed
change would align the flexibility in moving between EM and observer
coverage for all trip types (bottom trawl, whiting midwater, non-
whiting midwater, and fixed gear).
4. Mothership/Catcher Vessel (MS/CV) Endorsement
Current EM regulations at Sec. 660.604(e)(1)(iii) require a vessel
applying to use EM in the mothership sector to have a valid mothership/
catcher vessel (MS/CV) endorsement to qualify for authorization. This
requirement was initially included for vessels testing EM under EFPs,
as having valid permits for all intended fishing activities is a
standard requirement for EFP eligibility. However, the regulations
governing Mothership cooperatives at Sec. 660.150(g)(1) allow for a
vessel without an MS/CV endorsement, but that is enrolled in the
mothership cooperative to deliver to a mothership. It was not the
Council's and NMFS's intent to restrict participation in EM to only
those vessels with MS/CV endorsement. Including this eligibility
criterion was a holdover from the EFP terms and conditions and is not
consistent with Council intent. Therefore, this proposed rule would
remove the eligibility requirement at Sec. 660.604(e)(1)(iii) for an
MS/CV endorsement to be eligible to use EM on MS/CV trips.
5. Logbook Processing
This proposed regulatory change would require all vessel owners to
submit discard logbooks directly to their EM service providers
following a fishing trip in which EM was used. EM service providers
would receive and process discard logbooks by entering data, performing
quality assurance and control, and subsequently submit logbook data to
NMFS for review.
[[Page 11387]]
Service providers would be required to submit initial logbook data to
NMFS within two business days of receipt from vessel operators.
Current EM regulations at Sec. 660.604(s) assume vessel operators
would submit discard logbooks directly to NMFS or its agent for
processing. Under this model, NMFS would data enter, and check logbooks
for accuracy and issues, which would then be used to initially debit
discarded catch from vessel IFQ accounts. EM service providers review
video data separately, with WCGOP providing some logbook data to EM
service providers that is necessary for completing the video review,
such as trawl gear codend capacity, but with most identifying logbook
data withheld to ensure video review is done blind.
Under current regulations, having NMFS process logbooks directly
would require back-and-forth with EM service providers to accurately
match logbooks with EM trips, select trips or hauls for review, compare
logbook and EM discard estimates, and investigate any discrepancies.
Vessel owners must submit logbooks directly to NMFS via a secure
transmission method to comply with confidentiality and data security
requirements, limiting the methods by which NMFS can receive logbooks.
At the November 2020 Groundfish Electronic Monitoring Program
Advisory Committee (GEMPAC) meeting, GEMPAC members proposed an
alternative procedure in which EM service providers would receive,
complete data entry, review logbook data, and submit results to NMFS.
NMFS and the Council determined it would be more efficient and cost
effective to have EM service providers receive both logbooks and EM
data directly from vessel owners for initial processing, entry, and
quality control, and simply report final data to NMFS. NMFS would also
receive logbooks, and use its debriefing procedures to carry out
quality control on the logbook data and to check for potential bias in
the video review. Having EM service providers process logbooks would
also allow individual vessel operators to develop optimal submission
methods for discard logbooks with their respective EM service
providers. NMFS supports the Council recommendation and therefore
proposes the change through this proposed rule.
6. Reporting Deadlines for EM Service Providers
Under current regulations at Sec. 660.603, EM service providers
are responsible for providing various feedback reports to vessel
operators, and summaries to NMFS. These reports include logbook data,
technical assistance, vessel operator feedback, EM summary data, and
compliance reports. Submission of this information by service providers
has been required in regulations as of June 2019, however, deadlines
for the submission of these reports were not originally specified in
regulation. Under this proposed rule, NMFS would establish submission
deadlines for these required EM service providers' reports. This
proposed change would allow NMFS to enforce timely submission of EM
data. The submission deadlines for each report are specified below.
A. Discard Logbooks
As described previously in this proposed rule, vessel operators
would submit discard logbooks directly to EM service providers for
processing. The Council recommended, and NMFS is proposing, that
service providers would submit the initial logbook data to NMFS within
two days of receipt from vessel operators. This deadline would help to
ensure timely debiting of discards from vessel IFQ accounts, and is
consistent with submission timelines used for EM EFPs, and WCGOP
observer data. Setting the deadline based on the receipt of initial,
rather than final, logbook data would ensure service providers are not
held responsible for late or incomplete submissions from vessel
operators. After initial logbook submission, the EM service provider
would work with the vessel operator to review data and, if necessary,
revise and submit updated logbook data. Under these proposed regulatory
changes, requiring concrete deadlines for these reports in the
regulations would ensure the timely submission of discard estimates
from logbook data, which is essential for discard accounting in the
Catch Share program, and to provide clear expectations for all
participants.
B. Reports of Technical Assistance
Under current regulations at Sec. 660.603(k), EM service providers
are required to submit reports to NMFS when technical assistance is
requested by vessels on EM trips. These reports of technical assistance
allow NMFS to monitor the performance of EM systems and field services,
and follow up should any potential enforcement issues arise. Under this
proposed rule, NMFS would require technical assistance reports to be
submitted within 24 hours of the EM service provider being notified by
the vessel operator. This change would be consistent with how these
notifications have occurred in the EM EFP.
C. Vessel Feedback Reports
Under current regulations at Sec. 660.603(m)(4), EM service
providers are required to provide feedback reports to vessel operators
and field services staff. Feedback is required on EM systems, crew
responsibilities, and any other information that would improve the
quality and effectiveness of data collection on the vessel. Through
this proposed rule, NMFS would require feedback to be submitted to
vessels within three weeks of the date EM data is received from the
vessel operator for processing by the service provider. Prospective
service providers, EFP vessel operators, and industry members have
provided feedback through the Council process that three weeks is a
reasonable timeline for the submission vessel feedback reports.
