Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic Zone off Alaska; Cook Inlet Salmon; Amendment 16, 34718-34767 [2024-08664]
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 84 / Tuesday, April 30, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
15 CFR 902
50 CFR Parts 600 and 679
[Docket No.: 240417–0111]
RIN 0648–BM42
Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic
Zone off Alaska; Cook Inlet Salmon;
Amendment 16
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
NMFS issues this final rule to
implement amendment 16 to the
Fishery Management Plan (FMP) for the
Salmon Fisheries in the Exclusive
Economic Zone (EEZ) Off Alaska
(Salmon FMP). Amendment 16 and this
final rule establish Federal fishery
management for all salmon fishing that
occurs in the Cook Inlet EEZ, which
includes commercial drift gillnet and
recreational salmon fishery sectors. This
action is necessary to comply with
rulings from the U.S. Court of Appeals
for the Ninth Circuit and the U.S.
District Court for the District of Alaska,
and to ensure the Salmon FMP is
consistent with the Magnuson-Stevens
Fishery Conservation and Management
Act (Magnuson-Stevens Act). This final
rule is intended to promote the goals
and objectives of the Magnuson-Stevens
Act, the Salmon FMP, and other
applicable laws.
DATES: This rule is effective on May 30,
2024.
ADDRESSES: Electronic copies of
amendment 16; the Environmental
Assessment, the Regulatory Impact
Review, and the Social Impact Analysis
(contained in a single document and
collectively referred to as the
‘‘Analysis’’); the Finding of No
Significant Impact; and the public
comment announcement and tribal
consultation and meeting summaries
prepared for this action may be obtained
from https://www.regulations.gov or from
the NMFS Alaska Region website at
https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/action/
amendment-16-fmp-salmon-fisheriesalaska.
Written comments regarding the
burden-hour estimates or other aspects
of the collection-of-information
requirements contained in this final rule
may be submitted to NMFS Alaska
Region, P.O. Box 21668, Juneau, AK
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SUMMARY:
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99802–1668, Attn: Gretchen Harrington;
in person at NMFS Alaska Region, 709
West 9th Street, Room 401, Juneau, AK;
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.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Doug Duncan, 907–586–7228 or
doug.duncan@noaa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This final
rule implements amendment 16 to the
Salmon FMP. NMFS published the
proposed rule and Notice of Availability
(NOA) for amendment 16 in the Federal
Register on October 19, 2023 (88 FR
72314), with public comments invited
through December 18, 2023. Comments
submitted on the NOA and the proposed
rule for amendment 16 were considered
jointly. The Secretary of Commerce
approved amendment 16 on April 9,
2024, after considering public comment
and determining that amendment 16 is
consistent with the Salmon FMP, the
Magnuson-Stevens Act, and other
applicable laws.
NMFS manages U.S. salmon fisheries
in the EEZ off of Alaska under the
Salmon FMP. The North Pacific Fishery
Management Council (Council)
prepared, and the Secretary of
Commerce (Secretary) approved, the
Salmon FMP under the authority of the
Magnuson-Stevens Act, 16 U.S.C. 1801
et seq. Regulations implementing the
Salmon FMP are located at 50 CFR part
679. General regulations governing U.S.
fisheries also appear at 50 CFR part 600.
NMFS is authorized to prepare an FMP
amendment necessary for the
conservation and management of a
fishery managed under the FMP if the
Council fails to develop and submit
such an amendment after a reasonable
period of time (section 304(c)(1)(A); 16
U.S.C. 1854(c)(1)(A)). Because the
Council failed to take action to
recommend an FMP necessary for the
conservation and management of the
Cook Inlet EEZ salmon fishery, NMFS
developed amendment 16 to the Salmon
FMP and this final rule pursuant to
section 304(c) of the Magnuson-Stevens
Act in order to comply with rulings
from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the
Ninth Circuit and the U.S. District Court
for the District of Alaska, and to ensure
the Salmon FMP is consistent with the
Magnuson-Stevens Act.
Amendment 16 Overview
Amendment 16 incorporates the Cook
Inlet EEZ into the Salmon FMP as the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area (defined as the EEZ
waters of Cook Inlet north of a line at
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59°46.15′ N), thereby bringing the
salmon fishery that occurs within it
under Federal management by the
Council and NMFS.
Two different sectors participate in
the Cook Inlet EEZ Area salmon fishery:
the commercial drift gillnet sector and
the recreational sector. Historically, the
commercial drift gillnet fleet has
harvested over 99.99 percent of salmon
in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area. Under this
action, all salmon fishing in the Cook
Inlet EEZ Area is managed by NMFS
and the Council separately from
adjacent State of Alaska (State) water
salmon fisheries.
Amendment 16 revises the Salmon
FMP, beginning with an updated history
of the FMP and introduction in chapter
1, as well as a revised description of the
fishery management unit in chapter 2
that includes the Cook Inlet EEZ Area as
a separate and distinctly managed area.
The management and policy objectives
in chapter 2 are revised to include
consideration of the Cook Inlet EEZ
Area. Amendment 16 consolidates
chapters describing management of the
Salmon FMP’s East Area and West Area
into chapter 3. No substantive changes
are made to Salmon FMP content
related to the East Area and West Area.
A new chapter 4 comprehensively
describes Federal management measures
and the roles and responsibilities of
NMFS and the Council in managing the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area salmon fishery. In
particular, chapter 4 defines all required
conservation and management
measures, including maximum
sustainable yield (MSY), optimum yield
(OY), and status determination criteria,
and includes an outline of the harvest
specifications process. Chapter 4 also
describes required Federal permits;
fishing gear restrictions; fishing time
and area restrictions; NMFS inseason
management provisions; and
monitoring, recordkeeping, and
reporting requirements.
Chapter 5 contains all content related
to domestic annual harvesting and
processing capacity, finding that all
salmon fisheries off Alaska can be fully
utilized by U.S. harvesters and
processors. This finding is unchanged
by this action.
Chapter 6 contains information on
Essential Fish Habitat and Habitat Areas
of Particular Concern and is not
modified by this action. Amendment 16
removes the outdated Fishery Impact
Statement in the Salmon FMP. The
Analysis prepared for amendment 16
contains the Fishery Impact Statement
for the Cook Inlet EEZ salmon fishery
and this action.
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Maximum Sustainable Yield and
Optimum Yield
Under amendment 16, MSY and OY
are specified consistent with the
National Standard guidelines and are
briefly described below. The definitions
of MSY and OY are explained in greater
detail in the preamble to the proposed
rule and remain unchanged in this final
rule.
MSY is specified for salmon stocks
and stock complexes in Cook Inlet and
defined as the maximum potential yield,
which is calculated by subtracting the
lower bound of the escapement goal (or
another escapement value as
recommended by the Council’s
Scientific and Statistical Committee
(SSC) based on the best scientific
information available) from the total run
size for stocks where data are available.
An escapement goal is the number of
spawning salmon likely to result in
sustainable yields over a broad range of
expected conditions. Any fish in excess
of that necessary to achieve the
escapement goal for each stock or stock
complex are theoretically available for
harvest under this definition of MSY.
For stocks where escapement is not
known, historical catch is used as a
proxy for MSY.
Amendment 16 defines the OY range
for the Cook Inlet EEZ salmon fishery in
the Salmon FMP as the range between
the averages of the three lowest years of
total estimated EEZ salmon harvest and
the three highest years of total estimated
EEZ salmon harvest from 1999 to 2021.
This definition of OY tempers the
influence of extreme events in defining
OY (e.g., fishery disasters at the low
end, or extremely large harvests at the
high end), thereby resulting in a range
of harvests that are likely to be
sustainable and provide the greatest net
benefit to the Nation into the future.
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Status Determination Criteria and
Annual Catch Limits
Amendment 16 specifies objective
and measurable criteria for determining
when a stock or stock complex is subject
to overfishing or is overfished. These are
referred to as status determination
criteria and are established during the
harvest specification process and
evaluated each year after fishing is
complete.
Amendment 16 establishes a tier
system to assess salmon stocks based on
the amount of available information for
each stock. NMFS annually assigns each
salmon stock to a tier based on the best
available scientific information during
the harvest specifications process as
follows:
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• Tier 1: salmon stocks with
escapement goals and stock-specific
estimates of harvests
• Tier 2: salmon stocks managed as a
complex, with specific salmon stocks
as indicator stocks
• Tier 3: salmon stocks or stock
complexes with no reliable estimates
of escapement
For stocks and stock complexes where
escapement is known (Tier 1), or
escapement of indicator stocks is
thought to be a reliable index for the
number of spawners in a stock complex
(Tier 2), overfishing is defined as
occurring when the fishing mortality
rate in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area (FEEZ)
exceeds the maximum fishery mortality
threshold (MFMT). The MFMT is
defined as the maximum potential
fishing mortality rate in the EEZ above
which overfishing occurs for Tier 1 and
2 stocks, expressed as an exploitation
rate that is assessed over one generation.
For Tier 1 and Tier 2 stocks, the
Salmon FMP defines the overfishing
limit (OFL) as the amount of salmon
harvest in the EEZ for the coming year
that corresponds with the spawning
escapement target not being achieved,
based on information available
preseason. Acceptable biological catch
(ABC) is established based on the OFL.
As an ABC control rule, ABC must be
less than or equal to OFL, and the SSC
may recommend reducing ABC from
OFL to account for scientific
uncertainty, including uncertainty
associated with the assessment of
spawning escapement goals, forecasts,
harvests, and other sources. The annual
catch limit (ACL) for each stock is set
equal to ABC.
For Cook Inlet salmon, the minimum
stock size threshold (MSST)—the level
of biomass below which a stock would
be considered overfished—is calculated
for stocks in Tier 1 and 2 as follows: a
stock or stock complex is overfished
when summed escapements over a
generation fall below one half of
summed spawning escapement goals
over that generation.
For Tier 3 stocks, which have no
reliable estimates of escapement,
overfishing is defined as occurring
when harvest exceeds the OFL. The OFL
for Tier 3 stocks is set as the maximum
EEZ catch of the stock multiplied by the
generation time (years). The result of
this calculation is compared against the
cumulative EEZ catch of the stock for
the most recent generation. The SSC
may recommend an alternative catch
value for the OFL on the basis of the
best scientific information available. As
with Tier 1 and 2 stocks, ABC for these
stocks must be set less than or equal to
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the OFL, and may be reduced by a
buffer to account for scientific
uncertainty. For Tier 3 stocks or stock
complexes with escapement goals for a
suitable indicator stock, the MSST is
calculated the same as for Tier 1 and 2
stocks. For Tier 3 stock complexes
without any suitable indicator stocks
with escapement goals, it is not possible
to calculate MSST.
While OFL, ABC, and ACL are
calculated based on the best scientific
information available preseason when
harvest specifications must be
established, realized harvest and
escapement data are used post-season to
determine whether ACLs were
exceeded, whether overfishing occurred,
and whether any stocks are overfished.
Accountability measures are applied to
prevent ACL overages and, if they occur,
to prevent the recurrence of any ACL
overages.
Harvest Specifications and Annual
Processes
Amendment 16 establishes a harvest
specification process for the Cook Inlet
EEZ Area, along with specific
definitions of required status
determination criteria using the tier
system described in the previous
section.
A Stock Assessment and Fisheries
Evaluation (SAFE) report provides the
SSC and Council with a summary of the
most recent biological condition of the
salmon stocks, including all status
determination criteria, and the social
and economic condition of the fishing
and processing industries. NMFS
develops the SAFE report for the Cook
Inlet EEZ Area, with public and
scientific review through the Council
process and public review through
publication of the proposed salmon
harvest specifications in the Federal
Register.
The SAFE report summarizes the best
available scientific information
concerning the past, present, and
possible future condition of Cook Inlet
salmon stocks and fisheries, along with
ecosystem considerations, taking into
account any uncertainty. This includes
recommendations of OFL, ABC, and
MSST that are calculated following the
tier system described above. The SAFE
report will include a final post-season
evaluation of the previous fishing year
based on realized catches and
escapement with all information needed
to make ‘‘overfishing’’ and ‘‘overfished’’
determinations, as well as
recommendations to develop harvest
specifications for the upcoming fishing
year. In providing this information, the
SAFE report uses a time series of
historical catch for each salmon stock,
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including estimates of retained and
discarded catch taken in the salmon
fishery; bycatch taken in other fisheries;
catch in State commercial, recreational,
personal use, and subsistence fisheries;
and catches taken during scientific
research (e.g., test fisheries).
The SAFE report also provides
information needed to document
significant trends or changes in the
stocks, marine ecosystem, and fisheries
over time, as well as the impacts of
management. The SAFE report will be
developed to contain economic, social,
community, essential fish habitat, and
ecological information pertinent to the
success of salmon management or the
achievement of Salmon FMP objectives.
The SSC reviews the SAFE report
each year and recommends the OFL,
ABC, MFMT, and MSST for each stock
or stock complex, which then constrain
the maximum allowable harvest for each
stock based on biology and scientific
uncertainty identified in the
assessments. This SSC review
constitutes the official peer review of
scientific information used to manage
the Cook Inlet EEZ Area salmon fishery
for purposes of National Standard 1 and
for the purposes of the Information
Quality Act. Upon review and
acceptance by the SSC, the SAFE report,
after incorporating any associated SSC
comments, constitutes the best scientific
information available for purposes of
the Magnuson-Stevens Act.
Total allowable catches (TACs) are set
for the Cook Inlet EEZ commercial
salmon fishery. A TAC is a limit on the
annual catch of a stock, stock complex,
or species that is the management target
of the fishery, and operates as an
accountability measure that accounts for
management uncertainty to ensure total
catch remains at or below the ACL for
each stock. In the Cook Inlet EEZ, TACs
will initially be set at the species level
because it is not currently possible to
distinguish among individual stocks of
the same species when monitoring
harvests during the fishing season.
TACs are set considering the estimated
proportional contributions of each stock
to total harvest of a species such that
ACLs are not expected to be exceeded
for any component stock if all TACs are
fully achieved. Because of the
uncertainty inherent to estimating the
proportional contributions of each stock
to total harvest pre-season, species-level
TACs are reduced from the combined
ACLs of component stocks by an
appropriate buffer that accounts for the
degree of management uncertainty.
NMFS will establish harvest
specifications each year by publishing
proposed and final salmon harvest
specifications in the Federal Register.
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NMFS will consider public comments
on proposed harvest specification prior
to making a final decision. If approved,
final harvest specifications are issued
with any applicable modifications and
the agency responses to public
comments.
Changes From Proposed to Final
Amendment 16
After considering public comments,
NMFS revised amendment 16 to specify
the salmon stocks or stock complexes
for which status determination criteria
are being established, and, as
recommended by the SSC at their
February 2024 meeting, to better
describe how the OFL would be set
preseason. For Tier 1 stocks, the
preseason OFL was updated in
accordance with the SSC
recommendation that it be based solely
on the preseason total run size for the
coming fishing season (equation 6
within section 4.2.4 of the Salmon FMP)
rather than on the generational (multiyear) formula that was defined in
equations 8 and 9 of proposed
amendment 16. For Tier 3 stocks, the
language that describes how the
preseason OFL is set was updated in
accordance with the SSC
recommendation that rather than
considering only maximum historical
catch, the preseason OFL could also be
based on other values such as average or
maximum catch for a particular period
of time in the catch history. Finally,
several technical corrections were also
made to improve formatting consistency
and to eliminate redundancy in the
FMP.
Final Rule
This final rule modifies Federal
regulations to implement amendment 16
by revising the definition of Salmon
Management Area at 50 CFR 679.2 to
redefine the Cook Inlet Area as the Cook
Inlet EEZ Area and incorporate it into
the Federal Salmon Management Area.
This final rule creates figure 22 to 50
CFR part 679 to show the location of the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area. Regulations at
§ 600.725 are modified to authorize the
use of drift gillnet gear for the Cook Inlet
EEZ Area commercial salmon fishery.
Existing regulations related to salmon
fisheries under the Salmon FMP
throughout part 679 are moved to
subpart J beginning at § 679.110.
Management measures necessary for the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area are added to
subpart J. The following sections
provide a summary of management
measures implemented by this final
rule.
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Federal Commercial Fishing Season and
Fishing Periods
Under this final rule, the Cook Inlet
EEZ Area commercial drift gillnet
fishing season begins each year on
either the third Monday in June or June
19, whichever is later. For 2024, the
third Monday in June is June 17, so the
season will begin on June 19. However,
because June 19 falls on a Wednesday—
which as described below is not an open
fishing period—the first day of fishing
in the 2024 Cook Inlet EEZ Area
commercial fishing season will be on
Thursday, June 20.
On or after the season start date,
NMFS will open the Cook Inlet EEZ
Area for drift gillnet fishing for two, 12hour periods each week, from 7 a.m.
Monday until 7 p.m. Monday, and from
7 a.m. Thursday until 7 p.m. Thursday,
a schedule that will continue until July
15 unless a harvest limit (TAC) is
reached. From July 16 to July 31, drift
gillnet fishing will be open for one 12hour period per week from 7 a.m. until
7 p.m. on Thursdays, unless a TAC is
reached before that time. From August
1 to August 15, the Cook Inlet EEZ Area
will again be open for drift gillnet
fishing for two, 12-hour periods each
week, from 7 a.m. Monday until 7 p.m.
Monday, and from 7 a.m. Thursday
until 7 p.m. Thursday unless a TAC is
reached before that time. The Cook Inlet
EEZ Area will be closed to drift gillnet
fishing when the TAC is reached, or on
August 15, whichever comes first.
Inseason Management for Commercial
Fishing
NMFS will actively monitor and
manage the commercial salmon fishery
in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area throughout
the fishing season by exercising the
inseason management authorities
described in this rule. In regulations at
§ 679.118(c)(1)(i), this final rule
provides NMFS the authority to prohibit
commercial salmon fishing in the Cook
Inlet EEZ Area. In regulations at
§ 679.25, this final rule provides NMFS
inseason authority to adjust a TAC for
any salmon species or stock and to close
or open the Cook Inlet EEZ Area as
necessary to prevent overfishing or
prevent underharvest of a TAC for any
species or stock (assuming there are no
countervailing conservation concerns
regarding co-occurring species or
stocks).
Fishing will occur during the
regularly scheduled fishing periods
described above. Throughout the fishing
season, NMFS will project the
additional harvest expected from each
additional opening of the fishery based
on the number of participating vessels,
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catch rates, and any other available
information. NMFS will close the Cook
Inlet EEZ Area to commercial fishing for
salmon if projections indicate that an
additional fishery opening is expected
to exceed any specified TAC. NMFS
will implement inseason management
actions through publication in the
Federal Register, consistent with the
Administrative Procedure Act (APA).
NMFS will monitor all available
sources of information during the
fishery to evaluate whether the TAC
remains appropriate. If the best
scientific information available
indicates that the number of salmon
returning to Cook Inlet is significantly
different than what was forecasted,
NMFS may adjust management of the
fishery using the adjustment authorities
described above and specified in
regulations at § 679.25. If significantly
fewer fish return relative to the forecast,
NMFS may close the fishery before a
TAC is reached or before the season
closure date to prevent overfishing. This
may be determined based on fishery
catches, test-fishery catches,
escapement, or other scientific
information.
NMFS may also consider an inseason
adjustment to modify the TAC if
scientific information indicates that
salmon abundance is significantly
higher than forecasted. To implement
any inseason adjustment, NMFS
publishes a temporary rule in the
Federal Register and considers all
public comments on the action. Any
such action must not result in
overfishing on any other co-occurring
fish stocks and will also consider the
potential impacts of such an action to
all Cook Inlet salmon harvesters. NMFS
could not adjust the TAC above any
ABC or allowable de minimis amounts
set forth in the harvest specifications
established for the Cook Inlet EEZ Area
in that fishing year without engaging in
notice and comment rulemaking to
amend the harvest specifications.
NMFS will use the authorities
described above to achieve conservation
and management goals. These tools may
be used to either increase or decrease
harvests in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area drift
gillnet fishery as appropriate based on
the specified TAC amounts, the amount
already harvested, and other available
information on inseason salmon
abundance.
Federal Management Area
The management area is all Federal
waters of upper Cook Inlet (EEZ waters
of Cook Inlet north of a line at 59°46.15′
N).
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Retention of Bycatch
Drift gillnet vessels fishing in the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area may retain and sell
non-salmon bycatch including
groundfish (e.g., Pacific cod, pollock,
flounders, etc.) if they have a groundfish
Federal fisheries permit (FFP). These are
referred to as incidental catch species
and this final rule allows retention of
these species up to a specified
maximum retainable amount (MRA).
Drift gillnet vessels retaining nonsalmon incidental catch species are also
required comply with all State
requirements when landing these fish in
Alaska. The MRA of an incidental catch
species is calculated as a proportion
(percentage) of the weight of salmon on
board the vessel.
Table 10 to 50 CFR part 679
establishes MRA percentages in the Gulf
of Alaska (GOA) and applies to the Cook
Inlet EEZ Area. For commercial salmon
fishing in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area, the
basis species are salmon, which is
classified as ‘‘Aggregated amount of
non-groundfish species’’ in the table for
the purposes of the calculation. To
obtain the MRAs for each incidental
catch species, multiply the retainable
percentage for the incidental catch
species from table 10 by the round
weight of salmon (Basis Species:
Aggregated amount of non-groundfish
species) on board. For example, if there
were 100 pounds (45.36 kg) of salmon
aboard the vessel, then 20 pounds (9.07
kg) of pollock and 5 pounds (2.27 kg) of
aggregated rockfish could be retained,
because pollock has a retainable
percentage of 20 and aggregated rockfish
has a retainable percentage of 5 in table
10 when the basis species is the
aggregated amount of non-groundfish
species (i.e. salmon). Pacific halibut are
not defined as a groundfish and may not
be retained by drift gillnet vessels.
Cook Inlet EEZ Area Commercial
Salmon Fishing Monitoring,
Recordkeeping, and Reporting
Requirements
This action manages the Cook Inlet
EEZ Area salmon fishery separately
from the adjacent State waters salmon
fisheries. Recordkeeping and reporting
requirements for commercial salmon
fishing vessels operating in the Cook
Inlet EEZ Area are specified at
§ 679.115. This final rule requires
processors to report all landings of Cook
Inlet salmon harvested in the EEZ
through eLandings by noon of the day
following completion of the delivery.
Commercial salmon fishing vessels,
processors, and other entities receiving
deliveries of Cook Inlet EEZ Area
salmon (i.e., fish transporters, catcher
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sellers, and direct marketers) must
obtain Federal permits and comply with
Federal recordkeeping, reporting, and
monitoring requirements consistent
with regulations at § 679.114. While
operating, all entities required to have
any Federal salmon permit(s) for the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area must have a legible
copy of each valid permit in either
paper or electronic format.
Requirements for Commercial Salmon
Fishing Vessels
Harvesting vessel owners are required
to obtain a Salmon Federal Fisheries
Permit (SFFP). NMFS will issue SFFPs
at no charge to the owner or authorized
representative of a vessel. An SFFP will
authorize a vessel of the United States
to conduct commercial salmon fishing
operations in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area,
subject to all other Federal
requirements. An SFFP applicant must
be a citizen of the United States. NMFS
will issue SFFPs after receipt, review,
and approval of a complete SFFP
application. SFFPs will have a 3-year
application cycle. Once a vessel owner
or authorized representative obtains an
SFFP, it is valid until the expiration
date shown on the permit, which is after
3 years if issued at the beginning of a
permit cycle. Participants must
maintain a physical or electronic copy
of their valid SFFP aboard the named
vessel. As with other Federal fisheries,
if a vessel owner or authorized
representative surrenders an SFFP, they
could not obtain a new SFFP for that
vessel until the start of the next 3-year
permit cycle.
The SFFP is associated with a specific
vessel and not transferable to another
vessel. If the vessel is sold, the new
owner will need to apply for an SFFP
amendment from NMFS to reflect the
new owner or authorized representative
of the vessel. A vessel could not operate
in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area fishery until
the SFFP amendment was complete and
the amended SFFP issued. The SFFP
number is required to be displayed on
the vessel’s hull and buoys attached to
the vessel’s drift gillnet.
For a vessel being leased, the vessel
operator is considered the authorized
representative of the SFFP holder and
no amendments to the permit are
required. The vessel operator is subject
to all SFFP requirements and limitations
and liable for any violations.
This final rule requires commercial
salmon fishing vessels to operate a
Vessel Monitoring System (VMS) as
specified at § 679.28(f)(6)(x). VMS
transmits the real-time GPS location of
fishing vessels to NMFS. A vessel with
an SFFP is required to keep VMS active
at all times when operating with drift
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gillnet gear on board in the waters of
Cook Inlet any day the Cook Inlet EEZ
Area is open to commercial salmon
fishing. This includes when operating
within State waters to ensure that entire
fishing trips are monitored and to help
verify that no fishing occurred within
State waters during a fishing trip that
included salmon harvest in the Cook
Inlet EEZ, or that a vessel with an SFFP
does not fish in Federal waters during
the same calendar day it fishes in State
waters.
To collect catch and bycatch
information, this final rule requires
vessels to use a Federal fishing logbook
as specified at § 679.115(a)(1).
Commercial salmon fishing vessels will
record the start and end time and GPS
position of each set, as well as a count
of the catch and bycatch. Logbook
sheets are submitted electronically to
NMFS by the vessel operator when the
fish are delivered to a processor. The
data provided by the logbooks will
provide information to satisfy the
Magnuson-Stevens Act Standardized
Bycatch Reporting Methodology (SBRM)
requirement (16 U.S.C. 1853(a)(11)).
State requirements, including
possession of appropriate State
Commercial Fisheries Entry
Commission (CFEC) permit(s), continue
to apply for drift gillnet vessels landing
salmon or other species caught in the
EEZ within the State or entering State
waters.
This final rule prohibits commercial
salmon fishing vessels from landing or
otherwise transferring salmon caught in
the Cook Inlet EEZ Area within the EEZ
off Alaska. Commercial salmon fishing
vessels delivering to tenders may
deliver salmon caught in the Cook Inlet
EEZ Area only to a tender vessel
operating in State waters. This final rule
prohibits processing (as defined by
Federal regulations at § 679.2) salmon
harvested in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area in
the EEZ off Alaska in order to ensure
historical participants and operation
types are not displaced. Commercial
salmon fishing vessels are allowed to
gut, gill, and bleed salmon prior to
landing but cannot freeze or further
process salmon prior to landing their
catch (freezing is considered processing
per Federal regulations at § 679.2 and
therefore is prohibited in Cook Inlet EEZ
waters).
Requirements for Processors and Other
Entities Receiving Deliveries of
Commercially Caught Cook Inlet EEZ
Salmon
This final rule requires processors
that receive and process landings of
salmon that are caught in the Cook Inlet
EEZ Area by a vessel authorized by an
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SFFP to obtain a Salmon Federal
Processor Permit (SFPP). This includes
any person, facility, vessel, or stationary
floating processor that receives,
purchases, or arranges to purchase and
processes unprocessed salmon
harvested in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area,
except registered salmon receivers.
Persons or businesses that receive
landings (deliveries) of Cook Inlet EEZ
salmon from harvesting vessels but do
not immediately process it, or transport
it to another location for processing, are
required to obtain a Registered Salmon
Receiver Permit (RSRP). If a tender
vessel or vehicle receiving deliveries of
salmon is operated by an SFPP holder,
it may operate under the SFPP and does
not need to obtain an RSRP. SFPP and
RSRP holders may not receive deliveries
or process salmon that were harvested
in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area while in the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area or any EEZ waters.
SFPP and RSRP holders are required
to report all salmon landings through
eLandings by noon of the day following
completion of the delivery. Landings
must be reported using existing Cook
Inlet drift gillnet statistical areas, with
the addition of an EEZ identifier and a
requirement to identify the Federal
permit associated with each landing.
NMFS issues SFPPs and RSRPs on a
1-year cycle. If the ownership of an
entity holding a SFPP or RSRP changes,
the new owner will need to submit an
application for an amended permit. An
amended permit is issued with a new
permit number to reflect the change.
Because SFPPs are facility-specific,
one SFPP is required for every
processing facility, even if a facility is
controlled by a company already
holding an SFPP for another processing
facility. An RSRP is required for each
entity receiving but not processing
landings of Cook Inlet EEZ salmon at
the location of the delivery if they are
not operated by an SFPP holder. If a
single entity operates multiple vehicles
or vessels receiving landings of Cook
Inlet EEZ salmon, each one of those
vehicles or vessels could use the RSRP
held by the entity. This includes fish
transporters or buying stations
unaffiliated with an SFPP holder that
receive deliveries directly from
harvesting vessels.
For direct-marketing operations where
the owner or operator of a commercial
salmon fishing vessel catches and
processes their catch, both an SFFP and
an SFPP are required. For catcher-seller
operations where the owner or operator
of a harvesting vessel catches and sells
unprocessed salmon (e.g., whole fish or
headed and gutted) directly to someone
other than an SFPP or RSRP holder,
both an SFFP and an RSRP are required.
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Other Commercial Fishing Management
Measures and Prohibitions
This final rule defines the legal gear
for the Cook Inlet EEZ Area drift gillnet
fishery consistent with legal gear in the
State waters drift gillnet fishery, to the
extent practicable (see § 679.118(f)).
Legal drift gillnet gear is no longer than
200 fathoms (365.76 m) in length, 45
meshes deep, and has a mesh size no
greater than 6 inches (15.24 cm). Buoys
at each end of the drift gillnet must be
marked with the participant’s SFFP
number.
Gillnets will be measured, either wet
or dry, by determining the maximum or
minimum distance between the first and
last hanging of the net when the net is
fully extended with traction applied at
one end only. It is illegal to stake or
otherwise fix a drift gillnet to the
seafloor. The float line and floats of drift
gillnets must float on the surface of the
water while the net is fishing, unless
natural conditions cause the net to
temporarily sink.
This final rule includes the following
prohibitions specified at § 679.117 for
drift gillnet fisheries in the Cook Inlet
EEZ Area:
• Vessels are prohibited from fishing
in both State and Federal waters on the
same day, or otherwise having on board
or delivering fish harvested in both EEZ
and State waters, to ensure accurate
catch accounting for Federal managers.
• Vessels cannot have salmon
harvested in any other fishery on board.
• Vessels are prohibited from having
gear in excess of the allowable
configuration or deploying multiple
nets.
• Vessels are prohibited from
participating in other fisheries while
operating drift gillnet gear for salmon in
the Cook Inlet EEZ Area and are not
allowed to have other fishing gear on
board capable of catching salmon while
commercial fishing for salmon in the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area (i.e., operating drift
gillnet gear).
• Because vessels legally
participating in adjacent State water
salmon fisheries may transit across the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area, vessels can have
other fishing gear on board while
moving through the Cook Inlet EEZ
Area, but are prohibited from
commercial fishing for salmon within
the Cook Inlet EEZ Area on any day they
are participating in State water salmon
fisheries.
• Manned or unmanned aircraft
cannot be used to locate salmon or
otherwise direct fishing.
• Vessels are prohibited from
discarding any salmon caught while
harvesting salmon using drift gillnet
gear in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area.
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• Vessels are prohibited from
commercial or recreational fishing for
salmon in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area
contrary to notification of inseason
action, closure, or adjustment issued
under § 679.25 or § 679.118.
Cook Inlet EEZ Recreational Fishing
Management Measures
This final rule includes management
measures for recreational salmon fishing
in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area as specified
at § 679.119. NMFS establishes bag and
possession limits in Federal regulations.
For Chinook salmon, from April 1 to
August 31, the bag limit is one Chinook
salmon per day including a total limit
of one in possession of any size. From
September 1 to March 31, the bag limit
is two Chinook salmon per day
including a total limit of two in
possession of any size. For coho (silver)
salmon, sockeye salmon, pink salmon,
and chum salmon there is a combined
six fish bag limit per day, including a
total limit of six in possession of any
size. However, only three fish per day,
including a total limit of three in
possession, may be coho salmon.
In addition to Federal bag limits,
recreational anglers are constrained by
State bag and possession limits if
landing fish in Alaska. Because of this,
an angler cannot exceed State limits
when landing fish in Alaska, or
otherwise have both an EEZ limit and a
State limit on board at the same time in
either area.
Recreational fishing is open for the
entire calendar year. In regulations at
§ 679.118(c)(1)(ii), this final rule
provides that NMFS may prohibit,
through an inseason management
action, retention of individual salmon
species while still allowing harvest of
other salmon species if necessary. In
addition to prohibiting retention, NMFS
may also prohibit fishing for one or
more salmon species if required for
conservation. Inseason management
actions for the recreational sector will
be published in the Federal Register
and subject to the same process and
timing limitations outlined for the
commercial sector in the Cook Inlet
EEZ.
Recreational fishing for salmon in the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area may only be done
using hook and line gear with a single
line per angler with a maximum of two
hooks. Salmon harvested must not be
filleted or otherwise mutilated in a way
that could prevent determining how
may fish had been retained prior to
landing. Gills and guts may be removed
from retained fish prior to landing. Any
salmon that is not returned to the water
with a minimum of injury counts
toward an angler’s bag limit.
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Federal managers will review any
available developing inseason
information, including escapement data,
and may prohibit retention of one or
more salmon species if additional
harvest could not be supported. This
final rule does not establish a TAC
specific to the recreational sector
because the recreational harvest in the
Cook Inlet EEZ has been small
historically (less than 100 fish per year),
but estimated removals in combination
with commercial harvests are evaluated
against the ACL to ensure they are not
exceeded and to implement
accountability measures, if required, for
future seasons.
The State’s existing Saltwater Charter
Logbook, the Statewide Harvest Survey,
and creel surveys provide the
information needed to account for
recreational harvest in the Cook Inlet
EEZ Area, as well as satisfy the
Magnuson-Stevens Act SBRM
requirement.
Changes From Proposed to Final Rule
In response to public comment, this
final rule modifies the number of
commercial salmon fishing periods in
the Cook Inlet EEZ Area.
The commercial fishing season was
proposed to extend from approximately
June 19 to August 15 each year, with
two, 12-hour fishing periods each week.
Overall, public comments highlighted a
conservation and management concern
associated with allowing two days of
harvest per week between July 16 and
July 31. Under the status quo of State
management, this is the time period
during which there has been a single
drift gillnet opener per week in order to
allow salmon bound for Northern Cook
Inlet to pass through Federal waters (a
management option many public
commenters referred to as a
‘‘conservation corridor’’). The State
requested that NMFS close the EEZ to
all commercial fishing after July 15 to
avoid conservation concerns, including
stocks not achieving spawning
escapement goals. In addition, multiple
Alaska Native tribes from the Cook Inlet
region, communities in Northern Cook
Inlet, and regional sportfishing
organizations all expressed concern that
two fishery openings per week from July
16–July 31—which would provide
significantly more fishing opportunity
to the drift gillnet fleet—was likely to
result in conservation concerns when
compared to the status quo of one
opening per week during this time
period (see Comment 34). In all, these
comments emphasized that reducing
drift gillnet openings to one per week
from July 16–July 31 is a management
measure important to stakeholders and
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34723
Alaska Native tribes in Northern Cook
Inlet because it gives salmon stocks of
lower abundance more opportunities to
pass through the EEZ during the time
period they are most likely to be present
in Federal waters.
In light of the public comments
identifying significant potential
conservation concerns, NMFS reviewed
information contained in the Analysis
and 2024 SAFE report to further
consider the potential impacts that
could result from increased commercial
fishing opportunity during this late-July
migratory period. State management
measures that limited drift gillnet
fishing effort in the Cook Inlet EEZ
began in 2015. As described in section
3.1.2 of the Analysis, under Federal
reference points, overfishing likely
occurred on ‘‘other sockeye salmon’’ in
2008, and on Cook Inlet coho salmon in
2013. Both of these stock complexes
have substantial components that
originate from the Northern District.
Overfishing is not thought to have
occurred on any stock since the State
began restricting fishing in the EEZ in
late July. Susitna (Yentna) River sockeye
salmon were declared a State stock of
concern in 2008 after repeated failures
to meet escapement goals. After
subsequent restrictions to fishing,
including the reductions to EEZ fishing
opportunities in late July, this stock met
escapement goals to the point where it
was delisted from being a stock of
concern by the State of Alaska’s Board
of Fisheries (BOF) in 2020. Given the
historical evidence suggesting an
increased likelihood of conservation
concerns for these stocks when there is
additional EEZ fishing effort from July
16 until July 31, and because some
salmon stocks have continued to miss
spawning escapement goals during
recent years when there was only a
single drift gillnet opening per week
from July 16–July 31, NMFS has
determined that it would be unwise to
increase the number of fishing periods
in late July from the status quo.
Therefore, this final rule reduces the
proposed number of openings to one per
week during this period. The final rule,
however, does not adopt the State’s
request to close the EEZ July 15. As
explained in this final rule, the fishery
will be open for one opening per week
July 16–July 31 and two openings per
week August 1–August 15, unless a TAC
is reached.
NMFS expects that one opening per
week in late July will allow for the
harvest of surplus yield to the extent
practicable while still achieving
spawning escapement goals in most
years. If TACs allow for additional
harvest in August, the fishery will
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return to two openings per week from
August 1 to August 15. This approach
is expected to reduce the risk of higher
than expected harvests in the EEZ that
could result in overfishing or reduce or
eliminate the harvestable surplus of one
or more salmon stocks for all other
salmon users in Cook Inlet.
Further, NMFS expects this change
will better allow the drift gillnet fleet to
target the stocks of highest abundance
while reducing the risk of early closures
because a TAC is reached for a stock of
lower abundance. As explained above
and in the preamble to the proposed
rule, the Cook Inlet EEZ salmon fishery
will be managed using TACs. Allowing
salmon stocks of lower abundance
bound for Northern Cook Inlet more
opportunities to pass through the EEZ in
July—particularly coho and Chinook
salmon—means it is less likely the
fishery will close early due to reaching
the TAC for a stock of lower abundance
before the drift gillnet fleet is able to
harvest the TAC for abundant sockeye
salmon. Additionally, spreading out the
sockeye salmon harvest throughout the
season by reducing fishing periods in
late July will reduce pressure on
Northern District sockeye salmon—
which are Tier 3 stocks with less known
conservation status—as more of the
salmon in the EEZ in August are
expected to be from the highly abundant
Tier 1 Kenai and Kasilof stocks for
which there is better information to
inform inseason management decisions.
In this final rule, NMFS also clarified
language at § 679.28(f)(6)(x) to clearly
define when and where VMS is required
to be used by vessels named or required
to be named on a SFFP. An operational
and transmitting VMS unit that
complies with the requirements in
§ 679.28(f) must be carried by any such
vessel operating in the waters of Cook
Inlet with drift gillnet gear on board
during a calendar day when commercial
salmon fishing is authorized in the Cook
Inlet EEZ Area. The corresponding
prohibition at § 679.117(b)(1)(xiv) is
similarly revised to prohibit operation
contrary to requirements specified at
§ 679.28(f)(6)(x). This final rule also
adds a definition of the ‘‘waters of Cook
Inlet’’ at § 679.2. For purposes of
§§ 679.28(f)(6)(x) and 679.117(b)(1)(xiv),
the waters of Cook Inlet includes all
waters north of a line from Cape
Douglas (58°51.10′ N) to Point Adam
(59°15.27′ N). In sum, these changes
from proposed to final regulations
clarify that the VMS requirement for
SFFP holders applies: (1) on days when
directed fishing for salmon using drift
gillnet gear is open in the Cook Inlet
EEZ Area; (2) if the vessel has drift
gillnet gear on board the vessel or
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deployed; and (3) if the vessel is
operating in the waters of Cook Inlet.
This final rule also modifies
regulations at § 679.118(c)(1)(ii) to
provide NMFS the authority to prohibit
fishing for one or more salmon species
if required for conservation. While the
recreational salmon fishery in the Cook
Inlet EEZ Area is extremely small, this
would give NMFS all management tools
potentially required to conserve stocks
at very low abundance. The most likely
potential need for this authority is
because declines in Chinook salmon
abundance have, in some cases, entirely
eliminated the harvestable surplus of
Chinook (i.e., escapement goals cannot
be achieved even if no fish are
harvested). In this instance, even the
limited mortality resulting from catch
and release fishing (i.e., what would be
allowed under a prohibition on
retention) could potentially result in
exceeding an ABC/ACL. NMFS would
also maintain the authority to prohibit
retention of one or more species if a
closure to salmon fishing was not
required to achieve conservation
objectives or avoid exceeding an ABC/
ACL.
Additionally, this final rule adds two
new prohibitions to § 679.117 to clarify
that it is unlawful for any person to: (1)
engage in commercial fishing for salmon
in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area contrary to
notification of inseason action, closure,
or adjustment issued under §§ 679.25
and 679.118 (see § 679.117(b)(1)(xvi)); or
(2) engage in recreational fishing for
salmon in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area
contrary to notification of inseason
action, closure, or adjustment issued
under § 679.118 (see § 679.117(b)(2)(v)).
The final rule also makes clarifying
edits to § 679.117(b) as follows: (1)
moves ‘‘of the Salmon Management
Area, defined at § 679.2 and Figure 22
to this part,’’ from § 679.117(b)(1)(ii), to
§ 679.117(b)(1)(i), which is the first time
the term ‘‘Cook Inlet EEZ Area’’ appears
in § 679.117(b)(1); (2) replaces the word
‘‘set’’ in § 679.117(b)(1)(v), and replaces
it with ‘‘deploy’’; and (3) adds the term
‘‘Cook Inlet EEZ Area’’ to two
prohibitions applicable to recreational
fishing (see § 679.117(b)(2)(ii) and (iii)).
