Fisheries of the Caribbean, Gulf of Mexico, and South Atlantic; Snapper-Grouper Fishery of the South Atlantic; Amendment 50, 77742-77748 [2022-27485]
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Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 243 / Tuesday, December 20, 2022 / Rules and Regulations
In accordance with the provisions of
E.O. 12866, this regulation was
reviewed by the Office of Management
and Budget.
Chiquita Brooks-LaSure,
Administrator of the Centers for
Medicare & Medicaid Services,
approved this document on November
23, 2022.
List of Subjects in 42 CFR Part 600
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requirements.
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, the Centers for Medicare &
Medicaid Services amends 42 CFR part
600 as set forth below:
Dated: December 12, 2022.
Xavier Becerra,
Secretary, Department of Health and Human
Services.
[FR Doc. 2022–27211 Filed 12–16–22; 11:15 am]
BILLING CODE 4120–01–P
PART 600—ADMINISTRATION,
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1. The authority citation for part 600
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RIN 0648–BL46
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2. Amend § 600.610—
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■ b. In paragraph (c)(2)(ii) by removing
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adding in its place the phrase ‘‘during
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The revisions read as follows:
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(a) * * *
(1) Beginning in FY 2015, the
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year 2022, for multiple calendar years.
Beginning in calendar year 2023—
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(ii) In years that the Secretary
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methodology, the Secretary will publish
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National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
50 CFR Part 622
[Docket No. 221214–0269]
Fisheries of the Caribbean, Gulf of
Mexico, and South Atlantic; SnapperGrouper Fishery of the South Atlantic;
Amendment 50
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
NMFS issues regulations to
implement Amendment 50 to the
Fishery Management Plan for the
Snapper-Grouper Fishery of the South
Atlantic (FMP), as prepared and
submitted by the South Atlantic Fishery
Management Council (Council). For red
porgy, this final rule revises the sector
annual catch limits (ACLs), commercial
seasonal quotas, commercial trip limits,
recreational bag and possession limits,
recreational fishing season, and
recreational accountability measures
(AMs). In addition, Amendment 50
establishes a new rebuilding plan, and
revises the acceptable biological catch
(ABC), annual optimum yield (OY), and
sector allocations. The purpose of this
final rule and Amendment 50 is to end
overfishing of red porgy, rebuild the
stock, and achieve OY while
minimizing, to the extent practicable,
adverse social and economic effects.
DATES: This final rule is effective
January 19, 2023.
ADDRESSES: Electronic copies of
Amendment 50, which includes a
SUMMARY:
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fishery impact statement and a
regulatory impact review, may be
obtained from the Southeast Regional
Office website at https://
www.fisheries.noaa.gov/action/
amendment-50-catch-level-adjustmentsrebuilding-schedule-and-allocationsred-porgy/.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Frank Helies, telephone: 727–824–5305,
or email: frank.helies@noaa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The South
Atlantic snapper-grouper fishery, which
includes red porgy, is managed under
the FMP. The FMP was prepared by the
Council and implemented through
regulations at 50 CFR part 622 under the
authority of the Magnuson-Stevens
Fishery Conservation and Management
Act (Magnuson-Stevens Act).
Background
The Magnuson-Stevens Act requires
that NMFS and regional fishery
management councils prevent
overfishing and achieve, on a
continuing basis, the OY from federally
managed fish stocks. These mandates
are intended to ensure that fishery
resources are managed for the greatest
overall benefit to the nation, particularly
with respect to providing food
production and recreational
opportunities, and protecting marine
ecosystems. To further this goal, the
Magnuson-Stevens Act requires fishery
managers to minimize bycatch and
bycatch mortality to the extent
practicable.
On September 9, 2022, NMFS
published a notice of availability for
Amendment 50 and requested public
comment (87 FR 55376). On September
26, 2022, NMFS published a proposed
rule for Amendment 50 and requested
public comment (87 FR 58302). NMFS
approved Amendment 50 on December
7, 2022. The proposed rule and
Amendment 50 outline the rationale for
the actions contained in this final rule.
A summary of the management
measures described in Amendment 50
and implemented by this final rule is
described below.
In 1990, a stock assessment for red
porgy was completed and NMFS
determined that the stock was subject to
overfishing and overfished. As a result
of that stock status, through
Amendment 4 to the FMP the Council
established an initial rebuilding plan
and a minimum size limit for red porgy
(56 FR 56016, October 31, 1991). The
rebuilding plan was put into effect in
1991 with a target time to rebuild of 10
years. The stock was again assessed in
1999 and again was determined to be
subject to overfishing and overfished.
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Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 243 / Tuesday, December 20, 2022 / Rules and Regulations
Through an emergency rule published
in 1999, NMFS prohibited the harvest
and possession of red porgy in or from
the exclusive economic zone (EEZ) off
the southern Atlantic states (64 FR
48324, September 3, 1999). NMFS
subsequently extended the emergency
rule to prohibit the harvest and
possession of red porgy through August
28, 2000 (65 FR 10039, February 25,
2000).
The final rule to implement
Amendment 12 to the FMP replaced the
emergency rule and closed commercial
harvest during the red porgy peak
spawning season, reduced the
commercial trip limit, and reduced the
recreational bag limit (65 FR 51248,
August 23, 2000). Amendment 12 also
specified a new 18-year rebuilding plan,
which began with the implementation
of the emergency rule that prohibited
harvest on September 3, 1999. The red
porgy stock was assessed again in 2002,
as the first stock in the South Atlantic
to be assessed through the Southeast
Data, Assessment, and Review (SEDAR)
process (SEDAR 1). The SEDAR 1
assessment indicated the stock was
overfished but not undergoing
overfishing. Subsequent update
assessments in 2006 and 2012 also
resulted in the same stock status
determinations as the 2002 SEDAR 1
assessment.
The most recent SEDAR stock
assessment for South Atlantic red porgy
(SEDAR 60) was completed in April
2020. The assessment included data
through 2017 and incorporated the
revised estimates for recreational catch
from the Marine Recreational
Information Program Fishing Effort
Survey (MRIP FES), as discussed later in
this final rule. The Council’s Scientific
and Statistical Committee (SSC)
reviewed SEDAR 60 at their April 2020
meeting and found that the assessment
was conducted using the best scientific
information available, and was adequate
for determining stock status and
supporting fishing level
recommendations. The findings of the
assessment indicated that the South
Atlantic red porgy stock is undergoing
overfishing and is overfished. NMFS
also determined that the red porgy stock
has not made adequate progress towards
rebuilding.
The findings of SEDAR 60 showed a
declining trend in average recruitment
throughout the time series reviewed in
the assessment, and that red porgy has
made little progress towards rebuilding,
given the low recruitment in recent
years. The projections within SEDAR 60
indicate the reduced ABCs would have
only a very minor impact on stock
rebuilding. If recruitment continues to
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be low, the productivity of the stock and
the benchmark management reference
points would need to be reevaluated.
The red porgy stock is currently
scheduled to be assessed again in 2025.
Following a notification from NMFS
to a Council that a stock is undergoing
overfishing and is overfished, the
Magnuson-Stevens Act requires the
Council to develop an FMP amendment
with actions that immediately end
overfishing and rebuild the affected
stock. The Council developed
Amendment 50 in response to the
results of SEDAR 60.
In addition to the revisions to the
commercial quotas and sector ACLs,
modified red porgy management
measures are needed to constrain
commercial and recreational harvest to
the proposed fishing levels. This final
rule reduces commercial trip limits and
recreational bag and possession limits,
and implements a 2-month recreational
fishing season. The Council intends that
these actions will allow retention of red
porgy over the longest period of time
projected during the fishing year while
preventing overfishing. This final rule
also adjusts the recreational AMs to
ensure they are effective at keeping
recreational landings from exceeding
the recreational ACL and correct for
overages when they occur. This final
rule and Amendment 50 do not adjust
commercial AMs.
The Council determined that the
actions in Amendment 50 will end
overfishing of South Atlantic red porgy,
rebuild the stock, and achieve OY while
minimizing, to the extent practicable,
adverse social and economic effects.
Management Measures Contained in
This Final Rule
This final rule revises the sector
ACLs, commercial seasonal quotas,
commercial trip limits, recreational bag
and possession limits, recreational
fishing season, and recreational AMs.
All weights described in this final rule
are in gutted weight, unless otherwise
specified.
Total ACLs
As implemented through Regulatory
Amendment 18 to the FMP, the current
total ACL and annual OY for red porgy
are equal to the current ABC of 328,000
lb (148,778 kg), round weight. In
Amendment 50, the Council is revising
the ABC based on SEDAR 60 and the
recommendation of the SSC, and
keeping the ABC, total ACL, and annual
OY equal to each other.
This final rule revises the total ACL
equal to the recommended ABC of
75,000 lb (34,019 kg), round weight,
72,115 lb (32,711 kg), gutted weight, for
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2022; 81,000 lb (36,741 kg), round
weight, 77,885 lb (35,328 kg), gutted
weight, for 2023; 87,000 lb (39,463 kg),
round weight, 83,654 lb (37,945 kg),
gutted weight, for 2024; 91,000 lb
(41,277 kg), round weight, 87,500 lb
(39,689 kg), gutted weight, for 2025; and
95,000 lb (43,091 kg), round weight,
91,346 lb (41,434 kg), gutted weight, for
2026 and subsequent fishing years.