Specifically, a submission deadline of three weeks after the service
provider receives the hard drive from a vessel would ensure that EM
service providers are not held responsible for late submissions by
vessel operators. A shorter timeline may be more difficult for EM
service providers to meet if they receive several hard drives at once,
such as during busy times of the year. However, a longer timeline may
not provide timely feedback to vessel operators and updates to discard
data. Concrete and enforceable deadlines are necessary to ensure
service providers submit feedback reports in a timely manner, and
establish the data processing procedures to meet these deadlines. It is
critically important to provide timely feedback to vessel captains and
crew on catch handling, EM system care, and other aspects of operations
that affect data quality. Timely feedback to vessels would help to
ensure the quality of EM data, and reliability of the EM program in
meeting monitoring goals of the Catch Share program.
D. EM Summary Data and Compliance Reports
Current regulations at Sec. 660.603(m)(5) require service
providers to submit EM summary data and compliance reports to NMFS
following completion of video review. EM summary data includes discard
estimates, fishing activity information, and trip metadata. This
proposed rule would require EM summary data and compliance reports to
be submitted to NMFS three weeks from the date the vessel operator
submits EM data for processing. EM summary data and compliance reports
are used by NMFS to debit vessel accounts, monitor program and vessel
performance, and enforce requirements of the EM program. Trip metadata
is an
[[Page 11388]]
essential record of when and where EM data were created by the vessel,
submission time, date and location of review, and point of contacts for
reviewers. Trip metadata ensures fishing data can be accurately
corroborated with logbook data and is necessary for a complete chain of
custody and accountability between the vessel, service provider, and
NMFS. Catch discards would initially be debited from vessel accounts in
the IFQ database using logbook data, as described previously; discards
would largely be accounted for following logbook processing, and
audited using EM data. If there are large discrepancies between the
logbook and EM summary data, then a longer reporting timeline may
result in vessel account owners experiencing unexpected debits, or
being unable to ``close-out'' an account for a fishing trip until the
EM data are received. In the EM EFP, reporting timelines have ranged
from one to two weeks after receipt of the hard drive in 2015 to one to
two months during periods of higher fishing activity in 2019. Feedback
from prospective EM service providers is that three weeks after receipt
of the hard drive may be a reasonable timeline for completion of the
video review and submission of reports. NMFS recommended three weeks,
with support from the Council's GEMPAC and Groundfish Management Team,
as being a reasonable amount of time for service providers to complete
review and subsequently prepare summary data and compliance reports.
7. Retention of EM Data
This proposed rule would change the minimum length of time service
providers are required to retain EM data records. Under current
regulations, service providers must maintain all of a vessel's EM data,
reports, and other records specified in regulations at Sec. 660.603(m)
Data services for a period of not less than three years after the date
of landing for that trip. The rationale for originally adopting a
three-year minimum retention period for EM data is detailed in the June
2019 final rule (84 FR 31146; June 28, 2019). Since that final rule,
NMFS evaluated the feasibility and cost effectiveness of a shorter
retention period, and has developed a national policy on the minimum
time that EM data must be retained.
Under this proposed rule, EM service providers would be required to
maintain EM data for a period of not less than 12 months starting after
NMFS has officially completed end-of-year account reconciliation and
catch monitoring. This proposed regulatory change would align with the
12-month minimum data retention period in the NMFS Procedural Directive
04-115-03 (see ADDRESSES) for third-party minimum data retention in EM
programs for federally managed U.S. fisheries. Review of catch
monitoring data, including EM data, usually extends beyond the close of
the fishery at the end of the calendar year. Starting the clock for the
minimum retention period following end-of-the-year data reconciliation
would best meet the recommendations of the procedural directive.
8. Change in Definition of Conflict of Interest for EM Service
Providers
This proposed change would revise regulations at Sec. 660.603(h)
defining limitations on conflicts of interest for EM service providers
to exclude providing other types of technical and equipment services to
fishing companies. The definition in regulations currently excludes
``the provision of observer, catch monitor, EM or other biological
sampling services, in any Federal or state-managed fisheries'' from the
definition of a ``direct financial interest.'' After the final rule was
published, an EM service provider brought to the Council's attention
that many EM vendors provide a range of other services to fishing
companies, including vessel monitoring systems (VMS), automatic
identification system (AIS) transponders, telemetry (such as product
temperature monitoring for seafood safety), buoy and gear monitoring,
sonar systems, and mandatory safety services. Under the current
regulatory definition, such EM vendors would be ineligible to provide
EM services. The EM service provider noted that there is no evidence to
suggest that providing such technical services to fishing companies
creates any greater conflict of interest than providing biological
sampling services, and requested that the definition be revised.
Therefore, the Council recommended, and NMFS is proposing, revising the
definition of a conflict of interest at Sec. 660.603(h) to exclude
providing other types of technical and equipment services to fishing
companies.
9. Technical Corrections
In addition to the proposed regulatory changes already described,
the Council also recommended two clarifying corrections to language in
the EM program regulations. The first correction is technical and would
change the reference to ``a NMFS-accepted EM Service Plan'' under Sec.
660.603(a)(1) to correctly refer to paragraph Sec. 660.603(b)(1)(vii).
The second correction would change a reference to ``owner or operator''
to instead be ``authorized representative of the vessel'' in Sec.
660.603(n)(3), which is consistent with language in other regulations
in 50 CFR 660--Fisheries Off West Coast States. This correction would
clarify that a representative designated by the vessel owner, rather
than solely the vessel owner or operator, is allowed to transfer EM
data to service providers for review. NMFS supports these changes, and
is proposing these changes through this proposed rule.