Throughout the regulatory text, NMFS
also made technical and grammar edits
to correct regulatory cross references,
use consistent terms, remove
redundancy, and promote clarity.
One additional change from the
proposed rule was removing a proposed
requirement that any interactions or
entanglements with marine mammals
would be required to be recorded in the
logbook. NMFS determined that this
requirement would be duplicative with
and may be confused with existing
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reporting requirements under the
Marine Mammal Authorization Program
and has therefore removed the
requirement from this final rule.
Participants are, however, still required
to report marine mammal interactions
under the Marine Mammal
Authorization Program.
Comments and Responses
NMFS received 87 comment
submissions on amendment 16 and the
proposed rule. NMFS has summarized
and responded to 95 unique and
relevant comments below. The
comments were from individuals,
environmental groups, local
governments, the Alaska Department of
Fish and Game (ADF&G), sportfishing
organizations, fishing guides, tribes and
tribal members, drift gillnet fishermen,
and commercial fishing organizations.
Several comment submissions were
duplicates or addressed topics outside
the scope of amendment 16 and the
proposed rule. Overall, there was a mix
of support and opposition, with those
comments opposing the rule expressing
concerns about expanding Federal
management to salmon fisheries,
impacts to adjacent state salmon
fisheries, the cost and burden of
monitoring requirements, adverse
economic impacts, preseason catch
limits, the prohibition on fishing in both
state and Federal waters on the same
day, and underharvest (exceeding
spawning escapement goals). The vast
majority of commenters supported some
version of Federal management (mostly
drift gillnet fishers, commercial
processors, and tribal groups), and a
small minority opposed any type of
Federal management. Comments are
organized by topic into the following
categories:
• Scope of the Fishery Management
Plan
• National Standard 1
• Status Determination Criteria and
Annual Catch Limits
• Inseason Management
• Cook Inlet EEZ Commercial Salmon
Fishing Management Measures
• Federal Commercial Fishing Season
and Fishing Periods
• Monitoring, Recordkeeping, and
Reporting Requirements
• Other Commercial Salmon Fishing
Management Measures and
Prohibitions
• Recreational Fishing
• National Standard 2
• National Standard 3
• National Standard 4
• National Standards 5 and 7
• National Standard 8
• National Standard 10
• Economic Impacts
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•
•
•
•
•
•
General Support
General Opposition
Tribal Comments
Marine Mammals
Process Concerns
Other
Scope of the Fishery Management Plan
Comment 1: NMFS’s decision to limit
the scope of Federal management to the
Cook Inlet EEZ violates UCIDA v.
NMFS, 837 F.3d 1055 (9th Cir. 2016), in
which the Ninth Circuit Court of
Appeals held that NMFS must manage
the entire ‘‘fishery,’’ including State
waters.
Response: NMFS disagrees that the
Ninth Circuit’s decision requires this
FMP to cover both State and Federal
waters. Rather, limiting NMFS
management solely to Federal waters
(i.e., the Cook Inlet EEZ) is consistent
with the court’s decision in UCIDA v.
NMFS. In that case, UCIDA challenged
amendment 12 to the Salmon FMP,
which had excluded the Cook Inlet EEZ
from the Salmon FMP. The Ninth
Circuit considered only whether NMFS
had the legal authority to exclude
portions of the EEZ from the FMP. In
ruling against NMFS, the Court held
that NMFS must include the Cook Inlet
EEZ in the Salmon FMP because it has
an obligation to issue an FMP for each
fishery under its authority that requires
conservation and management. The
phrase ‘‘under its authority’’ was critical
to that Ninth Circuit decision, which
considered whether a State could
manage a fishery in Federal waters
outside the context of an FMP. Nothing
in UCIDA v. NMFS implied that a
Federal FMP must cover fishing that
occurs in State waters if a harvested
stock occurs in both State and Federal
waters. Not only was that question not
before the Ninth Circuit, but requiring
NMFS to manage in State waters
through an FMP would violate the plain
language of Magnuson-Stevens Act
section 306(a), which provides that
states retain management jurisdiction
over fishing in state waters.
In fact, the Ninth Circuit explicitly
recognized that the Cook Inlet EEZ
constitutes a fishery, stating that ‘‘the
statute requires an FMP for a fishery, a
defined term,’’ and adding ‘‘[n]o one
disputes that the exempted area of Cook
Inlet’’—i.e. the Cook Inlet EEZ—‘‘is a
salmon fishery.’’ 837 F.3d at 1064. The
portion of Cook Inlet at issue in the
litigation over amendment 12 was the
Cook Inlet EEZ, not all of Cook Inlet. In
this action, NMFS is complying with the
Ninth Circuit’s decision by
incorporating the very ‘‘fishery’’ at issue
in that case—the Cook Inlet EEZ salmon
fishery—into the Salmon FMP.
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Comment 2: NMFS’s decision to limit
the scope of Federal management to the
Cook Inlet EEZ violates the plain
language of the Magnuson-Stevens Act.
The term ‘‘fishery,’’ as defined within
section 3 of the Magnuson-Stevens Act,
requires that amendment 16 include a
definition of ‘‘fishery’’ that extends
throughout the range of salmon in Cook
Inlet, including State waters.
Response: NMFS disagrees that its
definition of the ‘‘fishery’’ violates the
Magnuson-Stevens Act. As explained in
the preamble to the proposed rule and
the response to Comment 1, the
‘‘fishery’’ that is subject to Federal
management under amendment 16 are
the salmon stocks harvested by the
commercial and recreational fishing
sectors within the Cook Inlet EEZ Area.
Defining the fishery as geographically
constrained to the Cook Inlet EEZ is
consistent with the Magnuson-Stevens
Act. Section 3 of the Magnuson-Stevens
Act broadly defines a ‘‘fishery’’ as one
or more stocks of fish that can be treated
as a unit for purposes of conservation
and management and which are
identified on the basis of geographical,
scientific, technical, recreational, and
economic characteristics; and any
fishing for such stocks.
NMFS has determined that salmon
stocks in the Cook Inlet EEZ can be
treated as a unit for purposes of
conservation and management because
they all fall within the geographical
management area under NMFS’s
jurisdiction, the best scientific
information available supports NMFS’s
determination that the EEZ has unique
ecological characteristics due to the
mixed stock nature of fishing in the
EEZ, and fishing for these stocks in the
EEZ has distinct technical and
economic characteristics that
distinguish it from State water fisheries,
as discussed in the response to
Comment 55.
The Magnuson-Stevens Act expressly
limits the management authority of
NMFS and the Council to the EEZ, with
a narrow exception. Section 101(a) of
the Magnuson-Stevens Act establishes
the Nation’s sovereign rights and
exclusive fishery management authority
over all fish and all Continental Shelf
fishery resources within the EEZ.
Section 3(11) of the Magnuson-Stevens
Act defines the inner boundary of the
EEZ as a line coterminous with the
seaward boundary of each of the coastal
States. Section 302(a)(l)(G) states that
the Council has authority over the
fisheries in the Arctic Ocean, Bering
Sea, and Pacific Ocean seaward of
Alaska. Because Alaska’s seaward
boundary is 3 nautical miles (nmi) (5.56
kilometers) from its coast (3-nmi
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34725
boundary line), 43 U.S.C. 1301(b), the
inner boundary of the EEZ, and
therefore the Council’s authority, starts
3 nmi (5.56 kilometers) from the
Alaskan coast and extends to the outer
boundary of the EEZ 200 nmi (370.4
kilometers) seaward of the coast of
Alaska. In section 306, the MagnusonStevens Act expressly states that it shall
not be construed as extending or
diminishing the jurisdiction or authority
of any State within its boundaries.
Therefore, the Magnuson-Stevens Act
does not contemplate the extension of
Federal authority into State waters,
except under the very limited
circumstances described in section
306(b) (discussed further in the
response to Comment 4). In sum, given
the geographic limits placed on NMFS’s
authority to manage fisheries, it is
necessary for the ‘‘fishery’’ to be
geographically constrained to the EEZ.
Comment 3: NMFS’s decision to
define the fishery as geographically
constrained to the Cook Inlet EEZ is
arbitrary. There cannot be two adjacent
management schemes for salmon; one in
Federal waters and one in State waters,
because one management scheme will
always depend on the other. Salmon
management depends on escapement
goals. That means an FMP for just the
EEZ will always depend on the State
which sets the escapement goals.
Response: Defining the fishery as
geographically constrained to the Cook
Inlet EEZ is not arbitrary; it is required
by the Magnuson-Stevens Act and is
consistent with fisheries management
throughout the EEZ off Alaska and
throughout the U.S. Nearly all stocks
harvested in the EEZ nationwide also
occur in State waters, but as explained
in the response to Comment 2, the
Magnuson-Stevens Act explicitly left
jurisdiction over state waters to the
states.
Recognizing Federal and State
jurisdictional boundaries is a
foundational principle in the
management of natural resources that
straddle jurisdictions in the U.S. In
mining, forestry, oil, gas, and fisheries,
the location of the activity determines
the applicable regulations, even if the
relevant resource is also present in an
adjacent jurisdiction. Furthermore, this
is consistent with the management
approach for other fisheries off Alaska.
For example, in the GOA, the State
manages fisheries for pollock and
Pacific cod in State waters and NMFS
manages pollock and Pacific cod
fisheries in Federal waters. For these
fisheries, the State determines when
State waters will be open to fishing for
pollock and Pacific cod, while the
Council recommends and NMFS makes
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those determinations for the EEZ, taking
into account any anticipated harvest in
State waters.
Similar to the Federal management of
the Cook Inlet EEZ, the Pacific Fishery
Management Council’s Salmon FMP
expressly limits Federal management to
the fisheries in EEZ waters. That FMP
covers salmon stocks caught in the EEZ
off the coasts of Washington, Oregon,
and California.
NMFS disagrees that a stock of
anadromous fish cannot be successfully
managed by different adjacent
management regimes. NMFS and State
management agencies regularly have
separate fisheries that harvest the same
stocks of fish. Management will be
coordinated to the extent practicable.
NMFS will establish catch limits for the
Cook Inlet EEZ that are based on
achieving escapement goals as defined
in the Federal stock assessment, while
accounting for both State and Federal
expected harvests.
There are cooperative management
arrangements where a single
management agency can make decisions
for both State and Federal waters. But
these are dependent on a mutually
accepted delegation of management
authority or international treaties. For
example, NMFS’s management
jurisdiction over the Bering Sea and
Aleutian Islands king and Tanner crab
fisheries is limited to the Bering Sea and
Aleutian Islands Area EEZ, but because
the Council recommended delegated
management of the EEZ to the State
through the Crab FMP—and NMFS
determined State management was
consistent with the FMP and the
Magnuson-Stevens Act—the State
executes delegated management actions
for crab stocks in Federal waters while
also managing these stocks within State
waters. While there is often
coordination between NMFS and the
State to ensure that fishery management
decisions achieve the common goal of
sustainability, State and Federal
authority remains constrained by
jurisdictional limits.
Management of the Salmon FMP’s
East Area is different from the
management of salmon in the Cook Inlet
EEZ Area because of both the delegation
of management authority to the State
and the Pacific Salmon Treaty.
Management of the salmon commercial
troll and recreational fisheries in the
East Area EEZ occurs across the State
and EEZ boundary because the Council
voted to delegate management of the
salmon fisheries in the East Area EEZ to
the State, the State was willing to accept
such a delegation of authority, and
NMFS determined State management
was consistent with both the Salmon
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FMP and the Magnuson-Stevens Act.
The Council and NMFS considered
delegating management of the Cook
Inlet EEZ to the State, similar to the
arrangement in the East Area. However,
the State refused to accept delegated
management on two occasions and
NMFS has no authority to compel a
state to accept such delegation. As a
result, there is no alternative to having
separately managed salmon fisheries in
Cook Inlet, and the State and Federal
fisheries are separated along the
jurisdictional EEZ boundary.
Comment 4: Even if states generally
retain jurisdiction over state waters
pursuant to Magnuson-Stevens Act
306(a), here Magnuson-Stevens Act
306(b) requires NMFS to preempt State
management and assert management
authority over salmon fishing in the
state waters of Cook Inlet.
Response: NMFS disagrees that
Magnuson-Stevens Act section 306(b)
requires NMFS to assert management
jurisdiction over the State waters of
Cook Inlet and/or implement
management measures for State waters
through this FMP amendment.
Magnuson-Stevens Act section 306(b)
includes two criteria that must both be
met before NMFS can assert
management authority over fishing in
State waters: (1) the fishery must occur
predominantly in the EEZ and (2) after
notice and opportunity for a hearing, the
Secretary must determine that a State is
‘‘substantially and adversely’’ affecting
the carrying out of an FMP. Even when
these criteria are met, MagnusonStevens Act section 306(b) explicitly
states that NMFS cannot assert
management authority over internal
(fresh) waters, meaning the scope of
Magnuson-Stevens Act section 306(b) is
narrower than claimed by the
commenter even when it does apply.
Historically, the State has managed
salmon fishing in Cook Inlet as a single
fishery with no distinction between
State and Federal waters. Under State
management, approximately 75 percent
of total upper Cook Inlet salmon
harvests occurred in State waters. NMFS
has previously determined that the
State-managed fishery did not occur
predominantly in the EEZ, and thus for
that reason alone it had no basis for
asserting management authority over
State waters under Magnuson-Stevens
Act section 306(b)(1)(A). In addition,
NMFS has consistently found that State
management is consistent with
Magnuson-Stevens Act requirements
and the goals and objectives of the FMP.
Thus, both criteria for preemption under
Magnuson-Stevens Act section 306(b)
have not been satisfied. As a result of
litigation brought by drift gillnet
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fishermen, among others, status quo
management as a single fishery by the
State is no longer possible. NMFS
acknowledges that amendment 16 will
create a new fishery in Cook Inlet,
which will occur entirely within
Federal waters.
Even assuming the 306(b)(1)(A)
criteria was met for the Cook Inlet EEZ
salmon fishery after implementation of
amendment 16—though total harvest of
Cook Inlet salmon stocks will continue
to occur predominantly within State
waters—for NMFS to assert management
jurisdiction over State waters it would
also have to determine that State
management ‘‘substantially and
adversely’’ affects implementation of the
Salmon FMP, after notice and
opportunity for a hearing. The
procedures and requirements for notice
and the hearing at 50 CFR part 600,
subpart G are prescriptive, none have
occurred here, and NMFS has no basis
to begin proceedings at this time. No
fishing has yet occurred under
amendment 16 to the Salmon FMP and
this final rule, and NMFS has no
information that suggests that State
action or inaction will prevent the
Council or NMFS from carrying out the
management measures and management
objectives specified in amendment 16.
Thus, the criteria for preemption under
Magnuson-Stevens Act section
306(b)(1)(B) has not been satisfied.
Comment 5: Every other FMP in
Alaska sets management measures,
including ACL and TAC, for the fishery
in both State and EEZ waters. The King
Crab closure around Kodiak Island does
not allow the fishery in State waters to
continue without direction, nor does the
Pacific Cod TAC in the GOA apply for
the EEZ waters only with the State
waters fishery unregulated; the same is
true for every other stock of fish except
salmon. For the Salmon FMP, NMFS is
trying to make us believe the rules
governing this fishery are different, even
after the Federal court decision that
have determined they are not.
Response: NMFS disagrees. Federal
ACLs and TACs are not established for
State waters in other Federal FMPs. The
BOF has established State managed
fisheries in State waters, for example,
the GOA Pacific cod fishery that the
State manages by setting a guideline
harvest level (GHL) outside the Federal
harvest specifications process. For some
fisheries, the BOF bases the GHL
amount on a percentage of the Federal
ABC. However, the GHL fishery is
managed by the State. To comply with
the Federal ACL regulations and
National Standard 1 guidelines, NMFS
manages Pacific cod in Federal waters to
ensure the sum of all State waters and
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Federal waters Pacific cod removals
from the GOA do not exceed the Federal
Pacific cod ABC (and therefore ACL) for
the GOA. Accordingly, each year the
Council recommends, and NMFS
approves, a TAC in the GOA that is set
at an amount to accommodate the
State’s GHL for the Pacific cod caught in
State waters. This is consistent with the
Magnuson-Stevens Act and National
Standard guidelines that direct, as a
fundamental component of sustainable
fisheries management, that catch should
not exceed the ACL and that all sources
of mortality from fishing activities
should be evaluated for stock status and
specification of Federal harvest limits. If
the State changed the applicable State
waters GHL, there are no limits on the
amount of Pacific cod that may be
harvested in State waters, and NMFS
would adjust the Federal TAC
accordingly to ensure that total Pacific
cod removals do not exceed the Federal
Pacific cod ABC and ACL. In other
words, as under amendment 16, the
Federal TAC accounts for State water
harvest but does not constrain or limit
State water harvest.
The commenter also appears to
reference the State Pacific cod parallel
fishery. In this parallel fishery, some of
the Federal TAC is harvested in State
waters, under State regulations
generally mirroring those used in
Federal waters. NMFS does not
establish a TAC for State waters or
manage in State waters; rather, NMFS
deducts catch in the parallel fishery
from the Federal TAC per a
longstanding arrangement that ensures
this fishery does not create conservation
concerns. The State originally
developed and implemented parallel
fisheries to provide fishing
opportunities within State waters before
the State had capacity and expertise to
independently develop and manage
State water groundfish fisheries (GHL
fisheries). While the State has since
developed State-managed groundfish
fisheries, parallel fisheries have been
maintained to address allocation issues
with respect to vessel gear type,
operation type, and size. The State
opposes the Federal management
approach for salmon in the Cook Inlet
EEZ Area and has not expressed interest
in either a delegation of management
authority or taking State action to
develop a parallel fishery for salmon.
Therefore, NMFS must manage salmon
fishing in the Cook Inlet EEZ in the
same manner as it manages the vast
majority of fish stocks off Alaska—by
accounting for projected State water
GHL harvest when establishing harvest
limits for the EEZ, and debiting catch
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that occurs in the parallel fisheries
against the Federal TAC during the
fishing season.
In regards to the crab fisheries in the
GOA, there are no federally managed
crab fisheries in the GOA, and there is
no GOA crab FMP. The king crab
closure around Kodiak is a State
management measure.
Comment 6: The proposed FMP
violates both the letter and the spirit of
the District Court’s ruling in 2022, the
Ninth Circuit’s order in 2016, and the
Magnuson-Stevens Act. NMFS’s
repeated failure to provide the relief
requested has caused severe economic
harm to the drift gillnet fleet.
Amendment 16 violates nearly all of the
National Standards and imposes a
harvest plan that is both burdensome
and inefficient. Do not approve this
action.
Response: NMFS disagrees. NMFS
developed amendment 16 to comply
with the decisions of the Ninth Circuit
and the District Court, the MagnusonStevens Act, and other applicable
Federal law. NMFS considered all
Magnuson-Stevens Act requirements for
FMPs and balanced the competing
demands of the National Standards
when developing amendment 16. NMFS
finds this final rule to be consistent with
all 10 National Standards, as detailed in
section 5.1 of the Analysis and further
addressed in responses to comments
under the National Standard headings
below. Economic impacts are further
addressed in responses to comments
below.
Because the State refused to accept
delegated management authority,
amendment 16 must necessarily
establish an entirely separate
management jurisdiction and, therefore,
results in decreased management
efficiency relative to the status quo
(management of all salmon fishing in
Upper Cook Inlet by the State). Separate
Federal management infrastructure and
regulations must be established while
all existing State management measures
remain in place. In order to manage the
fishery in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area,
NMFS must begin collecting the data
essential to manage the fishery and
required by the Magnuson-Stevens Act.
In particular, NMFS must know who is
participating in the fishery, how many
vessels are active, and where catch is
occurring, and must be able to debit
catch against established limits during
the season to prevent overfishing, even
though collecting this information will
involve new recordkeeping, reporting,
and monitoring requirements for
participants that are separate from those
required in State waters.
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Comment 7: NMFS is effectively
deferring to State management by
managing conservatively, claiming that
it is unprepared and procedurally
limited in its ability to manage the
fishery.
Response: NMFS disagrees that it is
implicitly deferring to State
management by managing
conservatively. This will be the first
year since Alaska Statehood that there
will be a federally-managed salmon
fishery in the Cook Inlet EEZ, and
currently all data collection and
management infrastructure are run by
the State. In light of these realities,
‘‘managing conservatively’’ is a
responsible approach to fishery
management, ensuring that NMFS does
not harm salmon stocks as it builds
infrastructure and expertise, and begins
collecting the data needed to manage a
new Federal fishery. It is unreasonable
and imprudent to expect that NMFS
could greatly increase total harvests
from the status quo in the first year of
a new fishery, with less management
flexibility, less information, and less
management experience in Cook Inlet.
The best available science suggests
status quo harvest levels in the EEZ
could not be significantly increased
without reducing or eliminating the
harvestable surplus for other users and
further increasing the risk that stocks of
lower abundance will not achieve
spawning escapement goals (which have
not always been achieved in all years
even under status quo EEZ harvests).
While NMFS’s approach is necessarily
precautionary, the proposed 2024 Cook
Inlet EEZ Area harvest specifications (89
FR 25857, April 12, 2024) would
establish TACs for all species except
coho salmon (due to elevated
conservation risks and high uncertainty)
that are higher than the recent 10-year
average estimated Cook Inlet EEZ Area
harvest.
As described in the preamble to the
proposed rule, this action contains all of
the management measures required for
NMFS to administer and manage all
salmon fishing in the Cook Inlet EEZ
Area consistent with the MagnusonStevens Act. No management decisions
are deferred to the State and NMFS will
not rely on the State—implicitly or
otherwise—to achieve OY or prevent
overfishing (one of the flaws the District
Court identified with amendment 14).
Using the best scientific information
available, each year NMFS will prepare
a SAFE report and develop harvest
specifications based on the
recommendations from the Council’s
SSC. As described in the response to
Comment 5, although NMFS must
necessarily account for projected
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removals from State-managed fisheries
in setting the harvest levels for the Cook
Inlet EEZ Area, and other Federal
fisheries off Alaska, that is part of
making decisions based on best
scientific information available and
consistent with National Standard 2.
Accounting for State action is not the
same as deferring to State action. The
processes by which Federal reference
points are independently developed and
annually reviewed is described in the
preamble to the proposed rule and
amendment 16.
Although NMFS has not historically
managed salmon fishing in the Cook
Inlet EEZ, it has the ability to do so
successfully. Acknowledging that the
State has decades of institutional
expertise and management tools that
make it currently more capable of
efficient administration (as described in
the Analysis) is not an indictment of
NMFS’s management. Further, while
Federal notice requirements limited the
suite of management alternatives and
options when developing amendment
16 and preclude rapid fishery openings
and closings as occurs under State
management, no procedural limitations
will prevent NMFS from implementing
amendment 16, which has been
designed to comply with all MagnusonStevens Act requirements. NMFS is
confident it can effectively manage this
fishery.
Comment 8: Regulations for Cook
Inlet should allow fishing 110 miles
(177.03 km) out from the mouth of the
fish spawning grounds. For sport
fishing, regulations should allow
snagging one mile (1.61 km) from the
mouth of any rivers in the inlet.
Response: This final rule would allow
recreational salmon fishing in all waters
of the Cook Inlet EEZ Area. EEZ waters
of the West Area (3–200 nmi (5.56–
370.4 km) off Alaska) outside of the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area remain closed to
commercial salmon fishing, as under the
status quo, but recreational salmon
fishing is authorized. Waters within 3
nmi (5.56 km) of shore are State waters
and not subject to this action.
Comment 9: Several commenters
suggested it would be best if all salmon
fishing in Cook Inlet was managed by
ADF&G. Some commenters expressed
skepticism about the track record of
Federal fisheries management (e.g.,
halibut fishery declines and salmon
bycatch concerns) and other Federal
resource management in Alaska. Other
commenters noted that the State has
more expertise and better flexibility to
manage salmon, which is desirable
given the complexity and challenge of
salmon management in Cook Inlet. One
commenter noted that Federal
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management may prioritize nonAlaskan constituencies.
Response: NMFS acknowledges the
complexity and challenges of salmon
management in Cook Inlet. The
challenges associated with Federal
management are identified sections 2.4
and 2.5 of the Analysis. NMFS
developed amendment 16 to address
these challenges to the extent
practicable.
NMFS is required to implement
Federal management of salmon fishing
in the Cook Inlet EEZ. The Ninth Circuit
held that section 302(h)(1) of the
Magnuson-Stevens Act requires a
Council to prepare and submit FMPs for
each fishery under its authority that
requires conservation and management.
United Cook Inlet Drift Ass’n v. NMFS,
837 F.3d 1055, 1065 (9th Cir. 2016).
Because NMFS determined that the
Cook Inlet EEZ salmon fishery requires
conservation and management, the
Ninth Circuit ruled that it must be
included in the Salmon FMP. Because
of this litigation and the State’s
subsequent decision not accept a
delegation of management authority for
the Cook Inlet EEZ, management of all
salmon fishing in Cook Inlet by the State
is not possible at this time. Additional
discussion of Federal jurisdiction is
provided in the response to Comment 3.
Further, this rule will not prioritize
any constituency. Consistent with
National Standard 4, amendment 16
does not discriminate between residents
of different states in allocating fishery
resources and is fair and equitable to all
fishermen. Consistency with National
Standard 4 is discussed further below.
National Standard 1
Comment 10: The Magnuson-Stevens
Act requires that NMFS set MSY and
OY for fishing that occurs in both
Federal and state waters. Only by doing
so can NMFS ensure that the State’s
action in the State waters fishery does
not interfere with NMFS’s obligation to
follow the Magnuson-Stevens Act in the
Federal-waters fishery and achieve OY.
NMFS should define OY for both State
and Federal waters so as to prevent the
overescapement caused by State
management decisions.
Response: NMFS disagrees that it
must set MSY and OY for fishing that
occurs in both State and Federal waters.
As discussed in the preamble to the
proposed rule, MSY is a reference point,
informed by the best available scientific
information. The Magnuson-Stevens Act
and National Standard 1 guidelines
require that every FMP include an
estimate of MSY for the stocks and stock
complexes that require conservation and
management (§ 600.310(e)(1)). MSY is
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defined as the largest long-term average
catch or yield that can be taken from a
stock or stock complex under prevailing
ecological, environmental conditions
and fishery technological characteristics
(e.g., gear selectivity), and the
distribution of catch among fleets
(§ 600.310(e)(1)). Thus, under National
Standard 1, NMFS acknowledges that
MSY should be defined for a stock or
stock complex, regardless of where
fishing occurs, and thus it is not set for
State waters or Federal waters. Because
MSY is not a management target, it does
not depend on any management actions.
Rather, it describes the capacity of a
stock to be harvested sustainably,
regardless of who manages fishing or
how harvest is authorized. Only by
accounting for catch wherever it occurs
can NMFS understand the largest longterm average catch or yield that can be
taken from the entire stock or stockcomplex. Amendment 16 provides that,
for salmon stocks harvested in the Cook
Inlet EEZ Area, MSY is defined at the
stock or stock complex level (as
described below), consistent with
National Standard 1 guidelines for
establishing MSY. Because MSY must
be defined in terms of stocks or stock
complexes, this definition of MSY does
not subdivide between State and EEZ
waters in Cook Inlet.
NMFS disagrees that OY should be
established for fishing occurring in both
State and Federal waters. In contrast to
MSY, OY may be established at the
stock, stock complex, or fishery level
(§ 600.310(e)(3)). With respect to the
yield from a fishery, the MagnusonStevens Act defines ‘‘optimum’’ as the
amount of fish that will provide the
greatest overall benefit to the Nation.
Under amendment 16, the fishery is
properly defined as all harvest of cooccurring salmon stocks in the Cook
Inlet EEZ for the reasons stated in
Comments 1, 3, 4, and 29. Because there
is limited ability to target individual
stocks of salmon in the Cook Inlet EEZ
Area, stocks of varying abundance are
inevitably all harvested in the same
fishing trip. The amount of harvest that
will provide the greatest overall benefit
to the Nation in this highly mixed stock
fishery where vessels operating in the
EEZ cannot discriminate between stocks
of varying abundance is very different
from the amount of harvest that may be
optimum for stocks or fisheries in State
waters where vessels are better able to
target individual stocks of fish near their
natal streams. Thus, OY is better
defined for the Cook Inlet EEZ fishery
rather than at the stock or stock complex
level, taking into account the
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interactions among various stocks in the
EEZ.
Furthermore, by defining OY at the
level of the Cook Inlet EEZ fishery
under Federal jurisdiction, NMFS
ensures that OY is entirely within its
purview and control to achieve on a
continuing basis. In vacating
amendment 14, the U.S. District Court
for the District of Alaska found that
NMFS had impermissibly deferred too
much management authority to the
State, stating ‘‘hinging federal
management targets on the changing
landscape of state decisions is an
improper delegation of management
authority to the State.’’ United Cook
Inlet Drift Ass’n v. Nat’l Marine
Fisheries Serv., No. 3:21–cv–00255 at
*28 (D. Alaska, June 21, 2022). In
developing amendment 16, NMFS took
a different approach. For the first time
since Alaska Statehood, there will be
two salmon fishery management
jurisdictions in Cook Inlet. To avoid
relying on the State to achieve any
Federal management targets under
amendment 16, NMFS has established
OY for the Cook Inlet EEZ fishery and
developed a harvest specifications
process that will achieve that OY on a
continuing basis while preventing
overfishing of any of the salmon stocks
of varying abundance that co-occur in
the EEZ.
Comment 11: Amendment 16
addresses the complexities of a mixed
stock fishery, with the added burden of
separate adjacent jurisdictional
authorities. The proposed rule addresses
MSY and OY, the jurisdictional issues,
and notes reliance on the State’s
scientific knowledge and management
authority but does not describe what
triggers fishing in the Cook Inlet EEZ
Area. Because the State did not accept
delegated management and because
NMFS lacks management expertise,
amendment 16 implements Federal
management that is not reliant on State
input. However, because the State
frequently develops the best scientific
information available for Cook Inlet
salmon stocks, amendment 16 should be
modified to provide that NMFS
authorize EEZ fishing only after
receiving notice from the State that
doing so will not negatively impact the
State’s management goals and strategies.
Response: NMFS acknowledges the
jurisdictional complexity related to this
action, and the State’s expertise in
salmon management. This action is
intended to establish a Federal salmon
management framework that is not
dependent on the State and has the
flexibility to adapt to changing
conditions. The annual status
determination criteria, harvest
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specifications, and inseason
management will be dependent on the
best scientific information available and
the circumstances present in each
fishing year.
NMFS expects that it will develop
management expertise and strengthen
cooperative relationships with various
Agency partners related to management
of the Cook Inlet EEZ Area over time.
NMFS acknowledges that the mixed
stock nature of and status of weaker
salmon stocks within the fishery can
make it difficult to harvest all of the
surplus yield for all component stocks
and that the interaction between stocks
must also factor into the definition of
OY.
NMFS disagrees that the FMP should
include language requiring approval
from the State prior to opening salmon
fishing in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area.
Consistent with the direction of the
District Court, NMFS has implemented
management measures including a
fishing season, fishing periods, and
TACs to ensure that OY can be achieved
without relying on the State.
Comment 12: Under the State’s
management and based on the State’s
preliminary numbers, the
overescapement of sockeye in just two
rivers in Upper Cook Inlet exceeded the
total commercial harvest of sockeye for
the entirety of Upper Cook Inlet and
likely exceeded the escapement
necessary for all other rivers in Cook
Inlet. According to NMFS’s own
scientific information included in its
analysis, overescapement is problematic
because it results in ‘‘foregone yield in
the current’’ year and ‘‘may be expected
to result in reduction in future
recruitment,’’ (i.e., reduction in longterm yield). To further put these
numbers in perspective,
overescapement of sockeye in the Kenai
and Kasilof in 2023 was more than
NMFS’s OY range—approximately
291,631 to 1,551,464—for the entire
Cook Inlet EEZ salmon fishery for all
species of salmon in Upper Cook Inlet.
There is no discussion in proposed
amendment 16 of how NMFS’s
management measures for the Cook Inlet
EEZ salmon fishery will address and
prevent rampant overescapement by the
State and the resulting unutilized waste
to ensure compliance with National
Standard 1. Amendment 16 focuses only
on the concept of avoiding overfishing,
without making any meaningful effort to
simultaneously prevent drastic
underfishing by optimizing yield.
Response: NMFS acknowledges that
Kenai and Kasilof sockeye salmon
stocks have exceeded escapement goals
in recent years, resulting in foregone
yield. As described in the preamble to
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the proposed rule, salmon fishing in the
Cook Inlet EEZ necessarily targets
mixed stocks of salmon. Conservation
measures to prevent overfishing on less
abundant co-occurring salmon stocks
are a primary driver of this foregone
yield as they limit a complete harvest of
the most abundant sockeye salmon
stocks to prevent overfishing on less
abundant salmon stocks. As referenced
within the 2024 SAFE report, which
was reviewed by the SSC, during recent
years when Kenai and Kasilof river
sockeye salmon escapement goals were
exceeded, some sockeye, coho, and
Chinook salmon escapement goals in
Cook Inlet were not achieved at the
status quo level of salmon harvest;
thereby highlighting the difficulty of
managing mixed stock fisheries to
enable the harvest of potential yield
while also achieving conservation
objectives. Management measures that
are required to prevent overfishing on
all stocks are consistent with the
Magnuson-Stevens Act.
As described in the response to
Comments 18, 25, and 55, Cook Inlet is
a mixed stock fishery within which
there are weak stocks (i.e., stocks of
relatively low abundance). This
situation requires management
decisions that can result in
overescapement of abundant stocks,
such as Kenai and Kasilof sockeye
salmon. Providing for greater harvest of
the more abundant stocks in the EEZ
would create a significant risk of not
meeting escapement goals for less
abundant stocks and reducing or
eliminating the harvestable surplus of
these stocks available to all other
salmon users. As noted above, NMFS
has evaluated historical EEZ harvest
levels and found that harvest in the EEZ
could not be increased to fully harvest
surplus Kenai and Kasilof salmon
without causing serious impacts to other
salmon harvesters and major
conservation problems for other stocks.
Whether management in State waters
could be modified to increase harvest of
these stocks closer to their natal streams
without increasing pressure on the
stocks of lower abundance in the EEZ is
outside the scope of this action, as
NMFS has no jurisdiction over State
waters (as described in the response to
Comment 10). The potential for
overescapement to reduce future yields
is addressed in the response to
Comment 18.
The Magnuson-Stevens Act has no
prohibition against foregone harvest,
and in fact suggests foregone harvest is
necessary when additional harvest of an
abundant stock would also result in
bycatch of species for which there is a
conservation concern. In contrast, the
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Magnuson-Stevens Act explicitly
mandates that NMFS prevent
overfishing. Therefore, in defining OY
for a mixed stock fishery, NMFS cannot
look at the strongest stocks in isolation.
Here, OY is appropriately limited to
EEZ waters and defined so as to identify
the amount of cumulative harvest of all
co-occurring EEZ stocks that provides
the greatest net benefit to the Nation
while preventing overfishing. This is
consistent with NMFS’s approach to
salmon management on the West Coast
where ‘‘weak stock’’ management is
required to avoid exceeding limits for
the stocks with the most constraining
limits. Each year when setting harvest
specifications, NMFS will evaluate the
maximum potential harvest available in
the Cook Inlet EEZ Area and will work
to provide harvest opportunities to the
extent possible, subject to the
constraints of scientific and
management uncertainty. As the
information available to NMFS to
manage salmon fishing in the Cook Inlet
EEZ Area improves through
implementation of this new Federal
fishery management regime, it is
possible that harvest levels could
increase.
The State’s management decisions
prior to NMFS implementing
amendment 16 regarding allocations
among fishery sectors under State
jurisdiction are State decisions that are
outside the scope of this action.
Comment 13: This definition of OY is
inconsistent with a 2018 NMFS legal
memorandum describing that OY
should not be subdivided between State
and Federal waters.
Response: NMFS disagrees that
amendment 16’s definition of OY is
inconsistent with the 2018 NMFS legal
memorandum filed in UCIDA v. NMFS.
The relevant portion of the legal
memorandum stated, ‘‘because the
fisheries take place in the EEZ and State
waters without formal recognition of the
boundary between these two areas, the
OY should not and cannot be
subdivided into separate parts for the
EEZ and State waters.’’ At that time,
management of Cook Inlet had never
been divided into separate State and
Federal management regimes under the
FMP. As such, it was assumed that
continued State management over the
drift gillnet fishery throughout both
Federal and State waters would
continue through delegation under
Magnuson-Stevens Act section 306(a).
Delegation of certain Federal
management authorities to the State
would have maintained a single fishery
that could operate without specific
regard for the EEZ boundary, but the
State declined delegation. Therefore,
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under amendment 16, which will create
separate Federal and State fisheries, it is
appropriate to define OY for the specific
fishery under NMFS’s jurisdiction—the
Cook Inlet EEZ salmon fishery.
Comment 14: If NMFS could
acknowledge that achieving OY/MSY
escapement goals should be the driving
factor in developing its FMP, then much
of the complication built into
amendment 16 would go away.
Response: NMFS acknowledges that
an FMP must contain conservation and
management measures, including ACLs
and accountability measures, to achieve
OY on a continuing basis and provisions
for information collection that are
designed to determine the degree to
which OY is achieved. As stated above,
here OY is defined for the fishery—
which currently includes seven stocks
or stock complexes of varying
abundance—and accounts for the mixed
stock nature of the salmon fishery in the
EEZ and the needs of multiple user
groups in identifying the harvest levels
that will produce the greatest net benefit
to the Nation across a variety of run
sizes. The FMP’s management measures
are explicitly designed to achieve OY on
a continuing basis while preventing
overfishing, consistent with National
Standard 1.
NMFS does not agree that achieving
MSY or MSY escapement goals are its
mandates. MSY is not a management
target, as described above, and MSY
identifies the maximum sustainable
harvest level an individual stock could
theoretically support if it was possible
to target that stock in isolation and
without uncertainty. OY is prescribed
on the basis of MSY, as reduced by any
relevant economic, social, or ecological
factors. Here, for Tier 1 and 2 salmon
stocks, MSY in the Cook Inlet EEZ
represents all salmon in excess of the
stock’s escapement goal in a given year.
For Tier 3 stocks, which have no
reliable estimates of escapement,
maximum catch over a recent range of
years that are representative of current
biological and environmental conditions
is used as a proxy for MSY. But because
it is not possible to target individual
stocks of salmon in the EEZ, it is not
possible to design conservation and
management measures intended to fully
harvest MSY for each stock, as such
harvest levels would result in
overfishing of the least abundant stocks.
Instead, OY is defined for the fishery on
the basis of MSY—in that it aims to
achieve as much surplus yield for each
stock as possible—but is reduced from
MSY to account for interactions
between stocks (ecological factors) and
identify the harvest levels that will
continue to support multiple active
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fishery sectors without resulting in any
one stock routinely missing its
escapement goal (i.e., likely overfishing)
or any user group losing access to the
resource (economic factors). Fully
harvesting MSY for Kenai late run
sockeye in the EEZ, for example, could
decimate co-occurring populations of
salmon bound for Northern Cook Inlet,
completely eliminating fishing
opportunities for other users. Such an
outcome would benefit one user group
to the exclusion of all others and thus
would not produce the greatest net
benefit to the Nation. Here, NMFS has
defined OY by carefully considering net
benefits, the competing demands of the
numerous stakeholders and tribes who
rely on Cook Inlet salmon stocks, and
the fundamental characteristic of cooccurring, mixed stocks in the Cook
Inlet EEZ. NMFS concludes the
management measures in this final rule
will achieve OY as defined in
amendment 16 on a continuing basis.
Comment 15: Federal oversight of this
fishery is a must to obtain maximum
harvest and sustainable yield.
Response: The Magnuson-Stevens Act
mandates that Federal fishery
management measures shall prevent
overfishing while achieving OY, which
is different from achieving maximum
harvest or MSY. To the degree that the
commenter is suggesting that Federal
management will result in harvests
equal to MSY, NMFS disagrees. To the
contrary, many stocks of fish in the EEZ
are harvested at levels well below their
MSY because of the complex
interactions between stocks; achieving
MSY for certain stocks would result in
overfishing of other stocks, which
would be inconsistent with the first
mandate of National Standard 1.
Instead, Federal fishery management
measures must achieve OY on a
continuing basis. OY is defined as the
amount of fish that:
(1) Will provide the greatest overall
benefit to the Nation, particularly with
respect to food production and
recreational opportunities, and taking
into account the protection of marine
ecosystems;
(2) Is prescribed as such on the basis
of the maximum sustainable yield from
the fishery, as reduced by any relevant
economic, social, or ecological factor;
and
(3) In the case of an overfished
fishery, provides for rebuilding to a
level consistent with producing the
maximum sustainable yield in such
fishery (16 U.S.C. 1802(33)).
Comment 16: Using historical catch
data from 1999–2021 is incorrect as a
proxy for MSY and OY. This period
begins after the State increased
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escapement levels, resulting in large
overescapements of sockeye in the
Kenai and Kasilof Rivers and underharvest of coho, pink and chum salmon.
Because the State has not been
managing the fishery on the basis of
MSY, this historical catch data has no
relationship with MSY. This continues
poor State management practices in
Federal management. NMFS should
include harvest data from the 1980s.
Response: NMFS disagrees. To start,
historical catch is not used as a basis for
establishing MSY in this action for any
stocks or stock complexes with
escapement goals or estimates of total
run size (Tier 1 and Tier 2 stocks).