Sector Allocations and ACLs
Amendment 50 revises the
commercial and recreational allocations
for red porgy. The current sector ACLs
for red porgy are based on the
commercial and recreational allocations
of the total ACL at 50.00 percent and
50.00 percent, respectively, and were
established through Amendment 15B to
the FMP (74 FR 58902, November 16,
2009).
The new red porgy sector allocations
in Amendment 50 will result in
commercial and recreational allocations
of 51.43 percent and 48.57 percent,
respectively. The Council determined
the revised sector allocations by
applying the allocation formula adopted
through the Comprehensive ACL
Amendment to the FMP, which is ACL
= ((mean landings 2006–2008) * 0.5)) +
((mean landings 1986–2008) * 0.5), to
the revised total ACL that includes
updated recreational landings from the
MRIP FES method.
Utilizing the revised allocation
formula will incorporate revised
recreational landings from the MRIP
FES, which will result in a slight shift
of allocation to the commercial sector.
Although commercial fishing, compared
to recreational fishing, tends to occur in
deeper water, where mortality of
discarded fish is greater, the Council
reasoned that a slightly increased
allocation to the commercial sector will
potentially reduce the number of fish
that are discarded if the commercial
ACL is reached in-season and a sector
closure becomes necessary, thus
promoting conservation.
The commercial ACLs will be 37,089
lb (16,823 kg), for 2022; 40,056 lb
(18,169 kg), for 2023; 43,023 lb (19,515
kg), for 2024; 45,001 lb (20,412 kg), for
2025; and 46,979 lb (21,309 kg), for 2026
and subsequent years.
The recreational ACLs will be 35,026
lb (15,888 kg), for 2022; 37,829 lb
(17,159 kg), for 2023; 40,631 lb (18,430
kg), for 2024; 42,499 lb (19,277 kg), for
2025; and 44,367 lb (20,125 kg), for 2026
and subsequent years.
Regulatory Amendment 27 to the FMP
established two commercial fishing
seasons for red porgy with 30 percent of
the commercial ACL allocated to Season
1 (January through April) and 70
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percent allocated to Season 2 (May
through December) (85 FR 4588, January
27, 2020). Any remaining commercial
quota from Season 1 would be added to
the commercial quota in Season 2. Any
remaining quota from Season 2 would
not be carried forward into the next
fishing year. Amendment 50 and this
final rule will not alter the current
fishing seasons or commercial season
ACL allocations.
Under Amendment 50, the
commercial quotas in 2022 for Season 1
will be 11,127 lb (5,047 kg) and Season
2 will be 25,962 lb (11,776 kg); in 2023,
Season 1 will be 12,017 lb (5,451 kg)
and Season 2 will be 28,039 lb (12,718
kg); in 2024, Season 1 will be 12,907 lb
(5,855 kg) and Season 2 will be 30,116
lb (13,660 kg); in 2025, Season 1 will be
13,500 lb (6,123 kg) and Season 2 will
be 31,501 lb (14,289 kg); and for 2026
and subsequent years, Season 1 will be
14,094 lb (6,393 kg) and Season 2 will
be 32,886 lb (14,917 kg).
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Commercial Trip Limits
Amendment 13C to the FMP
established the current commercial trip
limit for red porgy of 120 fish from May
1 through December 31, with no harvest
allowed from January 1 through April
30 (71 FR 55096, September 21, 2006).
Regulatory Amendment 27 to the FMP
removed the January 1 through April 30
spawning season commercial closure,
and established the current 60 fish trip
limit from January 1 through April 30,
to reduce discarding of red porgy by the
commercial sector during the early part
of the fishing year. This final rule
modifies the commercial trip limits for
red porgy to be 15 fish for both Seasons
1 and 2.
The Council decided that under the
revised 15-fish commercial trip limit,
the lowest trip limit considered,
commercial fishermen could retain an
amount of red porgy over the longest
amount of time during the fishing
seasons, and this will increase the
likelihood of red porgy remaining open
to commercial harvest and available to
consumers for as long as possible.
Additionally, the Council expects the
revised commercial trip limit to
minimize discards of incidentally
harvested red porgy when fishermen
target other snapper-grouper species,
such as gray triggerfish and vermilion
snapper.
Recreational Bag and Possession Limits
The current recreational bag and
possession limits for red porgy in the
South Atlantic, specified by the final
rule Amendment 13C to the FMP, are
three per person per day, or three per
person per trip, whichever is more
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restrictive. This final rule reduces the
recreational bag and possession limits to
one fish per person per day, or one fish
per person per trip, whichever is more
restrictive.
Given the substantial reduction in
harvest needed to end red porgy
overfishing immediately, and to
increase the likelihood of rebuilding the
stock, the Council selected the lowest
bag limit considered in Amendment 50
to continue to allow recreational
retention and help constrain harvest to
the reduced recreational ACL.
Recreational Fishing Season
Recreational harvest of red porgy is
currently allowed year-round until the
recreational ACL is met or is projected
to be met. This final rule establishes a
recreational fishing season for red porgy
where harvest will be allowed only from
May 1 through June 30. The recreational
sector will be closed annually from
January 1 through April 30 and from
July 1 through December 31. During the
revised seasonal closures, the
recreational bag and possession limits
for red porgy will be zero.
Given the substantial reductions in
harvest that are needed to address the
determination that the stock is
undergoing overfishing and overfished,
shortening the time recreational fishing
is allowed helps to reduce the risk that
recreational catches will exceed the
reduced sector ACL. The Council
selected the most conservative
recreational fishing season alternative in
Amendment 50 to reduce the chance the
recreational ACL will be exceeded,
while still allowing for some
recreational harvest opportunities.
Recreational AMs
The current AMs were established
through Amendment 34 to the FMP (81
FR 3731, January 22, 2016) and includes
an in-season closure for the remainder
of the fishing year if recreational
landings reach or are projected to reach
the recreational ACL, regardless of
whether the stock is overfished. The
current AMs also include post-season
adjustments. If recreational landings
exceed the recreational ACL, then
during the following fishing year
recreational landings will be monitored
for a persistence in increased landings.
If the total ACL is exceeded and red
porgy are overfished, the length of the
recreational fishing season and the
recreational ACL are reduced by the
amount of the recreational ACL overage.
This final rule revises the recreational
AMs for red porgy. Given the new 2month fishing season, both the current
in-season closure and stock status based
post-season AMs will be replaced with
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a new post-season AM. The revised
recreational AM would be triggered in
the following fishing year if the
recreational ACL is exceeded. If
recreational landings exceed the
recreational ACL, the length of the
following year’s recreational fishing
season would be reduced by the amount
necessary to prevent the recreational
ACL from being exceeded in the
following year. However, the length of
the recreational season would not be
reduced if the Regional Administrator
determines, using the best scientific
information available, that a reduction
is not necessary.
The Council’s intent in revising the
recreational AMs is to avoid an inseason closure of the recreational sector
and extend maximum fishing
opportunities to the sector during the 2month recreational season. The revised
AM will remove the current potential
duplicate AM application of a reduction
in the recreational season length and a
payback of the recreational ACL overage
if the total ACL was exceeded. Under
the revised measure, the AM trigger will
not be tied to the total ACL, but only to
the recreational ACL. The modification
of the current recreational AMs will
ensure that overages in the recreational
sector do not in turn affect the catch
levels for the commercial sector. Any
reduced recreational season length as a
result of the new AM being
implemented would apply to the
recreational fishing season in the year
following a recreational ACL overage.
Management Measures in Amendment
50 Not Codified by This Final Rule
In addition to the measures within
this final rule, Amendment 50 revises
the overfishing limit (OFL) for red porgy
equal to the ABC and updates other
biological reference points. The
amendment also establishes a new
rebuilding plan, and revises the ABC,
the annual OY, and the sector
allocations.
Rebuilding Plan for the South Atlantic
Red Porgy Stock
As previously discussed, the Council
implemented an 18-year rebuilding plan
for the South Atlantic red porgy stock
through Amendment 12 to the FMP that
was expected to rebuild the stock by the
end of 2017 (65 FR 51248, September
22, 2000). Because the South Atlantic
red porgy stock did not rebuild within
that time, and is still overfished,
Amendment 50 establishes a new
rebuilding plan schedule equal to the
time estimated to rebuild the stock
while maintaining fishing mortality at
75 percent of the maximum fishing
mortality threshold during the
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rebuilding period. This rebuilding
period will be 26 years, beginning in
2022 and ending in 2047.
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ABC and Annual OY
The current ABC for red porgy was
implemented in Regulatory Amendment
18 to the FMP, based upon a stock
assessment update (2012 SEDAR 1
Update) and the Council’s SSC’s
recommendations (78 FR 47574, August
6, 2013).
In April 2020, the Council’s SSC
reviewed the latest stock assessment
(SEDAR 60) and recommended new
ABC levels as determined by SEDAR 60.
The assessment and associated ABC
recommendations incorporated the
revised estimates for recreational catch
and effort from the MRIP Access Point
Angler Intercept Survey (APAIS) and
FES. MRIP began incorporating a new
survey design for APAIS in 2013 and
replaced the Coastal Household
Telephone Survey (CHTS) with FES in
2018. Prior to the implementation of
MRIP in 2008, recreational landings
estimates were generated using the
Marine Recreational Fisheries Statistics
Survey (MRFSS). As explained in
Amendment 50, total recreational
fishing effort estimates generated from
MRIP FES are generally higher than
both the MRFSS and MRIP CHTS
estimates. This difference in estimates
occurs because MRIP FES is designed to
more accurately measure fishing
activity, not because there was a sudden
increase in fishing effort. The MRIP FES
is considered by the Council’s SSC, the
Council, and NMFS to be a more
reliable estimate of recreational effort
and more robust compared to the MRIP
CHTS method. The new ABC
recommendations within Amendment
50 also represent the best scientific
information available as determined by
the SSC.