III. Classification
Pursuant to section 304(b)(1)(A) of the Magnuson-Stevens Act, the
NMFS Assistant Administrator has determined that this proposed rule is
consistent with the Pacific Coast Groundfish FMP, Magnuson-Stevens Act,
and other applicable laws, subject to further consideration after
public comment. In making the final determination, NMFS will take into
account the complete record, including the data, views, and comments
received during the comment period.
Pursuant to Executive Order 13175, this proposed rule was developed
after meaningful consultation and collaboration with tribal officials
from the area covered by the Pacific Coast Groundfish FMP. Under the
Magnuson-Stevens Act at 16 U.S.C. 1852(b)(5), one of the voting members
of the Pacific Council must be a representative of an Indian tribe with
federally recognized fishing rights from the area of the Council's
jurisdiction.
This proposed rule has been determined to be not significant for
the purposes of Executive Order 12866. This proposed rule does not
contain policies with Federalism or ``takings'' implications as those
terms are defined in Executive Orders 13132 and 12630, respectively.
An initial regulatory flexibility analysis (IRFA) was prepared, as
required by section 603 of the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) (5
U.S.C. 603). The IRFA describes the economic impact this proposed rule,
if adopted, would have on small entities. A description of the action,
why it is being considered, and the legal basis for this action are
contained in the Background section of the preamble. A summary of the
IRFA follows. A copy of the IRFA is available from NMFS (see
ADDRESSES).
When an agency proposes regulations, the RFA requires the agency to
prepare and make available for public comment an IRFA that describes
the impact on small businesses, non-profit enterprises,
[[Page 11389]]
local governments, and other small entities. The IRFA is to aid the
agency in considering all reasonable regulatory alternatives that would
minimize the economic impact on affected small entities.
The RFA (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.) requires government agencies to
assess the effects that regulatory alternatives would have on small
entities, defined as any business/organization independently owned and
operated and not dominant in its field of operation (including its
affiliates). A small harvesting business has combined annual receipts
of $11 million or less for all affiliated operations worldwide. A small
fish-processing business is one that employs 750 or fewer persons for
all affiliated operations worldwide.
For marinas and charter/party boats, a small business is one that
has annual receipts not in excess of $7.5 million. A wholesale business
servicing the fishing industry is a small business if it employs 100 or
fewer persons on a full time, part time, temporary, or other basis, at
all its affiliated operations worldwide. A nonprofit organization is
determined to be ``not dominant in its field of operation'' if it is
considered small under one of the following Small Business
Administration (SBA) size standards: Environmental, conservation, or
professional organizations are considered small if they have combined
annual receipts of $15 million or less, and other organizations are
considered small if they have combined annual receipts of $7.5 million
or less.
The RFA defines small governmental jurisdictions as governments of
cities, counties, towns, townships, villages, school districts, or
special districts with populations of less than 50,000.
Description and Estimate of Number of Small Entities to Which the Rule
Will Apply
This proposed rule would impact mainly commercial harvesting
entities engaged in the groundfish limited entry trawl fishery.
Although this action proposes an EM program regulations for only two
trip types in the limited entry trawl fishery--non-whiting midwater
trawl, and bottom trawl--any limited entry trawl vessel may participate
in these components, provided they comply with its requirements, and
therefore may be eligible to use EM as applied to these two trawl gear
sectors. In addition, vessels deploying EM are likely to be a subset of
the overall trawl fleet, as some vessels would likely choose to
continue to use observers. However, as all trawl vessels could
potentially use EM in the future under the proposed action, this IRFA
analyzes impacts to the entire trawl fleet. The total number of vessels
that may be eligible to use EM is 175, the total number of limited
entry trawl permits in 2021, and includes those vessels that do use
bottom trawl and non-whiting midwater trawl gear, and those that do
not. Given these entities participate in the program, they are most
likely to be impacted by this rule in the short term. This number may
be an underestimate if additional vessels elect to participate in the
EM program in the future.
Federal Rules Which May Duplicate, Overlap, or Conflict With This
Proposed Rule
The proposed regulations do not create overlapping regulations with
any state regulations or other Federal laws.
A Description of any Significant Alternatives to the Proposed Rule That
Accomplish the Stated Objectives of Applicable Statutes and That
Minimize any Significant Economic Impact of the Proposed Rule on Small
Entities
The RFA requires Federal agencies to conduct a full RFA analysis
unless the agency can certify that the proposed and/or final rule would
not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small
entities. This determination can be made at either the proposed or
final rule stage. If the agency can certify, it need not prepare an
IRFA, a final regulatory flexibility analysis (FRFA), or a Small Entity
Compliance Guide or undertake a subsequent periodic review of such
rules. The NMFS Guidelines for Economic Analysis of Fishery Management
Actions suggest two criteria to consider in determining the
significance of regulatory impacts, namely, disproportionality and
profitability. These criteria relate to the basic purpose of the RFA,
i.e., to consider the effect of regulations on small businesses and
other small entities, recognizing that regulations are frequently
unable to provide short-term cash reserves to finance operations
through several months or years until their positive effects start
paying off. If either criterion is met for a substantial number of
small entities, then the rule should not be certified for not having an
effect on small entities. These criterion raise two questions: Do the
regulations place a substantial number of small entities at a
significant competitive disadvantage to large entities? Do the
regulations significantly reduce profit for a substantial number of
small entities?
The preferred alternative for this rule will not have a significant
impact when comparing small versus large businesses in terms of
disproportionality and profitability given available information. These
regulations are likely to reduce fishing costs for both small and large
businesses. EM is an optional monitoring alternative to observers, and
may provide cost savings for some vessels. Economic effects of the
proposed action are expected to range from neutral to positive when
compared to the status quo. Nonetheless, NMFS has prepared this IRFA.