Rather, MSY represents the maximum
potential harvest of a run in excess of
the spawning escapement goal. The
annual SAFE reports will review the
best scientific information available
regarding escapement goals and
estimated run sizes. For Tier 3 stocks
with no data on run size or total
escapement, maximum catch over a
recent range of years that is
representative of current conditions is
used as a proxy for MSY because it
represents the best scientific
information available to estimate MSY.
In prescribing OY on the basis of MSY,
NMFS used the best scientific
information available to identify the
range of harvest levels in the EEZ that
will provide the greatest net benefit to
the Nation by ensuring all stocks
harvested in the EEZ can meet their
escapement goals and the greatest
number and diversity of stakeholders
and fishery sectors will retain access to
the resource. In other words, NMFS
defined OY as the harvest levels that are
expected to capture as much yield in
excess of escapement goals as possible
in the EEZ without any individual stock
routinely not achieving these
escapement goals and risking
overfishing, thereby maintaining a
harvestable surplus for all other salmon
users.
The best scientific information
available regarding the appropriate
harvest levels in this mixed stock
fishery are currently estimates of
historic catch in years of high and low
abundance across stocks from 1999–
2021. As explained in the Analysis, the
1999–2021 time period was chosen due
to the advent of the current abundancebased approach to management of
salmon in Upper Cook Inlet. In addition,
this time series represents the recent
range of salmon productivity conditions
that are representative of reasonably
foreseeable future conditions, reflects a
range of time when management
measures both increased and decreased
fishing opportunity in EEZ waters, and
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captures a range of different social and
economic conditions within fishing
communities. Furthermore, this period
also reflects the time for which high
quality and comparable data for nearly
all fisheries and fishing communities
throughout Cook Inlet are available. The
OY range considers but does not include
the 1980s because there was a different
ecological regime in place in the North
Pacific (highly productive for salmon
stocks), seafood markets for salmon
were significantly different (strong
Asian demand and less competition
from farmed salmon), and the regional
population was significantly smaller.
These factors all influence NMFS’s
consideration of the greatest net benefit
to the Nation, including consideration
of food production and recreational
opportunities and taking into account
the protection of marine ecosystems.
The harvest levels from 1999–2021
have resulted in numerous viable
fisheries while preventing stocks from
becoming overfished. While it may be
possible to develop better information
in the future as NMFS collects more
data specific to the EEZ—and section
302(h)(5) of the Magnuson-Steven Act
requires the Council to review OY on a
continuing basis—at present, historic
catch is the best scientific information
available. Therefore, ranges of catch in
years of high and low salmon
abundance is an appropriate method to
determine OY.
This action establishes a Federal
management framework that
accommodates varying levels of harvest
over time as the information available to
inform harvest specifications and both
relative and absolute abundances of
salmon change each year. NMFS
reviewed fishery data dating back to
1966 when developing a definition for
OY. Harvests by the drift gillnet fleet,
and all other salmon users in Cook Inlet,
have fluctuated dramatically over time
based on both salmon abundance cycles
and management decisions. Ultimately,
as explained above, NMFS determined
that the best scientific information
available for prescribing OY is currently
the estimates of historic catch in years
of high and low abundance across
stocks from 1999–2021.
Comment 17: The proposed
calculation of MSY, OY, and TAC
includes 3 years, 2018, 2020 and 2021,
which were declared economic disasters
by the Secretary of Commerce. This data
should be omitted from all analyses of
historic harvest.
Response: This action does not use
historical catch data to define MSY or
to set TACs, as explained above.
For the reasons explained in response
to Comment 16, the best available
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science for developing OY includes
historic catch data. Of the 2018, 2020,
and 2021 fishery disaster
determinations referenced by the
commenter, only the 2020 disaster
determination applied to the drift gillnet
fleet. The 2018 and 2021 determinations
only applied to the East Side set net
fishery sector. The East Side set net
fishery does not operate in EEZ waters.
Further, NMFS disagrees that disaster
and low harvest years should be omitted
from consideration in defining OY, as
they represent part of the range of
conditions experienced in the fishery. In
defining the lower bound of OY for the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area, the three lowest
EEZ harvests are averaged together, and
this number identifies what optimum
harvest levels might be in years when
low stock abundance reduces harvest
opportunities.
It should be noted that OY is not an
annual management target but is a longterm objective. Harvests may fall above
or below the OY range in some years.
Furthermore, OY may appropriately
encompass very low harvests when that
is what is required to prevent
overfishing on all stocks. For example,
in the GOA groundfish FMP, the lower
bound of the OY range is defined by the
year with the absolute lowest fishery
harvest in the time series and in the
BSAI King and Tanner Crab FMP, the
lower bound of the OY range is zero.
Comment 18: Multiple commenters
expressed concern about
overescapement reducing future yields
of Cook Inlet salmon stocks.
Commenters stated that underfishing
(too little harvest) can jeopardize the
capacity of a salmon stock to produce
MSY on a continuing basis by allowing
too many salmon to enter the stream to
spawn and exceeding the carrying
capacity of the spawning and rearing
habitat, thereby reducing future runs.
ADF&G data indicates all the salmon
stocks in Cook Inlet are underfished,
and with such low exploitation rates,
we cannot be overfishing. The
commenters stated that most salmon
stocks in Cook Inlet are underfished
with returns that have exceeded
escapement goals. For example, Kenai
and Kasilof River sockeye salmon have
consistently exceeded escapement goals,
sometimes by over a million fish. This
action will continue or increase
overescapement and result in
overcompensation. Management
practices that jeopardize the long-term
health of the salmon resource reduce
opportunities for harvesters and
processors and harm the economies of
fishing communities.
Response: NMFS disagrees that all
salmon stocks in Cook Inlet are
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underfished, that overfishing cannot
occur in Cook Inlet, and that
amendment 16 will jeopardize the longterm health of the salmon resource if the
stocks of highest abundance exceed
their escapement goals when harvest
restrictions are required to protect
stocks of lower abundance. As
discussed in the 2024 SAFE report,
escapements for some stocks of sockeye,
coho, and Chinook salmon have been
below spawning escapement goals
during recent years when Kenai and
Kasilof sockeye salmon have exceeded
the upper bound of their escapement
goals.
As discussed in section 3.1 of the
Analysis, the need to conserve weaker
stocks by reducing fishing effort
sometimes results in foregone yield
from more productive stocks. For
salmon, this can result in escapement
goals being exceeded, which is
sometimes referred to as
overescapement. NMFS has evaluated
the best available science on
overescapement. Appendix 14 of the
Analysis is an independent analysis of
the potential for overcompensation
(reduced yield as a result of
overescapement) in Kenai and Kasilof
river sockeye salmon stocks. The SSC
reviewed this analysis, which found
that ADF&G’s escapement goals were
established within the range expected to
produce MSY for those stocks, that
ADF&G’s point estimates of MSY were
accurate, and that there is limited
evidence for overcompensation across
the observed range of escapements for
Kenai and Kasilof sockeye salmon.
Thus, while instances of
overescapement will result in foregone
yield in the current year, existing
spawner-recruitment information does
not indicate that overescapement has
resulted in substantial reductions in
recruitment and yield for the primary
stocks harvested by the drift gillnet fleet
in Cook Inlet. In other words, though
the Kenai and Kasilof sockeye salmon
stocks have recently exceeded their
escapement goals, this has not resulted
in a conservation problem for those
stocks and available data does not
indicate that overescapement has
resulted in a reduction in future yields.
NMFS concludes that increased fishing
effort in the EEZ to fully harvest the
available yield for Kenai and Kasilof
sockeye salmon would result in serious
conservation concerns for stocks of
lower abundance, which would fail to
achieve their escapement goals.
For Cook Inlet salmon stocks without
escapement goals, information is not
available to analyze overescapement or
its potential impacts on future yields. In
the absence of specific stock
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information, conservative management
using suitable proxies while following
the precautionary principle is consistent
with the National Standard 1 guidelines
for dealing with data-poor stocks
(§ 600.310(e)(1)(v)(B) and (h)(2)). The
guidelines provide flexibility in setting
MSY and other reference points based
on insufficient data and in
consideration of stocks with unusual
life history characteristics, including
salmon. The risk of overfishing as a
result of harvest rates that are too high
is much greater than the uncertain and
speculative risk of underharvest or
overescapement. Therefore,
precautionary management is
appropriate for data-poor fish stocks.
From a practical perspective, it is not
possible to manage the mixed stock
salmon fishery in the Cook Inlet EEZ
Area by harvesting surplus yield on all
stocks because the composition,
abundance, and productivity of stocks
and species in the fishery vary
substantially. Overescapement occurs in
Cook Inlet, as noted in section 3.1 of the
Analysis. Overescapement usually
results from (1) a lack of fishing effort,
(2) unexpectedly large salmon runs, or
(3) management or economic constraints
on the fishery. In this instance,
management must constrain harvest of
the largest, most productive salmon
stocks to protect less abundant salmon
stocks and species.
Comment 19: The Exxon Valdez
litigation had documented damage to
the Kenai River due to overescapement
and the Exxon Valdez Oil Spill Trustees
Council funded ADF&G research on
damage from Kenai Sockeye
overescapement and plaintiffs’
compensation in part was for damage to
future runs caused by overescapement.
Now the State is managing the sockeye
fishery in a manner that results in
substantial overescapement, similar to
what occurred after the oil spill.
Response: The response to Comment
18 explains that the best scientific
information available indicates that
large escapements of sockeye salmon to
the Kenai River have not resulted in
reduced future yields and are not a
conservation concern compared to the
clear risks of overfishing and/or stocks
failing to meet the lower bound of
escapement goals. The claims and
damages paid to plaintiffs in the
decades of litigation arising from the
Exxon Valdez oil spill are beyond the
scope of this action.
Comment 20: The result of the
overescapement on the Kenai and
Kasilof rivers caused by commercial
fishery restrictions wastes a food
resource that belongs to the whole
nation (see the Supreme Court’s case of
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Hughes v. Oklahoma which reversed
Greer v. Connecticut). It is in the whole
Nation’s interest as to what happens to
salmon in Alaska. When Alaska became
a state, the State compact with Congress
was for the State to manage its fish and
wildlife in the national interest. The
State created ADF&G to manage fish and
game in the national interest. It is no
longer doing that. This is the reason for
the involvement of NMFS and the
Department of Commerce.
Response: The U.S. Supreme Court in
Hughes v. Oklahoma, 441 U.S. 322, 338
(1979), held that a State could not
prohibit transporting fish out of state for
sale once caught. Hughes v. Oklahoma
is not relevant to this action.
NMFS has determined that this action
would achieve OY for the Cook Inlet
EEZ Area and, in doing so, will result
in the greatest overall net benefit to the
Nation. The National Standard 1
guidelines provide that OY means the
amount of fish that will provide the
greatest overall benefit to the Nation,
particularly with respect to food
production and recreational
opportunities, and taking into account
the protection of marine ecosystems.
This means NMFS must look at the
impacts of its harvest management on
all salmon stocks and stakeholders and
cannot look at the interests of the drift
gillnet fleet alone.
As noted in the preamble to the
proposed rule, amendment 16 defines
OY as the average range of target EEZ
harvest across all species that
maximizes fishing opportunities while
preventing overfishing on any one stock.
This OY range provides the greatest
overall net benefits to the Nation
because it ensures sustainable stock
levels throughout the ecosystem,
preserves multiple viable commercial
fishery sectors for continued food
production, and maintains a viable
recreational fishing sector that attracts
participants from throughout the
Nation.
This OY range is expected to result in
drift gillnet harvests near historic levels,
protect less abundant salmon stocks
transiting to Northern Cook Inlet, and
ensure other commercial and noncommercial stakeholders in Cook Inlet
continue to have access to salmon
resources. Any management plan
designed only to prevent
overescapement in the Kenai and
Kasilof rivers by increasing EEZ harvest
would upset this balance, preempting
other users, and likely causing stocks of
lower abundance—particularly in
Northern Cook Inlet—to more regularly
miss their escapement goals, ultimately
resulting in overfishing.
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Comment 21: Use the flexibility
within the National Standard 1
guidelines (§ 600.310(h)(2)) to adopt an
escapement-based inseason
management methodology similar to the
State. If the State is allowing too much
harvest in its jurisdiction, it will be
reflected in too low escapement
numbers, and Federal managers will
know to restrict fishing. Likewise, if the
State is not providing for enough
harvest, daily escapement numbers will
indicate a higher than acceptable final
escapement, and Federal managers will
know to allow more fishing time. One
commenter noted that an alternative
approach is needed for salmon because
of the following: (1) unlike groundfish
stocks, salmon reproduce only once; (2)
the harvestable surplus is entirely new
recruits and the catch comprises almost
exclusively mature salmon; (3)
productivity of a specific year class
cannot be improved by limiting harvest
in subsequent years; (4) foregone harvest
cannot be recaptured in future years;
and (5) abundance cannot be estimated
effectively in advance. Therefore,
inseason estimates of abundance using
contemporaneous data, with appropriate
management actions taken to assure
escapement and optimum production in
future years, is the most effective way to
avoid the risk of overfishing.
Response: As set forth under section
301 of the Magnuson Stevens Act,
National Standard 1 provides that
conservation and management measures
shall prevent overfishing while
achieving, on a continuing basis, the
optimum yield from each fishery for the
United States fishing industry. Section
303(a)(15) of the Magnuson Stevens Act
requires that each FMP establish
mechanisms for specifying ACLs to
prevent overfishing and include
accountability measures to prevent
ACLs from being exceeded and to
correct overages of the ACL if they do
occur. The National Standard 1
guidelines at § 600.310(h)(2)
contemplate limited circumstances in
which alternative approaches to
establishing ACLs may be appropriate,
and specifically cite Pacific salmon as
an example of stocks that may require
an alternative approach to ACLs.
However, while § 600.310(h)(2) provides
NMFS some flexibility to consider
alternative means of establishing ACL
mechanisms and accountability
measures in FMPs, the National
Standard 1 guidelines do not provide
discretion to consider alternative means
of establishing other reference points,
like OFL or ABC. And any alternative
approach to establishing ACLs must be
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consistent with the Magnuson-Stevens
Act.
The primary function of status
determination criteria, ACLs, and
related requirements is to ensure that a
scientifically-based approach is used for
controlling catch to maintain stock
abundance at the level necessary to
prevent overfishing, ensure no stocks
become overfished, and achieve OY in
the fishery. Therefore, an alternative
approach that is consistent with the
Magnuson-Stevens Act must document
how the alternative management
measures would limit catch and explain
how such measures would rely on the
best scientific information available.
When the Council was developing the
alternatives for analysis, the Council
and NMFS considered using the State’s
salmon escapement goal management as
an alternative approach for satisfying
the ACL requirements of the MagnusonStevens Act under delegated
management to the State (Alternative 2).
Under amendment 12, the Council
recommended this alternative approach
for ACLs in the East Area. Escapement
goals are specified annually, in terms of
numbers of fish. The biology of salmon
is such that escapement is the point in
the species life history best suited for
routine assessment and long-term
monitoring. Using spawning
escapement goals is consistent with the
long-standing practice of using
spawning escapement to assess the
status of salmon stocks.
Under this alternative approach (not
adopted in amendment 16), the
mechanisms for specifying ACLs salmon
stocks would be the State’s
scientifically-based management
measures used to determine stock status
and control catch to achieve the number
of spawners necessary to produce MSY.
The State’s salmon management
program is based on scientifically
defensible escapement goals and
inseason management measures to
prevent overfishing. Accountability
measures would include the State’s
inseason management measures and the
escapement goal setting process that
incorporates the best scientific
information available on stock
abundance.
Using the State’s inseason
management approach as an alternative
approach to establishing ACLs is not
possible under Federal management of a
new fishery in the EEZ that will be
managed separately from fishing in
State waters. NMFS currently has no
infrastructure for collecting escapement
information in Cook Inlet and there is
no guarantee NMFS managers would
have access to information collected by
the State quickly enough to make real
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time management decisions.
Additionally, escapement information is
not available from any source for many
salmon stocks in Cook Inlet. The
responses to Comments 23 and 28
provide additional discussion of the
procedural challenges of implementing
escapement-based inseason
management in this situation.
For management of the Cook Inlet
EEZ Area as an entirely separate
jurisdiction, using escapement-based
inseason management as an alternative
approach for ACLs may have additional
limitations. Because there is a lag of
multiple days (or longer for the
Northern District salmon stocks
currently with the greatest conservation
risks) between encountering EEZ
fisheries and being counted at
escapement monitoring stations, that
data may not be timely for the current
management situation. This lag between
receipt of data and action can have huge
consequences in a fishery where a single
opening can harvest well over 300,000
salmon per day. Further, just because
one stock has reached an escapement
goal and can sustain additional harvest
that does not mean that all of the other
stocks, which are highly mixed in EEZ
waters, can support additional harvest.
This issue is compounded by fishing in
EEZ waters occurring before all other
users. Basing management solely on
escapement would make it more
difficult to ensure there was at least
some harvestable surplus available to all
salmon users in Cook Inlet across all
jurisdictions when cooperation is not
guaranteed through established
agreements.
During the development of this
action—first at the Council, then as a
Secretarial FMP amendment after the
Council failed to recommend any
management measures—no one
identified any alternative means of
specifying ACLs for the Cook Inlet EEZ
Area that would be consistent with the
Magnuson-Stevens Act, rely on the best
scientific information available, and
limit catch to ensure no overfishing
occurred. Therefore, amendment 16
uses the default ACL approach
described in the National Standard 1
guidelines—establishing preseason
harvest limits based on the best
scientific information available at the
time stock assessments are drafted and
harvest specifications are
recommended. This is similar to how
ACLs are set for salmon along the US
West Coast and how the 2019 Pacific
Salmon Treaty Agreement establishes
pre-season limits on Chinook harvest
under the Treaty.
Comment 22: The State, several
regional sportfishing organizations, and
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stakeholders in the Northern District
believe amendment 16 will disrupt
conservation and management benefits
realized by the State’s management
plans, which these commenters have
found to successfully balance the
complexity and challenges of managing
multiple user groups in a highly
populated area. They emphasize that the
State’s management plans were
developed by the BOF to ensure longterm sustainability of both strong and
weak salmon stocks, optimize yields
and opportunities of the diverse
fisheries, and allocate benefits among
user groups. They feel this action will
result in overfishing of weak salmon
stocks, produce suboptimum yields, and
confound the State’s effective in-season
management. This is not consistent with
the Magnuson-Stevens Act or National
Standard 1.
Response: NMFS recognizes the
complex and challenging nature of Cook
Inlet salmon fisheries. NMFS disagrees
that amendment 16 will undermine the
State’s Central District Drift Gillnet
Fishery Management Plan, result in
overfishing, or produce suboptimal
yields.
As described in the preamble to the
proposed rule, NMFS recognizes that
salmon harvest in the Cook Inlet EEZ
occurs first and can impact the amount
of salmon available to upstream users
and to meet spawning escapement goals.
In developing this final rule, NMFS
considered the management measures
implemented by the BOF and worked to
balance competing interests and provide
opportunity for all users of salmon
throughout Cook Inlet.
NMFS acknowledges that, in some
years, this action may allow for more
days of drift gillnet fishing in the Cook
Inlet EEZ Area relative to previous State
management plans. NMFS will use
TACs that account for uncertainty and
harvest in other fisheries in order to
prevent overfishing on any less
abundant salmon stocks transiting
through the Cook Inlet EEZ Area. As
described in section 2.5.2.1 of the
Analysis and the response to Comment
25, TACs will account for stocks of
lower abundance and prevent
overfishing on weak stocks. The TACs
are expected to result in total harvests
fairly consistent with the status quo.
NMFS will have inseason management
authority to adjust TACs and close or
reopen the fishery as needed to account
for inseason conditions. NMFS and the
Council will use the best scientific
information available and work to
improve salmon monitoring and
assessment where possible/practicable,
and will coordinate with the State to the
extent possible. Further, as discussed in
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the section on changes from the
proposed to final rule, NMFS is
reducing the number of open fishing
periods from two to one from July 16 to
July 31 to directly respond to the
comments from users in Northern Cook
Inlet who said they depend on the
conservation corridor established under
State management.
NMFS expects that this final rule will
continue to provide for a harvestable
surplus for all Upper Cook Inlet salmon
fishery sectors in both State and Federal
waters. NMFS anticipates that under
this final rule all Cook Inlet salmon
fisheries will remain viable and produce
economic benefits commensurate with
the status quo.
Status Determination Criteria and
Annual Catch Limits
Comment 23: Many commenters
raised concerns about using TACs for
salmon harvest in the EEZ, including
the following perspectives.
Use of a TAC established on
preseason projections will result in
inappropriate catch. While uncertainty
may be accounted for when setting ABC
and OFL, it lacks the benefit of inseason
information on run strength, weak
stocks, harvests, and other important
factors. Cook Inlet salmon run sizes and
timing are variable and unpredictable,
especially in recent years. Establishing a
TAC increases the likelihood of either
overfishing or underfishing and reduces
the likelihood of remaining within the
escapement goal range for those stocks
with goals. Further, if there are
deviations from forecasted run size,
procedural constraints on Federal
management may exacerbate the
resulting problems. These issues
combined could jeopardize
sustainability, especially for weak
stocks, and could result in overfishing
of weak stocks.
Commenters from the drift gillnet
fleet emphasized that forecasts will be
inaccurate, management objectives will
not be met, harvest will be
unnecessarily reduced, MSY and OY
will not be achieved, and this action
will cause adverse economic impacts.
Other commenters voiced concerns
that a TAC would not be conservative
enough given that this action sets TACs
for a first-in-line fishery, which would
require the State to reduce State water
fisheries harvest if the pre-season
forecasts are not realized. Commenters
from other commercial and recreational
salmon fishery sectors in Upper Cook
Inlet, as well as associated communities,
were significantly concerned that TACs
would not be precautionary enough and
EEZ harvests would reduce or eliminate
the harvestable surplus available to
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other users. Some commenters cited
unpredictable escapement data that
would require unexpected fishery
closures.
Response: Under section 303(a)(15) of
the Magnuson-Stevens Act, the FMP
must include a mechanism for
specifying ACLs at a level that
overfishing does not occur in the
fishery, including measures to ensure
accountability. NMFS is therefore
required to have ACLs and management
measures to implement them, and
amendment 16 includes these required
elements. TACs (i.e., preseason catch
limits) are established to ensure fishery
harvests remain below ACLs. Because
salmon of the same species originate
from separate stocks but cannot be
visually distinguished, in amendment
16, TACs are set at the species level
based on the cumulative estimated
contribution by stock, at least until
inseason genetic information becomes
available. There is uncertainty inherent
to forecast-based catch limits. In
establishing TACs, NMFS will take into
account management uncertainty and
public comment, just as NMFS and the
SSC will consider scientific uncertainty
in setting OFL and ABC (and therefore
ACL since ACL equals ABC) each year.
OFL and ABC are specified for each
stock or stock complex. TACs are
established for species rather than
stocks or stock complexes because
inseason it is not currently possible to
differentiate among stocks of the same
species. TACs for each species are set
based on the aggregate ABC for each
component stock and stock complex
and account for the assumed
contribution of each stock or stock
complex to total catch to ensure ABC is
not exceeded for any one component
stock. NMFS will monitor the fishery
daily and use inseason management
measures and adjust the TAC, if
practicable, to ensure that catch
amounts are appropriate for the realized
run strength. And NMFS expects that
TACs set for the Cook Inlet EEZ will be
suitably precautionary to avoid
overfishing.
Establishing TACs is consistent with
the NMFS’s management approach for
salmon stocks in ocean fisheries on the
West Coast with an ACL requirement
(e.g., stocks that are not subject to a
tribal/international treaty or ESA
exception). The Pacific Salmon Treaty
also establishes pre-season catch limits
for Chinook salmon covered by the
Treaty. NMFS considered alternative
approaches to establishing ACLs as
described in the response to Comment
21.
NMFS will consider all available
information about Cook Inlet salmon
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run strength and coordinate with the
State to the extent practicable when
making management decisions for the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area. However, this
action establishes Federal reference
points and harvest specifications for the
Federal fishery, as required by the
Magnuson-Stevens Act, which are
different from existing State
management measures.
NMFS acknowledges that the ACL
requirement and additional Federal
notice requirements—mandated by the
Magnuson-Stevens Act and the APA—
are less flexible in adjusting fishing
opportunity based on inseason
information about run size when
compared to managing by monitoring
escapement goals and exercising
emergency order authority pursuant to
State law, as under State management.
This is described in section 2.5.2.6 of
the Analysis. NMFS also acknowledges
that fishing in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area
takes place before all other salmon
fisheries in upper Cook Inlet and that it
can impact salmon escapement for each
stock as well as the harvestable surplus
available to all other subsequent salmon
users. NMFS acknowledges the
uncertainty inherent to forecast-based
catch limits. However, NMFS designed
the harvest specification process and
management framework implemented
by this action to account for the
inherent uncertainty in preseason
estimates and the need for inseason
management, as well as the mixedstock, first-in-line nature of the Cook
Inlet EEZ Area fishery, consistent with
the Magnuson-Stevens Act and the
APA.
Comment 24: Appropriate harvest
rates are not considered when
determining what should be harvested
in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area. The 2002
ADF&G mark-recapture population
estimate study (Regional Information
Report 2A03–20, published 2003) on
coho, pinks, and chums found that the
commercial fishery harvest rates on
coho were about 10 percent, pinks were
around 2 percent, and chums were
around 6 percent. These harvest rates
were the results of State management
policies that were in effect at that time.
To further skew the harvest rates since
2002, when the study was done, the
commercial fishery was even more
restricted by State salmon management
plans that continue to fail to meet the
requirements of Magnuson-Stevens Act.
All harvest rates should be based on 81
percent overfishing exploitation rate
and a 65 percent MSY exploitation rate.
MSY exploitation rates should be 63
percent for coho, 53 percent for pinks,
and 56 percent for chums to achieve
MSY on these stocks over the long term.
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Response: Harvest rates (exploitation
rates) could not be considered for the
Federal management of stocks of pink,
chum, and coho salmon in Upper Cook
Inlet because there are not sufficient
data available to estimate such harvest
rates. The mark-recapture studies cited
by the commenter are now more than 20
years old, and salmon populations are
not stable over time. Rather, as cited in
the Analysis and the SAFE report, a
variety of publications, including State
of Alaska escapement goal reports,
annual management reports, and stock
assessments, indicate that Alaska’s
salmon populations experience
substantial year-to-year fluctuations in
abundance over time. Population
estimates from a given year are not
indicative of the population abundance
during other years. There are no
contemporary estimates of total run size
or overall spawning escapement for
stocks of coho, pink, and chum salmon
for all of Upper Cook Inlet, and
historical estimates are highly
uncertain. As such, exploitation rates
have not been estimated during recent
years and therefore, it is not possible to
precisely estimate MSY for these stocks
based on current assessment methods.
Moreover, there are no estimates of
population abundance for these stocks
to inform preseason harvests
specifications. NMFS will use the best
available scientific information to
inform harvest specifications and
management decisions for the Cook
Inlet EEZ Area.
Comment 25: Several commenters,
including Alaska Native tribes in the
region, emphasized the importance of
precautionary salmon management and
felt that amendment 16 was not suitably
precautionary given large potential
harvests by the drift gillnet fleet, which
includes a mixture of strong and weak
stocks.
One commenter noted that many
Northern District salmon stocks lack
estimates of annual escapement,
escapement goals, and numeric data
(historic or current). Cook Inlet salmon
fisheries harvest mixed stocks and need
to be managed to account for this.
Precautionary management would help
meet escapement goals. NMFS should
fund genetic data collection and more
escapement monitoring.
Another commenter suggested setting
conservative TACs for the first 6 years.
One commenter generally suggested that
management measures in addition to
TACs would be needed. Another
commented stated that NMFS must
develop a plan for pre-season
commercial fishing closures as well as
in-season commercial fishing closures
based on in-season escapements.
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Response: NMFS acknowledges the
importance of precautionary fishery
management and avoiding overfishing
on all salmon stocks. Furthermore,
NMFS acknowledges that some Cook
Inlet salmon stocks are highly abundant
and may support additional harvests
while other salmon stocks are a major
conservation concern and can support
little or no harvest. Over time, NMFS
will work to expand the scientific
information available to manage Cook
Inlet salmon stocks. Amendment 16
includes accountability measures, and
NMFS can implement additional
accountability measures if needed to
avoid exceeding ACLs.
NMFS must establish harvest
specifications before fishing begins.
NMFS agrees that there is a need for
precaution when there is significant
scientific or management uncertainty
associated with salmon management in
Cook Inlet. Drift gillnet fishing in Cook
Inlet harvests mixed stocks of salmon.
The best scientific information available
will be used to assess the status of each
salmon stock in Cook Inlet and set
harvest limits each year. The harvest
limits set for each species will consider
the proportional contribution of each
salmon stock to total catch, when
known. Species-level TACs may also be
reduced from combined ACLs to protect
weak stocks when there is uncertainty
about catch composition (a key type of
management uncertainty). Furthermore,
NMFS will close commercial fishing for
all salmon species in the Cook Inlet EEZ
when catch limits for one or more stocks
are met or exceeded, or if other
information becomes available that
indicates overfishing is likely. This will
help ensure that overfishing does not
occur on any one stock.
NMFS disagrees that the management
framework established by this action is
not sufficiently precautionary. As
described in the preamble to the
proposed rule, every year the Council’s
SSC will establish ABCs for each Cook
Inlet salmon stock, accounting for
scientific uncertainty by reducing ABC
from OFL. TAC would then be set for
each salmon species to account for
management uncertainty to ensure that
total catch does not exceed the ABC for
any stock and may also include
additional reductions to account for
social, economic, and/or ecological
factors. As noted in the changes from
proposed to final rule section, this
action reduces the number of fishing
periods per week in the Cook Inlet EEZ
Area to one opening per week from July
16–July 31 to allow salmon stocks of
lower abundance to migrate northward.
To further address mixed-stock
conservation needs, drift gillnet fishing
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in the Cook Inlet EEZ area will be closed
after a TAC for a single species is
reached or would be exceeded by
another opening because drift gillnet
gear catches all stocks present in the
EEZ and the fleet could not focus
harvest on only those species for which
there is remaining TAC.
NMFS acknowledges that there is
some uncertainty in estimated EEZ
harvests but recognizes it as the best
scientific information available.
Forecasted salmon abundance and
associated uncertainty will be
considered each year to set harvest
specifications that are appropriately
precautionary. After implementation of
this action, NMFS will collect high
quality data to determine total EEZ
harvests.
For further explanation of NMFS’s
approach to management of this mixed
stock fishery, see the response to
Comment 55.
Comment 26: The State cannot
commit to adjusting the work schedule
and timing of Cook Inlet salmon
management and science products to
accommodate the proposed Federal
harvest specification process. Salmon
scales take time to read and age, data
takes time to analyze, and models take
time to run and fact check. Expediting
these processes could result in errors.
We already anticipate that this action
will increase the volume and
complexity of information requests that
ADF&G receives from fishery
participants, increasing staff workload.
Response: Nothing in this action
requires the State to change the timing
of their reports, publications, or other
work products. However, as described
in sections 4.7.3.2 and 4.8 of the
Analysis, NMFS acknowledges that this
action will increase costs and burden to
State and Federal fishery management
agencies. NMFS acknowledges the
timing, logistical challenges, and costs
associated with fishery data collection,
analyses, and the timing requirements of
the Federal process for the SSC and
Council to recommend harvest
specifications and for NMFS to
implement them by publishing
proposed and final harvest
specifications in the Federal Register.
NMFS and the Council will use the
best scientific information available at
the time that harvest specifications must
be developed or other fishery
management decisions made. This may
include information from the State or
other sources, and NMFS will work
with the State to the extent practicable.
NMFS, the Council, and the SSC will
evaluate the level of uncertainty in
available data and information and
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adjust harvest specifications and other
management measures accordingly.
Comment 27: To establish a reliable
TAC based on the proportional
contribution of each stock to this
fishery, better data must first be
established including in-season genetics
and escapement information for
Northern Cook Inlet salmon stocks. Test
fisheries need to take place where
northern-bound fish are most easily
differentiated from Kenai-bound fish.
Using averages of previous years to
establish the TAC is no substitute for
timely in-season management. NMFS
may want to support the State’s test
fishery or establish another test fishery
to monitor salmon numbers, species,
and stocks entering upper Cook Inlet.
Timely genetic analysis from test
fisheries could provide better real-time
abundance information for management.
Response: NMFS acknowledges that
there are incomplete genetics and
escapement data for Cook Inlet salmon
stocks, as described in section 2.5.2.2 of
the Analysis. However, NMFS will use
the best scientific information that is
available, including information from
test fisheries and historical data on
genetic stock composition to manage
salmon fishing in the Cook Inlet EEZ
Area. Any uncertainties in the available
scientific information will be accounted
for, and management measures will be
adjusted based on the level of
precaution warranted. As discussed in
the response to Comment 28, NMFS will
monitor the fishery and make
management decisions on a daily basis
depending on currently available
information on realized salmon
abundance.
NMFS will work to improve the level
of information available to manage the
fishery and may consider other
management tools including Federal test
fisheries and genetics sampling to
address future management needs.
Inseason Management
Comment 28: Daily management of
the fishery must take place like all other
State salmon fisheries.
Response: NMFS will monitor catch
from each Federal fishing day, catch in
other fisheries, and any other
information available about inseason
salmon abundance to make management
decisions for the Cook Inlet EEZ Area on
a daily basis. NMFS may close the
fishery, reopen it, or—potentially—
adjust the TAC amounts to account for
emerging inseason conditions. However,
unlike the State and as described in the
proposed rule, NMFS must comply with
the APA when implementing any
fishery management decision. The need
to comply with the APA’s notice
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requirements for all inseason actions,
and the Magnuson-Stevens Act
requirement to establish ACLs, make it
infeasible to implement an escapementbased salmon management approach
like that used by the State.
Comment 29: Catch per unit effort
(CPUE) should be used instead of a TAC
to manage salmon fishing in the Cook
Inlet EEZ Area.
Response: NMFS disagrees that CPUE
should be used to manage salmon
fishing in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area as
CPUE data alone would be insufficient
to meet Federal Magnuson-Stevens Act
and National Standards requirements.
CPUE data would provide managers
with the information about catch rates
of salmon in the fishery, but not about
the specific stocks caught. Even with
stock specific catch information, CPUE
data for salmon harvests may not
correspond to overall run size or
numbers of fish necessary to meet
spawning escapement goals. As
described in section 2.4.4 of the
Analysis, methods that use CPUE (e.g.,
catch per delivery) would likely not
provide sufficient information to judge
whether catches had exceeded a level
thought to cause overfishing for a stock.
NMFS does agree that CPUE can, under
some circumstances, provide useful
inseason information for fishery
managers.
Comment 30: The proposed TAC does
not discuss the criteria that will be used
to close the fishery. The only criterion
that is presented is a salmon harvest of
291,631. This single criterion of 291,631
salmon does not meet MagnusonStevens Act and the National Standards
requirements.
Response: This final rule does not
establish a TAC of 291,631 salmon.
NMFS will establish TACs in a separate
proposed and final harvest
specifications process.
The preamble to the proposed rule for
this action comprehensively describe
how TACs for each salmon species
would be established according to the
process laid out in the Harvest
Specifications and Annual Processes
section, while the criteria for closure are
described in the Inseason Management
section. This action establishes the
lower bound of the OY range at 291,631
salmon. The OY range is not used to
establish harvest specifications or close
salmon fishing. The OY range is a longterm average amount of desired yield
from the fishery, not an annual
management target, and thus 291,631
represents the lower bound of the
desired long-term average yield from the
fishery. As described in the response to
Comment 10, the OY range specified by
this action is consistent with the
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Magnuson-Stevens Act and the National
Standards.
Cook Inlet EEZ Commercial Salmon
Fishing Management Measures
Comment 31: Several commenters
objected to the prohibition on drift
gillnet fishing in State and Federal
waters on the same calendar day. They
indicated this will be inefficient, have
adverse economic impacts, decrease
flexibility to harvest salmon as
migration paths and run timing vary,
and be inconsistent with National
Standard 6. Another commenter noted
that there is not a similar prohibition on
recreational fishing in both State and
Federal waters on the same day. Some
commenters also suggested these
requirements are intended to be
punitive against members of the drift
gillnet fleet.
Response: This final rule provides
that it is unlawful for commercial
fishery sector participants to:
• Set drift gillnet gear within, or
allow any portion of drift gillnet gear to
enter, State waters on the same calendar
day that drift gillnet gear is also
deployed in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area
while commercial fishing for salmon in
the Cook Inlet EEZ Area
(§ 679.117(b)(1)(v));
• Use a vessel named, or required to
be named, on an SFFP to fish for salmon
in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area if that vessel
fishes for salmon in Alaska State waters
on the same calendar day
(§ 679.117(b)(1)(vii));
• Possess salmon, harvested in Alaska
State waters, on board a vessel
commercial fishing for salmon in the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area or to have salmon
on board a vessel at the time a fishing
trip commences in the Cook Inlet EEZ
Area (§ 679.117(b)(1)(viii) and (ix)); and
• Land salmon harvested in Alaska
State waters concurrently with salmon
harvested commercially in the Cook
Inlet EEZ Area’’ (§ 679.117(b)(1)(xii)).
As noted in the preamble to the
proposed rule (Other Commercial
Fishery Management Measures and
Prohibitions section), NMFS has
determined that there is a need to
restrict vessels from fishing in both
State and Federal waters during the
same calendar day. The Cook Inlet EEZ
Area is managed separately from
adjacent waters managed by the State.
NMFS must be able to accurately
account for harvest in the Cook Inlet
EEZ to avoid exceeding the Federal
TAC, prevent overfishing, and
accurately manage to the established
Federal reference points, as required by
the Magnuson-Stevens Act, which
NMFS would be less able to do if
catches from State and Federal waters
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were mixed on a vessel during a single
fishing trip.
If vessels could fish in both State and
Federal waters on the same calendar
day, landings could contain a mix of
salmon harvested in both the State and
Federal fisheries. Some method to
attribute a proportional amount of catch
to Federal waters would be needed. This
would embed assumptions about the
correct proportions and thus would
substantially increase uncertainty for
Federal managers and would likely
require significantly more conservative
management decisions for the Cook
Inlet EEZ Area. This could also create
an incentive for fishermen to over-report
State waters catch to keep the Cook Inlet
EEZ open to commercial salmon fishing
longer, which would necessitate
additional monitoring, recordkeeping,
and reporting measures. In short, NMFS
could not accurately monitor EEZ
harvests and ensure the fishery
complies with all Magnuson-Stevens
Act requirements if vessels could move
between State and Federal waters on the
same day and land fish caught in both
jurisdictions.
As described in the response to
Comment 37, these prohibitions do
allow vessels to choose whether to fish
in State or Federal waters on each
calendar day. This allows vessels to
operate where catches are highest or
efficiency is maximized depending on
their port location or any other factor.
Also as described in the response to
Comment 37, NMFS did consider
management that would schedule the
Federal drift gillnet fishery on separate
days to alleviate the catch accounting
concern but chose not to implement this
approach due to significant uncertainty
about the total number of drift gillnet
fishing days in Cook Inlet that would
result in highly unpredictable effort and
catch.
NMFS acknowledges that there is not
a prohibition on recreational (sport)
salmon fishing in State and Federal
waters on the same day. As described in
section 4.5.2.2 of the Analysis, fewer
than 70 salmon per year are estimated
to be harvested by recreational salmon
fishing in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area.
Furthermore, recreational anglers are
not allowed to harvest additional
salmon by fishing in either or both
areas—the same bag limit applies in
State and Federal waters and anglers are
prohibited from catching or possessing
a bag limit for both State and Federal
waters on the same day. Therefore, there
is no identified management need to
prohibit recreational fishing in State and
Federal waters on the same calendar
day. If recreational salmon harvests in
the Cook Inlet EEZ Area increase in the
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future, the Council may recommend and
NMFS may choose to implement
additional restrictions on recreational
salmon fishing as needed.
Comment 32: If NMFS implemented
escapement-based management rather
than a TAC, then there would be no
need to prohibit vessels from fishing in
State and Federal waters in the same
trip.
Response: Escapement-based
management was considered during the
development of this action under
Alternative 2, which would have
delegated management authority to the
State. Delegated management under
Alternative 2 would not have included
a prohibition on fishing in both State
and Federal waters on the same
calendar day and provided for the
State’s use of their escapement-based
tools to achieve Federal reference
points. However, the State refused to
accept delegated management. The
response to Comment 21 describes why
escapement-based management as
currently conducted by the State could
not be implemented by this action.
Comment 33: Opening the whole EEZ
and drift gillnet Area 2 will spread out
the small drift gillnet fleet (less than 300
boats in recent years), reducing pressure
on returning non-sockeye stocks and
allowing maximum harvest of abundant
sockeye stocks.
Response: Under this final rule, the
entire Cook Inlet EEZ Area will be open
to drift gillnet salmon fishing during
established fishing periods. Because this
is similar to historical State
management of the Area, as described in
the response to Comment 25, NMFS
remains concerned about mixed-stock
harvests and impacts to less abundant
stocks and will manage salmon fishing
within the Cook Inlet EEZ to prevent
overfishing on all stocks through the use
of TACs and inseason information.
While there have been fewer
participants in recent years, this trend
could reverse and over 200 additional
latent permits could reenter the fishery,
which must be considered in this longterm management framework.
Drift gillnet Area 2 is entirely within
State waters and will continue to be
managed by the State and is outside the
scope of this action.