In addition, the Council chose to
specify OY for red porgy on an annual
basis and set it equal to the ABC and
total ACL, in accordance with the
guidance provided in the MagnusonStevens Act National Standard 1
Guidelines at 50 CFR 600.310(f)(4)(iv),
and using the formula implemented
through the Comprehensive ACL
Amendment to the FMP (77 FR 15915,
March 16, 2012).
Comments and Reponses
NMFS received four comments from
individuals during the public comment
period on the notice of availability and
proposed rule for Amendment 50.
NMFS acknowledges the four comments
in favor of the action in Amendment 50
and the proposed rule and agrees with
them. No comments were received
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opposing Amendment 50 or the
proposed rule. No changes were made to
the final rule as a result of public
comment.
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 Amendment 50, the FMP, other
provisions of the Magnuson-Stevens
Act, and other applicable law.
This final rule has been determined to
be not significant for purposes of
Executive Order 12866.
This final rule does not contain
policies with federalism or ‘‘takings’’
implications, as those terms are defined
in E.O. 13132 and E.O. 12630,
respectively.
This final rule contains no
information collection requirements
under the Paperwork Reduction Act of
1995.
Pursuant to section 604 of the
Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA), NMFS
has completed a final regulatory
flexibility analysis (FRFA) in support of
Amendment 50. The FRFA incorporates
the initial regulatory flexibility analysis
(IRFA), a summary of the significant
issues raised by public comments in
response to the IRFA and NMFS’
responses to those comments. A
summary of the IRFA was published in
the proposed rule for this action and is
not repeated here. A description of why
this action was considered, the
objectives of the action, and the legal
basis for this rule is contained in
Amendment 50 and in the preambles to
the proposed rule and this final rule and
are not repeated here. The following
constitutes the FRFA prepared for this
final action.
The Magnuson-Stevens Act provides
the statutory basis for this final rule. A
description of this final rule, why it is
being implemented, and the purpose of
this final rule are contained in the
SUMMARY and SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION sections of this final rule.
No public comments were received
specifically in response to the IRFA, nor
were there any public comments
received that related to the potential
economic impacts on small entities. No
changes to this final rule were made in
response to public comments.
All monetary estimates in the
following analysis are in 2019 dollars.
This final rule will directly affect both
anglers (recreational fishers) and
commercial fishing businesses that
harvest red porgy in the South Atlantic
EEZ. Anglers, however, are not
considered small entities as that term is
defined in 5 U.S.C. 601(6), whether
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77745
fishing from charter vessel or headboat
(for-hire) fishing, private or leased
vessels. Therefore, neither estimates of
the number of anglers nor the impacts
on them are required or provided in this
analysis. For-hire fishing businesses
would be indirectly affected, and
because the effects on for-hire
businesses would be indirect, they fall
outside the scope of the RFA.
Any business that operates a
commercial fishing vessel that harvests
red porgy in the South Atlantic EEZ
must have a valid Federal South
Atlantic snapper-grouper permit
assigned to that vessel. From 2015
through 2019, an annual average of 161
(24 percent) snapper-grouper permitted
vessels reported landings of red porgy.
Therefore, NMFS estimates that 161
snapper-grouper permitted vessels will
be directly affected by this rule.
For RFA purposes, NMFS has
established a small business size
standard for businesses, including their
affiliates, whose primary industry is
commercial fishing (see 50 CFR 200.2).
A business primarily involved in
commercial fishing (NAICS 11411) is
classified as a small business if it is
independently owned and operated, is
not dominant in its field of operation
(including its affiliates), and its
combined annual receipts are not in
excess of $11 million for all of its
affiliated operations worldwide. The
average annual total revenue for a
snapper-grouper permitted vessel that
landed red porgy from 2015 through
2019 was $68,539, which is
substantially less than the above
threshold. Moreover, none of the
permitted vessels that land red porgy
have annual revenue close to or greater
than $11 million. Hence, NMFS
estimates that all of the businesses that
operate snapper-grouper permitted
vessels that land red porgy are small.
Actions 1 and 2 of Amendment 50,
which will establish a rebuilding plan
and revise the OFL, ABC, annual OY,
and total ACL for red porgy, would have
indirect impacts on small businesses
and their magnitudes are dependent on
subsequent action.
Action 3 of Amendment 50 revises the
sector allocations and increases the
commercial allocation of the total ACL
from 50 percent to 51.43 percent.
Currently, the commercial ACL is
157,692 lb (71,528 kg), gutted weight,
164,000 lb (157,692 kg), whole weight.
In combination, Actions 2 (total ACL)
and 3 (sector allocations) would reduce
the commercial ACL by 120,603 lb
(54,705 kg) for 2022, and then to
110,713 lb (50,219 kg) for 2026 and
subsequent years. If average annual
commercial ACL landings from 2015
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through 2019 represent future baseline
landings from 2022 through 2026,
Action 3 would generate an average
annual reduction of commercial ACL
landings of 68,822 lb (31,217 kg) during
that 5-year period. At an average
dockside price of $2.35 per lb, if the
average 161 snapper-grouper permitted
vessels with red porgy landings account
for all commercial ACL landings of red
porgy, they would collectively have
annual losses of dockside revenue of
$161,733 or individually have an
average reduction of $1,005 (1.47
percent) per vessel. However,
commercial landings reported by
snapper-grouper permitted vessels
represent, on average, 91.34 percent of
commercial ACL landings from 2015
through 2019. As such, the 161
permitted vessels would collectively
have average annual reductions of red
porgy landings of 62,822 lb (28,496 kg)
(91.34 percent of 68,822 lb (28,496 kg))
and dockside revenue of $147,727, or
individually have average annual
reductions of 427 lb (194 kg) and $918
(1.34 percent) per vessel.
Commercial landings of red porgy are
not equally divided across the states.
For purposes of protecting confidential
information, Florida and Georgia
vessels, landings and revenues are
combined. On average, Florida and
Georgia combined account for 28.73
percent of annual landings by weight
and North Carolina and South Carolina
account for 35.38 percent and 35.90
percent, respectively. Consequently, the
average revenue losses per vessel under
Action 3 (allocation) vary by state.
NMFS estimates that the 49 Florida or
Georgia vessels that land red porgy
would each have an annual loss of $870
(1.24 percent of total dockside revenue),
the 70 North Carolina vessels that land
red porgy would each have an annual
loss of $747 (1.41 percent of total
dockside revenue), and the 42 South
Carolina vessels that land red porgy
would each have an annual loss of
$1,251 (1.48 percent of total dockside
revenue).
Action 4 (commercial trip limits) in
Amendment 50 reduces the commercial
trip limits for red porgy in the South
Atlantic EEZ from 60 to 15 fish in
Season 1 (January 1 through April 3)
and 120 to 15 fish in Season 2 (May 1
through December 31). Because of the
prohibition on commercially harvesting
red porgy that had previously been in
effect from January through April from
January 1, 2015, to February 26, 2020,
landings per trip during March and
April of 2020 are used to evaluate
baseline trips and landings per trip
during March and April of Season 1.
The resulting March and April figures
are then doubled to produce estimates
of the baseline number of trips and
landings during Season 1. Baseline
landings per trip during Season 2 are
evaluated using landings from May 1
through December 31 from 2015 through
2019.
During Season 1, an estimated seven
(14.29 percent) of 49 Florida and
Georgia vessels report 82 trips that land
over 15 red porgy. Similarly, an
estimated 17 (24.29 percent) of 70 North
Carolina vessels and 13 (30.95 percent)
of 42 South Carolina vessels report 86
and 84 trips, respectively, that land over
15 red porgy during Season 1. NMFS
estimates that the average trip that lands
over 15 red porgy during Season 1
would lose 63 lb (29 kg) in Florida or
Georgia, 45 lb (20 kg) in North Carolina,
and 62 lb (28 kg) in South Carolina. The
average losses in dockside revenue per
vessel during Season 1 would be $1,734
for the 7 snapper-grouper permitted
vessels that land red porgy in Florida or
Georgia, $535 for the 17 snappergrouper permitted vessels that land the
species in North Carolina, and $941 for
the 13 snapper-grouper permitted
vessels that land red porgy in South
Carolina.
From 2015 through 2019, an annual
average of up to 52 vessels made 293
trips that landed red porgy in Florida or
Georgia during Season 2 (May through
December), and 68.60 percent of those
trips made by 29 vessels landed more
than 15 fish. During that same 5-year
period, an annual average of 70 vessels
made 590 trips that landed red porgy in
North Carolina during Season 2, and
52.88 percent of those trips made by 47
vessels landed more than 15 fish.
Furthermore, an annual average of 42
vessels made 362 trips that landed red
porgy in South Carolina during Season
2 and 66.85 percent of the trips made by
36 vessels landed more than 15 fish.
NMFS estimates that the average trip
that currently lands over 15 red porgy
in Florida or Georgia would lose 127 lb
(58 kg) of red porgy, while the average
trips that land over 15 red porgy in
North Carolina and South Carolina
would lose 75 lb (34 kg) and 103 lb (47
kg), respectively. With an average
dockside price of $2.35/lb, the annual
average of 29 vessels that land over 15
red porgy per trip during Season 2 in
Florida or Georgia would have
estimated annual reductions of $2,069
per vessel. Similarly, the average annual
47 vessels that land over 15 fish per trip
in North Carolina and 38 vessels that
land over 15 fish per trip in South
Carolina during Season 2 would have an
estimated annual revenue loss of $1,170
and $1,627 per vessel, respectively.