Through the rulemaking process associated with this action, NMFS is
requesting comments on this conclusion.
The economic impacts on small entities resulting from the proposed
action range from neutral to positive; these entities will have a
choice between hiring an observer, as is status quo, or using EM. The
choice is expected to be based on relative costs and operational
flexibility. Observer costs are currently $499 to $537 per seaday.
Under EM, NMFS estimates vessels in the bottom trawl fishery will spend
between $342/seaday (which include the cost of new equipment and
installation) or $285/seaday (without equipment costs). These estimates
are based on 412 seadays for 10 bottom trawl vessels participating in
EFPs from 2019-2020. Under EM, NMFS estimates per seaday costs for non-
whiting midwater trawl trips to range from $142/seaday (with equipment
costs), and $120/seaday (without equipment costs). These estimates are
based on 3,215 seadays for 30 midwater trawl vessels participating in
EFPs from 2091-2020, and averaged cost estimates from four prospective
EM service providers. These cost estimates are detailed in section 4.2
``Industry Costs'' of the IRFA included in the supporting documents for
this proposed rule. These costs are likely an overestimate and not an
accurate estimate of seaday costs for this gear type because it does
not incorporate revenue from seadays pursuing bottom trawl and whiting
activities that are also part of these vessels' portfolios. Cost of EM
service, including equipment installation and maintenance, along with
video review and data service is expected to vary by service provider.
Entities participating this fishery are not required to use EM, and
have the choice to use a human observer instead of EM. Furthermore, the
cost of EM is likely to decrease as technology used in EM systems
(cameras, sensors, and electronic storage devices) that meets current
specification necessary to meet monitoring requirements becomes cheaper
over time. Therefore, this proposed action would not impose new costs
on these
[[Page 11390]]
small entities, and will likely provide measurable cost savings over
time as individual vessels choose the most affordable at-sea monitoring
systems relative to their fishing operations.
The components of this rule have the potential to positively impact
all entities in the catch share sector of the fishery, regardless of
size. Therefore, the rule would impose effects on ``a substantial
number'' of small entities, however, these effects are expected to
range from neutral (if entities choose not to use the added flexibility
of the provisions in this rule) to positive. Data used to inform this
analysis was collected through EFPs and collaboration with industry and
non-government organizations from 2012 to present.
There are no relevant Federal rules that may duplicate, overlap, or
conflict with this action nor are there are no significant alternative
to the proposed rule that will accomplish the stated objectives and
that minimize any significant economic impact of the proposed rule on
small entities. As fishermen are given a choice between two alternative
monitoring systems (observers vs EM), this rule is likely to have
neutral to positive effects on small entities.
These regulations are likely to reduce fishing costs for both small
and large businesses. Through this proposed rule, NMFS is requesting
comments on this conclusion. The proposed action and alternatives are
described in detail in the Council's regulatory amendment and the
accompanying regulatory impact review (RIR)/IRFA (see ADDRESSES).
Description of the Proposed Reporting, Record-Keeping, and Other
Compliance Requirements of This Proposed Rule Under the Paperwork
Reduction Act (PRA)
The proposed action contains collection-of-information requirements
that have been previously approved under OMB control number 0648-0785,
West Coast Region Groundfish Trawl Fishery Electronic Monitoring
Program, as per the PRA requirements. The requirements include vessel
owner EM applications, renewals, and reports, EM service providers
applications, renewals and reports, as well as vessel operator log-
book, and hard drive submission. This proposed rule would revise
collection-of-information requirements to include submission of
information for the formation of self-enforcing cooperative agreements.
The proposed action contains changes to collection-of-information
requirements that are subject to review and approval by the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) as per the PRA requirements. NMFS has
submitted these requirements to OMB for approval under OMB control
number 0648-0785 West Coast Region Groundfish Trawl Fishery Electronic
Monitoring Program. This proposed rule would revise collection-of-
information requirements to include submission of information for the
formation of self-enforcing cooperative agreements. Collection of
information for self-enforcing agreements is not mandatory, as self-
enforcing agreements are an optional provision of the EM program under
collection 0648-0785. Some vessel owners may choose to apply for a
group EM authorization under a self-enforcing agreement in lieu of
individual vessel authorizations. The self-enforcing agreement would be
submitted with the initial applications for vessels in the group, and
requires approval prior to accepting final applications from the group.
One self-enforcing agreement would be completed and submitted by a
designated representative for each group of vessel owners applying
under a group authorization. NMFS expects no more than three such self-
enforcing group agreements for the first three years of this
collection. Each self-enforcing agreement is expected to take
approximately 3 hours to complete. The total annualized time burden to
prepare self-enforcing agreements would be 3 hours (3 hours x 3
agreements[hairsp]/[hairsp]3 years). The burden cost of one copy of the
self-enforcing agreement is estimated at $3.00 ($0.10[hairsp]/
[hairsp]page x 30 pages). A designated representative, or manager of
the self-enforcing cooperative would hold at least one copy. To be
deemed eligible to operate under the agreement, vessel owners and
operators would be required to have executed a copy of the agreement
for an adherence agreement under which they agree to be bound. At most,
10 vessel owners are expected to participate in any one self-enforcing
agreement, each would be required to have a copy of the agreement, plus
one original copy held by the cooperative manager, is expected to
result in a total annualized burden of $33.00 ($3.00 x 11).
This proposed rule includes a minor revision to declaration
requirements for groundfish vessels using EM under West Coast Region
Vessel Monitoring Requirement in the Pacific Coast Groundfish Fishery
(OMB Control Number 0648-0573). Vessels in the Pacific Coast Groundfish
Fishery are required to declare the gear type and monitoring they will
use on a given trip. Under this proposed rule, vessels would be able to
declare ``electronic monitoring'' or ``observers'' as possible
monitoring types on trips with bottom trawl and non-whiting midwater
trawl gear. The change would add additional potential answers to an
existing declaration questionnaire, which does not affect the number of
entities required to comply with the declaration requirement (OMB
Control Number 0648-0573). Therefore, the proposed rule does not
increase the time or cost burden associated with this requirement.