Federal Commercial Fishing Season and
Fishing Periods
Comment 34: Many commenters
expressed concern about the amount of
fishing that this action will allow
between July 15 and August 15, when
certain stocks are migrating north
through the Cook Inlet EEZ. Fishing by
the drift fleet in EEZ waters from July
16 through July 31 is highly impactful
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due to large catches and mixed stocks.
Commenters noted that currently the
drift gillnet fishery can only fish once
per week during this critical period for
migrating stocks and additional
openings from July 16 through July 31
are authorized only under certain
conditions and in limited areas.
Multiple regional tribes, Northern
district communities, and regional
sportfishing organizations
recommended that NMFS allow only
one EEZ opening per week between July
15 and July 31, or until the season
closure date. The State and one other
commenter proposed that NMFS close
the Cook Inlet EEZ to fishing after July
15.
Response: Upon reviewing the
significant public comment received
regarding the number of fishing periods
in the proposed rule for this action and
the importance of Cook Inlet salmon
resources to all salmon users throughout
Cook Inlet, NMFS agrees that it is
prudent for conservation of Cook Inlet
salmon stocks to reduce the number of
commercial fishery openings in the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area to one per week in
late July. The reason for this change is
discussed in detail above in the section
on changes from the proposed to final
rule and briefly summarized here.
In addition to establishing TACs that
are suitably precautionary in light of
uncertainty, the other primary means by
which NMFS prevents overfishing and
ensures all stocks are able to meet their
escapement goals is by managing the
amount and timing of scheduled fishing
periods. In this final rule, NMFS has
decided to decrease the number of
commercial fishing openings between
July 16 and July 31 from two to one per
week. This more closely aligns with the
number of openings under the status
quo and is responsive to the significant
public comments received on the
importance of this time period to
Northern Cook Inlet salmon stocks that
transit through the EEZ to spawning
grounds. From June 19 until July 15,
and from August 1 to August 15, there
will still be two drift gillnet fishery
openings per week, unless otherwise
closed. NMFS expects that when there
are high salmon abundances, and no
constraining stocks, this management
framework will allow for harvest of
TACs in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area.
Decreasing the number of fishing
periods in the second half of July may
also have other important conservation
and management benefits. First, it
allows for more even utilization of the
beginning, middle, and late returning
components of each salmon stock.
Second, it may decrease the risk of a
smaller TAC for one salmon species
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being reached and resulting in a closure
of the fishery before the larger, high
value sockeye salmon TAC can be fully
achieved. For example, while Chinook
salmon are not harvested in large
quantities by the drift gillnet fleet in the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area, declines in
Chinook salmon abundance have, in
some cases, entirely eliminated the
harvestable surplus of Chinook (i.e.,
escapement goals cannot be achieved
even if no fish are harvested). As a
result, the Chinook salmon TACs
established for the Cook Inlet EEZ Area
are likely to be relatively small.
Although very few Chinook have
historically been caught after August 1,
significant numbers have been caught in
the second half of July. Reducing fishing
time in the second half of July makes it
less likely that a Chinook TAC will be
reached, triggering a closure before the
sockeye salmon TAC has been
harvested.
As described in the preamble to the
proposed rule, NMFS considered but
rejected other management measures
that would provide fewer drift gillnet
fishing periods per week in the Cook
Inlet EEZ Area. NMFS determined that
allowing only one 12-hour drift gillnet
fishing period per week in the Cook
Inlet EEZ Area throughout the entire
season may not allow for adequate
harvest opportunities in the Cook Inlet
EEZ Area in years when salmon
abundances are higher. Similarly, a
fixed July 15 closure would be expected
to unnecessarily limit harvest in the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area to less than half of
its historical amount.
Comment 35: The State objected to
the drift gillnet fishing season ending on
August 15, as it stated that allowing
fishing in the Cook Inlet EEZ during the
August 1 to August 15 time period
conflicts with its 1 percent rule. Under
that State regulation, from August 1 to
August 15, if less than 1 percent of the
season’s total drift gillnet sockeye
salmon harvest has been taken per
fishing period for two consecutive
fishing periods in the drift gillnet
fishery, the fishery is restricted to the
west side of Upper Cook Inlet where the
fleet is less likely to catch salmon from
weak stocks or those needed to provide
a harvestable surplus to other users.
These area restrictions are also
implemented if the East Side Set Net
fishery is closed. The State stated that
the proposed closure date of August 15
rule is not based on conservation
objectives and fails to coordinate with
the existing Cook Inlet allocation
processes.
Response: NMFS chose not to
implement a regulation similar to the
State’s 1 percent rule for the Cook Inlet
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EEZ Area. NMFS expects that the season
closure date of August 15 combined
with the TAC will be sufficient to
address conservation and management
of coho salmon stocks in Cook Inlet. In
most Federal fisheries, a TAC-based
closure occurs before a season closure
date. NMFS does not anticipate that
drift gillnet fishing in the Cook Inlet
EEZ Area will be open through August
15 in all years. NMFS will close the
fishery when necessary to prevent
exceeding a TAC. However, in years
when salmon abundance supports
higher TACs, two fishery openings per
week for all of the season besides July
16–July 31 is expected to provide
sufficient opportunities to harvest the
available TAC by August 15 without
creating conservation concerns for
stocks of lower abundance.
Comment 36: Consider opening drift
gillnet fishing in the Cook Inlet EEZ and
Area 2 for two or three 12-hour periods
a week. When the Kenai River reaches
the lower end of the sockeye
escapement goal, the commercial fleet
should get additional openers to
maximize harvest to protect the river
from overescapement.
Response: As described in the
preamble to the proposed rule and
above, NMFS carefully considered the
number of weekly commercial drift
gillnet fishing periods. As described in
the response to Comment 2,
management of the Cook Inlet EEZ Area
must balance utilization of abundant
salmon stocks with protecting less
abundant stocks from overfishing and
ensuring stocks important to users other
than the drift gillnet fleet continue to
meet their escapement goals. While two
12-hour openings per week was
proposed by NMFS, public commenters
identified significant potential
conservation concerns associated with
increasing Cook Inlet EEZ Area
commercial fishing time from the status
quo. Opening the Cook Inlet EEZ Area
to commercial fishing for three 12-hour
periods per week would represent a
major increase in fishing time and could
significantly exacerbate the
conservation concerns identified in this
final rule. Kenai sockeye salmon
reaching their escapement goal does not
provide information to managers that
other salmon stocks (e.g., other sockeye,
coho, and Chinook salmon) can also
support additional harvest at that time.
There are also potential procedural
challenges associated with significant
inseason changes or adjustments.
Sections 2.5.2.6 and 2.5.13 of the
Analysis detail the constraints of the
harvest specifications (i.e., the TAC
amounts) that it must publish prior to
the fishing season. If there are
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unexpectedly large salmon returns,
fishing may continue for the remaining
days for the season until any TAC
amount is reached. If a TAC amount is
reached and the fishery closes, but the
best scientific information available
indicates there is still a harvestable
surplus, NMFS may adjust the TAC and
reopen the fishery until August 15, or
the revised TAC amount(s) is reached,
whichever comes first. In addition, the
Federal reference points established by
this action and required by the
Magnuson-Stevens Act are not directly
equivalent to State escapement goals.
Drift gillnet Area 2 is entirely within
State waters and will continue to be
managed by the State and is outside the
scope of this action.
Comment 37: Do not conduct Federal
openings on the exact same schedule as
State openings. Combining the two on
the same day will result in nothing more
than lost opportunity and inefficiency of
effort and cost.
Response: This final rule at
§ 679.118(e) provides that the Cook Inlet
EEZ will be open to drift gillnet fishing
for two, 12-hour periods each week,
from 7 a.m. Monday until 7 p.m.
Monday, and from 7 a.m. Thursday
until 7 p.m. Thursday from the later of
the third Monday in June or June 19
until July 15, and from August 1 to
August 15, and one, 12-hour fishing
period on Thursdays from July 16 to
July 31, until either (1) the TAC is
reached, or (2) August 15, whichever
comes first.
As discussed in the proposed rule and
sections 2.5.9 and 4.8 of the Analysis,
NMFS considered whether to open the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area to drift gillnet
fishing on different days than when
State waters are open. NMFS chose to
open the Cook Inlet EEZ Area on the
same days to avoid unpredictable
impacts to Cook Inlet salmon stocks, as
additional days of fishing in a week
would put additional pressure on stocks
of lower abundance, allowing those
stocks less opportunity to pass through
the EEZ with sufficient abundance to
both meet escapement goals and provide
a harvestable surplus to all other users.
If the EEZ were open on days when
adjacent State waters were closed, and
the State maintained its existing
management plan, it is likely there
would be a significantly increased
number of total drift gillnet fishing days
in upper Cook Inlet. This would
increase the likelihood of harvests that
are too high (the drift gillnet fleet has
the potential to harvest over 300,000
salmon per opening) and it may not be
possible to mitigate the impacts of
additional fishing days each week in
Cook Inlet, even with severe restrictions
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or closures of later occurring fishery
sectors. Further, to achieve OY while
preventing overfishing in salmon
fisheries, an important consideration is
balancing harvest and escapement over
the period salmon are returning.
Providing regular periods when fishing
is closed allows early, middle, and late
returning components of each salmon
stock to move up Cook Inlet to their
natal spawning streams. By largely
maintaining the existing fishing
schedule, these migratory periods where
fishing is closed—and which have
largely been successful in allowing
Northern District stocks to meet their
escapement goals—are maintained.
Fishery participants may select
whether to fish in State or Federal
waters each day to maximize their
harvest opportunities as salmon stocks
move up Cook Inlet. NMFS
acknowledges that, within a single
fishing day, this may decrease efficiency
and increase costs during times when
salmon abundance may be
unpredictably concentrated on the
State/EEZ boundary. Across years, there
is a high level of variability in the
spatial and temporal distributions of
salmon stocks migrating through Cook
Inlet waters, including the Cook Inlet
EEZ Area, due to changes in wind, tide,
water temperature, and other factors.
Therefore, it is very difficult to predict
with accuracy any change in efficiency
that may result from this rule.
Comment 38: Several drift gillnet
stakeholders requested that the
commercial fishing season start several
weeks early (June 1) and finish later
(September 15) to increase harvests of
all salmon species, including pink and
chum salmon.
Response: As described in the
preamble to the proposed rule,
historically drift gillnet fishing in Cook
Inlet has not occurred prior to the third
week in June as sockeye, coho, chum,
and pink salmon are not present in
commercially significant quantities in
the Cook Inlet EEZ. The start date is
based on this history of commercial
fishing in the EEZ area. Further, as
discussed in the preamble to the
proposed rule, NMFS has concerns
about additional impacts from the drift
gillnet fleet to Chinook salmon that are
present in the Cook Inlet EEZ before
June 19. Opening after mid-June helps
avoid potential additional impacts to
early-run Cook Inlet Chinook salmon
stocks. These stocks migrate through
upper Cook Inlet in May and early June.
For these reasons, NMFS did not choose
to open drift gillnet fishing within the
Cook Inlet EEZ prior to the third week
in June.
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NMFS has concerns that additional
fishing time after August 15 could result
in disproportionate impacts to coho
salmon stocks in Cook Inlet. Fishing in
the Cook Inlet EEZ after August 15
would be expected to primarily increase
harvests of this species. Based on recent
indices of spawning escapements,
additional harvests of coho salmon may
result in a failure to achieve spawning
escapement goals. The EEZ is relatively
far from Northern District streams and
associated weirs where escapements are
monitored. As such, fishery openings
targeting coho salmon (which have an
elevated conservation concern) in the
EEZ carry the largest risk in terms of
potential harvest on Northern District
stocks prior to information about the
achievement of spawning escapement
goals. In contrast, State waters are closer
to natal streams and can be prosecuted
more precisely on target stocks and
during a time when escapement data is
more likely to be available since there
is significantly less travel time between
the State fishery and weirs. This action
does not modify management of State
waters, and it is expected that the
majority of coho salmon harvests, which
occur in State waters after August 15,
will be unaffected by this action.
NMFS disagrees that closing the
fishery later than August 15 would
increase pink and chum salmon
harvests. Historically, by August 15,
over 99 percent of the average Chinook,
sockeye, pink, and chum salmon harvest
has been completed in both State and
EEZ waters as those salmon species
have largely moved through Cook Inlet
EEZ waters and up into Cook Inlet State
marine and fresh waters by that time
(section 4.5.1.2.1. of the Analysis).
Therefore, additional Cook Inlet EEZ
Area fishing time after August 15 would
be expected to impact only coho
salmon, for which there are
conservation concerns.
Comment 39: With amendment 16,
NMFS’s inseason management authority
to close the fishery should be based on
best available science and salmon
escapement goals. NMFS needs more
access to funding and resources to carry
out these goals.
Response: NMFS will use the best
scientific information available when
making any inseason management
decisions. NMFS will consider all
sources of information when
determining what constitutes the best
scientific information available.
However, for the reasons explained in
Comment 23, NMFS inseason
management decisions are based on
TACs. NMFS will consider the
escapement goals and the best scientific
information available regarding
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projected run sizes for an upcoming
fishing season during the stock
assessment and harvest specifications
process. The SSC and NMFS will
account for scientific uncertainty in
these projections when setting ABC, and
the Council and NMFS will also
consider management uncertainty in
recommending and establishing TACs.
Inseason closures before the end of the
season are most likely to be based on
information suggesting an additional
opener would result in exceeding a TAC
for any species or could result in
overfishing of any stock. NMFS will
consider available spawning abundance
information inseason (i.e., progress
toward meeting escapement goals) to
ensure the abundance assumptions
underlying the TACs are appropriate
and will identify any potentially needed
management changes.
NMFS will strive to make timely and
efficient inseason management
decisions, consistent with the APA,
Federal regulations, and other
applicable law. NMFS will work to
build capacity and resources for salmon
management in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area
over time, however NMFS has
determined that it can successfully
implement amendment 16 at this time.
Comment 40: Pacific salmon evolved
into the species we know today. Today,
various stocks of salmon are considered
threatened or endangered under the
Endangered Species Act (ESA).
Originally, indigenous people
developed a social custom that delayed
the start of salmon fishing and allowed
salmon to reach their spawning grounds
and complete their lifecycle, and this
has been continued by government
regulators. Flexibility in the opening
and closing dates is needed to account
for variations in run timing and
migration patterns, especially under
climate change, to avoid adversely
affecting sport and subsistence fishers.
The proposed new date of the third (or
possibly fourth) Monday in June allows
more flexibility.
Response: NMFS recognizes the
evolution of conservation and
management measures for salmon stocks
as jurisdictions have changed over time.
No salmon stocks spawning in Alaska
are listed under the ESA. As described
in the response to Comment 38, NMFS
established the fixed season start and
end dates to maintain historical harvest
patterns and avoid adverse impacts to
non-target salmon stocks within the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area. However, NMFS
does agree that flexibility is important to
account for variations and contingencies
and expects that the TACs and
associated inseason actions will ensure
that harvest is adjusted to the specific
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conditions experienced during each
fishing season to provide harvest
opportunity and prevent overfishing,
within the established commercial
fishery season dates (approximately
June 19 to August 15). NMFS may close
and reopen fishing during the season to
account for run conditions.
Comment 41: The season ending date
needs to reflect the size of the return,
which is not known until the very end
of a salmon run or shortly thereafter.
Response: NMFS acknowledges that
the realized run size of a stock is not
fully known until the end of the fishing
season, but has selected a fixed season
closure date that falls after nearly all
EEZ harvest has historically taken place
and avoids potential new impacts on
coho stocks of lower abundance.
However, NMFS will use its inseason
management authorities specified at
§ 679.25 to adjust the closure of the
fishery based on TAC or other scientific
information each year—up to August
15—including available indices of
abundance (e.g., test fishery data and
spawning escapements).
Monitoring, Recordkeeping, and
Reporting Requirements
Comment 42: ADF&G supports the
monitoring, recordkeeping, reporting,
legal gear, and prohibitions proposed for
the commercial salmon fishery in the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area. These
requirements are necessary to minimize
conflicts between fisheries in State and
Federal waters, ensure accurate catch
accounting, and facilitate enforcement
of Federal regulations. The proposed
prohibitions on fishing in both State and
EEZ waters on the same day and having
on board or delivering fish harvested in
both State and EEZ waters are
particularly important to meeting these
objectives and the State supports
including them in the final rule. We also
support the proposed prohibitions on
landing or otherwise transferring
salmon that is caught within the Cook
Inlet EEZ Area in the EEZ to ensure that
harvesting vessels delivering to a tender
vessel do so within State waters.
Response: NMFS acknowledges the
support for these fishery management
measures. NMFS agrees that the
measures in this final rule are necessary
to minimize conflicts between fisheries
in State and Federal waters, ensure
accurate catch accounting, and facilitate
enforcement of Federal regulations.
Comment 43: ADF&G supports the
proposed monitoring requirements to
enforce the prohibitions on drift gillnet
fishing in State and Federal waters on
the same day, including requirements
for commercial salmon fishing vessels
in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area to operate a
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VMS and complete a Federal logbook.
NMFS may wish to consider onboard
monitoring requirements such as
electronic monitoring or observers to
ensure adequate total catch accounting.
Response: NMFS acknowledges the
support for the VMS and Federal
logbook management measures
described in the proposed rule and
required by this final rule. As discussed
in sections 2.5.6 and 4.7.2.2 of the
Analysis, NMFS considered but did not
require electronic monitoring or
observers due to high costs and limited
additional management utility beyond
the measures contained in this final
rule.
Comment 44: NMFS received
comments that a VMS requirement is
not necessary. These comments
indicated that the drift gillnet fishery
has minimal or no bycatch of marine
mammals, sea birds, or protected fish
stocks; there are no closed economic
zones nearby; and that there is no VMS
requirement in salmon fisheries in the
East and West Areas of the EEZ, where
ADF&G reporting requirements are
deemed sufficient. Commenters also
asserted that NMFS did not provide a
legitimate or sufficient justification for
the VMS requirement. Several
commenters also said that they felt
NMFS was imposing it as a punishment.
One commenter asked if other forms of
electronic monitoring are required.
Commenters also noted that the VMS
devices cost 3,000 dollars, which can be
a significant portion of their gross
earnings in seasons when there is a
declared fishery disaster, and require
additional monthly fees to operate.
Response: The final rule at
§ 679.117(b)(1)(xiv) prohibits a vessel
named, or required to be named, on an
SFFP from operating in the waters of
Cook Inlet with drift gillnet gear on
board any day the Cook Inlet EEZ Area
is open to commercial salmon fishing
without a functioning VMS as described
in § 679.28(f). Regulations at
§ 679.28(f)(6)(x) requires a vessel
named, or required to be named, on an
SFFP issued under § 679.114 to use
VMS when operating in the waters of
Cook Inlet with drift gillnet gear on
board on any calendar day the Cook
Inlet EEZ Area is open to commercial
salmon fishing. NMFS has determined
that use of a VMS is necessary to
effectively and efficiently manage the
fishery. A VMS requirement is not
punitive, it is not based on assumed
bycatch of protected species nor
intended to reduce bycatch, and NMFS
disagrees that there are no closed fishing
areas adjacent to the Cook Inlet EEZ
Area. NMFS relies on VMS for most
Federal fisheries off Alaska, particularly
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when fishing vessels must comply with
area restrictions. Vessels drift gillnet
fishing for salmon in the Cook Inlet EEZ
Area are prohibited from fishing in the
adjacent EEZ waters south of the
Anchor Point line at all times and, on
the same calendar day, in the State
waters directly adjacent to the eastern,
western, and northern boundaries of the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area. As stated above,
for the purposes of catch accounting and
enforcement it is critical for NMFS to
understand where a vessel has been
fishing—in State or Federal waters. Drift
gillnet vessels that are fishing for
salmon in the Cook Inlet EEZ are
therefore subject to closed areas, and
VMS is a standard technology used to
monitor compliance with these
regulations.
NMFS acknowledges that VMS is not
a requirement in the East Area
commercial troll salmon fishery.
However, management of the East Area
is delegated to the State, which allows
fishing to occur seamlessly across the
EEZ boundary. The State has wellestablished monitoring and enforcement
infrastructure as well as other
regulations to manage the fishery
without the use of VMS. Similarly, the
delegated management approach
proposed for the Cook Inlet EEZ Area
under Alternative 2 (section 2.4.8.1 the
Analysis) was not expected to include a
VMS requirement given the State’s
existing management tools and
expertise. However, the State would not
accept delegated management authority,
and therefore under this final rule VMS
is needed to enforce the prohibition
against harvesting salmon in both State
and Federal waters on the same
calendar day.
As described in sections 2.5.6 and
4.7.2.2 of the Analysis, NMFS
considered but chose not to require
more costly onboard observers or
electronic monitoring camera systems in
this fishery. Therefore, VMS data and
logbooks are necessary to ensure
accuracy of reported fishing effort, catch
accounting, and compliance with
regulations. Critically, NMFS managers
will depend on VMS to determine the
effort and projected catch in order to
inform management decisions.
Furthermore, without VMS, NOAA
Fisheries Office of Law Enforcement
would have to rely exclusively on
resource-intensive patrols by air and
sea; methods that are not as consistent
as VMS in verifying that no fishing is
occurring in closed waters and
confirming fleet-wide reported fishing
effort information.
Vessel owners will be responsible for
the cost of obtaining and operating a
VMS. As discussed in section 4.7.2.2.7
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of the Analysis, NMFS estimates the
cost of purchasing a compliant VMS
unit at 3,100 dollars. One-time
installation and tax costs are estimated
at 888 dollars. Annual service and
maintenance is estimated at 206 dollars.
NMFS acknowledges that these
requirements place additional burden
on fishermen. However, Federal funds
may be available to qualified vessel
owners or operators for complete
reimbursement of the cost of purchasing
type-approved VMS units, which could
offset over 75 percent of the total
purchase and installation cost for
fishery participants.
To facilitate compliance with the
VMS requirement, NMFS has provided
information on obtaining VMS and
opportunities for reimbursement within
the small entity compliance guide
published with this final rule. Beyond
VMS, this final rule does not require
other electronic monitoring for vessels
commercially fishing for salmon in the
Cook Inlet EEZ.
Comment 45: VMS devices impose a
significant privacy cost, requiring vessel
owners to transmit their exact location
to NMFS every hour of every day,
regardless of why they are using their
vessel.
Response: NMFS disagrees. VMS use
would be required when operating a
vessel named, or required to be named,
on an SFFP in the waters of Cook Inlet
with drift gillnet gear on board, and
only on days when the Cook Inlet EEZ
Area is open to commercial salmon
fishing. When a vessel is operated
outside the waters of Cook Inlet, the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area is closed, or no
drift gillnet gear is onboard the vessel,
the VMS unit would not be required to
be activated and transmitting. VMS data
are collected for many Federal fisheries.
Section 402(a)(2) of the MagnusonStevens Act authorizes the collection of
data necessary for the efficient
management of fisheries but provides
for restrictions on the release of that
data beyond NMFS. VMS collects vessel
location information in near real time
that it uses to ensure efficient
management and compliance with
regulations. VMS data collected for law
enforcement purposes is considered
confidential under sections
311(b)(1)(a)(vi) and 402 of the
Magnuson-Stevens Act. Federal
regulations at § 679.28(f)(3)(v) provide
that vessel owners participating in a
fishery that requires a VMS must make
the VMS transmitter available to ‘‘NMFS
personnel, observers, or an authorized
officer.’’ Federal regulations at
§ 600.1509(b) limit the circumstances
under which personally identifying
information, including business
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identifiable information, can be
disclosed beyond authorized entities,
such as NMFS. NMFS does not release
confidential data to the public unless
directed by a court order. If NMFS uses
VMS data in publications, it is
aggregated to prevent release of
confidential information.
Comment 46: Will the drift gillnet
fishery participants be required to
maintain a digital logbook?
Response: This final rule does not
require a digital logbook. Under
regulations at § 679.115, this action
requires vessel operators to complete
and submit logbooks in paper or
electronic format. NMFS will make
logbook sheets available to participants
at no cost.
Comment 47: The proposed rule
appears to allow new participants into
the commercial fishery by requiring
only a Federal fisheries permit and
provides no explanation or justification
for doing so. Commercial fishing for
salmon in Federal and State waters in
Cook Inlet has been restricted to State
CFEC limited entry permit holders since
1974. If the permitting requirements
under this action allow new participants
by no longer requiring a CFEC permit,
that will significantly devalue the CFEC
permits held by existing participants. If
NMFS is not opening the fishery up to
new participants, it must clarify the
ambiguity in the proposed rule in
response to this comment.
Response: This action does not
modify the State requirements related to
CFEC permits. As described in section
2.5.6 of the Analysis, NMFS issues
Federal permits authorizing
participation in Federal fisheries and
allowing for implementation of Federal
monitoring, recordkeeping, and
reporting requirements in order to
manage fisheries. This final rule at
§ 679.114(b)(1) requires vessel owners or
operators to obtain a SFFP to
commercially fish for salmon in the
Cook Inlet EEZ. NMFS will issue SFFPs
free of charge. A SFFP is not a Federal
limited entry permit. As described in
section 2.5.15 of the Analysis, a Federal
limited entry program was considered
but not selected.
Although the SFFP is not a limited
entry permit, vessels that land salmon
from the Cook Inlet EEZ in Alaska must
also comply with all applicable State
requirements, which include the
requirement to have the appropriate
State CFEC permit, which is a limited
entry permit. Because landing or
transferring fish in the EEZ is
prohibited, and there are significant
logistical constraints to landing salmon
outside of Alaska, NMFS anticipates
that all participating vessels will land
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their fish within the State of Alaska
where they would be required to have
State CFEC S03H limited entry permits.
This will help ensure that historical
participants in the fishery are not
displaced or disrupted by new entrants
and avoid negative impacts to CFEC
permit values.
As described in section 2.5.15 of the
Analysis, in the future the Council may
consider whether it is necessary to
recommend an FMP amendment to limit
entry in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area.
Comment 48: Can a vessel registered
in a separate Alaska gillnet area (e.g., a
vessel fishing in Bristol Bay state
waters) participate in the Federal Cook
Inlet fishery?
Response: No, as explained in
response to Comment 47, in order to use
drift gillnet gear in the Cook Inlet EEZ
Area, participants are required to have
a SFFP. State CFEC permit requirements
fall under the purview of the State and
are not modified by this final rule.
NMFS anticipates that a CFEC S03H
permit for Cook Inlet drift gillnet would
continue to be required to land fish
caught using drift gillnet gear in the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area in Alaska.
Participants should consult the
applicable State of Alaska regulations
for a definitive answer regarding
landing requirements.
Comment 49: The State supports
maintaining the requirement for drift
gillnet vessels in the EEZ to have the
appropriate CFEC permit(s) to land
salmon or other species caught in the
EEZ within the State or enter State
waters.
Response: NMFS acknowledges this
comment. This final rule does not
modify any State requirements for
landing salmon or other species caught
in the EEZ within the State or transiting
through State waters with drift gillnet
gear on board.
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Other Commercial Salmon Fishing
Management Measures and Prohibitions
Comment 50: The State supports the
proposed legal gear definition for drift
gillnet fishing of a net no longer than
200 fathoms (365.76 m) in length, 45
meshes deep, and maximum mesh size
of no greater than 6 inches (15.24 cm).
The proposed definition is consistent
with State regulations and would help
maintain consistency with recent
fishery operations in terms of effort and
selectivity and enable managers to
estimate projected catches in the fishery
more effectively.
Response: NMFS acknowledges this
comment.
Comment 51: Are the net length
requirements the same as State waters or
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can a single permit fish 200 fathoms
(365.76 m) in Federal waters?
Response: This final rule at
§ 679.118(f)(1) limits the length of drift
gillnet gear in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area
to a maximum length of 200 fathoms
(365.76 m) for all participants. Fishery
participants should consult State of
Alaska regulations when determining
what amount of gear is allowable when
transiting State waters and landing
salmon in Alaska with the CFEC
permit(s) they hold.
Comment 52: One commenter stated
that no more than 150 fathoms (274.32
m) of gillnet gear per permit should be
allowable. Another suggested that
NMFS impose the same State of Alaska
CFEC rules regarding permits (i.e., allow
150 fathoms (274.32 m) for 1 CFEC
permit, and 200 fathoms (365.76 m) for
2 CFEC permits).
Response: NMFS disagrees with these
recommendations. As described in
section 4.5.1.2.1 of the Analysis, up to
200 fathoms (365.76 m) of drift gillnet
gear may be used by participants who
are drift gillnet fishing in the Cook Inlet
EEZ Area. NMFS does not anticipate
this final rule will increase the
allowable length of gear and result in
increased harvests in the Cook Inlet EEZ
Area, as State restrictions on the amount
of gear a vessel can have on board will
still apply when transiting through State
waters following a fishing trip in the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area.
Fishery participants should consult
State of Alaska regulations to determine
the amount of fishing gear they are
allowed to have on board while
transiting through State waters and
landing salmon in Alaska.
Recreational Fishing
Comment 53: The State supports the
proposed management measures for
recreational anglers in the EEZ,
including requirements for allowable
gear, processing harvested salmon and
reporting harvest. The proposed rule
would establish bag and possession
limits in Federal regulations consistent
with current State regulations; however,
we note that State regulations could
change in the future and result in
different regulations for anglers
harvesting salmon in State waters and
the EEZ.
Response: NMFS acknowledges this
comment.
National Standard 2
Comment 54: NMFS failed to use the
best scientific information, as required
by National Standard 2. One example of
this is the data used to calculate a
potential TAC, as it is unknown what
percent of fish have been harvested in
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the EEZ. ‘‘Best guess’’ data should not
be used.
Similarly, NMFS relied on State catch
records, but those may be skewed by 20
percent or more due to the history of
overescapement and pulling the in-river
fish counters prior to the end of the later
runs. The one good historical reference
is the Offshore Test Fishery, which
should be used in the analysis and to set
TACs. Previous years run data cannot be
considered reliable because Cook Inlet
has not been properly managed for
many years which has resulted in
overescapement and stock declines.
Consider modifying the historical
percent of drift gillnet harvests
attributed to the Cook Inlet EEZ to 65
percent.
Response: NMFS disagrees that the
management measures implemented by
amendment 16 and this final rule rely
on information that is inconsistent with
National Standard 2. National Standard
2 provides that conservation and
management measures shall be based
upon the best scientific information
available. NMFS considered and
weighed all of the information available
in making the decisions, including
public testimony, to develop and
approve amendment 16, respectively.
NMFS used the best scientific
information to inform the Analysis,
which includes comprehensive fish
ticket data including locale codes.
Previously, data regarding harvests,
landings, and statistical areas in Upper
Cook Inlet did not differentiate between
State and Federal waters. Therefore,
NMFS had to develop a methodology to
estimate historic salmon harvest in the
Cook Inlet EEZ. The methodology used
to develop EEZ harvest estimates for the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area is presented in
section 4.5.1.2.3 of the Analysis, along
with a description of the associated
uncertainties. This method and the
results were reviewed and approved by
the SSC, which agreed that the Analysis
and harvest specification process relies
on the best scientific information
available. NMFS received no comments
providing additional data to estimate
EEZ harvest and no suggested alternate
methodologies and cannot arbitrarily
increase the attribution of historical
harvest to the EEZ in the absence of any
supporting data. Therefore, NMFS
determined that the estimates presented
in the Analysis constitute the best
scientific information available.
However, this action establishes a
fishery management framework that is
adaptive, and is expected to improve the
scientific information available for
management of Cook Inlet salmon
stocks over time. Once amendment 16 is
implemented, NMFS will collect the
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landings information needed to directly
and precisely determine EEZ harvests.
NMFS will review the information
available to manage Cook Inlet salmon
stocks each year, including any data
gaps and uncertainties. As actual data is
collected on harvest in this new fishery,
NMFS will include that information in
the ongoing assessment of what
constitutes best scientific information
available at that time, reviewed by the
SSC, to establish harvest specifications
and manage the Cook Inlet EEZ Area.
NMFS agrees that the offshore test
fishery may be a useful source of
information for management of the Cook
Inlet EEZ salmon fishery, but disagrees
that it should have relied on it. The
offshore test fishery provides
standardized CPUE information.
However, as described in the response
to Comment 29 and in section 2.4.4 of
the Analysis, CPUE data could not
provide sufficient information to
evaluate salmon abundance and
determine whether catches exceed a
level that could cause overfishing.
National Standard 3
Comment 55: Defining fishing as
limited to the Cook Inlet EEZ violates
National Standard 3. NMFS’s definition
of the fishery fails to manage salmon
stocks as a unit throughout their range.
Splitting the fishery into a Federal and
State fishery makes the Federal fishery
subordinate to the State fishery because
the State fishery will continue
overescapement. If there are harvestable
surpluses, waiting to find out via the
State fishery will mean the EEZ fishery
will be compromised by State
management.
Response: As explained in greater
detail in the proposed rule, NMFS has
determined that amendment 16 is
consistent with National Standard 3. As
set forth under section 301 of the
Magnuson Stevens Act, National
Standard 3 provides that, to the extent
practicable, an individual stock of fish
shall be managed as a unit throughout
its range, and interrelated stocks of fish
shall be managed as a unit or in close
coordination.
The key term here is ‘‘practicable.’’ It
is not practicable for NMFS to manage
salmon stocks into State waters where
NMFS has no management jurisdiction,
and, thus, NMFS has designed
management measures that allow it to
manage stocks of salmon as a unit
throughout the portion of their range
under NMFS’s authority, grouping
interrelated stocks of salmon together
because vessels cannot target individual
stocks in the EEZ. Amendment 16 will
allow NMFS to manage to optimum
levels of EEZ harvest while preventing
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overfishing, but NMFS cannot rely on
National Standard 3 as a basis to assert
management authority over State
waters.
Furthermore, the National Standard 3
guidelines explain how to structure
appropriate management units for
stocks and stock complexes (§ 600.320).
These guidelines state that the purpose
of National Standard 3 is to induce a
comprehensive approach to fishery
management (§ 600.320(b)). The
guidelines define management unit as a
fishery or that portion of a fishery
identified in an FMP as relevant to the
FMP’s management objectives and state
that the choice of a management unit
depends on the focus of the FMP’s
objectives and may be organized around
biological, geographic, economic,
technical, social, or ecological
perspectives (§ 600.320(d)). As
discussed above, in defining the fishery,
NMFS primarily focused on cooccurring salmon stocks harvested
within the Cook Inlet EEZ Area, as that
geographic area defines the routine
limits of NMFS’s management
jurisdiction.
There are unique technical,
ecological, and economic features of
salmon fishing in the Cook Inlet EEZ
Area that further support limiting the
management unit to the Cook Inlet EEZ.
As described in the preamble to the
proposed rule, drift gillnet gear captures
all salmon in an area, and an entangled
salmon cannot be released without an
extremely high mortality rate. Further,
in EEZ waters, salmon stocks are highly
mixed, and catch in the EEZ includes
both the Kenai and Kasilof stocks of
sockeye salmon that are currently highly
abundant, as well as much less
abundant Northern District salmon
stocks. In contrast, in nearshore waters,
individual salmon stocks can be
targeted by fishing adjacent to the river
a specific salmon stock is returning to.
This is not possible in EEZ waters. In
other words, the EEZ is ecologically
unique compared to near-shore waters
due to the highly mixed stock nature of
the fishery, with varying abundances
and compositions of the stocks caught.
The stocks that are mixed in the EEZ
may be more discretely targeted in State
waters management districts. Therefore,
salmon fishery management in the EEZ
requires an approach that ensures the
stocks of lowest abundance are not
overharvested before they reach their
natal streams. The Cook Inlet EEZ Area
is also economically unique because the
drift gillnet fleet has exclusive use of the
area for commercial salmon fishing.
Within State waters, there are multiple
commercial and non-commercial fishery
sectors operating to selectively target
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specific individual stocks to the extent
practicable, with management measures
in place to limit catch and mortality on
stocks at risk of overfishing.
Federal management of the Cook Inlet
EEZ Area under amendment 16 achieves
National Standard 3 objectives through
coordination with the State to the extent
practicable before, during, and after
each fishing season, as described in the
harvest specifications and annual
processes section of this preamble. This
includes reviewing the available
scientific information for management
of Cook Inlet salmon stocks held by the
State, as well as other sources, and
estimating what harvests are expected in
State waters to inform harvest limits for
the Cook Inlet EEZ Area that are
designed to prevent overfishing on all
Cook Inlet salmon stocks. NMFS and the
Council will evaluate both where
harvest of salmon stocks may be
constrained by the presence of stocks of
low abundance and where there may be
opportunities to harvest additional
salmon that would not otherwise be
utilized. NMFS will provide data on
early EEZ catches to the State to inform
run strength forecasts for management
of all other upper Cook Inlet salmon
fisheries.
National Standard 4
Comment 56: This action
discriminates against Cook Inlet
commercial fishers. Amendment 16
violates National Standard 4 as it does
not allocate fishing privileges in a way
that is fair and equitable. It places a
TAC on one group of harvesters (the
drift gillnet fleet) in one area (the EEZ),
without a similar requirement on any
other group. This can severely affect the
economic viability of the drift gillnet
fleet if the TAC is set incorrectly, and
the drift gillnet fleet is precluded from
harvesting the excess salmon. In
addition, requiring a VMS system to
commercial fish in Federal waters is not
equitable as there is no similar
requirement for the recreational fishery
sector, or any VMS requirement for
vessels fishing salmon in the East Area.
Response: NMFS disagrees that
amendment 16 is inconsistent with
National Standard 4, or that it allocates
harvest in a manner that is not fair and
equitable to the drift gillnet fleet. As set
forth under section 301 of the Magnuson
Stevens Act, National Standard 4
provides that conservation and
management measures shall not
discriminate between residents of
different states. This final rule does not
in any way discriminate between
residents of different states. National
Standard 4 further provides that, if it
becomes necessary to allocate or assign
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fishing privileges among various United
States fishermen, such allocation shall
be (1) fair and equitable to all such
fishermen; (2) reasonably calculated to
promote conservation; and (3) carried
out in such manner that no particular
individual, corporation, or other entity
acquires an excessive share of such
privilege.
To start, this action allocates all
commercial fishing privileges in the
Cook Inlet EEZ to the drift gillnet fleet—
NMFS cannot conclude that an
allocation made to a single sector is not
fair and equitable for that sector. No
other commercial sector is subject to a
TAC because no other commercial
sector is permitted to fish in the EEZ at
all. The drift gillnet fleet has historically
harvested over 99.99 percent of the
salmon caught in the Cook Inlet EEZ.
The recreational fishery sector in the
Cook Inlet EEZ harvests the remaining
amount, an estimated average of 66 fish
per year. This action is expected to
maintain the harvest range of both
sectors in the EEZ and does not allocate
any harvest away from the drift gillnet
fleet.
Although allocations must be fair and
equitable and reasonably calculated to
promote conservation, not all
management measures required by the
Magnuson-Stevens Act are subject to the
same analysis. Neither the use of TACs
to manage fishery effort nor the
requirement to install VMS are
allocations. The Magnuson-Stevens Act
requires ACLs for fisheries managed
under the Magnuson-Stevens Act, and
TACs are how NMFS implements ACLs.
And because fishing will take place
adjacent to multiple closed areas, VMS
is needed to enforce and monitor time
and area closures. But even if NMFS
were required to show that TACs or
VMS requirements were fair and
equitable to the drift gillnet fleet when
compared to regulations that apply to
the only other authorized sector in the
EEZ, the recreational sector, it easily
meets that burden here. Because the
recreational sector catches under 100
fish per year in the EEZ and because
recreational anglers are prohibited from
possessing or landing the bag limit for
both State and Federal waters on the
same day—and thus there is no way that
sector could increase its harvest
opportunities compared to the status
quo—neither a TAC nor VMS is needed
to control recreational harvest or enforce
rules for recreational fishermen.
The rationale for requiring VMS for
commercial salmon fishing vessels in
the Cook Inlet EEZ Area but not the East
Area is described in the response to
Comment 44.
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If harvests by the recreational fishery
sector increase, then NMFS may
implement monitoring, recordkeeping,
or reporting measures. For the time
being, on-the-water and dockside
enforcement of the recreational fishery
sector is sufficient because the same bag
limits apply across State and Federal
waters for a single calendar day.
The allocation decisions referenced in
National Standard 4 do not apply to
decisions made by other management
authorities that govern fishing outside of
the Cook Inlet EEZ.
Comment 57: The proposed TAC does
not address priority use for Federal
Subsistence.
Response: Although it is unclear from
the comment what the commenter
means by ‘‘Federal Subsistence,’’ NMFS
acknowledges that, in Alaska,
subsistence taking of fish and wildlife is
regulated by Federal law under Title
VIII of the Alaska National Interests
Land Conservation Act (ANILCA),
which accords a priority for taking of
fish and wildlife for subsistence uses
over recreational/sport and commercial
users on Federal public lands in Alaska
(16 U.S.C. 3102, 3114). However, here
NMFS is managing the Cook Inlet EEZ
Area (i.e., Federal marine waters)
pursuant to the Magnuson-Stevens Act,
and therefore Title VIII of ANILCA does
not apply to this action regulating
Federal marine waters in the Cook Inlet
EEZ. The Magnuson-Stevens Act does
not have a subsistence priority for
fisheries in the EEZ.
Comment 58: Multiple commenters,
including municipalities, trade
associations, and fishing guides located
in the Matanuska-Susitna Valley
indicated that stable and predictable
salmon fishing opportunities for all
commercial and non-commercial users
have both provided food security and an
economic base for the region
(communities of Palmer, Wasilla, Knik,
Houston, Willow, Skwentna, Talkeetna,
and Trapper Creek). These commenters
cited several economic studies, which
concluded that a broad base of fishing
activities and fishing activities with
conservative regulations, limits, and
harvest opportunities (e.g., recreational
and subsistence) generate considerable
economic benefit for each fish
harvested.