Actions 5 (recreational bag limits and
recreational fishing season) and 6
(recreational AMs) in Amendment 50
will have direct impacts on anglers
(recreational fishers), and no direct
impacts on small businesses. Therefore,
descriptions of those actions and
analysis of their impacts are neither
required nor provided.
The estimated impacts of each of the
proposed actions on a vessel with a
Federal commercial snapper-grouper
permit that reports landings of red porgy
are summarized in Table 1. Note that
not all vessels are equally affected by
the actions. For example, while Action
3 would affect 100 percent of the 49
Florida and Georgia vessels, the Season
1 trip limit of Action 4 would affect
14.29 percent of those 49 vessels.
Because of that, the total impact per
vessel of the combined actions is not the
same for all vessels. Seven Florida and
Georgia vessels would experience the
maximum total adverse impact of
$4,674, assuming they are also affected
by the Season 2 trip limit, while 20
Florida and Georgia vessels would
experience the minimum total adverse
impact of $870. The range of the total
impact per vessel is summarized in
Table 2.
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TABLE 1—SUMMARY OF ESTIMATED ANNUAL ADVERSE IMPACTS PER VESSEL BY STATE BY ACTION
Action
Brief Description
1 ..........
Rebuilding Timeframe .......................
2 ..........
Total ACL & Annual OY ....................
3 ..........
Commercial ACL ...............................
$870 per vessel for 49 (100%) vessels.
$747 per vessel for 70 (100%) vessels.
$1,251 per vessel for 42 (100%)
vessels.
4 ..........
Season 1 Trip Limit ...........................
$1,734 per vessel for 7 (14.29%)
vessels.
$535 per vessel for 17 (24.29%)
vessels.
$535 per vessel for 13 (30.95%)
vessels.
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16:21 Dec 19, 2022
Florida and Georgia
Jkt 259001
North Carolina
South Carolina
No direct impact.
No direct impact.
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Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 243 / Tuesday, December 20, 2022 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 1—SUMMARY OF ESTIMATED ANNUAL ADVERSE IMPACTS PER VESSEL BY STATE BY ACTION—Continued
Action
Brief Description
Florida and Georgia
North Carolina
South Carolina
Season 2 Trip Limit ...........................
$2,069 for 29 (59.18%) vessels ........
$1,179 per vessel for 47 (67.14%)
vessels.
$1,627 per vessel for 38 (90.48%)
vessels.
5 ..........
Recreational bag limit .......................
No direct impact.
6 ..........
Recreational AMs ..............................
No direct impact.
TABLE 2—RANGE OF TOTAL ANNUAL IMPACTS PER VESSEL FOR COMBINED ACTIONS
Maximum
total
adverse
impact per
vessel
State
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FL/GA ....................................................................................................
NC .........................................................................................................
SC .........................................................................................................
As described in Amendment 50,
annual net revenue from operations for
vessels in the commercial snappergrouper fishery was approximately 5
percent of their average annual total
revenue from 2014 through 2016, while
average net cash flow was about 19
percent of their average annual gross
revenue during this time. Given that the
rule could reduce a vessel’s annual total
revenue by an estimated 4.03 percent to
6.64 percent, NMFS determined that
this final rule would have a significant
adverse impact on a substantial number
of small entities.
Three alternatives to Action 2, which
would revise the total ACL, were
considered, but not selected by the
Council. Two of those alternatives
would have larger decreases in the total
ACL and subsequently larger reductions
in the commercial ACL. As such, those
two alternatives would have a larger
adverse impact on small businesses. The
third alternative, the status quo, would
have no adverse impact on small
businesses beyond the baseline.
The status-quo alternative to Action 3
(sector allocations), which would keep
the commercial allocation of the total
ACL at 50 percent, was considered, but
not selected by the Council. It would
have had a larger adverse economic
impact on small businesses than the
selected alternative.
Section 212 of the Small Business
Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of
1996 states that, for each rule or group
of related rules for which an agency is
required to prepare a FRFA, the agency
will publish one or more guides to assist
small entities in complying with the
rule and will designate such
publications as ‘‘small entity
compliance guides.’’ The agency will
explain the actions a small entity is
required to take to comply with a rule
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16:21 Dec 19, 2022
Jkt 259001
$4,673
2,461
3,413
Number (%)
of vessels
with maximum
total impact
Maximum
percentage
of annual
revenue
loss per
vessel
7 (14.29%)
17 (24.29%)
13 (30.95%)
or group of rules. As part of this
rulemaking process, a fishery bulletin to
permit holders that also serves as a
small entity compliance guide was
prepared. This final rule and the guide
(i.e., bulletin) will be available on the
website (see ADDRESSES). Hard copies of
the guide and this final rule will be
available upon request (see ADDRESSES).
List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 622
Accountability measures, Annual
catch limits, Commercial, Fisheries,
Fishing, Recreational, Red porgy, South
Atlantic.
Dated: December 14, 2022.
Andrew James Strelcheck,
Acting Deputy Assistant Administrator for
Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
For the reasons set out in the
preamble, 50 CFR part 622 is amended
as follows:
PART 622—FISHERIES OF THE
CARIBBEAN, GULF OF MEXICO, AND
SOUTH ATLANTIC
1. The authority citation for part 622
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
2. In § 622.183, add paragraph (b)(9) to
read as follows:
■
§ 622.183
Area and seasonal closures.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(9) Red porgy recreational sector
closure. The recreational sector for red
porgy is closed from January 1 through
April 30, and July 1 through December
31, each year. During a closure, the bag
and possession limits for red porgy in or
from the South Atlantic EEZ are zero.
■ 3. In § 622.187, revise paragraphs
(b)(6) and (c)(2) to read as follows:
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Minimum
total
adverse
impact per
vessel
6.64
4.65
4.03
$870
747
1,251
§ 622.187
Number (%)
of vessels
with minimum
total impact
Minimum
percentage
of annual
revenue
loss per
vessel
40 (40.92%)
23 (32.86%)
4 (9.52%)
1.24
1.41
1.48
Bag and possession limits.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(6) Red porgy. 1.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(2) A person aboard a vessel may not
possess red porgy in or from the EEZ in
excess of one per day or one per trip,
whichever is more restrictive.
■ 4. In § 622.190, revise paragraphs (a)
introductory text and (a)(6)(i) and (ii) to
read as follows;
§ 622.190
Quotas.
*
*
*
*
*
(a) South Atlantic snapper-grouper,
excluding wreckfish. The quotas apply
to persons who are not subject to the bag
limits. (See § 622.11 for applicability of
the bag limits.) The quotas are in gutted
weight, that is eviscerated but otherwise
whole, except for the quotas in
paragraphs (a)(4), (5), and (7) of this
section which are in both gutted weight
and round weight.
*
*
*
*
*
(6) * * *
(i) For the period January 1 through
April 30 each year.
(A) For the 2022 fishing year—11,127
lb (5,047 kg).
(B) For the 2023 fishing year—12,017
lb (5,451 kg).
(C) For the 2024 fishing year—12,907
lb (5,855 kg).
(D) For the 2025 fishing year—13,500
lb (6,123 kg).
(E) For the 2026 and subsequent
fishing years—14,094 lb (6,393 kg).
(ii) For the period May 1 through
December 31 each year.
(A) For the 2022 fishing year—25,962
lb (11,776 kg).
(B) For the 2023 fishing year—28,039
lb (12,718 kg).
(C) For the 2024 fishing year—30,116
lb (13,660 kg).
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(D) For the 2025 fishing year—31,501
lb (14,289 kg).
(E) For the 2026 and subsequent
fishing years—32,886 lb (14,917 kg).
*
*
*
*
*
■ 5. In § 622.191, revise paragraphs
(a)(4)(i) and (ii) to read as follows:
§ 622.191
Commercial trip limits.
*
*
*
*
*
(a) * * *
(4) * * *
(i) From January 1 through April 30—
15 fish.
(ii) From May 1 through December
31—15 fish.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 6. In § 622.193, revise paragraphs
(v)(1)(ii) and (v)(2) and add paragraph
(v)(3) to read as follows:
§ 622.193 Annual catch limits (ACLs),
annual catch targets (ACTs), and
accountability measures (AMs).
*
*
*
*
(v) * * *
(1) * * *
(ii) If commercial landings for red
porgy, as estimated by the SRD, exceed
the commercial ACL, and the combined
commercial and recreational ACL as
specified in paragraph (v)(3) of this
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*
VerDate Sep<11>2014
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Jkt 259001
section, is exceeded during the same
fishing year, and red porgy are
overfished based on the most recent
Status of U.S. Fisheries Report to
Congress, the AA will file a notification
with the Office of the Federal Register
to reduce the commercial ACL in the
following fishing year by the amount of
the commercial ACL overage in the
prior fishing year.
(2) Recreational sector. (i) If
recreational landings for red porgy, as
estimated by the SRD, exceed the
recreational ACL specified in paragraph
(v)(2)(ii) of this section, then during the
following fishing year, the AA will file
a notification with the Office of the
Federal Register to reduce the length of
the recreational fishing season by the
amount necessary to ensure recreational
landings do not exceed the recreational
ACL. However, the length of the
recreational fishing season will not be
reduced in the following fishing year if
NMFS determines, using the best
scientific information available, that no
fishing season reduction is necessary.