Similarly, this proposed rule would adjust the requirement for EM
vessels to notify the West Coast Groundfish Observer Program before
each trip in place of the existing notification to an individual
vessel's observer provider when using a catch share observer. This
change would not be expected to increase the time or cost burden
associated with the existing notification requirements approved under
the collection Observer Programs' Information That Can be Gathered Only
Through Questions (OMB Control Number 0648-0593).
The requirement for first receivers to report protected and
prohibited species landings was previously approved under the
collection Northwest Region Groundfish Trawl Fishery Monitoring and
Catch Accounting Program (OMB Control Number 0648-0619). Under the
proposed rule, first receivers would continue to report protected and
prohibited species landings, but would also report landings of catch
from trips monitored using EM under ``maximized'' and ``optimized''
retention rules with bottom trawl and non-whiting midwater trawl gear.
The change would add additional potential answers to an existing
questionnaire, and is not be expected to change the time or cost burden
or number of entities associated with this requirement.
Public comment is sought regarding: Whether this proposed
collection of information is necessary for the proper performance of
the functions of the agency, including whether the information shall
have practical utility; the accuracy of the burden estimate; ways to
enhance the quality, utility, and clarity of the information to be
collected; and ways to minimize the burden of the collection of
information, including through the use of automated collection
techniques or other forms of information technology. Submit comments on
these or any other aspects of the collection of information at
www.reginfo.gov/public/do/PRAMain.
For more information, these collections, and all currently approved
NOAA collections can be viewed at
[[Page 11391]]
https://www.reginfo.gov/public/do/PRASearch# by entering the related
OMB control number.
Notwithstanding any other provision of the law, no person is
required to respond to, nor shall any person be subject to a penalty
for failure to comply with, a collection of information subject to the
requirements of the PRA, unless that collection of information displays
a currently valid OMB control number.
List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 660
Fisheries, Fishing, and Indians.
Dated: February 14, 2022.
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 660 is
proposed to be amended as follows:
PART 660--FISHERIES OFF WEST COAST STATES
0
1. Authority citation for part 660 continues to read as follows
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq., 16 U.S.C. 773 et seq., and
16 U.S.C. 7001 et seq.
0
2. In Sec. 660.13 revise paragraph (d)(4)(iv)(A) to read as follows:
Sec. 660.13 Recordkeeping and reporting.
* * * * *
(d) * * *
(4) * * *
(iv) * * *
(A) * * *
(1) Limited entry fixed gear, not including shorebased IFQ,
(2) Limited entry groundfish non-trawl, shorebased IFQ, observer,
(3) Limited entry groundfish non-trawl, shorebased IFQ, electronic
monitoring,
(4) Limited entry midwater trawl, non-whiting shorebased IFQ,
observer,
(5) Limited entry midwater trawl, non-whiting shorebased IFQ,
electronic monitoring,
(6) Limited entry midwater trawl, Pacific whiting shorebased IFQ,
observer,
(7) Limited entry midwater trawl, Pacific whiting shorebased IFQ,
electronic monitoring,
(8) Limited entry midwater trawl, Pacific whiting catcher/processor
sector,
(9) Limited entry midwater trawl, Pacific whiting mothership sector
(catcher vessel or mothership), observer,
(10) Limited entry midwater trawl, Pacific whiting mothership
sector (catcher vessel), electronic monitoring,
(11) Limited entry bottom trawl, shorebased IFQ, not including
demersal trawl or selective flatfish trawl,
(12) Limited entry bottom trawl, shorebased IFQ, not including
demersal trawl or selective flatfish trawl, electronic monitoring,
(13) Limited entry demersal trawl, shorebased IFQ, observer
(14) Limited entry demersal trawl, shorebased IFQ, electronic
monitoring,
(15) Limited entry selective flatfish trawl, shorebased IFQ,
observer,
(16) Limited entry selective flatfish trawl, shorebased IFQ,
electronic monitoring,
(17) Non-groundfish trawl gear for pink shrimp,
(18) Non-groundfish trawl gear for ridgeback prawn,
(19) Non-groundfish trawl gear for California halibut,
(20) Non-groundfish trawl gear for sea cucumber,
(21) Open access longline gear for groundfish,
(22) Open access Pacific halibut longline gear,
(23) Open access groundfish trap or pot gear,
(24) Open access Dungeness crab trap or pot gear,
(25) Open access prawn trap or pot gear,
(26) Open access sheephead trap or pot gear,
(27) Open access line gear for groundfish,
(28) Open access HMS line gear,
(29) Open access salmon troll gear,
(30) Open access California Halibut line gear,
(31) Open access Coastal Pelagic Species net gear,
(32) Other gear,
(33) Tribal trawl,
(34) Open access California gillnet complex gear, or
(35) Gear testing.
* * * * *
0
3. In Sec. 660.601, add the definition of ``Prohibited species'' in
alphabetical order to read as follows:
Sec. 660.601 Definitions.
* * * * *
Prohibited species means those species and species groups defined
at Sec. 660.11; Dungeness crab caught south of Point Reyes,
California; fish in excess of state or Federal limits; fish below a
state or Federal minimum size; and species for which the vessel or
vessel representative does not have a state or Federal permit.
* * * * *
0
4. In Sec. 660.603, revise paragraphs (a)(1), (h)(1) introductory
text, (k)(5), (m) introductory text, (m)(1), (m)(3), (m)(4)
introductory text, (m)(5), (m)(6) and (n)(3) to read as follows:
Sec. 660.603 Electronic monitoring provider permits and
responsibilities.