Response: NMFS acknowledges the
importance of salmon to fishermen and
communities in Northern Cook Inlet,
and when there are declines in salmon
abundance, it results in adverse
economic impacts. For discussion of the
potential economic impacts on
communities from this action, see
sections 4.7.1.3 to 4.7.1.4 of the
Analysis.
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Comment 59: Several commenters felt
this action would increase Cook Inlet
EEZ Area salmon harvests, which would
require the State to implement more
restrictive fishery management
measures for the Northern District
commercial and non-commercial
fisheries and may cause overfishing of
weak stocks, such as the Susitna
sockeye stock and the coho stock. By
increasing commercial harvest, this
action will exacerbate the inequity
between the drift gillnet fleet and
Northern Cook Inlet fishing groups. Drift
gillnet permit holders have historically
been the only commercial fishermen
allowed to harvest salmon in Federal
waters and also have better harvest
opportunities in State waters.
Response: As described in section
4.7.1.3 of the Analysis, this action is not
expected to increase salmon harvests in
the Cook Inlet EEZ. Therefore, historical
harvests by all fishery sectors in both
State and EEZ waters should be
maintained. As described in the
response to Comment 25, this action
will account for weak stocks and
uncertainty when setting TACs for the
Cook Inlet EEZ. NMFS acknowledges
that harvest in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area
occurs before all other salmon users in
upper Cook Inlet and before there is
robust information on realized inseason
salmon abundance, both generally and
for specific stocks. The uncertainty
associated with this and risks of
reducing or eliminating the harvestable
surplus for other salmon users will be
accounted for in both the harvest
specification process and inseason
management decisions. NMFS also
acknowledges that the drift gillnet fleet
is one of the largest salmon harvesters
in Cook Inlet and has fishing
opportunities in both State and Federal
waters.
Comment 60: The Magnuson-Stevens
Act emphasizes fairness in allocation
and the production of food. To that end,
the drift gillnet fleet should have not
only meaningful harvest opportunities
for sockeye but also a fair chance to
bring northbound coho to market.
Response: As described in section
4.5.1.2.2 of the Analysis, the drift gillnet
fleet is generally the largest or second
largest harvester of coho salmon in Cook
Inlet. On average, they harvest over 30
percent of the coho salmon in Cook
Inlet, with an increasing harvest trend
from 1999 to 2021. This results in an
approximately even split between the
drift gillnet fleet, the commercial set
gillnet sector, and all non-commercial
fishery sectors (recreational, personal
use, and subsistence). This action is not
expected to significantly reduce drift
gillnet harvests of coho salmon. NMFS
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determined that this action balances
food production and recreational
opportunities across all users in Cook
Inlet while also protecting salmon
stocks and the marine ecosystem. If
there are increased harvests by the drift
gillnet fleet, it is expected that the
harvest of other users would necessarily
be reduced, which NMFS concludes
would reduce the fairness of salmon
resource allocations in Cook Inlet by
preempting or even eliminating harvest
opportunities for other users, many of
which can only operate in State waters.
Comment 61: Where in amendment
16 are the management plans the State
will follow? For example, amendment
16 does not address closures of the East
Side set net fishery and the implications
for Federal management. The East Side
set net fishery is the second largest
fishery in Cook Inlet but has been
ignored. The failure to include the
entire fishery has decimated the East
Side set net fishery, which has been
restricted and closed based on illegal
and unscientific objectives.
Response: NMFS does not include
management measures in this action for
salmon fishing in State waters. The East
Side set net fishery sector and other
salmon fishery sectors operating in State
waters are described in section 4.6 of
the Analysis. The East Side set net
fishery sector occurs entirely within
State waters. NMFS has no jurisdiction
to implement management measures
within State waters in Cook Inlet. NMFS
will consider the harvests of other
fisheries, including the East Side set net
fishery sector, in making management
decisions for the Cook Inlet EEZ Area.
Comments on State management of the
East Side set net fishery are outside of
the scope of this action.
National Standard 5 and 7
Comment 62: The restriction on
fishing in State and Federal waters on
the same calendar day violates National
Standard 5 because it is impossible to
fish near the boundary line between
State and Federal waters, given large
Cook Inlet tides and current speeds in
excess of 7 knots (12.96 kph) and the
difficulty of staying within the
irregularly-shaped Federal boundary
line. Drift gillnetters lack the technology
to determine where the boundary line is
located while fishing.
Response: NMFS disagrees that the
prohibition on fishing in both State and
Federal waters in a single calendar day
is not practicable and disagrees that the
prohibition violates National Standard
5, which provides that conservation and
management measures shall consider
efficiency in the utilization of fishery
resources where practicable. Under
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State management, participants have
successfully remained within the
boundaries open to drift gillnet fishing
within either State or EEZ waters. This
action does not modify legal fishing gear
or other operational elements in a way
that is expected to increase the
difficulty of staying within an open
area. Nothing in this rule prohibits
participants who are concerned about
their ability to remain within Federal
waters during certain fishing conditions
from setting and retrieving their gear
farther away from the State/EEZ
boundary. Vessels participating in the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area drift gillnet fishery
are expected to be aware of their fishing
location and fish only in locations and
at times open to that fishery. In other
Federal fisheries off Alaska and
elsewhere, federally permitted vessels
fishing in EEZ waters are commonly
prohibited from fishing in State waters
and are able to successfully remain with
the Federal waters open to fishing
immediately adjacent to the EEZ
boundary. Examples include the Pacific
cod fisheries in the Kodiak, Chignik,
and South Alaska Peninsula areas, and
the Aleutian Islands and Dutch Harbor
subdistricts of the Bering Sea-Aleutian
Islands Area.
As for the availability of suitable
technology to verify vessel locations,
NMFS has provided charts depicting the
boundary and will provide electronic
charts compatible with smartphone
applications and commonly used
commercial navigation products
available at the NMFS Alaska Region
website at https://www.fisheries.
noaa.gov/region/alaska. More
information is provided in the small
entity compliance guide published with
this action.
Comment 63: Amendment 16 does not
adequately consider or promote
efficiency in the utilization of fishery
resources, and it fails to minimize costs
and avoid unnecessary duplication to
the extent practicable in violation of
National Standards 5 and 7.
NMFS’s analysis notes that
amendment 16 will increase direct costs
and burdens to drift gillnet vessels
harvesting salmon in the Cook Inlet EEZ
Area due to requirements including
obtaining a SFFP, installing and
operating a VMS, and maintaining a
Federal logbook. NMFS also chose to
open fishing in the EEZ on the same
days and at the same times that the State
fishery is open and to prohibit
participants from fishing in State and
Federal waters during the same trip.
This limitation makes no sense, is
extremely inefficient, is impracticable
for participants, and appears punitive.
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Response: NMFS disagrees that any of
the above-described requirements are
punitive, impractical, or inconsistent
with either National Standard 5 or 7. As
set forth under section 301 of the
Magnuson Stevens Act, National
Standard 5 provides that conservation
and management measures shall, where
practicable, consider efficiency in the
utilization of fishery resources, except
that no such measure shall have
economic allocation as its sole purpose.
National Standard 7 provides that
conservation and management measures
shall, where practicable, minimize costs
and avoid unnecessary duplication.
This action considers efficiency in the
utilization of fishery resources and
minimizes costs and avoids unnecessary
duplication to the extent practicable.
NMFS recognizes that a system in
which a single authority manages both
State and Federal waters could allow for
a more efficient means of conducting
the catch accounting necessary to avoid
overfishing. This is not possible here.
Because the State did not accept
delegated management authority nor
would it commit to providing the
information required for management
within the needed timeframe, NMFS
must establish Federal monitoring,
recordkeeping, and reporting
requirements to supply this essential
information to Federal fishery managers,
consistent with the mandates of the
Magnuson-Stevens Act. As discussed in
the response to Comment 31, to account
for fish caught solely in the Federal
EEZ, it is necessary for NMFS to
prohibit fishing in State and Federal
waters on the same trip. As such, this
requirement is consistent with National
Standard 7.
As described thoroughly in the
response to Comment 44 and in section
4.7.2.2 of the Analysis, NMFS identified
the minimum level of information
required to effectively manage and
enforce salmon fishing in the Cook Inlet
EEZ Area. NMFS considered the
additional costs and burden of these
measures, including the costs of VMS
equipment, on participants. NMFS
managers will depend on VMS to
determine the effort and projected catch
in order to inform management
decisions. Furthermore, without VMS,
NOAA Fisheries Office of Law
Enforcement would have to rely
exclusively on resource-intensive
patrols by air and sea; methods that are
not as consistent as VMS in verifying
that no fishing is occurring in closed
waters and confirming fleet-wide
reported fishing effort information.
NMFS considered but did not choose to
require management measures that
would provide additional information
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but impose disproportionate costs to
participants such as fishery observers
and electronic monitoring camera
systems. Federal funds may be available
to qualified vessel owners or operators
for complete reimbursement of the cost
of purchasing type-approved VMS units,
which could offset over 75 percent of
the total purchase and installation cost
for fishery participants.
Logbooks are similarly necessary to
ensure accuracy of reported fishing
effort, catch accounting, and compliance
with regulations. Logbook sheets will be
available for participants to obtain from
NOAA’s website, free of charge.
National Standard 8
Comment 64: Amendment 16 violates
National Standard 8 because it fails to
take into account the importance of
fishery resources to the Cook Inlet
fishing communities and does not
utilize economic and social data to
provide for the sustained participation
of such communities and to minimize
adverse economic impacts on such
communities.
Response: NMFS disagrees that
amendment 16 violates National
Standard 8. As set forth under section
301 of the Magnuson Stevens Act,
National Standard 8 provides that
conservation and management measures
shall, consistent with the conservation
requirements of the Act (including the
prevention of overfishing and rebuilding
of overfished stocks), take into account
the importance of fishery resources to
fishing communities by utilizing
economic and social data (based on the
best scientific information available), in
order to (1) provide for the sustained
participation of such communities, and
(2) to the extent practicable, minimize
adverse economic impacts on such
communities.
Section 4 of the Analysis extensively
documents the importance of salmon to
Cook Inlet fishing communities
throughout the Cook Inlet region as well
as communities in Washington and
Oregon. Many of these communities are
jointly dependent on commercial
salmon fishing (both drift gillnet and set
gillnet), as well as non-commercial
salmon fishing (recreational participants
and guides, subsistence, ceremonial,
and educational fishery sectors). NMFS
carefully considered the costs and
benefits of each management measure.
As described in the Analysis and the
preamble to the proposed rule, NMFS
selected measures that balance the
burden on participants with providing
the information that is essential for
NMFS to manage salmon fishing in the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area. Further, NMFS
expects that participants drift gillnet
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fishing in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area will
be able to maintain their existing range
of harvests and may be able to increase
harvests if conservation conditions
allow for it. Overall, because harvest
levels of all sectors are expected to
remain more or less consistent with
status quo conditions, no long term
community level impacts are expected.
And because this rule is expected to
maintain more or less status quo fishing
opportunities for all users in Cook
Inlet—with some possibility of
additional days for the drift gillnet
fleet—it appropriately provides for the
sustained participation of fishing
communities throughout Cook Inlet,
including communities with residents
that participate in State water fisheries.
Many public commenters from Northern
Cook Inlet expressed concern with any
management plan that would increase
EEZ harvests and thereby decrease
salmon returns to the Northern Cook
Inlet, causing adverse economic impacts
on those communities. Instead, NMFS
selected a management strategy that will
preserve the complicated balance among
various groups throughout Cook Inlet
that has provided for the sustained
participation of all Cook Inlet fishing
communities for decades.
National Standard 10
Comment 65: There is no meaningful
discussion of National Standard 10
Safety for this action. In the recent 10
year period, many vessels have been lost
or damaged during periods of bad
weather. Amendment 16 needs to
address what happens and how the
fishery will still achieve OY when these
regular bad weather events occur.
Response: NMFS disagrees; the
impacts of amendment 16 on the safety
of human life at sea are discussed in
sections 4.5.1.7 and 4.7.4 of the
Analysis and NMFS finds this rule in
consistent with National Standard 10.
National Standard 10 provides that
conservation and management measures
shall, to the extent practicable, promote
the safety of human life at sea. Overall
impacts to public health and safety from
this action are not expected to be
significant. The VMS requirement
provides a valuable tool for search and
rescue efforts to locate a vessel in
distress by regularly providing position
information. This action also closes
fishing in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area prior
to the advent of deteriorating late
summer and fall weather conditions.
NMFS acknowledges that an inseason
closure of the Cook Inlet EEZ under this
action could result in vessel congestion
in the fishing areas that remain open. In
addition, closures of traditional, local
fishing areas may induce vessel
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operators to take additional risks, such
as fishing in weather and sea conditions
that they would normally avoid, to
remain economically viable. However,
NMFS expects that the safety benefits
resulting from VMS will more than
offset any marginal, indirect adverse
effects on safety that this action may
have.
Economic Impacts
Comment 66: Multiple commenters
cited studies and information
highlighting the economic importance
of salmon fisheries to participants and
regional Alaskan communities. Several
commenters support amendment 16 as a
vehicle to conserve the salmon species
on which these fisheries depend.
Response: NMFS acknowledges this
comment. Economic information,
community information, and an analysis
of expected economic impacts are
presented in section 4 of the Analysis.
Comment 67: Many commenters and
their families are long-term Cook Inlet
drift gillnet participants who feel State
management has left drift gillnet fishery
participants struggling, and worry this
will continue under amendment 16.
They allege this action does not correct
the perceived errors in State
management and will continue to
reduce harvester and processor
participation.
Response: NMFS acknowledges
relatively low revenues to the Cook Inlet
drift gillnet fleet and decreases in
participation in recent years. Under this
action, NMFS will be responsible for
managing salmon fishing within the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area. NMFS has no
jurisdiction to modify salmon
management within State waters.
As discussed in the response to
Comment 10, NMFS recognizes that
some of the management measures
necessary to meet Federal managements
in the EEZ will require additional costs
and time commitments from
participants. As described in the Final
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis in the
Classifications section of this preamble,
NMFS designed the management
measures related to collection of
information for management purposes
to minimize the financial impact on
participants to the extent practicable.
NMFS selected these measures after
evaluating a range of options for
information collection, as described in
sections 2.5.6 and 4.7.2.2 of the
Analysis. More information is provided
in the response to comments related to
Monitoring, Recordkeeping, and
Reporting Requirements.
Because EEZ fishing opportunity is
expected to be similar to the status quo
under this action, salmon harvests in
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the Cook Inlet EEZ Area and other areas
of Cook Inlet are expected to remain at
or near existing levels. As described in
section 4.7.1.3, temporary shutdown or
permanent closing of some processing
businesses would only be expected to
occur if there were substantial decreases
in production. This is not expected to
occur because harvest levels are
expected to remain near existing levels.
However, in the event NMFS closed the
EEZ under this action, that likely means
fishery conditions would also be
expected to result in EEZ closure or
severe restrictions under status quo
management by the State. The most
likely reason for closure is the low
abundance of stocks that pass through
the EEZ as they move into the Northern
District of Cook Inlet. Thus, as
compared to the status quo, no
substantial reductions in EEZ harvest
are anticipated when considered in the
context of run strength in a given fishing
season.
NMFS disagrees that State
management has arbitrarily left the drift
gillnet fleet struggling. The low
abundance of specific salmon stocks in
Cook Inlet has been challenging to all
salmon fishery sectors in Cook Inlet.
The State has taken necessary
management action to protect these
weak stocks, which has reduced harvest
for all users. As described in section
4.5.1.2.2 of the Analysis, despite these
conservation challenges, the drift gillnet
fleet has, on average, harvested an
increasing percentage of the available
harvestable surplus for all salmon
species over this same time period
(1999–2021).
Further, the Analysis includes an
examination of the social and economic
impacts of the alternatives. Section 3 of
the Analysis evaluates the impact of the
proposed action on salmon stocks and
other parts of the environment while
section 4.7 of the Analysis discusses the
impact on fishing communities in
comparison to the status quo. Based on
the Analysis, NMFS concluded that this
final rule will not have a significant
impact on the human environment.
Comment 68: A commenter stated
support for NMFS’s proposed action to
manage the Cook Inlet EEZ because the
local economy on the Kenai Peninsula
is fragile, with people affected by
economic disasters such as fishing
closures and fires and faced with few
employment opportunities.
Response: NMFS acknowledges this
comment.
Comment 69: Several local
government representatives and bodies
requested that NMFS implement
management for the Cook Inlet EEZ
Area that provides for a healthy
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commercial fishing industry including
processors and support services,
considers all user groups, and considers
the impact that management of the Cook
Inlet EEZ can have on all Alaska
communities that rely on sportfishing
for economic development and
subsistence use of salmon.
Response: NMFS acknowledges this
comment. One of NMFS’s primary
concerns in developing amendment 16
is ensuring that all Cook Inlet salmon
users, processors, and fishing
communities retain access to and
benefits from Cook Inlet salmon
resources.
Comment 70: NMFS has not
adequately addressed the economic
impacts on fishermen and communities
where the harvest is landed, including
consideration of landing taxes,
employment on the vessels, and in the
processing plants.
Response: NMFS disagrees. The
economic impacts of salmon fishing
under the alternatives in Cook Inlet
were comprehensively described and
analyzed throughout section 4 of the
Analysis. This included consideration
of revenues, taxes, employment, and
dependency. As summarized in section
4.10 of the Analysis, this action is
expected to maintain harvest levels and
opportunities commensurate with status
quo conditions to the extent possible
while accounting for uncertainty and
the expectation that Federal
management should improve over time
as management expertise is developed.
In fact, as noted above, this action
allows for the possibility of slight
increases in fishing days and harvest for
the drift gillnet fleet when possible
without impacting stocks of lower
abundance. Thus, because this action is
expected to maintain status quo harvest
opportunities or even increase harvest
opportunities for participants willing to
comply with regulations in Federal
waters, the best scientific information
available supports NMFS’s conclusion
that minimal adverse economic impacts
are anticipated from this action.
Landings, landings taxes, employment,
and processing are not expected to be
significantly affected by this final rule
compared to status quo conditions.
Comment 71: Market conditions
arising from competition with farmraised salmon account for a large part of
the economic losses in salmon fisheries
around Alaska. Permitting increased
harvest of salmon in the Cook Inlet EEZ
is unlikely to correct this problem but
will likely adversely affect other Upper
Cook Inlet salmon users.
Response: NMFS acknowledges that
market conditions can have significant
impacts on fishery values and that
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fisheries management decisions made in
other jurisdictions do affect market
conditions. Sections 4.5.1 and 4.7.1.3 of
the Analysis describe market
conditions. In the near-term, this action
is not expected to result in the
harvesting of significantly more or less
salmon in the Cook Inlet EEZ.
Therefore, it should not directly affect
the market conditions for commercially
harvested salmon.
NMFS also acknowledges that
management of the Cook Inlet EEZ Area
may impact the harvestable surplus
available to all other salmon users in
Upper Cook Inlet. Again, because NMFS
does not anticipate a significant change
in harvest in the Cook Inlet EEZ as a
result of this action, NMFS disagrees
that this action will adversely affect the
fishing opportunity, and associated
economic value, for other users in the
Upper Cook Inlet area.
As described in sections 4.5.1.3.4.2
and 4.6 of the Analysis, commercial
catches and fishery values in nearly all
Cook Inlet salmon fishery sectors were
above the long-term average from 2010
to 2014. The ability to realize high
fishery values are dependent on the
number and value of harvested species.
Drift gillnet fishery catches during
recent years have been constrained by
mixed stock management
considerations, including constraining
fishing time and area in order to avoid
overharvesting less abundant salmon
stocks.
Section 4.6 of the Analysis included
an examination of the potentially
affected fisheries, including personal
use, set net, freshwater, subsistence, and
educational fisheries and determined
that harvests near status quo levels are
likely to be maintained by this action.
General Support
Comment 72: I support Federal
management of fisheries in Alaska.
Response: NMFS acknowledges this
comment.
Comment 73: Federal management
will ensure optimum yield and
sustainable fish populations.
Response: NMFS acknowledges this
comment.
Comment 74: I support this action.
Federally regulating fishing for all
salmon in the Cook Inlet EEZ will help
save the resources so that salmon
fishing by all users can continue.
However, I want more input from
Alaskans.
Response: NMFS acknowledges this
comment. The public had multiple
opportunities to provide input,
including at AP, SSC, and Council
meetings in 2022 and 2023; during a
public hearing hosted online by NMFS
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on Mary 18, 2023; and during the public
comment period on the proposed rule
and notice of availability for
Amendment 16. Public input on this
action from all members of the public
was considered and is summarized and
responded to in this final rule.
General Opposition
Comment 75: NMFS does not need to
recreate the wheel to create this FMP. It
should adopt the FMP management plan
put forward by Cook Inlet Fisherman’s
Fund, which is based on historic
regulations and would manage the Cook
Inlet fishery to comply with the court
orders, Magnuson-Stevens Act, and
other applicable laws.
The commenter’s proposed FMP
amendment can be viewed at https://
www.regulations.gov/comment/NOAANMFS-2023-0065-0071.
The commenter’s FMP includes the
following primary provisions:
• Escapement based management.
• Management measures for all
commercial salmon fishery sectors in
both State and Federal waters.
• Management of Chinook stocks
throughout upper Cook Inlet with the
commercial fishery allowed whatever
harvest necessary to achieve the MSY/
OY objectives for sockeye, coho, pink,
and chum stocks.
• Prioritize restrictions on nonresident sport fishing over resident
sport-fishing when restrictions are
needed to achieve OY.
• A commercial fishing season from
May through December, with two or
three 12 hour regular commercial
fishing periods per week. The State or
NMFS would retain authority to adjust
this fishing schedule to manage for MSY
escapement goals or exploitation rates
as required.
Response: NMFS disagrees that this
commenter’s proposed FMP amendment
should be adopted. As explained in the
responses to Comments 3 and 4, NMFS
cannot adopt Federal management
measures that apply to the State waters
of Cook Inlet. As explained in the
response to Comment 23, NMFS cannot
implement escapement based
management through amendment 16.
NMFS disagrees that commercial
salmon fishing should be exempt from
management restrictions required to
conserve Chinook salmon or other
salmon stocks. Even with severe
restrictions to both recreational and
commercial salmon fishing, Chinook
salmon stocks in Cook Inlet are not
meeting escapement goals under the
status quo. Forgoing any restrictions on
commercial fishing to harvest all
available yield of sockeye, coho, pink,
and chum salmon stocks would result in
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overfishing, which is inconsistent with
NMFS’s National Standard 1 mandate.
NMFS disagrees that achieving MSY,
particularly for a single fishery sector,
constitutes achieving OY or maximizing
net benefits to the nation. As explained
in the response to Comment 39, a
dramatic increase the fishing season
duration and number of commercial
fishing periods in the Cook Inlet EEZ
Area would result in overfishing and
reduce or eliminate the harvestable
surplus for other salmon users in Cook
Inlet. And NMFS may not discriminate
between residents of different states
when adopting Federal management
measures. Section 2.7 of the Analysis
generally explains why other provisions
in stakeholder-submitted FMP
amendments are inconsistent with the
Magnuson-Stevens Act.
Amendment 16 complies with the
Ninth Circuit ruling by amending the
Salmon FMP to include the Cook Inlet
EEZ Area. It complies with the District
Court’s order by implementing a
federally-managed fishery in the EEZ
that includes all Magnuson-Stevens Act
requirements—including ACLs—and
does not rely on the State to achieve any
of the FMP’s management objectives.
The Analysis provides a comprehensive
description of the purpose and need for
this action, the management alternatives
considered, and an analysis of their
respective impacts.
Comment 76: Despite having the
flexibility and resources to do an
excellent job, NMFS is making
amendment 16 unnecessarily
complicated and difficult.
Response: NMFS developed
amendment 16, the proposed rule, and
this final rule in compliance with the
Magnuson-Stevens Act and all other
applicable Federal law. Management of
Cook Inlet salmon fisheries is complex
and challenging. The fishery includes
multiple stocks of varying abundance,
no stocks can be targeted in isolation in
EEZ waters, and Cook Inlet includes
many stakeholders beyond the drift
gillnet fleet with competing demands.
There is no simple solution to fisheries
management in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area
if NMFS is to consider the perspectives
of all stakeholders and tribes, as it must.
The Analysis identifies the strengths
and weaknesses of each management
alternative under consideration,
including procedural constraints and
currently available expertise.
NMFS intends to do an effective job
managing the Cook Inlet EEZ Area
salmon fishery, and expertise in this
new Federal fishery will increase over
time.
Comment 77: This unprecedented
action should not be implemented. It
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will disrupt management of Cook Inlet
waters and lead to further lawsuits.
While not everyone will be happy with
any rule, the action’s legality and the
resources are most important.
Response: NMFS acknowledges that
this action implements a separate
Federal salmon fishery management
regime within Cook Inlet for the Cook
Inlet EEZ Area and that salmon users
have diverse preferences for
management measures. As described in
the response to Comment 9, NMFS must
implement Federal management of the
Cook Inlet EEZ to comply with
applicable court orders, the MagnusonStevens Act, and all other applicable
Federal law.
Tribal Comments
Comment 78: Regional tribes were not
adequately consulted in the
development of amendment 16, which
may have adverse impacts to salmon
stocks that tribes have traditionally
depended on since time immemorial.
Three federally recognized regional
tribal groups requested government-togovernment tribal consultation.
Response: NMFS acknowledges the
importance of salmon to many tribal
entities located throughout Cook Inlet
and adjacent lands. NMFS’s efforts to
engage and consult with tribes on this
action are described in detail in the
Tribal Summary Impact Statement of
this rule. In brief, NMFS participated in
three tribal engagement meetings on this
action before the Council failed to take
action and NMFS began developing a
Secretarial FMP amendment. NMFS
offered to consult with tribes after the
Council failed to take action, and NMFS
subsequently held consultations with
two tribes in May and June, 2023. NMFS
held a public hearing on the action in
May 2023, to which it invited all
impacted tribes. After publishing the
proposed rule in October 2023, NMFS
directly solicited comments on the
proposed rule from impacted tribes in
the fall of 2023. In December 2023,
NMFS held an engagement meeting
with the tribal fishing group, and in
January 2024, NMFS held two
informational meetings with tribal
entities throughout the Southcentral
Alaska region.
Many of the tribes NMFS engaged
with requested an indigenous
subsistence fishery set-aside to be
incorporated into amendment 16 and
this final rule. However, given the
impending court deadline of May 1,
2024 for publication of this action, there
was not sufficient opportunity to work
with interested tribes on developing a
proposal that could be analyzed and
incorporated into amendment 16 while
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remaining on schedule to comply with
the court order. NMFS received
additional tribal consultation requests
related to the possibility of an
indigenous subsistence fishery in the
Cook Inlet EEZ and will honor them.
Comment 79: Multiple tribes in the
region noted that this action impacts
sovereign federally recognized Tribes
and their citizens and ask that NMFS, as
part of its Federal trust responsibilities
to tribes, co-develop with Alaska Native
tribes a tribal subsistence fishery or setaside (tribal fishery) and include it as
part of this action. Many reasons were
provided in support, including that
Alaska Natives have used Cook Inlet
salmon since ancestral times; they have
stewarded salmon for thousands of
years; tribal inherent fishing rights have
long been ignored; a lack of equitable
tribal representation in Federal fisheries
management; obligations under
international law, Executive orders, and
ANILCA; and that a new subsistence
set-aside fishery in the EEZ would be
highly beneficial for tribal members
unable to sufficiently meet their needs
with other harvest opportunities. It was
suggested that a tribal fishery be
modeled after the subsistence halibut
fishery.
Response: NMFS recognizes that
Alaska tribes are seeking more equitable
fisheries management and increased
involvement in Federal fisheries
management processes. Furthermore,
NMFS acknowledges the long-standing
and ancestral use of salmon fishery
resources by Alaskan tribes.
NMFS evaluated the impacts of this
action on tribes in the Analysis and the
tribal impact summary statement. NMFS
recognizes that salmon fishing in the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area occurs before all
other fishing in Cook Inlet and impacts
the harvestable surplus available to all
others who rely on the salmon resources
in Cook Inlet, including tribal and
subsistence users. As described in
section 4.7.1.3 of the Analysis, because
this action is expected to maintain
salmon harvests near status quo levels,
NMFS does not expect that amendment
16 will decrease the harvestable surplus
for ongoing tribal and subsistence
fisheries in Cook Inlet.
To create a new tribal fishery within
the Cook Inlet EEZ would require an
FMP amendment, including further
analysis and consideration by NMFS
and the Council. NMFS has committed
to honor requests for tribal consultation
regarding the potential establishment of
a tribal fishery in the Cook Inlet EEZ.
FMPs are adaptive and the Council may
recommend and NMFS may amend the
FMP in the future to incorporate
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feedback from tribes received in
upcoming consultations.
Comment 80: The proposed action
and subsequent management directly
impacts the sovereign federally
recognized tribes of the Cook Inlet and
their citizens, which directly ties to
their vital cultural way of life that has
sustained their people for millennia.
NMFS must partner with the Cook Inlet
Tribes, thereby fulfilling their Federal
trust responsibilities and guaranteeing
the utilization and sustainability of
traditional resources. The requirement
to engage directly, government-togovernment, is found in international
law, treaties, declarations, Presidential
Executive Orders (E.O.), and Secretarial
Orders (See U.S. Department of the
Interior’s Secretary Order No. 3335
affirming the Federal trust responsibility
of the United States to Indian Tribes and
their citizens). Furthermore, the White
House signed E.O. 14096 on
Environmental Justice in April 2023.
The E.O. directly cites tribal sovereignty
and self-governance, recognizing the
requirement for tribal consultation and
enhanced collaboration with tribes on
Federal policies, stating, in part, that we
must recognize, honor, and respect the
different cultural practices—including
subsistence practices, ways of living,
Indigenous Knowledge, and traditions—
in communities across America.
Response: As described in response to
Comment 78 and in the Tribal Summary
Impact Statement section of this final
rule, NMFS provided multiple
informational meetings to tribes and
conducted tribal consultations. Impacts
to tribes, their members and all other
salmon users in Cook Inlet will continue
to be considered in management of the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area. NMFS will
continue to consult and work with
interested tribes to develop potential
future management actions for the Cook
Inlet EEZ Area that may provide
subsistence or tribal fishing
opportunities.
Marine Mammals
Comment 81: I support including the
Cook Inlet EEZ in the Salmon FMP.
Consider the importance of available
salmon to the Cook Inlet beluga whales,
which are endangered under the ESA.
Cook Inlet beluga whales rely on salmon
as prey. Failure to protect against
overfishing or otherwise could amount
to an illegal ‘‘taking’’ under the ESA.
Harassing or harming the beluga whale
is another reason the Salmon FMP must
include the Cook Inlet EEZ.
Response: NMFS acknowledges that
salmon are important prey to Cook Inlet
beluga whales and that the availability
of salmon prey for Cook Inlet beluga
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whales is a factor identified in the
recovery plan. NMFS Sustainable
Fisheries Division consulted with
NMFS Protected Resources Division
under ESA section 7 to evaluate the
potential impacts of these management
measures to all ESA-listed species,
including Cook Inlet beluga whales, that
may be affected by this action. As
described in section 3.3.1 of the
Analysis, the best scientific information
available at this time suggests that status
quo salmon prey availability is adequate
for belugas. This final rule is not
expected to appreciably alter salmon
availability to belugas compared to the
status quo. NMFS will continue to
review and consider any new
information on the importance and
availability of salmon prey to Cook Inlet
beluga whales.
Comment 82: Drift gillnet gear can be
destructive and its continued use in
Cook Inlet may have adverse impacts to
endangered beluga whales.
Response: As described in section
3.3.1 of the Analysis, NMFS has no
information indicating that the drift
gillnet gear used in the Cook Inlet EEZ
Area has resulted in entanglements of
Cook Inlet beluga whales or habitat
degradation. This action does not
modify drift gillnet fishing in Cook Inlet
in any way that is expected to increase
the entanglement risk for Cook Inlet
beluga whales.
Process Concerns
Comment 83: One commenter stated
that the EEZ line being used was ruled
illegal in U.S. v. Alaska in 1975. This
commenter alleges NMFS continues to
use an illegal EEZ boundary. If NMFS
were to use a proper boundary line (50
to 60 miles (80.47 to 96.56 km) north),
the majority of the fishery would occur
in State waters, undermining its
argument that it cannot regulate State
waters under section 306(b) of the
Magnuson-Stevens Act.
Another commenter suggested that
the EEZ boundary was incorrect for
fisheries jurisdiction and should only be
used for oil and gas leasing purposes.
Federal waters for fishing have not been
designated and need to be decided by
the Boundary Commission as in
Southeast Alaska.
Response: NMFS disagrees that it is
using an incorrect EEZ boundary. NMFS
also disagrees that Federal waters
boundaries for the purpose of fisheries
jurisdiction have not been defined in
Cook Inlet. Under the MagnusonStevens Act, the EEZ is defined as the
zone established by Proclamation
Numbered 5030, dated March 10, 1983.
For purposes of applying this Act, the
inner boundary of that zone is a line
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coterminous with the seaward boundary
of each of the coastal States. The
baselines used to determine the EEZ
boundary are reviewed and approved by
an interagency committee called the
U.S. Baseline Committee, which is
chaired by the Department of State. In
2006, a new method was used to
calculate the baseline and NOAA
navigation charts published in 2006
depict changes in the 3 nmi (5.56 km)
boundary in parts of Alaska. In 2011,
the U.S. Baseline Committee reviewed
some of the changes to the baseline in
Cook Inlet based on feedback from the
State and updated their
recommendations. However, not all
areas where the baseline changes
occurred have been reviewed by the
Baseline Committee. For this reason,
NMFS manages and enforces Federal
fisheries according to the decisions of
the U.S. Baseline Committee for the
areas they reviewed and approved after
considering input from the State since
2006. NMFS recognizes the historical
(pre-2006) t3-nmi (5.56 km) state-waters
boundary line for all other areas. This
information is documented in a letter
from NMFS to Alaska Department of
Fish and Game that is posted on NMFS
Alaska Region website.
To the extent this comment is alleging
the U.S. Baseline Committee erred in
approving this EEZ boundary, the
decisions of the Baseline Committee are
outside the scope of this action. For
NMFS’s response to the contention that
it has authority to regulate state waters
under section 306(b) of the MagnusonStevens Act, see the response to
Comment 4.
Comment 84: NMFS has repeatedly
disregarded instruction from courts, and
a special master should be appointed to
oversee development of Federal
management of Cook Inlet.
Response: NMFS disagrees that it
disregarded instruction from any court.
NMFS has worked to ensure that
Federal management of salmon fishing
in the Cook Inlet EEZ will be in place
by May 1, 2024, consistent with the
Ninth Circuit and District Court orders.
Comment 85: One commenter felt that
NMFS has been disingenuous,
duplicitous, insulting to stakeholders,
and deliberately obstructive throughout
this process and produced poor work
product that suggests it does not
understand the fishery. It was also
suggested that this action fails to reflect
consideration or incorporation of input
that the stakeholders from the drift
gillnet fleet have provided on multiple
occasions over several years, including
the Council’s stakeholder committee,
resulting in an unworkable product.
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Response: NMFS disagrees. The
proposed rule and Analysis prepared for
this action contains all relevant
information about salmon fisheries in
Cook Inlet and perspectives provided by
stakeholders during the development of
this action. Amendment 16 and this
final rule implement Federal
management in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area
in accordance with the MagnusonStevens Act and as appropriate in
recognition of the multiple users of
salmon throughout Cook Inlet.
Throughout the development of this
action, some stakeholders advocated for
many provisions to increase harvests by
the drift gillnet fleet that NMFS is not
implementing for reasons discussed in a
number of responses to comments. This
input, as well as recommendations from
the stakeholder committee, is also
summarized in section 2.7 of the
Analysis, which provides a
comprehensive discussion of why
certain recommendations were not
incorporated into the management
alternatives under consideration. Many
of the drift gillnet fleets requests can be
distilled to two basic premises, neither
of which are consistent with the
Magnuson-Stevens Act: (1) NMFS must
apply Federal management to both State
and Federal waters in Cook Inlet; and
(2) NMFS must manage to fully harvest
MSY for Kenai and Kasilof sockeye
salmon, as well as all other salmon
stocks and prevent overescapement. As
described in the response to Comment
4, NMFS does not have jurisdiction to
assert management authority over the
State waters of Cook Inlet. As explained
throughout the Analysis, the preamble
to the proposed rule, and in responses
to comments in this final rule, fully
harvesting the entire harvestable surplus
for Kenai and Kasilof sockeye would
require an amount of fishery effort in
the EEZ that would result in overfishing
of other salmon stocks and could
completely eliminate fishery
opportunities and access to fishery
resources for other users in Cook Inlet.
To achieve OY and ensure that the
fishery results in the greatest net
benefits to the Nation, NMFS cannot
prioritize access for one user group over
access for all others. And in mixed stock
fisheries, harvest is always constrained
by the stocks of lowest abundance, as
the Magnuson-Stevens Act requires that
fishery management measures prevent
overfishing.
NMFS’s decision not to implement
specific measures advocated for by one
group of fishery stakeholders—and
which other stakeholders and tribes
oppose as likely to decrease their access
to salmon and the State opposes based
on conservation concerns—does not
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mean NMFS is being disingenuous,
duplicitous, insulting, or deliberately
obstructive.
Comment 86: Most Council members
could see their special interests
(trawlers) affected by further scrutiny
over salmon management. These
conflicts are the reason that the
Magnuson-Stevens Act requires science
to drive management. These conflicts
and the lack of accountability are why
councils nationwide should be
appointed by the president and be held
responsible for their decisions.
Alaska has a majority of seats on the
Council, including the commissioner of
ADF&G, and the Council will mostly
rule in favor of the State’s parochial
interests. This prioritizes protecting
State interests and revenues.
Response: Amendment 16 is a
Secretarial FMP amendment developed
by NMFS and was not recommended by
the Council. When this action was
previously under Council consideration,
none of the Council members had
financial interests that would have
required recusal from voting had the
Council decided to recommend action.
Regardless, the statutorily prescribed
system for appointing Council members
is outside the scope of this action.
Comment 87: ADF&G has a financial
conflict of interest in managing South
Central Alaska Salmon stocks. They are
funded, in part, by sport fishing licenses
and associated Federal matched funds.
Therefore, they have a financial
incentive to favor the recreational and
personal use fisheries.
Response: The State of Alaska’s
allocation decisions among various
sectors within State waters are outside
of the scope of this action. In the Cook
Inlet EEZ, nearly all catch is by the
commercial drift gillnet fleet. There is
no Federal personal use fishery, and the
recreational sector catches less than 70
fish per year on average in the Cook
Inlet EEZ.
Comment 88: Multiple commenters
suggested that ADF&G had prioritized
political considerations, or specific user
groups, over sustainability and has not
managed salmon and other species
properly, which has resulted in the
declines of Chinook and sockeye
fisheries in Cook Inlet and unnecessary
litigation. One commenter felt that
amendment 16 results in more political
management.
Response: NMFS disagrees that
amendment 16 is political management.
As described throughout the preamble
to the proposed rule, NMFS worked to
balance competing interests and
demands of the National Standards in
the policy decisions inherent to this
fishery management action. NMFS will
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manage salmon fishing in the Cook Inlet
EEZ Area using best available science to
achieve OY and prevent overfishing on
all Cook Inlet salmon stocks. The State
will continue to manage salmon fishing
within State waters.
NMFS found the State has prioritized
protecting stocks with the lowest
abundance in regulating salmon fishing
in Cook Inlet. As described in sections
3.1, 4.5, and 4.6 of the Analysis, salmon
abundance is cyclical, and the harvests
of different user groups have both
increased and decreased at different
times. To the extent the comment is
criticizing allocation decisions made by
the BOF (i.e., which user group(s) are
allowed to harvest the available excess
yield of salmon), that is outside the
scope of this action.
Comment 89: Our fisheries statewide
are in peril because of multijurisdictional authority and allocations
to specific user groups based on
political agendas. Trawling back and
forth across the mouth to Cook Inlet
occurred only weeks prior to our Stateregulated 2023 commercial salmon
season being shut down due to a
prediction of a shortage of what turned
out to be less than 1,500 Chinook
salmon. This was under both
jurisdictions. So who should manage
the anadromous fishery? The owner of
the resource.
Response: NMFS, with guidance from
the Council, has jurisdiction over
salmon fishing in the Cook Inlet EEZ
Area. This action addresses directed
fishing for salmon in the Cook Inlet EEZ
Area. Comments regarding salmon
bycatch in trawl fisheries are outside of
the scope of this action.
Comment 90: The State should no
longer manage the fishery as they have
failed to do so in a way that supports
Alaskan interests. Furthermore, there is
no longer a fishery to manage in the
EEZ, as the president has taken away
the ability of Alaskans to utilize
Alaska’s natural resources, such as oil
and gas.
Response: Under this rule, NMFS, not
the State of Alaska, will manage all
salmon fishing (commercial and
recreational) in the Cook Inlet EEZ.
Comments regarding executive actions
that affect other natural resources in
Alaska are outside the scope of this
action.
Comment 91: Alaskans who are
licensed business owners and fishing in
the EEZ should be managing their
resources. People in Washington DC or
Washington State are the reason many
of our wild resources are being
depleted; they should not have a say in
managing Alaska fisheries.