When the recreational sector is closed as
a result of NMFS reducing the length of
the recreational fishing season, the bag
and possession limits for red porgy in or
from the South Atlantic EEZ are zero.
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(ii) The recreational ACL for red porgy
is 35,026 lb (15,888 kg), gutted weight,
for the 2022 fishing year; 37,829 lb
(17,139 kg), gutted weight, for 2023
fishing year; 40,631 lb (18,430 kg),
gutted weight, for the 2024 fishing year;
42,499 lb (19,277 kg), gutted weight, for
the 2025 fishing year; and 44,367 lb
(20,125 kg), gutted weight, for the 2026
and subsequent fishing years.
(3) Combined commercial and
recreational ACLs. The combined
commercial and recreational ACL for
red porgy is 72,115 lb (32,711 kg),
gutted weight, 75,000 lb (34,019 kg),
round weight, for the 2022 fishing year;
77,885 lb (35,328 kg), gutted weight,
81,000 lb (36,741 kg), round weight, for
2023 fishing year; 83,654 lb (37,945 kg),
gutted weight, 87,000 lb (39,463 kg),
round weight, for the 2024 fishing year;
87,500 lb (39,689 kg), gutted weight,
91,000 lb (41,277 kg), round weight, for
the 2025 fishing year; and 91,346 lb
(41,434 kg), gutted weight, 95,000 lb
(43,091 kg), round weight, for the 2026
and subsequent fishing years.
*
*
*
*
*
[FR Doc. 2022–27485 Filed 12–19–22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 87, Number 243 (Tuesday, December 20, 2022)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 77742-77748]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2022-27485]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
50 CFR Part 622
[Docket No. 221214-0269]
RIN 0648-BL46
Fisheries of the Caribbean, Gulf of Mexico, and South Atlantic;
Snapper-Grouper Fishery of the South Atlantic; Amendment 50
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: NMFS issues regulations to implement Amendment 50 to the
Fishery Management Plan for the Snapper-Grouper Fishery of the South
Atlantic (FMP), as prepared and submitted by the South Atlantic Fishery
Management Council (Council). For red porgy, this final rule revises
the sector annual catch limits (ACLs), commercial seasonal quotas,
commercial trip limits, recreational bag and possession limits,
recreational fishing season, and recreational accountability measures
(AMs). In addition, Amendment 50 establishes a new rebuilding plan, and
revises the acceptable biological catch (ABC), annual optimum yield
(OY), and sector allocations. The purpose of this final rule and
Amendment 50 is to end overfishing of red porgy, rebuild the stock, and
achieve OY while minimizing, to the extent practicable, adverse social
and economic effects.
DATES: This final rule is effective January 19, 2023.
ADDRESSES: Electronic copies of Amendment 50, which includes a fishery
impact statement and a regulatory impact review, may be obtained from
the Southeast Regional Office website at https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/action/amendment-50-catch-level-adjustments-rebuilding-schedule-and-allocations-red-porgy/.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Frank Helies, telephone: 727-824-5305,
or email: [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The South Atlantic snapper-grouper fishery,
which includes red porgy, is managed under the FMP. The FMP was
prepared by the Council and implemented through regulations at 50 CFR
part 622 under the authority of the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery
Conservation and Management Act (Magnuson-Stevens Act).
Background
The Magnuson-Stevens Act requires that NMFS and regional fishery
management councils prevent overfishing and achieve, on a continuing
basis, the OY from federally managed fish stocks. These mandates are
intended to ensure that fishery resources are managed for the greatest
overall benefit to the nation, particularly with respect to providing
food production and recreational opportunities, and protecting marine
ecosystems. To further this goal, the Magnuson-Stevens Act requires
fishery managers to minimize bycatch and bycatch mortality to the
extent practicable.
On September 9, 2022, NMFS published a notice of availability for
Amendment 50 and requested public comment (87 FR 55376). On September
26, 2022, NMFS published a proposed rule for Amendment 50 and requested
public comment (87 FR 58302). NMFS approved Amendment 50 on December 7,
2022. The proposed rule and Amendment 50 outline the rationale for the
actions contained in this final rule. A summary of the management
measures described in Amendment 50 and implemented by this final rule
is described below.
In 1990, a stock assessment for red porgy was completed and NMFS
determined that the stock was subject to overfishing and overfished. As
a result of that stock status, through Amendment 4 to the FMP the
Council established an initial rebuilding plan and a minimum size limit
for red porgy (56 FR 56016, October 31, 1991). The rebuilding plan was
put into effect in 1991 with a target time to rebuild of 10 years. The
stock was again assessed in 1999 and again was determined to be subject
to overfishing and overfished.
[[Page 77743]]
Through an emergency rule published in 1999, NMFS prohibited the
harvest and possession of red porgy in or from the exclusive economic
zone (EEZ) off the southern Atlantic states (64 FR 48324, September 3,
1999). NMFS subsequently extended the emergency rule to prohibit the
harvest and possession of red porgy through August 28, 2000 (65 FR
10039, February 25, 2000).
The final rule to implement Amendment 12 to the FMP replaced the
emergency rule and closed commercial harvest during the red porgy peak
spawning season, reduced the commercial trip limit, and reduced the
recreational bag limit (65 FR 51248, August 23, 2000). Amendment 12
also specified a new 18-year rebuilding plan, which began with the
implementation of the emergency rule that prohibited harvest on
September 3, 1999. The red porgy stock was assessed again in 2002, as
the first stock in the South Atlantic to be assessed through the
Southeast Data, Assessment, and Review (SEDAR) process (SEDAR 1). The
SEDAR 1 assessment indicated the stock was overfished but not
undergoing overfishing. Subsequent update assessments in 2006 and 2012
also resulted in the same stock status determinations as the 2002 SEDAR
1 assessment.
The most recent SEDAR stock assessment for South Atlantic red porgy
(SEDAR 60) was completed in April 2020. The assessment included data
through 2017 and incorporated the revised estimates for recreational
catch from the Marine Recreational Information Program Fishing Effort
Survey (MRIP FES), as discussed later in this final rule. The Council's
Scientific and Statistical Committee (SSC) reviewed SEDAR 60 at their
April 2020 meeting and found that the assessment was conducted using
the best scientific information available, and was adequate for
determining stock status and supporting fishing level recommendations.
The findings of the assessment indicated that the South Atlantic red
porgy stock is undergoing overfishing and is overfished. NMFS also
determined that the red porgy stock has not made adequate progress
towards rebuilding.
The findings of SEDAR 60 showed a declining trend in average
recruitment throughout the time series reviewed in the assessment, and
that red porgy has made little progress towards rebuilding, given the
low recruitment in recent years. The projections within SEDAR 60
indicate the reduced ABCs would have only a very minor impact on stock
rebuilding. If recruitment continues to be low, the productivity of the
stock and the benchmark management reference points would need to be
reevaluated. The red porgy stock is currently scheduled to be assessed
again in 2025.
Following a notification from NMFS to a Council that a stock is
undergoing overfishing and is overfished, the Magnuson-Stevens Act
requires the Council to develop an FMP amendment with actions that
immediately end overfishing and rebuild the affected stock. The Council
developed Amendment 50 in response to the results of SEDAR 60.
In addition to the revisions to the commercial quotas and sector
ACLs, modified red porgy management measures are needed to constrain
commercial and recreational harvest to the proposed fishing levels.
This final rule reduces commercial trip limits and recreational bag and
possession limits, and implements a 2-month recreational fishing
season. The Council intends that these actions will allow retention of
red porgy over the longest period of time projected during the fishing
year while preventing overfishing. This final rule also adjusts the
recreational AMs to ensure they are effective at keeping recreational
landings from exceeding the recreational ACL and correct for overages
when they occur. This final rule and Amendment 50 do not adjust
commercial AMs.
The Council determined that the actions in Amendment 50 will end
overfishing of South Atlantic red porgy, rebuild the stock, and achieve
OY while minimizing, to the extent practicable, adverse social and
economic effects.
Management Measures Contained in This Final Rule
This final rule revises the sector ACLs, commercial seasonal
quotas, commercial trip limits, recreational bag and possession limits,
recreational fishing season, and recreational AMs. All weights
described in this final rule are in gutted weight, unless otherwise
specified.
Total ACLs
As implemented through Regulatory Amendment 18 to the FMP, the
current total ACL and annual OY for red porgy are equal to the current
ABC of 328,000 lb (148,778 kg), round weight. In Amendment 50, the
Council is revising the ABC based on SEDAR 60 and the recommendation of
the SSC, and keeping the ABC, total ACL, and annual OY equal to each
other.
This final rule revises the total ACL equal to the recommended ABC
of 75,000 lb (34,019 kg), round weight, 72,115 lb (32,711 kg), gutted
weight, for 2022; 81,000 lb (36,741 kg), round weight, 77,885 lb
(35,328 kg), gutted weight, for 2023; 87,000 lb (39,463 kg), round
weight, 83,654 lb (37,945 kg), gutted weight, for 2024; 91,000 lb
(41,277 kg), round weight, 87,500 lb (39,689 kg), gutted weight, for
2025; and 95,000 lb (43,091 kg), round weight, 91,346 lb (41,434 kg),
gutted weight, for 2026 and subsequent fishing years.
Sector Allocations and ACLs
Amendment 50 revises the commercial and recreational allocations
for red porgy. The current sector ACLs for red porgy are based on the
commercial and recreational allocations of the total ACL at 50.00
percent and 50.00 percent, respectively, and were established through
Amendment 15B to the FMP (74 FR 58902, November 16, 2009).