(a) * * *
(1) Operate under a NMFS-accepted EM Service Plan (see paragraph
(b)(1)(vii) of this section).
* * * * *
(h) * * *
(1) EM service providers and their employees must not have a direct
financial interest, other than the provision of observer, catch
monitor, EM, other biological sampling services, VMS, AIS transponders,
telemetry (such as product temperature monitoring for seafood safety),
buoy and gear monitoring, sonar systems, mandatory safety services
(i.e., GMDSS), or other technical or equipment services, in any Federal
or state managed fisheries, including but not limited to:
* * * * *
(k) * * *
(5) The EM service provider must submit to NMFS reports of requests
for technical assistance from vessels, including when the call or visit
was made, the nature of the issue, and how it was resolved. Reports
must be submitted to NMFS within 24 hours of the EM service provider
being notified of the request for technical assistance.
* * * * *
(m) Data services. For vessels with which it has a contract (see
Sec. 660.604(k)), the EM service provider must provide and manage EM
data and logbook processing, reporting, and record retention services,
as described below and according to a NMFS-approved EM Service Plan,
which is required under paragraph (b)(1)(vii) of this section, and as
described in the EM Program Manual or other written and oral
instructions provided by the EM Program, and such that the EM Program
achieves its purpose as defined at Sec. 660.600(b).
(1) The EM service provider must process vessels' EM data and
logbooks according to a prescribed coverage level or sampling scheme,
as specified by NMFS in consultation with the Council, and determine an
estimate of discards for each trip using standardized estimation
methods specified by NMFS. NMFS will maintain manuals for EM and
logbook data processing protocols on its website.
* * * * *
(3) The EM service provider must track hard drives and EM datasets
throughout their cycles, including documenting any access and
modifications. If end-to-end encryption is not used to protect EM data,
EM data must be removed from hard drives or
[[Page 11392]]
other mediums before returning them to the field.
(4) The EM service provider must communicate with vessel operators
and NMFS to coordinate data service needs, resolve specific program
issues, and provide feedback on program operations. No later than three
weeks from the date of receipt of EM data for processing from the
vessel operator, the EM service provider must provide feedback to
vessel representatives, field services staff, and NMFS regarding:
* * * * *
(5) Submission of data and reports. On behalf of vessels with which
it has a contract (see Sec. 660.604(k)), the EM service provider must
submit to NMFS logbook data, EM summary reports, including discard
estimates, fishing activity information, and meta data (e.g., image
quality, reviewer name), and incident reports of compliance issues
according to a NMFS-accepted EM Service Plan, which is required under
paragraph (b)(1)(vii) of this section, and as described in the EM
Program Manual or other written and oral instructions provided by the
EM Program, such that the EM program achieves its purpose as defined at
Sec. 660.600(b). Logbook data must be submitted to NMFS within two
business days of receipt from the vessel operator. EM summary reports
must be submitted within three weeks of the date the EM data was
received by the EM service provider from the vessel operator. If NMFS
determines that the information does not meet these standards, NMFS may
require the EM service provider to correct and resubmit the datasets
and reports.
(6) Retention of records. Following an EM trip, the EM service
provider must maintain all of a vessel's EM data and other records
specified in this section, or used in the preparation of records or
reports specified in this section or corrections to these reports. The
EM service provider must maintain EM data for a period of not less than
12 months after NMFS has completed its determination of the total base
year IFQ catch for all vessels for end-of-year account reconciliation
(i.e., base year is the year in which the EM trip was taken). NMFS will
issue a public notice when end-of-the-year account reconciliation has
been completed, on or about March 1 of each year. The EM service
provider must maintain summary EM data and other records for a period
of not less than three years after the date of landing for that trip.
EM data and other records must be stored such that the integrity and
security of the records is maintained for the duration of the retention
period. The EM service provider must produce EM data and other records
immediately upon request by NMFS or an authorized officer.
(n) * * *
(3) Must not release a vessel's EM data and other records specified
in this section (including documents containing such data and
observations or summaries thereof) except to NMFS and authorized
officers as provided in paragraph (m)(6) of this section, or as
authorized by an authorized representative of the vessel.
0
5. In Sec. 660.604,
0
a. Revise paragraphs (e) introductory text and (e)(1);
0
b. Remove paragraph (e)(5);
0
c. Revise paragraphs (f), (i), (m), and (n);
0
d. Add paragraphs (p)(3) and (4);
0
e. Revise paragraphs (q), (s)(2), (s)(3)(i) through (ii); and
0
f. Remove and reserve paragraph (s)(3)(iii).
The revisions and additions read as follows:
Sec. 660.604 Vessel and first receiver responsibilities.
* * * * *
(e) Electronic Monitoring Authorization. To obtain an EM
Authorization, a vessel owner must submit an initial application to the
NMFS West Coast Region Fisheries Permit Office, and then a final
application that includes an EM system certification and a vessel
monitoring plan (VMP). NMFS will only review complete applications.
NMFS will issue a public notice at least 90 calendar days prior to when
it will begin accepting applications for EM Authorizations for the
first year of the Program. Once NMFS begins accepting applications,
vessel owners that want to have their EM Authorizations effective for
January 1 of the following calendar year must submit their complete
application to NMFS by October 1 of the preceding calendar year. Vessel
owners that want to have their EM Authorizations effective for May 15
must submit their complete application to NMFS by February 15 of the
same year. In lieu of individual EM Authorizations, a group of eligible
vessel owners participating in the shorebased IFQ sector may obtain a
group EM Authorization through a self-enforcing agreement. This
agreement allows a group of eligible vessels to encourage compliance
with the requirements of this section through a private, contractual
arrangement. To be considered for a group EM Authorization, a group of
vessel owners must submit a completed application package to NMFS for
review and approval. As part of a group EM Authorization application,
participating vessel owners must agree to conduct fishing operations
according to the self-enforcement agreement. For a vessel to be deemed
eligible to operate under the agreement, its owner(s) and its
operator(s) must have executed a copy of the agreement or an adherence
agreement under which they agree to be bound by the agreement's terms.