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Response: The Magnuson-Stevens Act
governs the management of the fisheries
in the EEZ. Section 2 of the MagnusonStevens Act provides that the purpose of
the Act is to exercise sovereign rights for
the purpose of exploring, exploiting,
conserving, and managing all fish
within the exclusive economic zone. It
further provides that, with respect to
management within the EEZ adjacent to
Alaska waters, the Council is
responsible for developing and
recommending fishery management
plans and regulations that implement
those plans for management. Comments
from all stakeholders and members of
the public were considered in the
development of amendment 16 and will
be considered every year in the annual
management processes for establishing
salmon harvest specifications for the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area.
Comment 92: Alaska’s permanent
fund dividend is declining and is being
used to build commercial vessel docks.
This litigation, which favors one fishing
group over others, is costing millions of
dollars. Commercial fishing is not
hurting anyone. Protecting recreational
fishing is not needed.
Response: Comments on the Alaska
permanent fund, State government
revenues, and dock construction are
outside of the scope of this action.
Comments about the cost of litigation
are outside the scope of this action. This
action will implement conservation and
management measures for commercial
drift gillnet and recreational fishing
solely within the Cook Inlet EEZ Area.
Other
Comment 93: The proposed rule is
incomplete without a complete
overview of how offshore wind turbines,
which are responsible for the increase in
deaths of whales, dolphins, and other
cetaceans off the East Coast, will be
handled off Alaska.
Response: This action does not
include elements related to offshore
wind energy. Therefore, this comment is
outside of the scope of this action.
Comment 94: Protect the hooligan
(eulachon); that fishery needs review.
Response: This comment is outside
the scope of this action.
Comment 95: In the Cook Inlet area,
salmon spawning and rearing occurs on
Federal lands and waters under the
Department of the Interior. The
Department of the Interior should be
consulted and included in the
development of this action.
Response: The United States Fish and
Wildlife Service (USFWS), an agency
within the Department of the Interior,
has a representative on the Council and
is aware of the issue. The USFWS did
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34751
not provide comments to NMFS during
the comment period on amendment 16
or the proposed rule. In this action,
NMFS implements federal management
over commercial and recreational
fishing in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area
consistent with NMFS’s authorities
under the Magnuson-Stevens Act. The
authorities of other agencies, including
the Department of the Interior and
USFWS, over lands and waters outside
of the EEZ are outside the scope of this
action.
Classification
The NMFS Assistant Administrator
(AA) has determined that this action is
consistent with the Salmon FMP, the
National Standards, other provisions of
the Magnuson-Stevens Act, and other
applicable law.
NMFS prepared an environmental
assessment (EA) for amendment 16 and
the AA concluded that there will be no
significant impact on the human
environment as a result of this rule. This
action is expected to maintain Cook
Inlet EEZ salmon harvests at or near
existing levels. The same or similar
vessels will continue to use the same or
similar fishing gear. As a result, no
significant environmental impacts are
anticipated. Copies of the EA and
Finding of No Significant Impact are
available from the NMFS (see
ADDRESSES).
This final rule has been determined to
be not significant for the purposes of
Executive Order 12866.
A Regulatory Impact Review was
prepared to assess costs and benefits of
available regulatory alternatives. A copy
of this analysis is available from NMFS
(see ADDRESSES). NMFS approved
amendment 16 and these regulations
based on those measures that maximize
net benefits to the Nation when
considering the viable management
alternatives. Specific aspects of the
economic analysis are discussed below
in the Final Regulatory Flexibility
Analysis (FRFA) section.
Small Entity Compliance Guide
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
shall publish one or more guides to
assist small entities in complying with
the rule, and shall designate such
publications as ‘‘small entity
compliance guides.’’ Copies of the
proposed rule, this final rule, and the
small entity compliance guide are
available on the Alaska Region’s website
at: https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/
region/alaska.
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Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
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NMFS prepared a FRFA that
incorporates the Initial Regulatory
Flexibility Analysis (IRFA) and a
summary of the analyses completed to
support this final rule.
Section 604 of the Regulatory
Flexibility Act (RFA) requires that,
when an agency promulgates a final rule
under section 553 of title 5 of the U.S.
Code (5 U.S.C. 553), after being required
by that section or any other law to
publish a general notice of final
rulemaking, the agency shall prepare a
FRFA (5 U.S.C. 604). Section 604
describes the required contents of a
FRFA: (1) A statement of the need for
and objectives of the rule; (2) a
statement of the significant issues raised
by the public comments in response to
the IRFA, a statement of the assessment
of the agency of such issues, and a
statement of any changes made to the
proposed rule as a result of such
comments; (3) the response of the
agency to any comments filed by the
Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small
Business Administration (SBA) in
response to the proposed rule, and a
detailed statement of any change made
to the proposed rule in the final rule as
a result of the comments; (4) a
description of and an estimate of the
number of small entities to which the
rule will apply or an explanation of why
no such estimate is available; (5) a
description of the projected reporting,
recordkeeping, and other compliance
requirements of the rule, including an
estimate of the classes of small entities
that will be subject to the requirement
and the type of professional skills
necessary for preparation of the report
or record; and (6) a description of the
steps the agency has taken to minimize
the significant economic impact on
small entities consistent with the stated
objectives of applicable statutes
including a statement of the factual,
policy, and legal reasons for selecting
the alternative adopted and why each
one of the other significant alternatives
to the rule considered by the agency
which affect the impact on small
entities was rejected.
A description of this final rule and the
need for and objectives of this rule are
contained in the preamble to the
proposed rule and final rule and are not
repeated here.
Public and Chief Counsel for Advocacy
Comments on the IRFA
An IRFA was prepared in the
Classification section of the preamble to
the proposed rule. The Chief Counsel
for Advocacy of the SBA did not file any
comments on the proposed rule. NMFS
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received no comments specifically on
the IRFA. No comments provided
information that refuted the conclusions
presented in the IRFA.
Number and Description of Small
Entities Regulated by This Final Action
This final rule will directly regulate
commercial salmon fishing vessels that
operate in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area,
charter guides and charter businesses
fishing for salmon in the Cook Inlet EEZ
Area, and entities receiving deliveries of
salmon harvested in the Cook Inlet EEZ
Area.
For RFA purposes only, NMFS has
established small business size
standards for businesses, including their
affiliates, whose primary industries are
commercial fishing, charter fishing,
seafood processing, and seafood buying
(see 50 CFR 200.2). A business primarily
engaged in commercial fishing (NAICS
code 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 has combined annual
receipts not in excess of $11 million for
all its affiliated operations worldwide.
For charter fishing vessels (NAICS code
713990), this threshold is combined
annual receipts not in excess of $9
million. For shoreside processors
(NAICS code 311710), the small
business size is defined in terms of
number of employees, with the
threshold set at not greater than 750
employees. For entities that purchase
seafood but do not process it (NAICS
code 424460), the small business
threshold is not greater than 100
employees.
From 2019 to 2021, there was an
average of 567 S03H permits in
circulation, with an average of 361
active permit holders, all of which are
considered small entities based on the
11 million dollar threshold. Because
NMFS expects the State to maintain
current requirements for a commercial
salmon fishing vessels landing any
salmon in upper Cook Inlet to hold a
CFEC S03H permit, NMFS does not
expect participation from non-S03H
permit holders in the federally managed
salmon fishery in the Cook Inlet EEZ
Area. Therefore, the number of S03H
permit holders represents the maximum
number of directly regulated entities for
the commercial salmon fishery in the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area. From 2019 to
2021, there was an average of 11
shoreside processors and 6 direct
marketers, all of which are considered
small entities based on the 750
employee threshold. From 2019 to 2021,
there was an average of 4 catcher-sellers,
all of which are considered small
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entities based on the 100 employee
threshold. From 2019 to 2021, there was
an average of 58 charter guides that
fished for salmon at least once in the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area, all of which are
considered small entities based on the 9
million dollar threshold. Additional
detail is included in sections 4.5 and 4.9
in the Analysis prepared for this action
(see ADDRESSES).
Description of Significant Alternatives
That Minimize Adverse Impacts on
Small Entities
NMFS considered, but did not select
three other alternatives. The
alternatives, and their impacts to small
entities, are described below.
Alternative 1 would take no action
and would maintain existing
management measures and conditions
in the fishery within recently observed
ranges, resulting in no change to
impacts on small entities. This is not a
viable alternative because it would be
inconsistent with the Ninth Circuit’s
ruling that the Cook Inlet EEZ must be
included within the Salmon FMP and
managed according to the MagnusonStevens Act.
Alternative 2 would delegate
management to the State. If fully
implemented, Alternative 2 would
maintain many existing conditions
within the fishery. Fishery participants
would have the added burdens of
obtaining a SFFP, maintaining a Federal
fishing logbook, and monitoring their
fishing position with respect to EEZ and
State waters as described in sections
2.4.8 and 4.7.2.2 of the Analysis.
However, section 306(a)(3)(B) of the
Magnuson-Stevens Act provides that
NMFS cannot delegate management to
the State without a three-quarter
majority vote by the Council, which did
not occur. Therefore, Alternative 2
cannot be implemented and is not a
viable alternative.
Alternative 4 would close the Cook
Inlet EEZ but not impose any additional
direct regulatory costs on participants
and would allow directly regulated
entities to possibly recoup lost EEZ
harvest inside State waters. However,
the District Court ruled that Alternative
4 was contrary to law. Therefore,
Alternative 4 is not a viable alternative.
This action (Alternative 3) will result
in a Cook Inlet EEZ salmon fishery
managed directly by NMFS and the
Council. Within Alternative 3, there
were numerous sub-options for
management measures. As described
below, NMFS worked to select specific
management measures that minimized
cost and burden on participants to the
extent practicable. This action will
increase direct costs and burdens to
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commercial salmon fishing vessels that
operate in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area by
requiring an SFFP, associated
requirements to install and operate a
VMS, and maintaining a Federal
logbook as described in sections 2.5.6
and 4.7.2.2 of the Analysis. This action
also requires that TACs be set before
each fishing season. The TAC will be set
to account for management uncertainty
and reduce the risk of overfishing
without the benefit of inseason harvest
data, but overall catch in the EEZ is
likely to remain near existing levels
with a possibility for slight increases
from the status quo (particularly as
Federal managers collect data specific to
the EEZ and develop expertise
managing the fishery). As is possible
under the status quo, salmon harvest in
the EEZ could be reduced or prohibited
in years when salmon returns are not
predicted to result in a harvestable
surplus, with an appropriate buffer to
account for scientific and management
uncertainty.
Processors receiving deliveries of
salmon commercially harvested in the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area are required to
obtain an SFPP. Entities receiving
deliveries of salmon commercially
harvested in the Cook Inlet EEZ but not
processing the fish are required to
obtain an RSRP. All of these permits are
available at no cost from NMFS.
However, entities with these permits are
required to use eLandings and report
landings with all associated information
by noon of the day following the
completion of each delivery, which
increases direct costs and burden.
While these measures do increase
costs to commercial fishery sector
participants, all of these elements are
necessary to manage the fishery and
prevent overfishing. Specific
consideration was given in their
development to minimize the burden on
participants to the extent practicable
while also providing required
information to Federal fishery managers
in a timely manner. More costly means
of monitoring catch—including
observers and electronic monitoring—
were considered but rejected by NMFS.
All entities that may be directly
regulated by this action could also
choose to continue participating in only
the State waters fisheries to avoid being
subject to these Federal requirements.
Charter fishing vessels do not have
any additional Federal recordkeeping,
reporting, or monitoring requirements
but are subject to Federal bag,
possession, and gear regulations. These
measures are the same as existing State
requirements and do not add additional
burden.
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Based upon the best scientific
information available, there are no
significant alternatives to the action that
have the potential to comply with
applicable court rulings, accomplish the
stated objectives of the MagnusonStevens Act and any other statutes, and
minimize any significant adverse
economic impact of the action on small
entities while preventing overfishing.
After a public process, NMFS concluded
that of the viable management options,
Alternative 3, amendment 16 and this
final rule, best accomplish the stated
objectives articulated in the preamble
for this action and in applicable
statutes, and minimizes, to the extent
practicable, adverse economic impacts
on directly regulated small entities.
Recordkeeping, Reporting, and Other
Compliance Requirements
This action implements new
recordkeeping, reporting, and
compliance requirements. These
requirements are necessary for the
management and monitoring of the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area salmon fishery.
All Cook Inlet EEZ Area salmon
fishery participants using drift gillnet
gear are required to provide additional
information to NMFS for management
purposes. As in other North Pacific
fisheries, processors provide catch
recording data to managers to monitor
harvest. Processors are required to
record deliveries and processing
activities to aid in fishery
administration.
To participate in the fishery, persons
are required to complete application
forms, reporting requirements, and
monitoring requirements. These
requirements impose costs on small
entities in gathering the required
information and completing the
information collections.
NMFS has estimated the costs of
complying with the requirements based
on information such as the burden
hours per response, number of
responses per year, and wage rate
estimates from industry or the Bureau of
Labor Statistics. Persons are required to
complete many of the requirements
prior to fishing, such as obtaining
permits. Persons are required to
complete some requirements every year,
such as the SFPP and RSRP
applications. Other requirements are
more periodic, such as the SFFP
application, which must be submitted
every 3 years. The impacts of these
changes are described in more detail in
sections 2.5.6 and 4.7.2 of the Analysis
prepared for this action (see
ADDRESSES).
Vessels commercially fishing for
salmon in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area are
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34753
required to obtain an SFFP, complete a
Federal fishing logbook, and install and
maintain an operational VMS. NMFS
issues SFFPs at no cost. Although VMS
costs may be significant for some
participants, there may be funds
available from NMFS for reimbursement
of the purchase costs. Information on
the VMS reimbursement program is
contained in the small entity
compliance guide published with this
Final Rule. The vessel will also be
required to mark buoys at each end of
their drift gillnet with their SFFP
number. While commercially fishing for
salmon in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area,
participants must remain within Federal
waters and cannot also fish in State
waters on the same calendar day or
conduct any other types of fishing while
in Federal waters.
Processors and other entities receiving
landings of commercially caught Cook
Inlet salmon from the Cook Inlet EEZ
Area are required to obtain an SFPP or
an RSRP, and report landings through
eLandings by noon of the day following
completion of the delivery. NMFS
issues SFPPs and RSRPs at no cost.
For recreational salmon fishing, no
additional Federal recordkeeping and
reporting requirements are established.
The State’s existing recordkeeping and
reporting requirements are expected to
provide the information needed to
manage recreational fishing in the Cook
Inlet EEZ Area and satisfy MagnusonStevens Act requirements given the
small scale and very limited harvest by
the recreational sector. Information
collected by the State includes creel
sampling, the ADF&G’s Statewide
Harvest Survey, harvest records for
annual limits, and the Saltwater Guide
Logbooks.
Paperwork Reduction Act
This final rule contains collection-ofinformation requirements subject to
review and approval by the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) under
the Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA).
This final rule adds a new collection of
information for the Cook Inlet EEZ
salmon fishery under new OMB control
number 0648–0818 and revises and
extends for 3 years existing collectionof-information requirements for OMB
Control Number 0648–0445 (NMFS
Alaska Region VMS Program). The
public reporting burden estimates
provided below for these collections of
information include the time for
reviewing instructions, searching
existing data sources, gathering and
maintaining the data needed, and
completing and reviewing the collection
of information.
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OMB Control Number 0648–0818
A new collection of information is
created for reporting, recordkeeping,
and monitoring requirements
implemented by this action that are
necessary to federally manage the Cook
Inlet EEZ Area salmon fishery. This new
collection contains the applications and
processes used by harvesters,
processors, and other entities receiving
deliveries of Cook Inlet EEZ Area
salmon to apply for and manage their
permits; provide catch, landings, and
processing data; and mark drift gillnet
buoys. The data are used to ensure that
the fishery participants adhere to
harvesting, processing, and other
requirements for the Cook Inlet EEZ
Area salmon fishery.
The public reporting burden per
individual response is estimated to
average 15 minutes for the SFFP
application, 25 minutes for the SFPP
application, 20 minutes for the RSRP
application, 15 minutes to register for
eLandings, 10 minutes for landing
reports, 15 minutes for the daily fishing
logbook, and 30 minutes to mark drift
gillnet buoys.
OMB Control Number 0648–0445
NMFS proposes to revise and extend
by 3 years the existing requirements for
OMB Control Number 0648–0445. This
collection contains the VMS
requirements for the federally managed
groundfish and crab fisheries off Alaska.
This collection is revised because this
action requires vessels commercially
fishing for salmon in the Cook Inlet EEZ
Area to install and maintain an
operational VMS. The public reporting
burden per individual response is
estimated to average 6 hours for
installation of a VMS unit, 4 hours for
VMS maintenance, and 2 hours for VMS
failure troubleshooting. VMS
transmissions are not assigned a
reporting burden because the
transmissions are automatic.
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Public Comments
We invite the general public and other
Federal agencies to comment on
proposed and continuing information
collections, which helps us assess the
impact of our information collection
requirements and minimize the public’s
reporting burden. Written comments
and recommendations for these
information collections should be
submitted on the following website:
https://www.reginfo.gov/public/do/
PRAMain. Find the particular
information collection by using the
search function and entering either the
title of the collection or the OMB
Control Number.
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Notwithstanding any other provisions
of the law, no person is required to
respond 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.
Tribal Summary Impact Statement
NMFS’s responsibility to engage in
tribal consultations on Federal policies
with tribal implications is outlined in
Executive Order (E.O.) 13175,
Consultation and Coordination with
Indian Tribal Governments (November
6, 2000), the Executive Memorandum
(April 29, 1994), the American Indian
and Alaska Native Policy of the U.S.
Department of Commerce (March 30,
1995), the Department of Commerce
Tribal Consultation and Coordination
Policy (78 FR 33331, June 4, 2013),
Presidential Memorandum (Tribal
Consultation and Strengthening Nationto-Nation Relationships) (86 FR 7491,
January 29, 2021), and the updated
NOAA Policy on Government-toGovernment Consultations with
Federally Recognized Indian Tribes and
Alaska Native Corporations (July 27,
2023). Congress required federal
agencies to consult with Alaska Native
corporations on the same basis as
federally recognized Indian tribes under
E.O. 13175 (Pub. L. 108–199, 118 Stat.
452, as amended by Pub. L. 108–447,
118 Stat. 3267). NOAA interprets the
term ‘‘Alaska Native corporations’’ in
this requirement to mean ‘‘Native
corporation[s]’’ as that term is defined
under the Alaska Native Claims
Settlement Act (ANCSA) of 1971 (43
U.S.C. 1602).
Section 5(b)(2)(B) of E.O. 13175
requires a ‘‘Tribal Summary Impact
Statement’’ for any regulation that has
tribal implications, imposes substantial
direct compliance costs on Native Tribal
governments, and is not required by
statute. Although not required by
section 5(b)(2)(B) of E.O. 13175, the
following is a tribal summary impact
statement for this final rule that is
consistent with E.O. 13175 and
summarizes and responds to issues
raised during all tribal consultations on
Amendment 16 and the proposed rule.
Under E.O. 13175 and agency
policies, NMFS notified all potentially
impacted federally recognized Tribal
governments in Alaska and Alaska
Native Corporations and provided the
opportunity to comment and respond to
the agency’s invitation for tribal
consultation on the action.
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A Description of the Extent of NMFS’s
Prior Consultation With Tribal Officials
On February 17, 2023, NMFS emailed
tribal consultation invitation letters to
Alaska Native Tribes, Alaska Native
Corporations, and Alaska Native
Organizations (‘‘Alaska Native
representatives’’). The letter notified
Alaska Native representatives that the
management of salmon fisheries in the
Federal (EEZ) marine waters of upper
Cook Inlet would be presented to the
Council for review, with an invitation to
participate in the process and contribute
to fishery decisions at the April 2023
meeting. NMFS invited Alaska Native
representatives to consult with and
provide comments to the agency
directly via meeting or by telephone.
NMFS received one response from the
Chickaloon Village Traditional Council
(CVTC) to consult on management of
salmon fisheries in the Federal (EEZ)
waters of Cook Inlet. The purpose was
to complete consultation between CVTC
and NMFS Alaska Region per the
agency’s government-to-government
relationship regarding the management
of salmon fisheries in the EEZ waters of
Cook Inlet before scheduled final action
at the April 2023 Council meeting to
hear and better understand the CVTC’s
perspectives regarding tribal impacts.
NMFS also shared information about the
action and its potential implementation
and answered questions during the
consultation.
NMFS was invited by Alaska Native
representatives to speak on this action at
the Tikahtnu Forum Meeting on
February 24, 2023, the Kenaitze/
Salamatof Hunting Fishing and
Gathering Commission Meeting on
March 7, 2023, and the Cook Inlet
Fishers Group on March 30, 2023, to
listen to tribal perspectives, provide
information and answer questions on
the action.
On April 21, 2023, NMFS sent an
announcement to Alaska Native
representatives stating the agency was
under a court order to implement an
amendment to the Salmon FMP by May
1, 2024 to federally manage the salmon
fisheries that occur in the Cook Inlet
EEZ, consistent with Magnuson-Stevens
Act requirements. NMFS provided a
second invitation for tribal consultation
and engagement opportunities on this
issue. Two Alaska Native tribes
responded to the invitation to consult
on amendment 16. NMFS held tribal
consultation on this action with the
Salamatof Tribe on May 22, 2023, and
with the Chickaloon Native Village
(CNV) on June 20, 2023. NMFS shared
information regarding Federal salmon
management during the meeting but
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primarily wanted to hear and better
understand the Salamatof Tribe’s and
CNV’s perspectives regarding tribal
impacts. Also, on June 22, 2023, NMFS
received a letter from the Ninilchik
Traditional Council (NTC). NTC
thanked NMFS for the invitation to
consult and for engaging with tribes on
the action but declined NMFS’s
invitation to consult based on lack of
agency engagement in the past, lack of
adequate time, and because of NTC’s
concern that the action did not
incorporate tribal input in studies and
impact statements related to traditional
ecological knowledge.
On April 26, 2023, NMFS notified
Alaska Native representatives that
NMFS would hold a public hearing to
receive input on an amendment to the
Salmon FMP to establish Federal
management for salmon fishing in the
Federal waters of upper Cook Inlet.
Alaska Native representatives were
given another opportunity to provide
verbal comments at the public hearing
on May 18, 2023 or written comments
by May 25, 2023 during the public
comment process.
On October 18, 2023, NMFS solicited
public comment—including comments
from Alaska Native representatives—on
the proposed rule that would implement
Federal management of commercial and
recreational salmon fishing in the Cook
Inlet EEZ (88 FR 72314, October 19,
2023). NMFS invited comment from
Alaska Native representatives on the
action through December 18, 2023.
Additionally, on October 20, 2023,
NMFS provided a response letter to the
NTC thanking them for their concerns
and encouraging the NTC to reconsider
engagement with NMFS on this action.
On November 16, 2023, NMFS
received a response from the Cook Inlet
Fishers Group asking for tribal
engagement. On December 5, 2023,
NMFS met with tribal representatives
from the Cook Inlet Tribal Fishers
Group, which included the Knik Tribal
Council, CVTC, and NTC. The purpose
of this meeting was to engage with
interested Cook Inlet Tribes regarding
Federal management of salmon fisheries
in the Cook Inlet EEZ. NMFS shared
information about the action and its
potential implementation during the
meeting but primarily wanted to hear
and better understand the Cook Inlet
Tribes’ perspectives regarding tribal
impacts. At the close of the meeting,
participants agreed that a follow up
tribal engagement meeting on this action
would be pertinent in January 2024.
At the close of the amendment 16
public comment period on December
18, 2023, NMFS received written
comments from NTC, Salamatof Tribe,
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CVTC, and Kenaitze Tribe. The
Salamatof Tribe requested separate
government-to-government engagement
while the remaining Cook Inlet tribes
requested joint government-togovernment consultation. On January 8,
2024, NMFS met with the Salamatof
Tribe to share a status update on
amendment 16 as well as hear and
better understand their perspectives on
the need for an indigenous subsistence
fishery set-aside. On January 9, 2024,
NMFS met with 11 Alaska Native
representatives, including the NVC,
CVTC, Seldovia Village Tribe, NTC,
Knik Tribe, Native Village of Eklutna,
Kenaitze Tribe, Chugach Regional
Resource Commission, Ninilchik Native
Association, Tyonek Native
Corporation, and the Salamatof Tribe.
NMFS listened to tribal concerns and
perspectives regarding the new idea for
an indigenous subsistence fishery setaside and provided a status update on
the amendment 16 process.
After the close of the amendment 16
public comment period, NMFS also
received three written tribal comments
from the Chugach Regional Resource
Commission representing the Nanwalek
Indian Reorganization Act Council and
Port Graham Village Council, Tyonek
Conservation District, and Native
Village of Eklutna. The Chugach
Regional Resource Commission
requested tribal consultation with
Nanwalek IRA Council and Port Graham
Village Council. The Tyonek
Conservation District expressed
significant interest in participating in
natural resource management decisions
that could affect Cook Inlet. The Native
Village of Eklutna requested to further
develop traditional stewardship,
through a degree of co-management
with NMFS and the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service (USFWS), of culturally
important trust salmon stocks returning
to traditional areas.
Many tribal members requested an
indigenous subsistence fishery set-aside
to be incorporated into amendment 16
and this final rule. Such a modification
could not have been made to
amendment 16 without publishing a
new proposed rule, which was not
possible given the impending court
deadline for implementation of a final
rule. Creating an indigenous subsistence
fishery set-aside within the Cook Inlet
EEZ would require further analysis and
consideration by NMFS and the Council
that are outside of the original scope
and purpose of this action. As noted in
response the Comment 79, FMPs are
adaptive and the Council may
recommend amending the Salmon FMP
in the future to incorporate feedback
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34755
from tribes in upcoming consultations
that NMFS has committed to honoring.
A Summary of the Nature of Tribal
Concerns
Comments from Alaska Native
representatives received prior to the
close of the public comment period are
summarized in the Comments and
Responses section of this final rule.
NMFS also received three written
comments from Alaska Native
representatives after the public
comment period closed. Tribal
comments received after the public
comment period are included in the
summary below.
Cook Inlet tribes expressed a
significant interest in collaborating with
NMFS on this action. The primary
question received from Alaska Native
representatives during tribal outreach
and engagement on amendment 16 was
how this action would impact tribal
subsistence fishing. Based on the above
tribal engagements, consultations, and
public comments, the nature of tribal
concerns fell into four main categories:
(1) impacts to traditional lands/Federal
trust responsibility; (2) indigenous
subsistence fishery set-aside; (3) salmon
status/fishery management; and (4) fish
& habitat enhancement. The nature of
tribal concerns are summarized for each
of these categories below.
Impacts To Traditional Lands/Federal
Trust Responsibility
All Cook Inlet tribes expressed that
this action would affect their traditional
ancestral territories, customary areas of
use, and vital way of life and would
impact environmental and cultural
resources that are imperative to the
health, safety, and welfare of tribal
citizens. Cook Inlet tribes stated that
NMFS must partner with them to fulfill
the Federal trust responsibility and
international obligations for tribal rights
and food security, including access to
traditional resources such as salmon.
Cook Inlet tribes stated that Federal,
territorial, and State regulations have
dramatically reduced the fishing
opportunities for Alaska Native tribal
citizens while globally significant
markets have been developed to sell
Alaskan fish, which have eroded
indigenous rights and have had a huge
impact on Alaska Native peoples.
Indigenous Subsistence Fishery SetAside
Cook Inlet tribes expressed concerns
that less weight was given to tribal
comments relative to the commercial
fishing industry and that they do not
have a voice in the government process.
Cook Inlet tribes asked NMFS to be
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mindful of this power imbalance and
that the action impacts tribal rights.
Personal use, educational fishery
permits, and a few (select) subsistence
permits are how tribal citizens currently
harvest fish in Cook Inlet. Cook Inlet
tribes believe that Federal management
of salmon in the Cook Inlet EEZ
provides a long overdue opportunity for
an indigenous subsistence fishery (e.g.,
tribal fishery set-aside) in the Cook Inlet
EEZ, ahead of commercial and
recreational needs, and would like to
work with NMFS to develop an
indigenous set-aside for salmon harvest
that has priority over other uses.
Salmon Status/Fishery Management
One Cook Inlet tribe felt
overescapement was unsustainable for
the available habitat. Another tribe had
significant concerns about the EEZ
fishing and wanted to maintain the
conservation corridor in Cook Inlet.
Other tribes highlighted that there are
numerous and increasing threats to
Cook Inlet salmon populations that
decrease salmon runs originating from
Cook Inlet. Several Cook Inlet tribes
support Federal management of salmon
in the Cook Inlet EEZ. Tribes generally
emphasized that NMFS must do more to
achieve a precautionary fishery
management approach based on threats
to Cook Inlet salmon populations.
Tribes also stated that by merely
focusing on the commercial and
recreational fishing that was the subject
of the District Court’s 2022 order, NMFS
ignores subsistence needs, which are
also included in the Magnuson-Stevens
Act. With subsistence use representing
only one tenth of one percent of Cook
Inlet harvest, Cook Inlet tribes stated a
subsistence fishery would not threaten
commercial or recreational fisheries,
have a very small effect on the salmon
populations, and have a notably
beneficial impact on tribal cultural
perpetuation, citizen health, and
wellbeing. Cook Inlet tribes requested
that Federal fishery management be
precautionary with TACs based on
timely in-season escapements and not
historical harvest averages and preseason forecasts. Tribal
recommendations included funding
better escapement data collection and
genetic analysis of EEZ-harvested
salmon, development of a salmon
database with in-season genetic data,
development of test fisheries, a fishery
period from July 16 to August 15,
allowing only one 12-hour fishing
period per week, and maintaining the
current drift gillnet length of 150
fathoms (274.32 m). Lastly, tribes
recommend creating a tribal fishing
opportunity modeled after the Alaska
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Subsistence Halibut Program and
providing proxy fishing opportunities
developed collectively with Tribal
governments to ensure tribal elders and
other tribal citizens who are physically
unable to harvest fish in the Cook Inlet
EEZ can access salmon.
Fish & Habitat Enhancement
All Cook Inlet tribes that commented
want to work towards increasing salmon
runs and have been taking actions (e.g.,
fish and habitat enhancement) over the
past 50 years to address Alaska Native
community concerns by reducing
invasive species; replacing fish passage
barriers in their district; restoring over
45 miles (72.42 km) of upstream salmon
habitat; leading regional efforts for the
prevention, early detection, and
treatment of aquatic invasive plants;
collecting baseline stream data; and
surveying streams for inclusion in the
State of Alaska Anadromous Waters
Catalog for protection. Cook Inlet tribes
have also performed research to advise
habitat assessments and salmon
restoration planning.
In summary, tribal concerns were
focused on providing relief to Alaska
Native salmon fishing families and
communities as well as continued
communication in the NMFS tribal
engagement and consultation process as
it relates to fishery resource access that
sustains the tribal way of life. Detailed
meeting summaries of the tribal
concerns listed above are available on
the NMFS Alaska Region website (see
ADDRESSES).
NMFS’s Position Supporting the Need
To Issue the Regulation
This final rule is needed to implement
Federal fisheries management of the
Cook Inlet EEZ. NMFS’s position is
stated in the preamble to the proposed
rule and this final rule, and in the
comments and responses section.
Statement of the Extent to Which the
Concerns of Tribal Officials Have Been
Met
From the perspective of a number of
Cook Inlet tribes, the primary concern
was over how this fishery would impact
Alaska Native subsistence fishing and,
secondly, if the action would include a
tribal subsistence set-aside. The
Analysis prepared for this action
provides information on the current
subsistence fisheries in Cook Inlet and
indicates that there has not been a
subsistence fishery in the EEZ during
the time period for which NMFS has
data, though tribes have stated that they
did historically fish in EEZ waters.
Throughout litigation and for much of
the development of amendment 16, a
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tribal subsistence fishery did not come
up as a management proposal. This final
rule, developed in response to court
decisions on a strict timeline, therefore
authorizes only commercial drift gillnet
and recreational fishing in the EEZ. To
address tribal concerns that amendment
16 did not include an indigenous
subsistence set-aside, NMFS has
committed to honoring the Cook Inlet
tribal consultation requests received in
2024 and welcomes further engagement
and discussion.
NMFS and the Council have made
significant efforts in conducting direct
outreach and engagement, and for
NMFS in conducting tribal
consultations, with Alaska Native
representatives, which include Alaska
Native tribes, Alaska Native
corporations, and Native organizations
and communities over the last few
years. NMFS made significant efforts to
involve Alaska Native representatives in
the development of this action. In
conjunction with Council outreach,
NMFS provided information to Alaska
Native representatives that were
interested in engaging at each step in
the process and consulted with
interested Alaska Native
representatives, as described above.
NMFS considered all input from these
consultations and engagements,
consistent with E.O. 13175 and the
agency’s tribal consultation obligations
before reaching a final decision on this
action. In addition, NMFS committed to
honoring the Cook Inlet tribal
consultation and information requests to
discuss the possibility of a tribal
subsistence fishery in the Cook Inlet
EEZ.
NMFS acknowledges the longstanding challenges that Alaska Native
representatives have had
communicating with the agency and
appreciates the tribes’ commitment to
communicating needed improvements
to the consultation process. NMFS has
taken several actions over the last year,
including building staff capacity and
hosting listening sessions, and intends
to continue to improve tribal
consultation.
List of Subjects
15 CFR Part 902
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
50 CFR Part 600
Administrative practice and
procedure, Confidential business
information, Fish, Fisheries, Fishing,
Fishing vessels, Foreign relations,
Intergovernmental relations, Penalties,
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Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Statistics.
2. Amend § 902.1, in the table in
paragraph (b), by adding in numerical
order entries for ‘‘679.114’’, ‘‘679.115’’,
‘‘679.117(b)(1)(xiv)’’, and
‘‘679.118(f)(2)’’ to read as follows:
■
50 CFR Part 679
Alaska, Fisheries, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
§ 902.1 OMB control numbers assigned
pursuant to the Paperwork Reduction Act.
Dated: April 18, 2024.
Samuel D. Rauch III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for
Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
*
TITLE 15—COMMERCE AND FOREIGN
TRADE
*
*
Current OMB
control No.
(all numbers
begin with
0648–)
*
50 CFR
........................
*
*
*
679.114 .................................
679.115 .................................
679.117(b)(1)(xiv) .................
679.118(f)(2) .........................
*
–0818
–0818
–0445
–0818
Fishery
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
PART 600—MAGNUSON-STEVENS
ACT PROVISIONS
3. The authority citation for part 600
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 561 and 16 U.S.C. 1801
et seq.
*
Authority: 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.
*
*
4. Amend § 600.725, in the table in
paragraph (v), under the heading ‘‘VII.
North Pacific Fishery Management
Council’’ by revising entry ‘‘8’’ to read
as follows:
■
§ 600.725
*
General prohibitions.
*
*
(v) * * *
*
*
Authorized gear types
*
*
*
VII. North Pacific Fishery Management Council
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
8. Alaska Salmon Fishery (FMP):
A. East Area ...................................................................................... A. Hook and line.
B. Cook Inlet EEZ Area ..................................................................... B. Drift gillnet, handline, rod and reel, hook and line.
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
5. The authority citation for part 679
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 773 et seq., 1801 et
seq., 3631 et seq.; Pub. L. 108–447; Pub. L.
111–281.
6. Amend § 679.1 by revising
paragraph (i)(1) to read as follows:
■
§ 679.1
Purpose and scope.
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*
*
*
*
*
(i) * * *
(1) Regulations in this part govern
commercial fishing for salmon by
fishing vessels of the United States in
the West Area and commercial and
recreational fishing for salmon in the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area of the Salmon
Management Area.
*
*
*
*
*
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*
*
7. Amend § 679.2 by:
a. Adding, in alphabetical order, the
definition for ‘‘Daily bag limit’’;
■ b. Revising the definition of
‘‘Federally permitted vessel,’’
■ c. Adding paragraph (7) to the
definition of ‘‘Fishing trip’’;
■ d. Adding, in alphabetical order, the
definitions for ‘‘Possession limit’’ and
‘‘Registered Salmon Receiver’’;
■ e. Revising the definition of ‘‘Salmon
Management Area’’; and
■ f. Adding, in alphabetical order, the
definitions for ‘‘Salmon shoreside
processor’’ and ‘‘Waters of Cook Inlet.’’
The additions and revision read as
follows:
■
■
PART 679—FISHERIES OF THE
EXCLUSIVE ECONOMIC ZONE OFF
ALASKA
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control No.
(all numbers
begin with
0648–)
TITLE 50—WILDLIFE AND FISHERIES
*
*
*
*
*
PART 902—NOAA INFORMATION
COLLECTION REQUIREMENTS UNDER
THE PAPERWORK REDUCTION ACT:
OMB COLLECTION NUMBERS
1. The authority citation for 15 CFR
part 902 continues to read as follows:
*
CFR part or section where
the information collection requirement is located
For the reasons set out in the
preamble, NMFS amends 15 CFR part
902 and 50 CFR parts 600 and 679 as
follows:
■
*
*
(b) * * *
CFR part or section where
the information collection requirement is located
§ 679.2
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
Daily bag limit means the maximum
number of salmon a person may retain
in any calendar day from recreational
fishing in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area.
*
*
*
*
*
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*
*
*
*
Federally permitted vessel means a
vessel that is named on a Federal
fisheries permit issued pursuant to
§ 679.4(b), a Salmon Federal Fisheries
Permit issued pursuant to § 679.114(b),
or a Federal crab vessel permit issued
pursuant to § 680.4(k) of this chapter.
Federally permitted vessels must
conform to regulatory requirements for
purposes of fishing restrictions in
habitat conservation areas, habitat
conservation zones, habitat protection
areas, and the Modified Gear Trawl
Zone; for purposes of anchoring
prohibitions in habitat protection areas;
for purposes of requirements for the BS
and GOA nonpelagic trawl fishery
pursuant to §§ 679.7(b)(9) and (c)(5),
and 679.24(f); and for purposes of VMS
requirements.
*
*
*
*
*
Fishing trip means:
*
*
*
*
*
(7) For purposes of subpart J of this
part, the period beginning when a vessel
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operator commences commercial fishing
for any salmon species in the Cook Inlet
EEZ Area and ending when the vessel
operator offloads or transfers any
unprocessed salmon species from that
vessel.
*
*
*
*
*
Possession limit means the maximum
number of unprocessed salmon a person
may possess from recreational fishing in
the Cook Inlet EEZ Area.
*
*
*
*
*
Registered Salmon Receiver means a
person holding a Registered Salmon
Receiver Permit issued by NMFS.
*
*
*
*
*
Salmon Management Area means
those waters of the EEZ off Alaska (see
figures 22 and 23 to part 679) under the
authority of the Salmon FMP. The
Salmon Management Area is divided
into three areas: the East Area, the West
Area, and the Cook Inlet EEZ Area:
(1) The East Area means the area of
the EEZ in the Gulf of Alaska east of the
longitude of Cape Suckling (143°53.6′
W).
(2) The West Area means the area of
the EEZ off Alaska in the Bering Sea,
Chukchi Sea, Beaufort Sea, and the Gulf
of Alaska west of the longitude of Cape
Suckling (143°53.6′ W), but excludes the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area, Prince William
Sound Area, and the Alaska Peninsula
Area. The Prince William Sound Area
and the Alaska Peninsula Area are
shown in figure 23 to this part and
described as:
(i) The Prince William Sound Area
means the EEZ shoreward of a line that
starts at 60°16.8′ N and 146°15.24′ W
and extends southeast to 59°42.66′ N
and 144°36.20′ W and a line that starts
at 59°43.28′ N and 144°31.50′ W and
extends northeast to 59°56.4′ N and
143°53.6′ W.
(ii) The Alaska Peninsula Area means
the EEZ shoreward of a line at 54°22.5′
N from 164°27.1′ W to 163°1.2′ W and
a line at 162°24.05′ W from 54°30.1′ N
to 54°27.75′ N.
(3) The Cook Inlet EEZ Area, shown
in figure 22 to this part, means the EEZ
of Cook Inlet north of a line at 59°46.15′
N.
*
*
*
*
*
Salmon shoreside processor means
any person or vessel that receives,
purchases, or arranges to purchase, and
processes unprocessed salmon
harvested in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area,
except a Registered Salmon Receiver.
*
*
*
*
*
Waters of Cook Inlet means, for the
purposes of §§ 679.28(f)(6)(x) and
679.117(b)(1)(xiv), all Federal waters
and Alaska State waters north of a line
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from Cape Douglas (58°51.10′ N) to
Point Adam (59°15.27′ N).
*
*
*
*
*
■ 8. Amend § 679.3 by revising
paragraph (f) to read as follows:
§ 679.3
Relation to other laws.
*
*
*
*
*
(f) Domestic fishing for salmon.
Management of the salmon commercial
troll fishery and recreational fishery in
the East Area of the Salmon
Management Area, defined at § 679.2, is
delegated to the State of Alaska.
Regulations governing the commercial
drift gillnet salmon fishery and
recreational salmon fishery in the Cook
Inlet EEZ Area, defined at § 679.2, are
set forth in subpart J of this part.
*
*
*
*
*
§ 679.7
[Amended]
9. Amend § 679.7 by removing and
reserving paragraph (h).
■ 10. Amend § 679.25 by:
■ a. Revising paragraph (a)(1)
introductory text;
■ b. Adding paragraphs (a)(1)(vi) and
(a)(2)(vi) through (viii); and
■ c. Revising paragraphs (b)
introductory text and (b)(3) and (8).