The new red porgy sector allocations in Amendment 50 will result in
commercial and recreational allocations of 51.43 percent and 48.57
percent, respectively. The Council determined the revised sector
allocations by applying the allocation formula adopted through the
Comprehensive ACL Amendment to the FMP, which is ACL = ((mean landings
2006-2008) * 0.5)) + ((mean landings 1986-2008) * 0.5), to the revised
total ACL that includes updated recreational landings from the MRIP FES
method.
Utilizing the revised allocation formula will incorporate revised
recreational landings from the MRIP FES, which will result in a slight
shift of allocation to the commercial sector. Although commercial
fishing, compared to recreational fishing, tends to occur in deeper
water, where mortality of discarded fish is greater, the Council
reasoned that a slightly increased allocation to the commercial sector
will potentially reduce the number of fish that are discarded if the
commercial ACL is reached in-season and a sector closure becomes
necessary, thus promoting conservation.
The commercial ACLs will be 37,089 lb (16,823 kg), for 2022; 40,056
lb (18,169 kg), for 2023; 43,023 lb (19,515 kg), for 2024; 45,001 lb
(20,412 kg), for 2025; and 46,979 lb (21,309 kg), for 2026 and
subsequent years.
The recreational ACLs will be 35,026 lb (15,888 kg), for 2022;
37,829 lb (17,159 kg), for 2023; 40,631 lb (18,430 kg), for 2024;
42,499 lb (19,277 kg), for 2025; and 44,367 lb (20,125 kg), for 2026
and subsequent years.
Regulatory Amendment 27 to the FMP established two commercial
fishing seasons for red porgy with 30 percent of the commercial ACL
allocated to Season 1 (January through April) and 70
[[Page 77744]]
percent allocated to Season 2 (May through December) (85 FR 4588,
January 27, 2020). Any remaining commercial quota from Season 1 would
be added to the commercial quota in Season 2. Any remaining quota from
Season 2 would not be carried forward into the next fishing year.
Amendment 50 and this final rule will not alter the current fishing
seasons or commercial season ACL allocations.
Under Amendment 50, the commercial quotas in 2022 for Season 1 will
be 11,127 lb (5,047 kg) and Season 2 will be 25,962 lb (11,776 kg); in
2023, Season 1 will be 12,017 lb (5,451 kg) and Season 2 will be 28,039
lb (12,718 kg); in 2024, Season 1 will be 12,907 lb (5,855 kg) and
Season 2 will be 30,116 lb (13,660 kg); in 2025, Season 1 will be
13,500 lb (6,123 kg) and Season 2 will be 31,501 lb (14,289 kg); and
for 2026 and subsequent years, Season 1 will be 14,094 lb (6,393 kg)
and Season 2 will be 32,886 lb (14,917 kg).
Commercial Trip Limits
Amendment 13C to the FMP established the current commercial trip
limit for red porgy of 120 fish from May 1 through December 31, with no
harvest allowed from January 1 through April 30 (71 FR 55096, September
21, 2006). Regulatory Amendment 27 to the FMP removed the January 1
through April 30 spawning season commercial closure, and established
the current 60 fish trip limit from January 1 through April 30, to
reduce discarding of red porgy by the commercial sector during the
early part of the fishing year. This final rule modifies the commercial
trip limits for red porgy to be 15 fish for both Seasons 1 and 2.
The Council decided that under the revised 15-fish commercial trip
limit, the lowest trip limit considered, commercial fishermen could
retain an amount of red porgy over the longest amount of time during
the fishing seasons, and this will increase the likelihood of red porgy
remaining open to commercial harvest and available to consumers for as
long as possible. Additionally, the Council expects the revised
commercial trip limit to minimize discards of incidentally harvested
red porgy when fishermen target other snapper-grouper species, such as
gray triggerfish and vermilion snapper.
Recreational Bag and Possession Limits
The current recreational bag and possession limits for red porgy in
the South Atlantic, specified by the final rule Amendment 13C to the
FMP, are three per person per day, or three per person per trip,
whichever is more restrictive. This final rule reduces the recreational
bag and possession limits to one fish per person per day, or one fish
per person per trip, whichever is more restrictive.
Given the substantial reduction in harvest needed to end red porgy
overfishing immediately, and to increase the likelihood of rebuilding
the stock, the Council selected the lowest bag limit considered in
Amendment 50 to continue to allow recreational retention and help
constrain harvest to the reduced recreational ACL.
Recreational Fishing Season
Recreational harvest of red porgy is currently allowed year-round
until the recreational ACL is met or is projected to be met. This final
rule establishes a recreational fishing season for red porgy where
harvest will be allowed only from May 1 through June 30. The
recreational sector will be closed annually from January 1 through
April 30 and from July 1 through December 31. During the revised
seasonal closures, the recreational bag and possession limits for red
porgy will be zero.
Given the substantial reductions in harvest that are needed to
address the determination that the stock is undergoing overfishing and
overfished, shortening the time recreational fishing is allowed helps
to reduce the risk that recreational catches will exceed the reduced
sector ACL. The Council selected the most conservative recreational
fishing season alternative in Amendment 50 to reduce the chance the
recreational ACL will be exceeded, while still allowing for some
recreational harvest opportunities.
Recreational AMs
The current AMs were established through Amendment 34 to the FMP
(81 FR 3731, January 22, 2016) and includes an in-season closure for
the remainder of the fishing year if recreational landings reach or are
projected to reach the recreational ACL, regardless of whether the
stock is overfished. The current AMs also include post-season
adjustments. If recreational landings exceed the recreational ACL, then
during the following fishing year recreational landings will be
monitored for a persistence in increased landings. If the total ACL is
exceeded and red porgy are overfished, the length of the recreational
fishing season and the recreational ACL are reduced by the amount of
the recreational ACL overage.
This final rule revises the recreational AMs for red porgy. Given
the new 2-month fishing season, both the current in-season closure and
stock status based post-season AMs will be replaced with a new post-
season AM. The revised recreational AM would be triggered in the
following fishing year if the recreational ACL is exceeded. If
recreational landings exceed the recreational ACL, the length of the
following year's recreational fishing season would be reduced by the
amount necessary to prevent the recreational ACL from being exceeded in
the following year. However, the length of the recreational season
would not be reduced if the Regional Administrator determines, using
the best scientific information available, that a reduction is not
necessary.
The Council's intent in revising the recreational AMs is to avoid
an in-season closure of the recreational sector and extend maximum
fishing opportunities to the sector during the 2-month recreational
season. The revised AM will remove the current potential duplicate AM
application of a reduction in the recreational season length and a
payback of the recreational ACL overage if the total ACL was exceeded.
Under the revised measure, the AM trigger will not be tied to the total
ACL, but only to the recreational ACL. The modification of the current
recreational AMs will ensure that overages in the recreational sector
do not in turn affect the catch levels for the commercial sector. Any
reduced recreational season length as a result of the new AM being
implemented would apply to the recreational fishing season in the year
following a recreational ACL overage.
Management Measures in Amendment 50 Not Codified by This Final Rule
In addition to the measures within this final rule, Amendment 50
revises the overfishing limit (OFL) for red porgy equal to the ABC and
updates other biological reference points. The amendment also
establishes a new rebuilding plan, and revises the ABC, the annual OY,
and the sector allocations.
Rebuilding Plan for the South Atlantic Red Porgy Stock
As previously discussed, the Council implemented an 18-year
rebuilding plan for the South Atlantic red porgy stock through
Amendment 12 to the FMP that was expected to rebuild the stock by the
end of 2017 (65 FR 51248, September 22, 2000). Because the South
Atlantic red porgy stock did not rebuild within that time, and is still
overfished, Amendment 50 establishes a new rebuilding plan schedule
equal to the time estimated to rebuild the stock while maintaining
fishing mortality at 75 percent of the maximum fishing mortality
threshold during the
[[Page 77745]]
rebuilding period. This rebuilding period will be 26 years, beginning
in 2022 and ending in 2047.
ABC and Annual OY
The current ABC for red porgy was implemented in Regulatory
Amendment 18 to the FMP, based upon a stock assessment update (2012
SEDAR 1 Update) and the Council's SSC's recommendations (78 FR 47574,
August 6, 2013).
In April 2020, the Council's SSC reviewed the latest stock
assessment (SEDAR 60) and recommended new ABC levels as determined by
SEDAR 60. The assessment and associated ABC recommendations
incorporated the revised estimates for recreational catch and effort
from the MRIP Access Point Angler Intercept Survey (APAIS) and FES.
MRIP began incorporating a new survey design for APAIS in 2013 and
replaced the Coastal Household Telephone Survey (CHTS) with FES in
2018. Prior to the implementation of MRIP in 2008, recreational
landings estimates were generated using the Marine Recreational
Fisheries Statistics Survey (MRFSS). As explained in Amendment 50,
total recreational fishing effort estimates generated from MRIP FES are
generally higher than both the MRFSS and MRIP CHTS estimates. This
difference in estimates occurs because MRIP FES is designed to more
accurately measure fishing activity, not because there was a sudden
increase in fishing effort. The MRIP FES is considered by the Council's
SSC, the Council, and NMFS to be a more reliable estimate of
recreational effort and more robust compared to the MRIP CHTS method.
The new ABC recommendations within Amendment 50 also represent the best
scientific information available as determined by the SSC.