The existence of a self-enforcing agreement among EM vessels does not
foreclose the possibility of independent enforcement action by NMFS OLE
or authorized officers.
(1) Initial application. To be considered for an EM Authorization,
the vessel owner must:
(i) Submit a completed application form provided by NMFS, signed
and dated by an authorized representative of the vessel;
(ii) Meet the following eligibility criteria:
(A) The applicant owns the vessel proposed to be used;
(B) The vessel has a valid Pacific Coast Groundfish limited entry,
trawl-endorsed permit registered to it;
(C) The vessel is participating in the Pacific whiting IFQ fishery,
mothership sector, or the Shorebased IFQ sector;
(D) The vessel is able to accommodate the EM system, including
providing sufficient uninterrupted electrical power, suitable camera
mounts, adequate lighting, and fittings for hydraulic lines to enable
connection of a pressure transducer;
(E) The vessel owner and operator are willing and able to comply
with all applicable requirements of this section and to operate under a
NMFS-accepted VMP; and
(F) The vessel owner and operator are willing and able to comply
with the terms and conditions of a self-enforcing agreement that was
submitted as part of a group authorization application, if applicable.
(iii) If applying for a group EM Authorization, submit a complete
proposed self-enforcing agreement that describes how the group's
operations will be conducted to meet the requirements of this section.
NMFS will develop EM Program Guidelines containing best practices and
templates and make them available on NMFS's website to assist vessel
owners in developing a self-enforcing agreement. The self-enforcing
agreement must include descriptions of the following:
(A) A list of all participating vessels, owners, operators, and
other parties;
(B) The name and contact information of a designated representative
who will be responsible for ensuring that each vessel is complying with
the terms and
[[Page 11393]]
conditions of the agreement and the requirements of this section, and
who will promptly inform the appropriate parties and NMFS if any vessel
fails to comply;
(C) Eligibility criteria for participating vessels, owners, and
operators;
(D) The roles and responsibilities of participating vessels,
owners, operators, the designated representative, and any other parties
to the agreement;
(E) Procedures for communication between participating vessels,
owners, operators, the designated representative, and any other parties
to the agreement, NMFS or its designated agent, and EM service
providers, for the execution of the agreement and the requirements of
this section;
(F) Performance standards or requirements for equipment, if
applicable;
(G) Reporting requirements, if applicable;
(H) Time and area restrictions, if applicable;
(I) Provisions for the use and protection of confidential data
necessary for execution of the agreement;
(J) Provisions to encourage or enforce the compliance of members
with the agreement and the requirements of this section;
(K) Procedures for addressing the non-compliance of members with
the agreement and the requirements of this section, including
procedures for restricting or terminating vessel's participation in the
agreement;
(L) Procedures for notifying NMFS when a participating vessel or
its owner(s) or operator(s) are not complying with the terms of the
agreement or the requirements of this section;
(M) Procedures for participating vessels, owners, operators, the
designated representative, or other parties to the agreement, to exit
the agreement;
(N) Any other provisions that the applicants deem necessary for the
execution of the agreement; and
(O) Procedures for the designated representative to submit an
annual report to the Council prior to applying to renew a group EM
authorization containing information about the group's performance from
the previous year, including a description of any actions taken by the
self-enforcing group in response to the non-compliance of members with
the agreement.
* * * * *
(f) Changes to a NMFS-accepted VMP or NMFS-approved self-enforcing
agreement. A vessel owner may make changes to a NMFS-accepted VMP by
submitting a revised plan or plan addendum to NMFS in writing. A group
may make changes to an approved self-enforcing agreement by submitting
a revised agreement or agreement addendum to NMFS in writing. NMFS will
review and accept the change if it meets all the requirements of this
section. A VMP or self-enforcing agreement addendum must contain:
(1) The date and the name and signature of the vessel owner, or
designated representative for a self-enforcing agreement;
(2) Address, telephone number, fax number and email address of the
person submitting the revised plan or addendum; and
(3) A complete description of the proposed change.
* * * * *
(i) Renewing an EM Authorization. To maintain a valid EM
Authorization, vessel owners must renew annually prior to the permit
expiration date. NMFS will mail EM Authorization renewal forms to
existing EM Authorization holders each year on or about: September 1
for shorebased IFQ vessels, and January 1 for Pacific whiting IFQ and
MS/CV vessels. Vessel owners who want to have their Authorizations
effective for January 1 of the following calendar year must submit
their complete renewal form to NMFS by October 15. Vessel owners who
want to have their EM Authorizations effective for May 15 of the
following calendar year must submit their complete renewal form to NMFS
by February 15.
* * * * *
(m) Declaration reports. The operator of a vessel with a valid EM
Authorization must make a declaration report to NMFS OLE prior to
leaving port following the process described at Sec. 660.13(d)(4). A
declaration report will be valid until another declaration report
revising the existing gear or monitoring declaration is received by
NMFS OLE.