The revisions and additions read as
follows:
■
§ 679.25
Inseason adjustments.
(a) * * *
(1) Types of adjustments. Inseason
adjustments for directed fishing for
groundfish, fishing for IFQ or CDQ
halibut, or fishing for Cook Inlet EEZ
Area salmon issued by NMFS under this
section include:
*
*
*
*
*
(vi) Adjustment of TAC for any
salmon species or stock and closure or
opening of a season in all or part of the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area.
(2) * * *
(vi) Any inseason adjustment taken
under paragraph (a)(1)(vi) of this section
must be based on a determination that
such adjustments are necessary to
prevent:
(A) Overfishing of any species or
stock of fish or shellfish;
(B) Harvest of a TAC for any salmon
species or stock that, on the basis of the
best available scientific information, is
found by NMFS to be incorrectly
specified; or
(C) Underharvest of a TAC for any
salmon species or stock when catch
information indicates that the TAC has
not been reached, and there is not a
conservation or management concern
for any species or stock that would also
be harvested with additional fishing
effort.
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(vii) The selection of the appropriate
inseason management adjustments
under paragraphs (a)(1)(vi) of this
section must be from the following
authorized management measures and
must be based on a determination by the
Regional Administrator that the
management adjustment selected is the
least restrictive necessary to achieve the
purpose of the adjustment:
(A) Closure of a management area or
portion thereof, or gear type, or season
to all salmon fishing; or
(B) Reopening of a management area
or season to achieve the TAC for any of
the salmon species or stock without
exceeding the TAC of any other salmon
species or stock.
(viii) The adjustment of a TAC for any
salmon species or stock under
paragraph (a)(1)(vi) of this section must
be based upon a determination by the
Regional Administrator that the
adjustment is based upon the best
scientific information available
concerning the biological stock status of
the species or stock in question and that
the currently specified TAC is incorrect.
Any adjustment to a TAC must be
reasonably related to the change in
biological stock status.
(b) Data. Information relevant to one
or more of the following factors may be
considered in making the
determinations required under
paragraphs (a)(2)(i), (ii), (vi) and (vii) of
this section:
*
*
*
*
*
(3) Relative distribution and
abundance of stocks of groundfish
species, salmon species or stocks, and
prohibited species within all or part of
a statistical area;
*
*
*
*
*
(8) Any other factor relevant to the
conservation and management of
groundfish species, salmon species or
stocks, or any incidentally caught
species that are designated as prohibited
species or for which a PSC limit has
been specified.
*
*
*
*
*
11. Amend § 679.28 by adding
paragraph (f)(6)(x) to read as follows:
■
§ 679.28 Equipment and operational
requirements
*
*
*
*
*
(f) * * *
(6) * * *
(x) You operate a vessel named, or
required to be named, on an SFFP
issued under § 679.114 in the waters of
Cook Inlet during a calendar day when
directed fishing for salmon using drift
gillnet gear is open in the Cook Inlet
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EEZ Area and have drift gillnet gear on
board or deployed.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 12. Add subpart J, consisting of
§§ 679.110 through 679.119, to read as
follows:
Subpart J—Salmon Fishery
Management
Sec.
679.110
679.111
679.114
Recordkeeping and reporting.
[Reserved]
Salmon fisheries prohibitions.
Management measures.
Recreational salmon fisheries.
Subpart J—Salmon Fishery
Management
§ 679.110
Applicability.
This subpart contains regulations
governing the commercial and
recreational harvest of salmon in the
Salmon Management Area (See § 679.2).
Applicability.
through 679.113 [Reserved]
Permits.
§ 679.111 through 679.113
§ 679.114
[Reserved]
Permits.
(a) Requirements—(1) What permits
are available? The following table
describes the permits available under
this subpart that authorize the retention,
processing, and receipt of salmon in the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area, respectively, along
with date of effectiveness for each
permit and reference paragraphs for
further information:
If permit type is:
Permit is in effect from issue date through the
end of:
For more information, see . . .
(i) Salmon Federal Fisheries Permit (SFFP) ......
3 years or until expiration date shown on permit.
Until expiration date shown on permit .............
1 year ...............................................................
Paragraph (b) of this section.
(ii) Salmon Federal Processor Permit (SFPP) ...
(iii) Registered Salmon Receiver Permit (RSRP)
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679.115
679.116
679.117
679.118
679.119
(2) Permit and logbook required by
participant and fishery. For the various
types of permits issued pursuant to this
subpart, refer to § 679.115 for
recordkeeping and reporting
requirements.
(3) Permit application. (i) A person
may obtain an application for a new
permit, or for renewal or revision of an
existing permit, from NMFS for any of
the permits under this section and must
submit forms to NMFS as instructed in
application instructions. All permit
applications may be completed online
and printed from the NMFS Alaska
Region website (See § 679.2);
(ii) Upon receipt of an incomplete or
improperly completed permit
application, NMFS will notify the
applicant of the deficiency in the permit
application. If the applicant fails to
correct the deficiency, the permit will
not be issued. NMFS will not approve
a permit application that is untimely or
incomplete;
(iii) The owner or authorized
representative of a vessel, owner or
authorized representative of a processor,
and Registered Salmon Receiver must
obtain a separate permit for each vessel,
entity, operation, or facility, as
appropriate to each Federal permit in
this section;
(iv) All permits are issued free of
charge;
(v) NMFS will consider objective
written evidence in determining
whether an application is timely. The
responsibility remains with the sender
to provide objective written evidence of
when an application to obtain, amend,
or to surrender a permit was received by
NMFS (e.g., certified mail or other
method that provides written evidence
that NMFS Alaska Region received it);
and
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(vi) For applications delivered by
hand delivery or carrier, the date the
application was received by NMFS is
the date NMFS staff signs for it upon
receipt. If the application is submitted
by fax or mail, the receiving date of the
application is the date stamped received
by NMFS.
(4) Disclosure. NMFS will maintain a
list of permit holders that may be
disclosed for public inspection.
(5) Sanctions and denials. Procedures
governing permit sanctions and permit
denials for enforcement purposes are
found at subpart D of 15 CFR part 904.
Such procedures are not required for
any other purposes under this part.
(6) Harvesting privilege. Permits
issued pursuant to this subpart are
neither a right to the resource nor any
interest that is subject to the ‘‘Takings
Clause’’ provision of the Fifth
Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
Rather, such permits represent only a
harvesting privilege that may be revoked
or amended subject to the requirements
of the Magnuson-Stevens Act and other
applicable law.
(7) Permit surrender. (i) NMFS will
recognize the voluntary surrender of a
permit issued under this subpart, if a
permit is authorized to be surrendered
and if an application is submitted by the
permit holder or authorized
representative and approved by NMFS;
and
(ii) For surrender of an SFFP and
SFPP, refer to paragraphs (b)(3)(ii) and
(c)(3)(ii) of this section, respectively.
(b) Salmon Federal Fisheries Permit
(SFFP)—(1) Requirements. (i) No vessel
of the United States may be used to
commercially fish for salmon in the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area unless the owner
or authorized representative first obtains
an SFFP for the vessel issued under this
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Paragraph (c) of this section.
Paragraph (d) of this section.
part. Only persons who are U.S. citizens
are authorized to obtain an SFFP; and
(ii) Each vessel used to commercially
fish for salmon within the Cook Inlet
EEZ Area must have a legible copy of a
valid SFFP on board at all times. The
vessel operator must present the valid
SFFP for inspection upon the request of
any authorized officer.
(2) Vessel operation. An SFFP
authorizes a vessel to conduct
operations in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area.
(3) Duration—(i) Length of permit
effectiveness. NMFS issues SFFPs on a
3-year cycle, and an SFFP is in effect
from the effective date through the
expiration date, as indicated on the
SFFP, unless the SFFP is revoked,
suspended, or modified under § 600.735
or § 600.740 of this chapter, or
surrendered in accordance with
paragraph (a)(7) of this section.
(ii) Surrendered permit. (A) An SFFP
may be voluntarily surrendered in
accordance with paragraph (a)(7) of this
section. NMFS will not reissue a
surrendered SFFP to the owner or
authorized representative of a vessel
named on an SFFP until after the
expiration date of the surrendered SFFP
as initially issued.
(B) An owner or authorized
representative who applied for and
received an SFFP must notify NMFS of
the intention to surrender the SFFP by
submitting an SFFP application found at
the NMFS Alaska Region website and
indicating on the application that
surrender of the SFFP is requested.
Upon receipt and approval of an SFFP
surrender application, NMFS will
withdraw the SFFP from active status.
(4) Amended permit. An owner or
authorized representative who applied
for and received an SFFP must notify
NMFS of any change in the permit
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information by submitting an SFFP
application found at the NMFS Alaska
Region website. The owner or
authorized representative must submit
the application form as instructed on
the form. Except as provided under
paragraph (b)(3)(ii)(B) of this section,
upon receipt and approval of an
application form for permit amendment,
NMFS will issue an amended SFFP.
(5) SFFP application. To obtain,
amend, renew, or surrender an SFFP,
the vessel owner or authorized
representative must complete an SFFP
application form per the instructions
from the NMFS Alaska Region website.
The owner or authorized representative
of the vessel must sign and date the
application form, certifying that all
information is true, correct, and
complete to the best of their knowledge
and belief. If the application form is
completed by an authorized
representative, proof of authorization
must accompany the application form.
(6) Issuance. (i) Except as provided in
subpart D of 15 CFR part 904, upon
receipt and approval of a properly
completed permit application, NMFS
will issue an SFFP required by
paragraph (b) of this section.
(ii) NMFS will send an SFFP with the
appropriate logbooks to the owner or
authorized representative, as provided
under § 679.115.
(7) Transfer. An SFFP issued under
paragraph (b) of this section is not
transferable or assignable and is valid
only for the vessel for which it is issued.
(c) Salmon Federal Processor Permit
(SFPP)—(1) Requirements. No salmon
shoreside processor, as defined at
§ 679.2, may process salmon harvested
in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area, unless the
owner or authorized representative first
obtains an SFPP issued under this
subpart. A salmon shoreside processor
may not be operated in a category other
than as specified on the SFPP. A legible
copy of a valid SFPP must be on site at
the salmon shoreside processor at all
times and must be presented for
inspection upon the request of any
authorized officer.
(2) SFPP application. To obtain,
amend, renew, or surrender an SFPP,
the owner or authorized representative
of the salmon shoreside processor must
complete an SFPP application form per
the instructions from the NMFS Alaska
Region website. The owner or
authorized representative of the salmon
shoreside processor must sign and date
the application form, certifying that all
information is true, correct, and
complete to the best of their knowledge
and belief. If the application form is
completed by an authorized
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representative, proof of authorization
must accompany the application form.
(3) Issuance. Except as provided in
subpart D of 15 CFR part 904, upon
receipt and approval of a properly
completed permit application, NMFS
will issue an SFPP required by
paragraph (c) of this section.
(4) Duration—(i) Length of
effectiveness. An SFPP is in effect from
the effective date through the date of
permit expiration, unless it is revoked,
suspended, or modified under § 600.735
or § 600.740 of this chapter, or
surrendered in accordance with
paragraph (a)(7) of this section.
(ii) Surrendered permit. (A) An SFPP
may be voluntarily surrendered in
accordance with paragraph (a)(7) of this
section. NMFS may reissue an SFPP to
the person to whom the SFPP was
initially issued in the same fishing year
in which it was surrendered.
(B) An owner or authorized
representative who applied for and
received an SFPP must notify NMFS of
the intention to surrender the SFPP by
submitting an SFPP application found at
the NMFS Alaska Region website and
indicating on the application form that
surrender of the SFPP is requested.
Upon receipt and approval of an SFPP
surrender application, NMFS will
withdraw the SFPP from active status.
(5) Amended permit. An owner or
authorized representative who applied
for and received an SFPP must notify
NMFS of any change in the permit
information by submitting an SFPP
application found at the NMFS Alaska
Region website. The owner or
authorized representative must submit
the application form as instructed on
the form. Upon receipt and approval of
an SFPP amendment application, NMFS
will issue an amended SFPP.
(6) Transfer. An SFPP issued under
this paragraph (c) is not transferable or
assignable and is valid only for the
salmon shoreside processor for which it
is issued.
(d) Registered Salmon Receiver Permit
(RSRP)—(1) Requirements. An RSRP
authorizes the person identified on the
permit to receive a landing of salmon
from an SFFP holder at any time during
the fishing year for which it is issued
until the RSRP expires, as indicated on
the RSRP, or is revoked, suspended, or
modified under § 600.735 or § 600.740
of this chapter, or surrendered in
accordance with paragraph (a)(7) of this
section. An RSRP is required for any
person, other than an SFPP holder, to
receive salmon commercially harvested
in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area from the
person(s) who harvested the fish. A
legible copy of the RSRP must be
present at the time and location of a
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landing. The RSRP holder or their
authorized representative must make
the RSRP available for inspection upon
the request of any authorized officer.
(2) Application. To obtain, amend,
renew, or surrender an RSRP, the owner
or authorized representative must
complete an RSRP application form per
the instructions from the NMFS Alaska
Region website. The owner or
authorized representative of a
Registered Salmon Receiver must sign
and date the application form, certifying
that all information is true, correct, and
complete to the best of their knowledge
and belief. If the application form is
completed by an authorized
representative, proof of authorization
must accompany the application form.
(3) Issuance. Except as provided in
subpart D of 15 CFR part 904, upon
receipt and approval of a properly
completed permit application, NMFS
will issue an RSRP required by
paragraph (d) of this section.
(4) Duration. An RSRP is issued on an
annual cycle defined as May through
the end of April of the next calendar
year, to persons who submit a
Registered Salmon Receiver Permit
application that NMFS approves.
(i) An RSRP is in effect from the first
day of May in the year for which it is
issued or from the date of issuance,
whichever is later, through the end of
the current annual cycle, unless it is
revoked, suspended, or modified under
§ 600.735 or § 600.740 of this chapter, or
surrendered in accordance with
paragraph (a)(7) of this section.
(ii) An RSRP may be voluntarily
surrendered in accordance with
paragraph (a)(7) of this section. An
RSRP may be reissued to the permit
holder of record in the same fishing year
in which it was surrendered.
(5) Amended permit. An owner or
authorized representative who applied
for and received an RSRP must notify
NMFS of any change in the permit
information by submitting an RSRP
application found at the NMFS Alaska
Region website. The owner or
authorized representative must submit
the application form as instructed on
the form. Upon receipt and approval of
an RSRP amendment application, NMFS
will issue an amended RSRP.
§ 679.115
Recordkeeping and reporting.
(a) General recordkeeping and
reporting (R&R) requirement. R&R
requirements include, but are not
limited to, paper and electronic
documentation, logbooks, forms,
reports, and receipts.
(1) Salmon logbooks and forms. (i)
The Regional Administrator will
prescribe and provide logbooks required
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under this section. All forms required
under this section are available from the
NMFS Alaska Region website or may be
requested by calling the Sustainable
Fisheries Division at 907–586–7228.
These forms may be completed online,
or submitted according to the
instructions shown on the form.
(ii) The operator must use the current
edition of the logbooks and current
format of the forms, unless they obtain
prior written approval from NMFS to
use logbooks from the previous year.
Upon approval from NMFS, electronic
versions of the forms may be used.
(iii) Commercial salmon harvest that
occurred in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area
must be recorded in eLandings by an
SFPP or RSRP holder. See paragraph (b)
of this section for more information.
(2) Responsibility. (i) The operator of
a vessel, the manager of a salmon
shoreside processor (hereafter referred
to as the manager), and a Registered
Salmon Receiver are responsible for
complying with applicable R&R
requirements in this section.
(ii) The owner of a vessel, the owner
of a salmon shoreside processor, and the
owner of a Registered Salmon Receiver
are responsible for ensuring their
employees and agents comply with
applicable R&R requirements in this
section.
(3) Fish to be recorded and reported.
The operator of a vessel or manager
must record and report the following
information (see paragraphs (a)(3)(i)
through (iv) of this section) for all
salmon, groundfish (see table 2a to this
part), halibut and crab, forage fish (see
table 2c to this part), and sculpins (see
table 2c to this part). The operator of a
vessel or manager may record and report
the following information (see
paragraphs (a)(3)(i) through (iv) of this
section) for other species (see table 2d
to this part):
(i) Harvest information from vessels;
(ii) Receipt information from vessels,
buying stations, and tender vessels,
including fish received from vessels not
required to have an SFFP or FFP, and
fish received under contract for
handling or processing for another
processor;
(iii) Discard or disposition
information, including fish reported but
not delivered to the operator or manager
(e.g., fish used on board a vessel,
retained for personal use, discarded at
sea), when receiving catch from a vessel,
buying station, or tender vessel; and
(iv) Transfer information, including
fish transferred off the vessel or out of
the facility.
(4) Inspection and retention of
records—(i) Inspection of records. The
operator of a vessel, a manager, and a
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Registered Salmon Receiver must make
available for inspection R&R
documentation they are required to
retain under this section upon the
request of an authorized officer; and
(ii) Retention of records. The operator
of a vessel, a manager, and a Registered
Salmon Receiver must retain the R&R
documentation they are required to
make under this section as follows:
(A) Retain these records on board a
vessel, on site at the salmon shoreside
processor or stationary floating
processor (see § 679.2), or at the
Registered Salmon Receiver’s place of
business, as applicable, until the end of
the fishing year during which the
records were made and for as long
thereafter as fish or fish products
recorded in the R&R documentation are
retained on site.
(B) Retain these records for 3 years
after the end of the fishing year during
which the records were made.
(5) Maintenance of records. The
operator of a vessel, a manager, and a
Registered Salmon Receiver must
maintain all records described in this
section in English and in a legible,
timely, and accurate manner, based on
Alaska local time (A.l.t.); if handwritten,
in indelible ink; if computer-generated,
as a readable file or a legible printed
paper copy.
(6) Custom processing. The manager
or Registered Salmon Receiver must
record products that result from custom
processing for another person in
eLandings consistently throughout a
fishing year using one of the following
two methods:
(i) For combined records, record
landings, discards or dispositions, and
products of custom-processed salmon
routinely in eLandings using processor
name, any applicable RSRP number or
SFPP number, and ADF&G processor
code; or
(ii) For separate records, record
landings, discards or dispositions, and
products of custom-processed salmon in
eLandings identified by the name, SFPP
number or RSRP number, and ADF&G
processor code of the associated
business entity.
(7) Representative. The operator of a
vessel, manager, and RSRP holder may
identify one contact person to complete
the logbook and forms and to respond
to inquiries from NMFS.
(b) Interagency Electronic Reporting
System (IERS) and eLandings—(1)
Responsibility. (i) An eLandings User
must obtain at his or her own expense
hardware, software, and internet
connectivity to support internet
submissions of commercial fishery
landings for which participants report to
NMFS: landing data, production data,
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and discard or disposition data. The
User must enter this information via the
internet by logging on to the eLandings
system at https://elandings.alaska.gov
or other NMFS-approved software or by
using the desktop client software.
(ii) If the User is unable to submit
commercial fishery landings of Cook
Inlet EEZ salmon due to hardware,
software, or internet failure for a period
longer than the required reporting time,
the User must contact NMFS
Sustainable Fisheries Division at 907–
586–7228 for instructions. When the
hardware, software, or internet is
restored, the User must enter this same
information into eLandings or other
NMFS-approved software.
(2) eLandings processor registration.
(i) Before a User can use the eLandings
system to report landings, production,
discard, or disposition data, he or she
must request authorization to use the
system, reserve a unique UserID, and
obtain a password by using the internet
to complete the eLandings processor
registration at https://elandings.
alaska.gov/elandings/Register;
(ii) Upon registration acceptance, the
User must print, sign, and mail or fax
the User Agreement Form to NMFS at
the address or fax number shown on the
form. Confirmation is emailed to
indicate that the User is registered,
authorized to use eLandings, and that
the UserID and User’s account are
enabled; and
(iii) The User’s signature on the
registration form means that the User
agrees to the following terms:
(A) To use eLandings access
privileges only for submitting legitimate
fishery landing reports;
(B) To safeguard the UserID and
password to prevent their use by
unauthorized persons; and
(C) To ensure that the User is
authorized to submit landing reports for
the processor permit number(s) listed.
(3) Information required for eLandings
processor registration form. The User
must enter the following information
(see paragraphs (b)(3)(i) through (ix) of
this section) to obtain operation
registration and UserID registration:
(i) Select the operation type from the
dropdown list;
(ii) Enter a name that will refer to the
specific operation. For example, if the
plant is in Kodiak and the company is
East Pacific Seafoods, the operation
name might read ‘‘East Pacific SeafoodsKodiak;’’
(iii) Enter ADF&G processor code;
(iv) Enter all the Federal permits
associated with the operation;
(A) If a processor for Cook Inlet EEZ
salmon, enter the SFPP number; and
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(B) If a Registered Salmon Receiver,
enter the RSRP number;
(v) Enter the home port code (see
tables 14a, 14b, and 14c to this part) for
the operation;
(vi) If a tender operation, the operator
must enter the ADF&G vessel
identification number of the vessel;
(vii) If a buying station or Registered
Salmon Receiver operation is a vehicle,
enter vehicle license number and the
state of license issuance;
(viii) If a buying station, tender vessel,
or custom processor, enter the following
information to identify the associated
processor where the processing will take
place: operation type, ADF&G processor
code, and applicable SFPP number, and
RSRP number; and
(ix) Each operation requires a primary
User. Enter the following information
for the primary User for the new
operation: create and enter a UserID,
initial password, company name, User
name (name of the person who will use
the UserID), city and state where the
operation is located, business telephone
number, business fax number, business
email address, security question, and
security answer.
(4) Information entered automatically
for eLandings landing report. eLandings
autofills the following fields from
processor registration records (see
paragraph (b)(2) of this section): UserID,
processor company name, business
telephone number, email address, port
of landing, operation type (for catcher/
processors, motherships, or stationary
floating processors), ADF&G processor
code, and Federal permit number. The
User must review the autofilled cells to
ensure that they are accurate for the
landing that is taking place. eLandings
assigns a unique landing report number
and an ADF&G electronic fish ticket
number upon completion of data entry.
(5) Registered Salmon Receiver
landing report. The manager and a
Registered Salmon Receiver that
receives salmon from a vessel issued an
SFFP under § 679.114 and that is
required to have an SFPP or RSRP under
§ 679.114(c) or (d) must use eLandings
or other NMFS-approved software to
submit a daily landing report during the
fishing year to report processor
identification information and the
following information under paragraphs
(b)(5)(i)(A) through (C) of this section:
(i) Information entered for each
salmon delivery to a salmon shoreside
processor or Registered Salmon
Receiver. The User for a shoreside
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processor, stationary floating processor,
or Registered Salmon Receiver must
enter the information specified at
(b)(5)(i)(A) through (C) of this section for
each salmon delivery provided by the
operator of a vessel, the operator or
manager of an associated buying station
or tender vessel, and from processors for
reprocessing or rehandling product into
eLandings or other NMFS-approved
software:
(A) Delivery information. The User
must:
(1) For crew size, enter the number of
licensed crew aboard the vessel,
including the operator;
(2) Enter the management program
name in which harvest occurred (see
paragraph (a)(1)(iii) of this section);
(3) Enter the ADF&G salmon
statistical area of harvest;
(4) For date of landing, enter date
(mm/dd/yyyy) that the delivery was
completed;
(5) Indicate (YES or NO) whether
delivery is from a buying station or
tender vessel;
(6) If the delivery is received from a
buying station, indicate the name of the
buying station;
(7) If the delivery is received from a
tender vessel, enter the ADF&G vessel
registration number;
(8) If delivery is received from a
vessel, indicate the ADF&G vessel
registration number of the vessel; and
(9) Mark whether the vessel logsheet
has been received.
(B) Catch information. The User must
record the number and landed scale
weight in pounds of salmon, including
any applicable weight modifier such as
delivery condition code, and disposition
code of fish by species.
(C) Discard or disposition
information. (1) The User must record
discard or disposition of fish: that
occurred on and was reported by a
vessel; that occurred on and was
reported by a salmon shoreside
processor or Registered Salmon
Receiver; and that occurred prior to,
during, and/or after production at the
salmon shoreside processor.
(2) The User for a salmon shoreside
processor or Registered Salmon Receiver
must submit a landing report containing
the information described in paragraph
(b)(5)(i) of this section for each salmon
delivery from a specific vessel by 1200
hours, A.l.t., of the day following
completion of the delivery. If the landed
scale weight required in paragraph
(b)(5)(i)(B) of this section is not
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available by this deadline, the User
must transmit an estimated weight and
count for each species by 1200 hours,
A.l.t., of the day following completion
of the delivery, and must submit a
revised landing report with the landed
scale weight for each species by 1200
hours, A.l.t., of the third day following
completion of the delivery.
(3) By using eLandings, the User for
a salmon shoreside processor or a
Registered Salmon Receiver and the
operator of the vessel providing
information to the User for the salmon
shoreside processor or Registered
Salmon Receiver accept the
responsibility of and acknowledge
compliance with § 679.117(b)(5).
(ii) [Reserved]
(c) Logbooks—(1) Requirements. (i)
All Cook Inlet EEZ Area logbook pages
must be sequentially numbered.
(ii) Except as described in paragraph
(c)(1)(iii) or (iv) of this section, no
person may alter or change any entry or
record in a logbook;
(iii) An inaccurate or incorrect entry
or record in printed data must be
corrected by lining out the original and
inserting the correction, provided that
the original entry or record remains
legible. All corrections must be made in
ink; and
(iv) If after an electronic logsheet is
signed, an error is found in the data, the
operator must make any necessary
changes to the data, sign the new
logsheet, and export the revised file to
NMFS. The operator must retain both
the original and revised logsheet
reports.
(2) Logsheet distribution and
submittal. The operator of a vessel must
distribute and submit accurate copies of
logsheets to the salmon shoreside
processor or Registered Salmon Receiver
and to NOAA Fisheries Office of Law
Enforcement Alaska Region according to
the logsheet instructions.
(3) Salmon drift gillnet vessel daily
fishing log. The operator of a vessel that
is required to have an SFFP under
§ 679.114(b), and that is using drift
gillnet gear to harvest salmon in the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area, must maintain a
salmon drift gillnet vessel daily fishing
log.
(4) Reporting time limits. The operator
of a vessel using drift gillnet gear must
record in the daily fishing log the
information from the following table for
each set within the specified time limit:
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REPORTING TIME LIMITS, CATCHER VESSEL DRIFT GILLNET GEAR
Required information
Time limit for recording
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(i) SFFP number, set number, date and time gear set, date and time gear hauled, beginning
and end positions of set, length of net deployed, total number of salmon, and estimated hail
weight of groundfish for each set.
(ii) Discard and disposition information ...........................................................................................
(iii) Submit an accurate copy of the groundfish discards reported on the daily fishing log to
shoreside processor or Registered Salmon Receiver receiving catch.
(iv) All other required information ....................................................................................................
(v) Operator sign the completed logsheets .....................................................................................
§ 679.116
[Reserved]
§ 679.117
Salmon fisheries prohibitions.
In addition to the general prohibitions
specified in § 600.725 of this chapter
and § 679.7, it is unlawful for any
person to do any of the following:
(a) The East Area and the West Area—
(1) East Area. Engage in commercial
fishing for salmon using any gear except
troll gear, defined at § 679.2, in the East
Area of the Salmon Management Area,
defined at § 679.2 and figure 23 to this
part.
(2) West Area. Engage in commercial
fishing for salmon in the West Area of
the Salmon Management Area, defined
at § 679.2 and figure 23 to this part.
(b) Cook Inlet EEZ Area—(1)
Commercial fishery participants. (i)
Engage in commercial fishing for
salmon in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area of
the Salmon Management Area, defined
at § 679.2 and figure 22 to this part, with
a vessel of the United States that does
not have on board a legible copy of a
valid SFFP issued to the vessel under
§ 679.114;
(ii) Engage in commercial fishing for
salmon using any gear except drift
gillnet gear, described at § 679.118, in
the Cook Inlet EEZ Area;
(iii) Have on board, retrieve, or deploy
any gear, except a drift gillnet legally
configured for the Cook Inlet EEZ Area
commercial salmon fishery while
commercial fishing for salmon in the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area;
(iv) Deploy more than one drift gillnet
while commercial fishing for salmon in
the Cook Inlet EEZ Area;
(v) Deploy drift gillnet gear within, or
allow any portion of drift gillnet gear to
enter, Alaska State waters on the same
calendar day that drift gillnet gear is
also deployed in the Cook Inlet EEZ
Area while commercial fishing for
salmon in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area;
(vi) Deploy drift gillnet gear in excess
of the allowable configuration for total
length and mesh size specified at
§ 679.118(f) while commercial fishing
for salmon in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area;
(vii) Use a vessel named, or required
to be named, on an SFFP to fish for
salmon in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area if
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that vessel fishes for salmon in Alaska
State waters on the same calendar day;
(viii) Possess salmon, harvested in
Alaska State waters, on board a vessel
commercial fishing for salmon in the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area;
(ix) Have salmon on board a vessel at
the time a fishing trip commences in the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area;
(x) Conduct recreational fishing for
salmon, or have recreational or
subsistence salmon on board, while
commercial fishing for salmon in the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area;
(xi) Use or employ aircraft (manned or
unmanned) to locate salmon or to direct
commercial fishing while commercial
fishing for salmon in the Cook Inlet EEZ
Area 1 hour before, during, and 1 hour
after a commercial salmon fishing
period;
(xii) Land salmon harvested in Alaska
State waters concurrently with salmon
harvested commercially in the Cook
Inlet EEZ Area;
(xiii) Land or transfer salmon
harvested while commercial fishing for
salmon in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area,
within the EEZ off Alaska;
(xiv) Operate a vessel named, or
required to be named, on an SFFP in the
waters of Cook Inlet without an operable
VMS as required in § 679.28(f).
(xv) Discard any salmon harvested
while commercial fishing for salmon in
the Cook Inlet EEZ Area.
(xvi) Engage in commercial fishing for
salmon in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area
contrary to notification of inseason
action, closure, or adjustment issued
under §§ 679.25 and 679.118.
(2) Recreational fishery participants.
(i) Engage in recreational fishing for
salmon using any gear except for
handline, rod and reel, or hook and line
gear, defined at § 600.10, in the Cook
Inlet EEZ Area of the Salmon
Management Area, defined at § 679.2
and figure 22 to this part;
(ii) Use more than a single line, with
more than two hooks attached, per
angler in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area;
(iii) No person shall possess on board
a vessel, including charter vessels and
pleasure craft used for fishing, salmon
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Within 2 hours after completion of gear retrieval.
Prior to landing.
At the time of catch delivery.
At the time of catch delivery.
At the time of catch delivery.
retained in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area that
have been filleted, mutilated, or
otherwise disfigured in any manner,
except that each salmon may be cut into
no more than two pieces with a patch
of skin on each piece, naturally
attached. One piece from one salmon on
board may be consumed.
(iv) Exceed the daily bag limits and
possession limits established under
§ 679.119.
(v) Engage in recreational fishing for
salmon in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area
contrary to notification of inseason
action, closure, or adjustment issued
under § 679.118.
(3) Processors and Registered Salmon
Receivers. (i) Receive, purchase or
arrange for purchase, discard, or process
salmon harvested in the Cook Inlet EEZ
Area without having on site a legible
copy of a valid SFPP or valid RSRP
issued under § 679.114;
(ii) Process or receive salmon
harvested in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area
without submitting a timely and
complete landing report as required
under § 679.115;
(iii) Process salmon harvested in the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area in the EEZ off
Alaska; and
(iv) Receive or transport salmon
caught in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area
without an SFPP or RSRP issued under
§ 679.114.
(4) Recordkeeping and reporting. (i)
Fail to comply with or fail to ensure
compliance with requirements in
§ 679.114 or § 679.115.
(ii) Alter or forge any permit or
document issued under § 679.114 or
§ 679.115;
(iii) Fail to submit or submit
inaccurate information on any report,
application, or statement required under
this part; and
(iv) Intentionally submit false
information on any report, application,
or statement required under this part.
(5) General. Fail to comply with any
other requirement or restriction
specified in this part or violate any
provision under this part.
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§ 679.118
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 84 / Tuesday, April 30, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
Management measures.
This section applies to vessels
engaged in commercial fishing and
recreational fishing for salmon in the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area.
(a) Harvest limits—(1) TAC. NMFS,
after consultation with the Council, will
specify the annual TAC amounts for
commercial fishing for each salmon
stock or species after accounting for
projected recreational fishing removals.
(2) Annual TAC determination. The
annual determinations of TAC for each
salmon species or stock may be based
on a review of the following:
(i) Resource assessment documents
prepared regularly for the Council that
provide information on historical catch
trends; updated estimates of the MSY of
the salmon stocks or stock complexes;
assessments of the stock condition of
each salmon stock or stock complex;
SSC recommendations on reference
points established for salmon stocks;
management uncertainty; assessments of
the multispecies and ecosystem impacts
of harvesting the salmon stocks at
current levels, given the assessed
condition of stocks, including
consideration of rebuilding depressed
stocks; and alternative harvesting
strategies and related effects on the
salmon species;
(ii) Social and economic
considerations that are consistent with
Salmon FMP goals for the Cook Inlet
EEZ Area, including the need to
promote efficiency in the utilization of
fishery resources, including minimizing
costs; the desire to conserve, protect,
and rebuild depleted salmon stocks; the
importance of a salmon fishery to
harvesters, processors, local
communities, and other salmon users in
Cook Inlet; and the need to promote
utilization of certain species.
(b) Annual specifications—(1)
Proposed specifications. (i) As soon as
practicable after consultation with the
Council, NMFS will publish proposed
specifications for the salmon fishery in
the Cook Inlet EEZ Area; and
(ii) NMFS will accept public comment
on the proposed specifications
established by this section for a period
specified in the notice of proposed
specifications published in the Federal
Register.
(2) Final specifications. NMFS will
consider comments received on the
proposed specifications and will
publish a notice of final specifications
in the Federal Register unless NMFS
determines that the final specifications
would not be a logical outgrowth of the
notice of proposed specifications. If the
final specifications would not be a
logical outgrowth of the notice of
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proposed specifications, NMFS will
either:
(i) Publish a revised notice of
proposed specifications in the Federal
Register for public comment, and after
considering comments received on the
revised proposed specifications, publish
a notice of final specifications in the
Federal Register; or
(ii) Publish a notice of final
specifications in the Federal Register
without an additional opportunity for
public comment based on a finding that
good cause pursuant to the
Administrative Procedure Act justifies
waiver of the requirement for a revised
notice of proposed specifications and
opportunity for public comment
thereon.
(c) Management authority—(1)
Fishery closures. (i) For commercial
fishing, if NMFS determines that any
salmon TAC for commercial fishing as
specified under paragraph (b) of this
section has been or may be reached for
any salmon species or stock, NMFS will
publish notification in the Federal
Register prohibiting commercial fishing
for salmon in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area.
(ii) For recreational fishing, if NMFS
determines that any salmon ABC as
specified under paragraph (b) of this
section has been or may be reached,
NMFS will publish notification in the
Federal Register prohibiting retention of
that salmon species when recreational
fishing in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area and
may also prohibit recreational fishing
for one or more salmon species in the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area. The Regional
Administrator maintains the authority
to open or close the Cook Inlet EEZ Area
to recreational fishing for one or more
salmon species if they deem it
appropriate for conservation or other
management purposes. Factors such as
the ABC, anticipated harvest rates,
expected mortality, and the number of
participants will be considered in
making any such determination.
(d) Commercial Fishery maximum
retainable amounts (MRA)—(1)
Proportion of basis species. The MRA of
an incidental catch species is calculated
as a proportion of the basis species
retained on board the vessel using the
retainable percentages in table 10 to this
part for the GOA species categories.
(2) Calculation. (i) To calculate the
MRA for a specific incidental catch
species, an individual retainable
amount must be calculated with respect
to each basis species that is retained on
board that vessel.
(ii) To obtain these individual
retainable amounts, multiply the
appropriate retainable percentage for the
incidental catch species/basis species
combination, set forth in table 10 to this
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part for the GOA species categories, by
the amount of the relevant basis species
on board, in round-weight equivalents.
(iii) The MRA for that specific
incidental catch species is the sum of
the individual retainable amounts for
each basis species.
(e) Seasons—(1) Fishing season.
Directed fishing for salmon using drift
gillnet gear in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area
may be conducted from 0700 hours,
A.l.t., from the third Monday in June or
June 19, whichever is later, through
1900 hours, A.l.t., August 15.
(2) Fishing periods. Notwithstanding
other provisions of this part, fishing for
salmon with drift gillnet gear in the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area is authorized
during the fishing season only from
0700 hours, A.l.t., until 1900 hours,
A.l.t., Mondays and from 0700 hours,
A.l.t., until 1900 hours, A.l.t., Thursdays
from the third Monday in June or June
19, whichever is later, until July 15, and
from August 1 until August 15. From
July 16 until July 31, fishing for salmon
with drift gillnet gear in the Cook Inlet
EEZ Area is authorized during the
fishing season only from 0700 hours,
A.l.t., until 1900 hours, A.l.t.,
Thursdays. Fishing for salmon using
drift gillnet gear at times other than
during the specified fishing periods is
not authorized.
(f) Legal gear—(1) Size. Drift gillnet
gear must be no longer than 200 fathoms
(1.1 kilometer) in length, 45 meshes
deep, and have a mesh size of no greater
than 6 inches (15.24 cm).
(2) Marking. Drift gillnet gear must be
marked at both ends with buoys that
legibly display the vessel’s SFFP
number.
(3) Floating. The float line and floats
of gillnets must be floating on the
surface of the water while the net is
fishing, unless natural conditions cause
the net to temporarily sink. Staking or
otherwise fixing a drift gillnet to the
seafloor is not authorized.
(4) Measurement. For purposes of
paragraph (f)(1) of this section, nets
must be measured, either wet or dry, by
determining the maximum or minimum
distance between the first and last
hanging of the net when the net is fully
extended with traction applied at one
end only.
§ 679.119
Recreational salmon fisheries.
(a) Daily bag limits and possession
limits. For each person recreational
fishing for salmon in the Cook Inlet EEZ
Area, the following daily bag and
possession limits apply:
(1) Chinook salmon. From April 1 to
August 31, the daily bag limit is one
Chinook salmon of any size and the
possession limit is one daily bag limit
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(one Chinook salmon). From September
1 to March 31, the daily bag limit is two
Chinook salmon of any size and the
possession limit is one daily bag limit
(two Chinook salmon).
(2) Coho salmon, sockeye salmon,
pink salmon, and chum salmon. For
coho salmon, sockeye salmon, pink
salmon, and chum salmon, the daily bag
limit is a total of six fish combined, of
any size, of which a maximum of three
may be coho salmon. The possession
limit for coho salmon, sockeye salmon,
pink salmon, and chum salmon is one
daily bag limit (six fish total).
(3) Combination of bag/possession
limits. A person who fishes for or
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possesses salmon in or from the Cook
Inlet EEZ Area, specified in paragraph
(a) of this section, may not combine
such bag or possession limits with any
bag or possession limit applicable to
Alaska State waters.
(4) Responsibility for bag/possession
limits. The operator of a vessel that
fishes for or possesses salmon in or from
the Cook Inlet EEZ Area is responsible
for the cumulative bag or possession
limit specified in paragraph (a) of this
section that apply to that vessel, based
on the number of persons aboard.
(5) Transfer at sea. A person who
fishes for or possesses salmon in or from
the Cook Inlet EEZ Area under a bag or
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34765
possession limit specified in paragraph
(a) of this section may not transfer a
salmon at sea from a fishing vessel to
any other vessel, and no person may
receive at sea such salmon.
(b) Careful release. Any salmon
brought aboard a vessel and not
immediately returned to the sea with a
minimum of injury will be included in
the daily bag limit of the person
catching the salmon.
■ 13. Add figure 22 to part 679 to read
as follows:
Figure 22 to Part 679—Cook Inlet EEZ
Area
BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 84 / Tuesday, April 30, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
Cook Inlet EEZ Area
• . Alaska
:. : 1EEZ Boundary
~ Cook Inlet EEZ Area
BILLING CODE 3510–22–C
14. Amend table 15 to part 679 by:
■ a. Adding in alphabetical order the
entry ‘‘Gillnet, drift’’ under the heading
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■
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.,
30
.
,___ _ ____,Mifes
‘‘NMFS AND ADF&G GEAR CODES’’;
and
■ b. Removing the entry ‘‘Gillnet, drift’’
under the heading ‘‘ADF&G GEAR
CODES’’.
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*
The addition reads as follows:
*
*
*
*
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ER30AP24.023
,.·~·····:,
34767
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 84 / Tuesday, April 30, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 15 TO PART 679—GEAR CODES, DESCRIPTIONS, AND USE
Use alphabetic code to complete the following:
Name of gear
Alpha gear
code
Use numeric code to complete the following:
Electronic
check-in/
check-out
NMFS
logbooks
Numeric gear
code
IERS
eLandings
ADF&G COAR
NMFS AND ADF&G GEAR CODES
*
*
Gillnet, drift ................................................
*
*
*
........................
*
........................
*
*
........................