In addition, the Council chose to specify OY for red porgy on an
annual basis and set it equal to the ABC and total ACL, in accordance
with the guidance provided in the Magnuson-Stevens Act National
Standard 1 Guidelines at 50 CFR 600.310(f)(4)(iv), and using the
formula implemented through the Comprehensive ACL Amendment to the FMP
(77 FR 15915, March 16, 2012).
Comments and Reponses
NMFS received four comments from individuals during the public
comment period on the notice of availability and proposed rule for
Amendment 50. NMFS acknowledges the four comments in favor of the
action in Amendment 50 and the proposed rule and agrees with them. No
comments were received opposing Amendment 50 or the proposed rule. No
changes were made to the final rule as a result of public comment.
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 Amendment 50, the FMP, other provisions of the
Magnuson-Stevens Act, and other applicable law.
This final rule has been determined to be not significant for
purposes of Executive Order 12866.
This final rule does not contain policies with federalism or
``takings'' implications, as those terms are defined in E.O. 13132 and
E.O. 12630, respectively.
This final rule contains no information collection requirements
under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995.
Pursuant to section 604 of the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA),
NMFS has completed a final regulatory flexibility analysis (FRFA) in
support of Amendment 50. The FRFA incorporates the initial regulatory
flexibility analysis (IRFA), a summary of the significant issues raised
by public comments in response to the IRFA and NMFS' responses to those
comments. A summary of the IRFA was published in the proposed rule for
this action and is not repeated here. A description of why this action
was considered, the objectives of the action, and the legal basis for
this rule is contained in Amendment 50 and in the preambles to the
proposed rule and this final rule and are not repeated here. The
following constitutes the FRFA prepared for this final action.
The Magnuson-Stevens Act provides the statutory basis for this
final rule. A description of this final rule, why it is being
implemented, and the purpose of this final rule are contained in the
SUMMARY and SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION sections of this final rule.
No public comments were received specifically in response to the
IRFA, nor were there any public comments received that related to the
potential economic impacts on small entities. No changes to this final
rule were made in response to public comments.
All monetary estimates in the following analysis are in 2019
dollars.
This final rule will directly affect both anglers (recreational
fishers) and commercial fishing businesses that harvest red porgy in
the South Atlantic EEZ. Anglers, however, are not considered small
entities as that term is defined in 5 U.S.C. 601(6), whether fishing
from charter vessel or headboat (for-hire) fishing, private or leased
vessels. Therefore, neither estimates of the number of anglers nor the
impacts on them are required or provided in this analysis. For-hire
fishing businesses would be indirectly affected, and because the
effects on for-hire businesses would be indirect, they fall outside the
scope of the RFA.
Any business that operates a commercial fishing vessel that
harvests red porgy in the South Atlantic EEZ must have a valid Federal
South Atlantic snapper-grouper permit assigned to that vessel. From
2015 through 2019, an annual average of 161 (24 percent) snapper-
grouper permitted vessels reported landings of red porgy. Therefore,
NMFS estimates that 161 snapper-grouper permitted vessels will be
directly affected by this rule.
For RFA purposes, NMFS has established a small business size
standard for businesses, including their affiliates, whose primary
industry is commercial fishing (see 50 CFR 200.2). A business primarily
involved in commercial fishing (NAICS 11411) is classified as a small
business if it is independently owned and operated, is not dominant in
its field of operation (including its affiliates), and its combined
annual receipts are not in excess of $11 million for all of its
affiliated operations worldwide. The average annual total revenue for a
snapper-grouper permitted vessel that landed red porgy from 2015
through 2019 was $68,539, which is substantially less than the above
threshold. Moreover, none of the permitted vessels that land red porgy
have annual revenue close to or greater than $11 million. Hence, NMFS
estimates that all of the businesses that operate snapper-grouper
permitted vessels that land red porgy are small.
Actions 1 and 2 of Amendment 50, which will establish a rebuilding
plan and revise the OFL, ABC, annual OY, and total ACL for red porgy,
would have indirect impacts on small businesses and their magnitudes
are dependent on subsequent action.
Action 3 of Amendment 50 revises the sector allocations and
increases the commercial allocation of the total ACL from 50 percent to
51.43 percent. Currently, the commercial ACL is 157,692 lb (71,528 kg),
gutted weight, 164,000 lb (157,692 kg), whole weight. In combination,
Actions 2 (total ACL) and 3 (sector allocations) would reduce the
commercial ACL by 120,603 lb (54,705 kg) for 2022, and then to 110,713
lb (50,219 kg) for 2026 and subsequent years. If average annual
commercial ACL landings from 2015
[[Page 77746]]
through 2019 represent future baseline landings from 2022 through 2026,
Action 3 would generate an average annual reduction of commercial ACL
landings of 68,822 lb (31,217 kg) during that 5-year period. At an
average dockside price of $2.35 per lb, if the average 161 snapper-
grouper permitted vessels with red porgy landings account for all
commercial ACL landings of red porgy, they would collectively have
annual losses of dockside revenue of $161,733 or individually have an
average reduction of $1,005 (1.47 percent) per vessel. However,
commercial landings reported by snapper-grouper permitted vessels
represent, on average, 91.34 percent of commercial ACL landings from
2015 through 2019. As such, the 161 permitted vessels would
collectively have average annual reductions of red porgy landings of
62,822 lb (28,496 kg) (91.34 percent of 68,822 lb (28,496 kg)) and
dockside revenue of $147,727, or individually have average annual
reductions of 427 lb (194 kg) and $918 (1.34 percent) per vessel.
Commercial landings of red porgy are not equally divided across the
states. For purposes of protecting confidential information, Florida
and Georgia vessels, landings and revenues are combined. On average,
Florida and Georgia combined account for 28.73 percent of annual
landings by weight and North Carolina and South Carolina account for
35.38 percent and 35.90 percent, respectively. Consequently, the
average revenue losses per vessel under Action 3 (allocation) vary by
state. NMFS estimates that the 49 Florida or Georgia vessels that land
red porgy would each have an annual loss of $870 (1.24 percent of total
dockside revenue), the 70 North Carolina vessels that land red porgy
would each have an annual loss of $747 (1.41 percent of total dockside
revenue), and the 42 South Carolina vessels that land red porgy would
each have an annual loss of $1,251 (1.48 percent of total dockside
revenue).
Action 4 (commercial trip limits) in Amendment 50 reduces the
commercial trip limits for red porgy in the South Atlantic EEZ from 60
to 15 fish in Season 1 (January 1 through April 3) and 120 to 15 fish
in Season 2 (May 1 through December 31). Because of the prohibition on
commercially harvesting red porgy that had previously been in effect
from January through April from January 1, 2015, to February 26, 2020,
landings per trip during March and April of 2020 are used to evaluate
baseline trips and landings per trip during March and April of Season
1. The resulting March and April figures are then doubled to produce
estimates of the baseline number of trips and landings during Season 1.
Baseline landings per trip during Season 2 are evaluated using landings
from May 1 through December 31 from 2015 through 2019.
During Season 1, an estimated seven (14.29 percent) of 49 Florida
and Georgia vessels report 82 trips that land over 15 red porgy.
Similarly, an estimated 17 (24.29 percent) of 70 North Carolina vessels
and 13 (30.95 percent) of 42 South Carolina vessels report 86 and 84
trips, respectively, that land over 15 red porgy during Season 1. NMFS
estimates that the average trip that lands over 15 red porgy during
Season 1 would lose 63 lb (29 kg) in Florida or Georgia, 45 lb (20 kg)
in North Carolina, and 62 lb (28 kg) in South Carolina. The average
losses in dockside revenue per vessel during Season 1 would be $1,734
for the 7 snapper-grouper permitted vessels that land red porgy in
Florida or Georgia, $535 for the 17 snapper-grouper permitted vessels
that land the species in North Carolina, and $941 for the 13 snapper-
grouper permitted vessels that land red porgy in South Carolina.
From 2015 through 2019, an annual average of up to 52 vessels made
293 trips that landed red porgy in Florida or Georgia during Season 2
(May through December), and 68.60 percent of those trips made by 29
vessels landed more than 15 fish. During that same 5-year period, an
annual average of 70 vessels made 590 trips that landed red porgy in
North Carolina during Season 2, and 52.88 percent of those trips made
by 47 vessels landed more than 15 fish. Furthermore, an annual average
of 42 vessels made 362 trips that landed red porgy in South Carolina
during Season 2 and 66.85 percent of the trips made by 36 vessels
landed more than 15 fish. NMFS estimates that the average trip that
currently lands over 15 red porgy in Florida or Georgia would lose 127
lb (58 kg) of red porgy, while the average trips that land over 15 red
porgy in North Carolina and South Carolina would lose 75 lb (34 kg) and
103 lb (47 kg), respectively. With an average dockside price of $2.35/
lb, the annual average of 29 vessels that land over 15 red porgy per
trip during Season 2 in Florida or Georgia would have estimated annual
reductions of $2,069 per vessel. Similarly, the average annual 47
vessels that land over 15 fish per trip in North Carolina and 38
vessels that land over 15 fish per trip in South Carolina during Season
2 would have an estimated annual revenue loss of $1,170 and $1,627 per
vessel, respectively.
Actions 5 (recreational bag limits and recreational fishing season)
and 6 (recreational AMs) in Amendment 50 will have direct impacts on
anglers (recreational fishers), and no direct impacts on small
businesses. Therefore, descriptions of those actions and analysis of
their impacts are neither required nor provided.