(n) Observer requirements. The operator of a vessel with a valid EM
Authorization must provide advanced notice to NMFS, at least 48 hours
prior to departing port, of the vessel operator's intent to take a trip
under EM, including: Vessel name, permit number; contact name and
telephone number for coordination of observer deployment; date, time,
and port of departure; and the vessel's trip plan, including area to be
fished, gear type to be used, and whether the vessel will use maximized
or optimized retention rules for the trip as defined at paragraphs
(p)(3) and (4) of this section. NMFS may waive this requirement for
vessels declared into the Pacific whiting IFQ fishery or mothership
sector with prior notice. If NMFS notifies the vessel owner, operator,
or manager of any requirement to carry an observer, the vessel may not
be used to fish for groundfish without carrying an observer. The vessel
operator must comply with the following requirements on a trip that the
vessel owner, operator, or manager has been notified is required to
carry an observer.
* * * * *
(p) * * *
(3) Maximized retention bottom trawl and non-whiting midwater trawl
trips. A vessel operator on a declared maximized retention trip using
bottom trawl gear, or midwater trawl gear in which Pacific whiting
constitutes less than 50 percent of the catch by weight at landing, the
vessel must not sort catch at-sea and must retain all catch until
landing, with exceptions listed below in paragraphs (p)(3)(i) through
(v) of this section. All discards must be discarded following
instructions in the VMP per paragraph (e)(iii) of this section. All
discards, regardless of the source, must be reported in the bottom
trawl logbook, including the species (where possible), estimated
weight, and reason for discard. The vessel operator is responsible for
ensuring that all catch is handled in a manner that enables the EM
system to record it.
(i) Minor operational discards are permitted. Minor operational
discards include mutilated fish; fish vented from an overfull codend;
and fish removed from the deck and fishing gear during cleaning. Minor
operational discards do not include discards that result when more
catch is taken than is necessary to fill the hold or catch from a tow
that is not delivered.
(ii) Large individual marine organisms (i.e., all marine mammals,
sea turtles, and non-ESA-listed seabirds, and fish species longer than
6 ft (1.8 m) in length) may be discarded. For any ESA-listed seabirds
that are brought on board, vessel operators must follow any relevant
instructions for handling and disposition under Sec. 660.21(c)(1)(v).
(iii) Crabs, starfish, coral, sponges, and other invertebrates may
be discarded.
(iv) Trash, mud, rocks, and other inorganic debris may be
discarded.
(v) A discard that is the result of an event that is beyond the
control of the vessel operator or crew, such as a safety issue or
mechanical failure, is permitted.
(4) Optimized retention bottom trawl and non-whiting midwater trawl
trips. On a declared optimized retention trip
[[Page 11394]]
using bottom trawl gear, or midwater trawl gear in which Pacific
whiting constitutes less than 50 percent of the catch by weight at
landing, the vessel owner and operator are responsible for the
following:
(i) The vessel must retain IFQ species (as defined at Sec.
660.140(c)), except for Arrowtooth flounder, English sole, Dover sole,
deep sea sole, Pacific sanddab, Pacific whiting, lingcod and starry
flounder; must retain salmon and eulachon; and must retain the
following non-IFQ species greenland turbot; slender sole; hybrid sole;
c-o sole; bigmouth sole; fantail sole; hornyhead turbot; spotted
turbot; California halibut; northern rockfish; black rockfish; blue
rockfish; shortbelly rockfish; olive rockfish; Puget Sound rockfish;
semaphore rockfish; walleye pollock; slender codling; Pacific tom cod;
with exceptions listed in paragraphs (p)(4)(i)(A) and (B) of this
section.
(A) Mutilated and depredated fish may be discarded.
(B) A discard that is the result of an event that is beyond the
control of the vessel operator or crew, such as a safety issue or
mechanical failure, is permitted.
(ii) The vessel must discard Pacific halibut, green sturgeon,
California halibut (except as allowed by state regulations), and
nearshore groundfish species below state commercial minimum size
limits, following instructions in the NMFS-accepted VMP.
(iii) Incidentally caught marine mammals, non-ESA-listed seabirds,
sea turtles, other ESA-listed fish, and Dungeness crab caught seaward
of Washington or Oregon or south of Point Reyes, California, as
described at Sec. 660.11 Prohibited species, must be discarded
following instructions in the NMFS-accepted VMP per paragraph (e)(iii)
of this section. For any ESA-listed seabirds that are brought on board,
vessel operators must follow any relevant instructions for handling and
disposition under Sec. 660.21(c)(1)(v).
(iv) Crabs, starfish, coral, sponges, and other invertebrates may
be discarded.
(v) Trash, mud, rocks, and other inorganic debris may be discarded.
(vi) All discards must be discarded following instructions in the
VMP per paragraph (e)(iii) of this section. All discards, regardless of
the source, must be reported in the bottom trawl logbook, including the
species (where possible), estimated weight, and reason for discard. The
vessel operator is responsible for ensuring that all catch is handled
in a manner that enables the EM system to record it.
(q) Changes to retention requirements. NMFS may specify alternate
retention requirements in a NMFS-accepted VMP through the process
described in paragraph (f) of this section, after consultation with the
Council and issuance of a public notice notifying the public of the
changes. Alternate retention requirements must be sufficient to provide
NMFS with the best available information to determine individual
accountability for catch, including discards, of IFQ species and
compliance with requirements of the Shorebased IFQ Program (Sec.
660.140) and MS Coop Program (Sec. 660.150).
* * * * *
(s) * * *
(2) Submission of logbooks. Vessel operators must submit copies of
the Federal discard logbook and state retained logbook to the vessel
owner's contracted EM service provider and to NMFS or its agent within
24 hours of the end of each EM trip.
(3) * * *
(i) Shorebased IFQ vessels. EM data from an EM trip must be
submitted within 72 hours after the beginning of the offload (and no
more than 10 days after the end of the first trip on the hard drive).
(ii) Mothership catcher vessels. EM data from an EM trip must be
submitted within 72 hours of the catcher vessel's return to port.
* * * * *
[FR Doc. 2022-03516 Filed 2-28-22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-22-P