The estimated impacts of each of the proposed actions on a vessel
with a Federal commercial snapper-grouper permit that reports landings
of red porgy are summarized in Table 1. Note that not all vessels are
equally affected by the actions. For example, while Action 3 would
affect 100 percent of the 49 Florida and Georgia vessels, the Season 1
trip limit of Action 4 would affect 14.29 percent of those 49 vessels.
Because of that, the total impact per vessel of the combined actions is
not the same for all vessels. Seven Florida and Georgia vessels would
experience the maximum total adverse impact of $4,674, assuming they
are also affected by the Season 2 trip limit, while 20 Florida and
Georgia vessels would experience the minimum total adverse impact of
$870. The range of the total impact per vessel is summarized in Table
2.
Table 1--Summary of Estimated Annual Adverse Impacts per Vessel by State by Action
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Action Brief Description Florida and Georgia North Carolina South Carolina
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1............... Rebuilding Timeframe.. No direct impact.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2............... Total ACL & Annual OY. No direct impact.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
3............... Commercial ACL........ $870 per vessel for 49 $747 per vessel for 70 $1,251 per vessel for
(100%) vessels. (100%) vessels. 42 (100%) vessels.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
4............... Season 1 Trip Limit... $1,734 per vessel for $535 per vessel for 17 $535 per vessel for 13
7 (14.29%) vessels. (24.29%) vessels. (30.95%) vessels.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 77747]]
Season 2 Trip Limit... $2,069 for 29 (59.18%) $1,179 per vessel for $1,627 per vessel for
vessels. 47 (67.14%) vessels. 38 (90.48%) vessels.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
5............... Recreational bag limit No direct impact.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
6............... Recreational AMs...... No direct impact.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table 2--Range of Total Annual Impacts per Vessel for Combined Actions
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Maximum Minimum
Maximum Number (%) of percentage Minimum Number (%) of percentage
total vessels with of annual total vessels with of annual
State adverse maximum total revenue adverse minimum total revenue
impact per impact loss per impact per impact loss per
vessel vessel vessel vessel
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FL/GA............................................................. $4,673 7 (14.29%) 6.64 $870 40 (40.92%) 1.24
NC................................................................ 2,461 17 (24.29%) 4.65 747 23 (32.86%) 1.41
SC................................................................ 3,413 13 (30.95%) 4.03 1,251 4 (9.52%) 1.48
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
As described in Amendment 50, annual net revenue from operations
for vessels in the commercial snapper-grouper fishery was approximately
5 percent of their average annual total revenue from 2014 through 2016,
while average net cash flow was about 19 percent of their average
annual gross revenue during this time. Given that the rule could reduce
a vessel's annual total revenue by an estimated 4.03 percent to 6.64
percent, NMFS determined that this final rule would have a significant
adverse impact on a substantial number of small entities.
Three alternatives to Action 2, which would revise the total ACL,
were considered, but not selected by the Council. Two of those
alternatives would have larger decreases in the total ACL and
subsequently larger reductions in the commercial ACL. As such, those
two alternatives would have a larger adverse impact on small
businesses. The third alternative, the status quo, would have no
adverse impact on small businesses beyond the baseline.
The status-quo alternative to Action 3 (sector allocations), which
would keep the commercial allocation of the total ACL at 50 percent,
was considered, but not selected by the Council. It would have had a
larger adverse economic impact on small businesses than the selected
alternative.
Section 212 of the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness
Act of 1996 states that, for each rule or group of related rules for
which an agency is required to prepare a FRFA, the agency will publish
one or more guides to assist small entities in complying with the rule
and will designate such publications as ``small entity compliance
guides.'' The agency will explain the actions a small entity is
required to take to comply with a rule or group of rules. As part of
this rulemaking process, a fishery bulletin to permit holders that also
serves as a small entity compliance guide was prepared. This final rule
and the guide (i.e., bulletin) will be available on the website (see
ADDRESSES). Hard copies of the guide and this final rule will be
available upon request (see ADDRESSES).
List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 622
Accountability measures, Annual catch limits, Commercial,
Fisheries, Fishing, Recreational, Red porgy, South Atlantic.
Dated: December 14, 2022.
Andrew James Strelcheck,
Acting Deputy Assistant Administrator for Regulatory Programs, National
Marine Fisheries Service.
For the reasons set out in the preamble, 50 CFR part 622 is amended
as follows:
PART 622--FISHERIES OF THE CARIBBEAN, GULF OF MEXICO, AND SOUTH
ATLANTIC
0
1. The authority citation for part 622 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
0
2. In Sec. 622.183, add paragraph (b)(9) to read as follows:
Sec. 622.183 Area and seasonal closures.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(9) Red porgy recreational sector closure. The recreational sector
for red porgy is closed from January 1 through April 30, and July 1
through December 31, each year. During a closure, the bag and
possession limits for red porgy in or from the South Atlantic EEZ are
zero.
0
3. In Sec. 622.187, revise paragraphs (b)(6) and (c)(2) to read as
follows:
Sec. 622.187 Bag and possession limits.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(6) Red porgy. 1.
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(2) A person aboard a vessel may not possess red porgy in or from
the EEZ in excess of one per day or one per trip, whichever is more
restrictive.
0
4. In Sec. 622.190, revise paragraphs (a) introductory text and
(a)(6)(i) and (ii) to read as follows;
Sec. 622.190 Quotas.
* * * * *
(a) South Atlantic snapper-grouper, excluding wreckfish. The quotas
apply to persons who are not subject to the bag limits. (See Sec.
622.11 for applicability of the bag limits.) The quotas are in gutted
weight, that is eviscerated but otherwise whole, except for the quotas
in paragraphs (a)(4), (5), and (7) of this section which are in both
gutted weight and round weight.
* * * * *
(6) * * *
(i) For the period January 1 through April 30 each year.
(A) For the 2022 fishing year--11,127 lb (5,047 kg).
(B) For the 2023 fishing year--12,017 lb (5,451 kg).
(C) For the 2024 fishing year--12,907 lb (5,855 kg).
(D) For the 2025 fishing year--13,500 lb (6,123 kg).
(E) For the 2026 and subsequent fishing years--14,094 lb (6,393
kg).
(ii) For the period May 1 through December 31 each year.
(A) For the 2022 fishing year--25,962 lb (11,776 kg).
(B) For the 2023 fishing year--28,039 lb (12,718 kg).
(C) For the 2024 fishing year--30,116 lb (13,660 kg).
[[Page 77748]]
(D) For the 2025 fishing year--31,501 lb (14,289 kg).
(E) For the 2026 and subsequent fishing years--32,886 lb (14,917
kg).
* * * * *
0
5. In Sec. 622.191, revise paragraphs (a)(4)(i) and (ii) to read as
follows:
Sec. 622.191 Commercial trip limits.
* * * * *
(a) * * *
(4) * * *
(i) From January 1 through April 30--15 fish.
(ii) From May 1 through December 31--15 fish.
* * * * *
0
6. In Sec. 622.193, revise paragraphs (v)(1)(ii) and (v)(2) and add
paragraph (v)(3) to read as follows:
Sec. 622.193 Annual catch limits (ACLs), annual catch targets (ACTs),
and accountability measures (AMs).
* * * * *
(v) * * *
(1) * * *
(ii) If commercial landings for red porgy, as estimated by the SRD,
exceed the commercial ACL, and the combined commercial and recreational
ACL as specified in paragraph (v)(3) of this section, is exceeded
during the same fishing year, and red porgy are overfished based on the
most recent Status of U.S. Fisheries Report to Congress, the AA will
file a notification with the Office of the Federal Register to reduce
the commercial ACL in the following fishing year by the amount of the
commercial ACL overage in the prior fishing year.
(2) Recreational sector. (i) If recreational landings for red
porgy, as estimated by the SRD, exceed the recreational ACL specified
in paragraph (v)(2)(ii) of this section, then during the following
fishing year, the AA will file a notification with the Office of the
Federal Register to reduce the length of the recreational fishing
season by the amount necessary to ensure recreational landings do not
exceed the recreational ACL. However, the length of the recreational
fishing season will not be reduced in the following fishing year if
NMFS determines, using the best scientific information available, that
no fishing season reduction is necessary. When the recreational sector
is closed as a result of NMFS reducing the length of the recreational
fishing season, the bag and possession limits for red porgy in or from
the South Atlantic EEZ are zero.
(ii) The recreational ACL for red porgy is 35,026 lb (15,888 kg),
gutted weight, for the 2022 fishing year; 37,829 lb (17,139 kg), gutted
weight, for 2023 fishing year; 40,631 lb (18,430 kg), gutted weight,
for the 2024 fishing year; 42,499 lb (19,277 kg), gutted weight, for
the 2025 fishing year; and 44,367 lb (20,125 kg), gutted weight, for
the 2026 and subsequent fishing years.
(3) Combined commercial and recreational ACLs. The combined
commercial and recreational ACL for red porgy is 72,115 lb (32,711 kg),
gutted weight, 75,000 lb (34,019 kg), round weight, for the 2022
fishing year; 77,885 lb (35,328 kg), gutted weight, 81,000 lb (36,741
kg), round weight, for 2023 fishing year; 83,654 lb (37,945 kg), gutted
weight, 87,000 lb (39,463 kg), round weight, for the 2024 fishing year;
87,500 lb (39,689 kg), gutted weight, 91,000 lb (41,277 kg), round
weight, for the 2025 fishing year; and 91,346 lb (41,434 kg), gutted
weight, 95,000 lb (43,091 kg), round weight, for the 2026 and
subsequent fishing years.
* * * * *
[FR Doc. 2022-27485 Filed 12-19-22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-22-P