*
*
03
*
*
[FR Doc. 2024–08664 Filed 4–29–24; 8:45 am]
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BILLING CODE 3510–22–P
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*
X
30APR5
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 89, Number 84 (Tuesday, April 30, 2024)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 34718-34767]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2024-08664]
[[Page 34717]]
Vol. 89
Tuesday,
No. 84
April 30, 2024
Part VI
Department of Commerce
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National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
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15 CFR Part 902
50 CFR Part 600 and 679
Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic Zone off Alaska; Cook Inlet Salmon;
Amendment 16; Final Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 89 , No. 84 / Tuesday, April 30, 2024 / Rules
and Regulations
[[Page 34718]]
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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
15 CFR 902
50 CFR Parts 600 and 679
[Docket No.: 240417-0111]
RIN 0648-BM42
Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic Zone off Alaska; Cook Inlet
Salmon; Amendment 16
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule.
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SUMMARY: NMFS issues this final rule to implement amendment 16 to the
Fishery Management Plan (FMP) for the Salmon Fisheries in the Exclusive
Economic Zone (EEZ) Off Alaska (Salmon FMP). Amendment 16 and this
final rule establish Federal fishery management for all salmon fishing
that occurs in the Cook Inlet EEZ, which includes commercial drift
gillnet and recreational salmon fishery sectors. This action is
necessary to comply with rulings from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the
Ninth Circuit and the U.S. District Court for the District of Alaska,
and to ensure the Salmon FMP is consistent with the Magnuson-Stevens
Fishery Conservation and Management Act (Magnuson-Stevens Act). This
final rule is intended to promote the goals and objectives of the
Magnuson-Stevens Act, the Salmon FMP, and other applicable laws.
DATES: This rule is effective on May 30, 2024.
ADDRESSES: Electronic copies of amendment 16; the Environmental
Assessment, the Regulatory Impact Review, and the Social Impact
Analysis (contained in a single document and collectively referred to
as the ``Analysis''); the Finding of No Significant Impact; and the
public comment announcement and tribal consultation and meeting
summaries prepared for this action may be obtained from https://www.regulations.gov or from the NMFS Alaska Region website at https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/action/amendment-16-fmp-salmon-fisheries-alaska.
Written comments regarding the burden-hour estimates or other
aspects of the collection-of-information requirements contained in this
final rule may be submitted to NMFS Alaska Region, P.O. Box 21668,
Juneau, AK 99802-1668, Attn: Gretchen Harrington; in person at NMFS
Alaska Region, 709 West 9th Street, Room 401, Juneau, AK; 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.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Doug Duncan, 907-586-7228 or
[email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This final rule implements amendment 16 to
the Salmon FMP. NMFS published the proposed rule and Notice of
Availability (NOA) for amendment 16 in the Federal Register on October
19, 2023 (88 FR 72314), with public comments invited through December
18, 2023. Comments submitted on the NOA and the proposed rule for
amendment 16 were considered jointly. The Secretary of Commerce
approved amendment 16 on April 9, 2024, after considering public
comment and determining that amendment 16 is consistent with the Salmon
FMP, the Magnuson-Stevens Act, and other applicable laws.
NMFS manages U.S. salmon fisheries in the EEZ off of Alaska under
the Salmon FMP. The North Pacific Fishery Management Council (Council)
prepared, and the Secretary of Commerce (Secretary) approved, the
Salmon FMP under the authority of the Magnuson-Stevens Act, 16 U.S.C.
1801 et seq. Regulations implementing the Salmon FMP are located at 50
CFR part 679. General regulations governing U.S. fisheries also appear
at 50 CFR part 600. NMFS is authorized to prepare an FMP amendment
necessary for the conservation and management of a fishery managed
under the FMP if the Council fails to develop and submit such an
amendment after a reasonable period of time (section 304(c)(1)(A); 16
U.S.C. 1854(c)(1)(A)). Because the Council failed to take action to
recommend an FMP necessary for the conservation and management of the
Cook Inlet EEZ salmon fishery, NMFS developed amendment 16 to the
Salmon FMP and this final rule pursuant to section 304(c) of the
Magnuson-Stevens Act in order to comply with rulings from the U.S.
Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit and the U.S. District Court for
the District of Alaska, and to ensure the Salmon FMP is consistent with
the Magnuson-Stevens Act.
Amendment 16 Overview
Amendment 16 incorporates the Cook Inlet EEZ into the Salmon FMP as
the Cook Inlet EEZ Area (defined as the EEZ waters of Cook Inlet north
of a line at 59[deg]46.15' N), thereby bringing the salmon fishery that
occurs within it under Federal management by the Council and NMFS.
Two different sectors participate in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area salmon
fishery: the commercial drift gillnet sector and the recreational
sector. Historically, the commercial drift gillnet fleet has harvested
over 99.99 percent of salmon in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area. Under this
action, all salmon fishing in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area is managed by
NMFS and the Council separately from adjacent State of Alaska (State)
water salmon fisheries.
Amendment 16 revises the Salmon FMP, beginning with an updated
history of the FMP and introduction in chapter 1, as well as a revised
description of the fishery management unit in chapter 2 that includes
the Cook Inlet EEZ Area as a separate and distinctly managed area. The
management and policy objectives in chapter 2 are revised to include
consideration of the Cook Inlet EEZ Area. Amendment 16 consolidates
chapters describing management of the Salmon FMP's East Area and West
Area into chapter 3. No substantive changes are made to Salmon FMP
content related to the East Area and West Area.
A new chapter 4 comprehensively describes Federal management
measures and the roles and responsibilities of NMFS and the Council in
managing the Cook Inlet EEZ Area salmon fishery. In particular, chapter
4 defines all required conservation and management measures, including
maximum sustainable yield (MSY), optimum yield (OY), and status
determination criteria, and includes an outline of the harvest
specifications process. Chapter 4 also describes required Federal
permits; fishing gear restrictions; fishing time and area restrictions;
NMFS inseason management provisions; and monitoring, recordkeeping, and
reporting requirements.
Chapter 5 contains all content related to domestic annual
harvesting and processing capacity, finding that all salmon fisheries
off Alaska can be fully utilized by U.S. harvesters and processors.
This finding is unchanged by this action.
Chapter 6 contains information on Essential Fish Habitat and
Habitat Areas of Particular Concern and is not modified by this action.
Amendment 16 removes the outdated Fishery Impact Statement in the
Salmon FMP. The Analysis prepared for amendment 16 contains the Fishery
Impact Statement for the Cook Inlet EEZ salmon fishery and this action.
[[Page 34719]]
Maximum Sustainable Yield and Optimum Yield
Under amendment 16, MSY and OY are specified consistent with the
National Standard guidelines and are briefly described below. The
definitions of MSY and OY are explained in greater detail in the
preamble to the proposed rule and remain unchanged in this final rule.
MSY is specified for salmon stocks and stock complexes in Cook
Inlet and defined as the maximum potential yield, which is calculated
by subtracting the lower bound of the escapement goal (or another
escapement value as recommended by the Council's Scientific and
Statistical Committee (SSC) based on the best scientific information
available) from the total run size for stocks where data are available.
An escapement goal is the number of spawning salmon likely to result in
sustainable yields over a broad range of expected conditions. Any fish
in excess of that necessary to achieve the escapement goal for each
stock or stock complex are theoretically available for harvest under
this definition of MSY. For stocks where escapement is not known,
historical catch is used as a proxy for MSY.
Amendment 16 defines the OY range for the Cook Inlet EEZ salmon
fishery in the Salmon FMP as the range between the averages of the
three lowest years of total estimated EEZ salmon harvest and the three
highest years of total estimated EEZ salmon harvest from 1999 to 2021.
This definition of OY tempers the influence of extreme events in
defining OY (e.g., fishery disasters at the low end, or extremely large
harvests at the high end), thereby resulting in a range of harvests
that are likely to be sustainable and provide the greatest net benefit
to the Nation into the future.
Status Determination Criteria and Annual Catch Limits
Amendment 16 specifies objective and measurable criteria for
determining when a stock or stock complex is subject to overfishing or
is overfished. These are referred to as status determination criteria
and are established during the harvest specification process and
evaluated each year after fishing is complete.
Amendment 16 establishes a tier system to assess salmon stocks
based on the amount of available information for each stock. NMFS
annually assigns each salmon stock to a tier based on the best
available scientific information during the harvest specifications
process as follows:
Tier 1: salmon stocks with escapement goals and stock-specific
estimates of harvests
Tier 2: salmon stocks managed as a complex, with specific
salmon stocks as indicator stocks
Tier 3: salmon stocks or stock complexes with no reliable
estimates of escapement
For stocks and stock complexes where escapement is known (Tier 1),
or escapement of indicator stocks is thought to be a reliable index for
the number of spawners in a stock complex (Tier 2), overfishing is
defined as occurring when the fishing mortality rate in the Cook Inlet
EEZ Area (FEEZ) exceeds the maximum fishery mortality
threshold (MFMT). The MFMT is defined as the maximum potential fishing
mortality rate in the EEZ above which overfishing occurs for Tier 1 and
2 stocks, expressed as an exploitation rate that is assessed over one
generation.
For Tier 1 and Tier 2 stocks, the Salmon FMP defines the
overfishing limit (OFL) as the amount of salmon harvest in the EEZ for
the coming year that corresponds with the spawning escapement target
not being achieved, based on information available preseason.
Acceptable biological catch (ABC) is established based on the OFL. As
an ABC control rule, ABC must be less than or equal to OFL, and the SSC
may recommend reducing ABC from OFL to account for scientific
uncertainty, including uncertainty associated with the assessment of
spawning escapement goals, forecasts, harvests, and other sources. The
annual catch limit (ACL) for each stock is set equal to ABC.
For Cook Inlet salmon, the minimum stock size threshold (MSST)--the
level of biomass below which a stock would be considered overfished--is
calculated for stocks in Tier 1 and 2 as follows: a stock or stock
complex is overfished when summed escapements over a generation fall
below one half of summed spawning escapement goals over that
generation.
For Tier 3 stocks, which have no reliable estimates of escapement,
overfishing is defined as occurring when harvest exceeds the OFL. The
OFL for Tier 3 stocks is set as the maximum EEZ catch of the stock
multiplied by the generation time (years). The result of this
calculation is compared against the cumulative EEZ catch of the stock
for the most recent generation. The SSC may recommend an alternative
catch value for the OFL on the basis of the best scientific information
available. As with Tier 1 and 2 stocks, ABC for these stocks must be
set less than or equal to the OFL, and may be reduced by a buffer to
account for scientific uncertainty. For Tier 3 stocks or stock
complexes with escapement goals for a suitable indicator stock, the
MSST is calculated the same as for Tier 1 and 2 stocks. For Tier 3
stock complexes without any suitable indicator stocks with escapement
goals, it is not possible to calculate MSST.
While OFL, ABC, and ACL are calculated based on the best scientific
information available preseason when harvest specifications must be
established, realized harvest and escapement data are used post-season
to determine whether ACLs were exceeded, whether overfishing occurred,
and whether any stocks are overfished. Accountability measures are
applied to prevent ACL overages and, if they occur, to prevent the
recurrence of any ACL overages.
Harvest Specifications and Annual Processes
Amendment 16 establishes a harvest specification process for the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area, along with specific definitions of required status
determination criteria using the tier system described in the previous
section.
A Stock Assessment and Fisheries Evaluation (SAFE) report provides
the SSC and Council with a summary of the most recent biological
condition of the salmon stocks, including all status determination
criteria, and the social and economic condition of the fishing and
processing industries. NMFS develops the SAFE report for the Cook Inlet
EEZ Area, with public and scientific review through the Council process
and public review through publication of the proposed salmon harvest
specifications in the Federal Register.
The SAFE report summarizes the best available scientific
information concerning the past, present, and possible future condition
of Cook Inlet salmon stocks and fisheries, along with ecosystem
considerations, taking into account any uncertainty. This includes
recommendations of OFL, ABC, and MSST that are calculated following the
tier system described above. The SAFE report will include a final post-
season evaluation of the previous fishing year based on realized
catches and escapement with all information needed to make
``overfishing'' and ``overfished'' determinations, as well as
recommendations to develop harvest specifications for the upcoming
fishing year. In providing this information, the SAFE report uses a
time series of historical catch for each salmon stock,
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including estimates of retained and discarded catch taken in the salmon
fishery; bycatch taken in other fisheries; catch in State commercial,
recreational, personal use, and subsistence fisheries; and catches
taken during scientific research (e.g., test fisheries).
The SAFE report also provides information needed to document
significant trends or changes in the stocks, marine ecosystem, and
fisheries over time, as well as the impacts of management. The SAFE
report will be developed to contain economic, social, community,
essential fish habitat, and ecological information pertinent to the
success of salmon management or the achievement of Salmon FMP
objectives.
The SSC reviews the SAFE report each year and recommends the OFL,
ABC, MFMT, and MSST for each stock or stock complex, which then
constrain the maximum allowable harvest for each stock based on biology
and scientific uncertainty identified in the assessments. This SSC
review constitutes the official peer review of scientific information
used to manage the Cook Inlet EEZ Area salmon fishery for purposes of
National Standard 1 and for the purposes of the Information Quality
Act. Upon review and acceptance by the SSC, the SAFE report, after
incorporating any associated SSC comments, constitutes the best
scientific information available for purposes of the Magnuson-Stevens
Act.
Total allowable catches (TACs) are set for the Cook Inlet EEZ
commercial salmon fishery. A TAC is a limit on the annual catch of a
stock, stock complex, or species that is the management target of the
fishery, and operates as an accountability measure that accounts for
management uncertainty to ensure total catch remains at or below the
ACL for each stock. In the Cook Inlet EEZ, TACs will initially be set
at the species level because it is not currently possible to
distinguish among individual stocks of the same species when monitoring
harvests during the fishing season. TACs are set considering the
estimated proportional contributions of each stock to total harvest of
a species such that ACLs are not expected to be exceeded for any
component stock if all TACs are fully achieved. Because of the
uncertainty inherent to estimating the proportional contributions of
each stock to total harvest pre-season, species-level TACs are reduced
from the combined ACLs of component stocks by an appropriate buffer
that accounts for the degree of management uncertainty.
NMFS will establish harvest specifications each year by publishing
proposed and final salmon harvest specifications in the Federal
Register. NMFS will consider public comments on proposed harvest
specification prior to making a final decision. If approved, final
harvest specifications are issued with any applicable modifications and
the agency responses to public comments.
Changes From Proposed to Final Amendment 16
After considering public comments, NMFS revised amendment 16 to
specify the salmon stocks or stock complexes for which status
determination criteria are being established, and, as recommended by
the SSC at their February 2024 meeting, to better describe how the OFL
would be set preseason. For Tier 1 stocks, the preseason OFL was
updated in accordance with the SSC recommendation that it be based
solely on the preseason total run size for the coming fishing season
(equation 6 within section 4.2.4 of the Salmon FMP) rather than on the
generational (multi-year) formula that was defined in equations 8 and 9
of proposed amendment 16. For Tier 3 stocks, the language that
describes how the preseason OFL is set was updated in accordance with
the SSC recommendation that rather than considering only maximum
historical catch, the preseason OFL could also be based on other values
such as average or maximum catch for a particular period of time in the
catch history. Finally, several technical corrections were also made to
improve formatting consistency and to eliminate redundancy in the FMP.
Final Rule
This final rule modifies Federal regulations to implement amendment
16 by revising the definition of Salmon Management Area at 50 CFR 679.2
to redefine the Cook Inlet Area as the Cook Inlet EEZ Area and
incorporate it into the Federal Salmon Management Area. This final rule
creates figure 22 to 50 CFR part 679 to show the location of the Cook
Inlet EEZ Area. Regulations at Sec. 600.725 are modified to authorize
the use of drift gillnet gear for the Cook Inlet EEZ Area commercial
salmon fishery. Existing regulations related to salmon fisheries under
the Salmon FMP throughout part 679 are moved to subpart J beginning at
Sec. 679.110. Management measures necessary for the Cook Inlet EEZ
Area are added to subpart J. The following sections provide a summary
of management measures implemented by this final rule.
Federal Commercial Fishing Season and Fishing Periods
Under this final rule, the Cook Inlet EEZ Area commercial drift
gillnet fishing season begins each year on either the third Monday in
June or June 19, whichever is later. For 2024, the third Monday in June
is June 17, so the season will begin on June 19. However, because June
19 falls on a Wednesday--which as described below is not an open
fishing period--the first day of fishing in the 2024 Cook Inlet EEZ
Area commercial fishing season will be on Thursday, June 20.
On or after the season start date, NMFS will open the Cook Inlet
EEZ Area for drift gillnet fishing for two, 12-hour periods each week,
from 7 a.m. Monday until 7 p.m. Monday, and from 7 a.m. Thursday until
7 p.m. Thursday, a schedule that will continue until July 15 unless a
harvest limit (TAC) is reached. From July 16 to July 31, drift gillnet
fishing will be open for one 12-hour period per week from 7 a.m. until
7 p.m. on Thursdays, unless a TAC is reached before that time. From
August 1 to August 15, the Cook Inlet EEZ Area will again be open for
drift gillnet fishing for two, 12-hour periods each week, from 7 a.m.
Monday until 7 p.m. Monday, and from 7 a.m. Thursday until 7 p.m.
Thursday unless a TAC is reached before that time. The Cook Inlet EEZ
Area will be closed to drift gillnet fishing when the TAC is reached,
or on August 15, whichever comes first.
Inseason Management for Commercial Fishing
NMFS will actively monitor and manage the commercial salmon fishery
in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area throughout the fishing season by exercising
the inseason management authorities described in this rule. In
regulations at Sec. 679.118(c)(1)(i), this final rule provides NMFS
the authority to prohibit commercial salmon fishing in the Cook Inlet
EEZ Area. In regulations at Sec. 679.25, this final rule provides NMFS
inseason authority to adjust a TAC for any salmon species or stock and
to close or open the Cook Inlet EEZ Area as necessary to prevent
overfishing or prevent underharvest of a TAC for any species or stock
(assuming there are no countervailing conservation concerns regarding
co-occurring species or stocks).
Fishing will occur during the regularly scheduled fishing periods
described above. Throughout the fishing season, NMFS will project the
additional harvest expected from each additional opening of the fishery
based on the number of participating vessels,
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catch rates, and any other available information. NMFS will close the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area to commercial fishing for salmon if projections
indicate that an additional fishery opening is expected to exceed any
specified TAC. NMFS will implement inseason management actions through
publication in the Federal Register, consistent with the Administrative
Procedure Act (APA).
NMFS will monitor all available sources of information during the
fishery to evaluate whether the TAC remains appropriate. If the best
scientific information available indicates that the number of salmon
returning to Cook Inlet is significantly different than what was
forecasted, NMFS may adjust management of the fishery using the
adjustment authorities described above and specified in regulations at
Sec. 679.25. If significantly fewer fish return relative to the
forecast, NMFS may close the fishery before a TAC is reached or before
the season closure date to prevent overfishing. This may be determined
based on fishery catches, test-fishery catches, escapement, or other
scientific information.
NMFS may also consider an inseason adjustment to modify the TAC if
scientific information indicates that salmon abundance is significantly
higher than forecasted. To implement any inseason adjustment, NMFS
publishes a temporary rule in the Federal Register and considers all
public comments on the action. Any such action must not result in
overfishing on any other co-occurring fish stocks and will also
consider the potential impacts of such an action to all Cook Inlet
salmon harvesters. NMFS could not adjust the TAC above any ABC or
allowable de minimis amounts set forth in the harvest specifications
established for the Cook Inlet EEZ Area in that fishing year without
engaging in notice and comment rulemaking to amend the harvest
specifications.
NMFS will use the authorities described above to achieve
conservation and management goals. These tools may be used to either
increase or decrease harvests in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area drift gillnet
fishery as appropriate based on the specified TAC amounts, the amount
already harvested, and other available information on inseason salmon
abundance.
Federal Management Area
The management area is all Federal waters of upper Cook Inlet (EEZ
waters of Cook Inlet north of a line at 59[deg]46.15' N).
Retention of Bycatch
Drift gillnet vessels fishing in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area may retain
and sell non-salmon bycatch including groundfish (e.g., Pacific cod,
pollock, flounders, etc.) if they have a groundfish Federal fisheries
permit (FFP). These are referred to as incidental catch species and
this final rule allows retention of these species up to a specified
maximum retainable amount (MRA). Drift gillnet vessels retaining non-
salmon incidental catch species are also required comply with all State
requirements when landing these fish in Alaska. The MRA of an
incidental catch species is calculated as a proportion (percentage) of
the weight of salmon on board the vessel.
Table 10 to 50 CFR part 679 establishes MRA percentages in the Gulf
of Alaska (GOA) and applies to the Cook Inlet EEZ Area. For commercial
salmon fishing in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area, the basis species are
salmon, which is classified as ``Aggregated amount of non-groundfish
species'' in the table for the purposes of the calculation. To obtain
the MRAs for each incidental catch species, multiply the retainable
percentage for the incidental catch species from table 10 by the round
weight of salmon (Basis Species: Aggregated amount of non-groundfish
species) on board. For example, if there were 100 pounds (45.36 kg) of
salmon aboard the vessel, then 20 pounds (9.07 kg) of pollock and 5
pounds (2.27 kg) of aggregated rockfish could be retained, because
pollock has a retainable percentage of 20 and aggregated rockfish has a
retainable percentage of 5 in table 10 when the basis species is the
aggregated amount of non-groundfish species (i.e. salmon). Pacific
halibut are not defined as a groundfish and may not be retained by
drift gillnet vessels.
Cook Inlet EEZ Area Commercial Salmon Fishing Monitoring,
Recordkeeping, and Reporting Requirements
This action manages the Cook Inlet EEZ Area salmon fishery
separately from the adjacent State waters salmon fisheries.
Recordkeeping and reporting requirements for commercial salmon fishing
vessels operating in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area are specified at Sec.
679.115. This final rule requires processors to report all landings of
Cook Inlet salmon harvested in the EEZ through eLandings by noon of the
day following completion of the delivery.
Commercial salmon fishing vessels, processors, and other entities
receiving deliveries of Cook Inlet EEZ Area salmon (i.e., fish
transporters, catcher sellers, and direct marketers) must obtain
Federal permits and comply with Federal recordkeeping, reporting, and
monitoring requirements consistent with regulations at Sec. 679.114.
While operating, all entities required to have any Federal salmon
permit(s) for the Cook Inlet EEZ Area must have a legible copy of each
valid permit in either paper or electronic format.
Requirements for Commercial Salmon Fishing Vessels
Harvesting vessel owners are required to obtain a Salmon Federal
Fisheries Permit (SFFP). NMFS will issue SFFPs at no charge to the
owner or authorized representative of a vessel. An SFFP will authorize
a vessel of the United States to conduct commercial salmon fishing
operations in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area, subject to all other Federal
requirements. An SFFP applicant must be a citizen of the United States.
NMFS will issue SFFPs after receipt, review, and approval of a complete
SFFP application. SFFPs will have a 3-year application cycle. Once a
vessel owner or authorized representative obtains an SFFP, it is valid
until the expiration date shown on the permit, which is after 3 years
if issued at the beginning of a permit cycle. Participants must
maintain a physical or electronic copy of their valid SFFP aboard the
named vessel. As with other Federal fisheries, if a vessel owner or
authorized representative surrenders an SFFP, they could not obtain a
new SFFP for that vessel until the start of the next 3-year permit
cycle.
The SFFP is associated with a specific vessel and not transferable
to another vessel. If the vessel is sold, the new owner will need to
apply for an SFFP amendment from NMFS to reflect the new owner or
authorized representative of the vessel. A vessel could not operate in
the Cook Inlet EEZ Area fishery until the SFFP amendment was complete
and the amended SFFP issued. The SFFP number is required to be
displayed on the vessel's hull and buoys attached to the vessel's drift
gillnet.
For a vessel being leased, the vessel operator is considered the
authorized representative of the SFFP holder and no amendments to the
permit are required. The vessel operator is subject to all SFFP
requirements and limitations and liable for any violations.
This final rule requires commercial salmon fishing vessels to
operate a Vessel Monitoring System (VMS) as specified at Sec.
679.28(f)(6)(x). VMS transmits the real-time GPS location of fishing
vessels to NMFS. A vessel with an SFFP is required to keep VMS active
at all times when operating with drift
[[Page 34722]]
gillnet gear on board in the waters of Cook Inlet any day the Cook
Inlet EEZ Area is open to commercial salmon fishing. This includes when
operating within State waters to ensure that entire fishing trips are
monitored and to help verify that no fishing occurred within State
waters during a fishing trip that included salmon harvest in the Cook
Inlet EEZ, or that a vessel with an SFFP does not fish in Federal
waters during the same calendar day it fishes in State waters.
To collect catch and bycatch information, this final rule requires
vessels to use a Federal fishing logbook as specified at Sec.
679.115(a)(1). Commercial salmon fishing vessels will record the start
and end time and GPS position of each set, as well as a count of the
catch and bycatch. Logbook sheets are submitted electronically to NMFS
by the vessel operator when the fish are delivered to a processor. The
data provided by the logbooks will provide information to satisfy the
Magnuson-Stevens Act Standardized Bycatch Reporting Methodology (SBRM)
requirement (16 U.S.C. 1853(a)(11)).
State requirements, including possession of appropriate State
Commercial Fisheries Entry Commission (CFEC) permit(s), continue to
apply for drift gillnet vessels landing salmon or other species caught
in the EEZ within the State or entering State waters.
This final rule prohibits commercial salmon fishing vessels from
landing or otherwise transferring salmon caught in the Cook Inlet EEZ
Area within the EEZ off Alaska. Commercial salmon fishing vessels
delivering to tenders may deliver salmon caught in the Cook Inlet EEZ
Area only to a tender vessel operating in State waters. This final rule
prohibits processing (as defined by Federal regulations at Sec. 679.2)
salmon harvested in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area in the EEZ off Alaska in
order to ensure historical participants and operation types are not
displaced. Commercial salmon fishing vessels are allowed to gut, gill,
and bleed salmon prior to landing but cannot freeze or further process
salmon prior to landing their catch (freezing is considered processing
per Federal regulations at Sec. 679.2 and therefore is prohibited in
Cook Inlet EEZ waters).
Requirements for Processors and Other Entities Receiving Deliveries of
Commercially Caught Cook Inlet EEZ Salmon
This final rule requires processors that receive and process
landings of salmon that are caught in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area by a
vessel authorized by an SFFP to obtain a Salmon Federal Processor
Permit (SFPP). This includes any person, facility, vessel, or
stationary floating processor that receives, purchases, or arranges to
purchase and processes unprocessed salmon harvested in the Cook Inlet
EEZ Area, except registered salmon receivers. Persons or businesses
that receive landings (deliveries) of Cook Inlet EEZ salmon from
harvesting vessels but do not immediately process it, or transport it
to another location for processing, are required to obtain a Registered
Salmon Receiver Permit (RSRP). If a tender vessel or vehicle receiving
deliveries of salmon is operated by an SFPP holder, it may operate
under the SFPP and does not need to obtain an RSRP. SFPP and RSRP
holders may not receive deliveries or process salmon that were
harvested in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area while in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area
or any EEZ waters.
SFPP and RSRP holders are required to report all salmon landings
through eLandings by noon of the day following completion of the
delivery. Landings must be reported using existing Cook Inlet drift
gillnet statistical areas, with the addition of an EEZ identifier and a
requirement to identify the Federal permit associated with each
landing.
NMFS issues SFPPs and RSRPs on a 1-year cycle. If the ownership of
an entity holding a SFPP or RSRP changes, the new owner will need to
submit an application for an amended permit. An amended permit is
issued with a new permit number to reflect the change.
Because SFPPs are facility-specific, one SFPP is required for every
processing facility, even if a facility is controlled by a company
already holding an SFPP for another processing facility. An RSRP is
required for each entity receiving but not processing landings of Cook
Inlet EEZ salmon at the location of the delivery if they are not
operated by an SFPP holder. If a single entity operates multiple
vehicles or vessels receiving landings of Cook Inlet EEZ salmon, each
one of those vehicles or vessels could use the RSRP held by the entity.
This includes fish transporters or buying stations unaffiliated with an
SFPP holder that receive deliveries directly from harvesting vessels.
For direct-marketing operations where the owner or operator of a
commercial salmon fishing vessel catches and processes their catch,
both an SFFP and an SFPP are required. For catcher-seller operations
where the owner or operator of a harvesting vessel catches and sells
unprocessed salmon (e.g., whole fish or headed and gutted) directly to
someone other than an SFPP or RSRP holder, both an SFFP and an RSRP are
required.
Other Commercial Fishing Management Measures and Prohibitions
This final rule defines the legal gear for the Cook Inlet EEZ Area
drift gillnet fishery consistent with legal gear in the State waters
drift gillnet fishery, to the extent practicable (see Sec.
679.118(f)). Legal drift gillnet gear is no longer than 200 fathoms
(365.76 m) in length, 45 meshes deep, and has a mesh size no greater
than 6 inches (15.24 cm). Buoys at each end of the drift gillnet must
be marked with the participant's SFFP number.
Gillnets will be measured, either wet or dry, by determining the
maximum or minimum distance between the first and last hanging of the
net when the net is fully extended with traction applied at one end
only. It is illegal to stake or otherwise fix a drift gillnet to the
seafloor. The float line and floats of drift gillnets must float on the
surface of the water while the net is fishing, unless natural
conditions cause the net to temporarily sink.
This final rule includes the following prohibitions specified at
Sec. 679.117 for drift gillnet fisheries in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area:
Vessels are prohibited from fishing in both State and
Federal waters on the same day, or otherwise having on board or
delivering fish harvested in both EEZ and State waters, to ensure
accurate catch accounting for Federal managers.
Vessels cannot have salmon harvested in any other fishery
on board.
Vessels are prohibited from having gear in excess of the
allowable configuration or deploying multiple nets.
Vessels are prohibited from participating in other
fisheries while operating drift gillnet gear for salmon in the Cook
Inlet EEZ Area and are not allowed to have other fishing gear on board
capable of catching salmon while commercial fishing for salmon in the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area (i.e., operating drift gillnet gear).
Because vessels legally participating in adjacent State
water salmon fisheries may transit across the Cook Inlet EEZ Area,
vessels can have other fishing gear on board while moving through the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area, but are prohibited from commercial fishing for
salmon within the Cook Inlet EEZ Area on any day they are participating
in State water salmon fisheries.
Manned or unmanned aircraft cannot be used to locate
salmon or otherwise direct fishing.
Vessels are prohibited from discarding any salmon caught
while harvesting salmon using drift gillnet gear in the Cook Inlet EEZ
Area.
[[Page 34723]]
Vessels are prohibited from commercial or recreational
fishing for salmon in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area contrary to notification
of inseason action, closure, or adjustment issued under Sec. 679.25 or
Sec. 679.118.
Cook Inlet EEZ Recreational Fishing Management Measures
This final rule includes management measures for recreational
salmon fishing in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area as specified at Sec.
679.119. NMFS establishes bag and possession limits in Federal
regulations. For Chinook salmon, from April 1 to August 31, the bag
limit is one Chinook salmon per day including a total limit of one in
possession of any size. From September 1 to March 31, the bag limit is
two Chinook salmon per day including a total limit of two in possession
of any size. For coho (silver) salmon, sockeye salmon, pink salmon, and
chum salmon there is a combined six fish bag limit per day, including a
total limit of six in possession of any size. However, only three fish
per day, including a total limit of three in possession, may be coho
salmon.
In addition to Federal bag limits, recreational anglers are
constrained by State bag and possession limits if landing fish in
Alaska. Because of this, an angler cannot exceed State limits when
landing fish in Alaska, or otherwise have both an EEZ limit and a State
limit on board at the same time in either area.
Recreational fishing is open for the entire calendar year. In
regulations at Sec. 679.118(c)(1)(ii), this final rule provides that
NMFS may prohibit, through an inseason management action, retention of
individual salmon species while still allowing harvest of other salmon
species if necessary. In addition to prohibiting retention, NMFS may
also prohibit fishing for one or more salmon species if required for
conservation. Inseason management actions for the recreational sector
will be published in the Federal Register and subject to the same
process and timing limitations outlined for the commercial sector in
the Cook Inlet EEZ.
Recreational fishing for salmon in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area may only
be done using hook and line gear with a single line per angler with a
maximum of two hooks. Salmon harvested must not be filleted or
otherwise mutilated in a way that could prevent determining how may
fish had been retained prior to landing. Gills and guts may be removed
from retained fish prior to landing. Any salmon that is not returned to
the water with a minimum of injury counts toward an angler's bag limit.
Federal managers will review any available developing inseason
information, including escapement data, and may prohibit retention of
one or more salmon species if additional harvest could not be
supported. This final rule does not establish a TAC specific to the
recreational sector because the recreational harvest in the Cook Inlet
EEZ has been small historically (less than 100 fish per year), but
estimated removals in combination with commercial harvests are
evaluated against the ACL to ensure they are not exceeded and to
implement accountability measures, if required, for future seasons.
The State's existing Saltwater Charter Logbook, the Statewide
Harvest Survey, and creel surveys provide the information needed to
account for recreational harvest in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area, as well as
satisfy the Magnuson-Stevens Act SBRM requirement.
Changes From Proposed to Final Rule
In response to public comment, this final rule modifies the number
of commercial salmon fishing periods in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area.
The commercial fishing season was proposed to extend from
approximately June 19 to August 15 each year, with two, 12-hour fishing
periods each week. Overall, public comments highlighted a conservation
and management concern associated with allowing two days of harvest per
week between July 16 and July 31. Under the status quo of State
management, this is the time period during which there has been a
single drift gillnet opener per week in order to allow salmon bound for
Northern Cook Inlet to pass through Federal waters (a management option
many public commenters referred to as a ``conservation corridor''). The
State requested that NMFS close the EEZ to all commercial fishing after
July 15 to avoid conservation concerns, including stocks not achieving
spawning escapement goals. In addition, multiple Alaska Native tribes
from the Cook Inlet region, communities in Northern Cook Inlet, and
regional sportfishing organizations all expressed concern that two
fishery openings per week from July 16-July 31--which would provide
significantly more fishing opportunity to the drift gillnet fleet--was
likely to result in conservation concerns when compared to the status
quo of one opening per week during this time period (see Comment 34).
In all, these comments emphasized that reducing drift gillnet openings
to one per week from July 16-July 31 is a management measure important
to stakeholders and Alaska Native tribes in Northern Cook Inlet because
it gives salmon stocks of lower abundance more opportunities to pass
through the EEZ during the time period they are most likely to be
present in Federal waters.
In light of the public comments identifying significant potential
conservation concerns, NMFS reviewed information contained in the
Analysis and 2024 SAFE report to further consider the potential impacts
that could result from increased commercial fishing opportunity during
this late-July migratory period. State management measures that limited
drift gillnet fishing effort in the Cook Inlet EEZ began in 2015. As
described in section 3.1.2 of the Analysis, under Federal reference
points, overfishing likely occurred on ``other sockeye salmon'' in
2008, and on Cook Inlet coho salmon in 2013. Both of these stock
complexes have substantial components that originate from the Northern
District. Overfishing is not thought to have occurred on any stock
since the State began restricting fishing in the EEZ in late July.
Susitna (Yentna) River sockeye salmon were declared a State stock of
concern in 2008 after repeated failures to meet escapement goals. After
subsequent restrictions to fishing, including the reductions to EEZ
fishing opportunities in late July, this stock met escapement goals to
the point where it was delisted from being a stock of concern by the
State of Alaska's Board of Fisheries (BOF) in 2020. Given the
historical evidence suggesting an increased likelihood of conservation
concerns for these stocks when there is additional EEZ fishing effort
from July 16 until July 31, and because some salmon stocks have
continued to miss spawning escapement goals during recent years when
there was only a single drift gillnet opening per week from July 16-
July 31, NMFS has determined that it would be unwise to increase the
number of fishing periods in late July from the status quo. Therefore,
this final rule reduces the proposed number of openings to one per week
during this period. The final rule, however, does not adopt the State's
request to close the EEZ July 15. As explained in this final rule, the
fishery will be open for one opening per week July 16-July 31 and two
openings per week August 1-August 15, unless a TAC is reached.
NMFS expects that one opening per week in late July will allow for
the harvest of surplus yield to the extent practicable while still
achieving spawning escapement goals in most years. If TACs allow for
additional harvest in August, the fishery will
[[Page 34724]]
return to two openings per week from August 1 to August 15. This
approach is expected to reduce the risk of higher than expected
harvests in the EEZ that could result in overfishing or reduce or
eliminate the harvestable surplus of one or more salmon stocks for all
other salmon users in Cook Inlet.
Further, NMFS expects this change will better allow the drift
gillnet fleet to target the stocks of highest abundance while reducing
the risk of early closures because a TAC is reached for a stock of
lower abundance. As explained above and in the preamble to the proposed
rule, the Cook Inlet EEZ salmon fishery will be managed using TACs.
Allowing salmon stocks of lower abundance bound for Northern Cook Inlet
more opportunities to pass through the EEZ in July--particularly coho
and Chinook salmon--means it is less likely the fishery will close
early due to reaching the TAC for a stock of lower abundance before the
drift gillnet fleet is able to harvest the TAC for abundant sockeye
salmon. Additionally, spreading out the sockeye salmon harvest
throughout the season by reducing fishing periods in late July will
reduce pressure on Northern District sockeye salmon--which are Tier 3
stocks with less known conservation status--as more of the salmon in
the EEZ in August are expected to be from the highly abundant Tier 1
Kenai and Kasilof stocks for which there is better information to
inform inseason management decisions.
In this final rule, NMFS also clarified language at Sec.
679.28(f)(6)(x) to clearly define when and where VMS is required to be
used by vessels named or required to be named on a SFFP. An operational
and transmitting VMS unit that complies with the requirements in Sec.
679.28(f) must be carried by any such vessel operating in the waters of
Cook Inlet with drift gillnet gear on board during a calendar day when
commercial salmon fishing is authorized in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area. The
corresponding prohibition at Sec. 679.117(b)(1)(xiv) is similarly
revised to prohibit operation contrary to requirements specified at
Sec. 679.28(f)(6)(x). This final rule also adds a definition of the
``waters of Cook Inlet'' at Sec. 679.2. For purposes of Sec. Sec.
679.28(f)(6)(x) and 679.117(b)(1)(xiv), the waters of Cook Inlet
includes all waters north of a line from Cape Douglas (58[deg]51.10' N)
to Point Adam (59[deg]15.27' N). In sum, these changes from proposed to
final regulations clarify that the VMS requirement for SFFP holders
applies: (1) on days when directed fishing for salmon using drift
gillnet gear is open in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area; (2) if the vessel has
drift gillnet gear on board the vessel or deployed; and (3) if the
vessel is operating in the waters of Cook Inlet.
This final rule also modifies regulations at Sec.
679.118(c)(1)(ii) to provide NMFS the authority to prohibit fishing for
one or more salmon species if required for conservation. While the
recreational salmon fishery in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area is extremely
small, this would give NMFS all management tools potentially required
to conserve stocks at very low abundance. The most likely potential
need for this authority is because declines in Chinook salmon abundance
have, in some cases, entirely eliminated the harvestable surplus of
Chinook (i.e., escapement goals cannot be achieved even if no fish are
harvested). In this instance, even the limited mortality resulting from
catch and release fishing (i.e., what would be allowed under a
prohibition on retention) could potentially result in exceeding an ABC/
ACL. NMFS would also maintain the authority to prohibit retention of
one or more species if a closure to salmon fishing was not required to
achieve conservation objectives or avoid exceeding an ABC/ACL.
Additionally, this final rule adds two new prohibitions to Sec.
679.117 to clarify that it is unlawful for any person to: (1) engage in
commercial fishing for salmon in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area contrary to
notification of inseason action, closure, or adjustment issued under
Sec. Sec. 679.25 and 679.118 (see Sec. 679.117(b)(1)(xvi)); or (2)
engage in recreational fishing for salmon in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area
contrary to notification of inseason action, closure, or adjustment
issued under Sec. 679.118 (see Sec. 679.117(b)(2)(v)). The final rule
also makes clarifying edits to Sec. 679.117(b) as follows: (1) moves
``of the Salmon Management Area, defined at Sec. 679.2 and Figure 22
to this part,'' from Sec. 679.117(b)(1)(ii), to Sec.
679.117(b)(1)(i), which is the first time the term ``Cook Inlet EEZ
Area'' appears in Sec. 679.117(b)(1); (2) replaces the word ``set'' in
Sec. 679.117(b)(1)(v), and replaces it with ``deploy''; and (3) adds
the term ``Cook Inlet EEZ Area'' to two prohibitions applicable to
recreational fishing (see Sec. 679.117(b)(2)(ii) and (iii)).
Throughout the regulatory text, NMFS also made technical and grammar
edits to correct regulatory cross references, use consistent terms,
remove redundancy, and promote clarity.
One additional change from the proposed rule was removing a
proposed requirement that any interactions or entanglements with marine
mammals would be required to be recorded in the logbook. NMFS
determined that this requirement would be duplicative with and may be
confused with existing reporting requirements under the Marine Mammal
Authorization Program and has therefore removed the requirement from
this final rule. Participants are, however, still required to report
marine mammal interactions under the Marine Mammal Authorization
Program.
Comments and Responses
NMFS received 87 comment submissions on amendment 16 and the
proposed rule. NMFS has summarized and responded to 95 unique and
relevant comments below. The comments were from individuals,
environmental groups, local governments, the Alaska Department of Fish
and Game (ADF&G), sportfishing organizations, fishing guides, tribes
and tribal members, drift gillnet fishermen, and commercial fishing
organizations. Several comment submissions were duplicates or addressed
topics outside the scope of amendment 16 and the proposed rule.
Overall, there was a mix of support and opposition, with those comments
opposing the rule expressing concerns about expanding Federal
management to salmon fisheries, impacts to adjacent state salmon
fisheries, the cost and burden of monitoring requirements, adverse
economic impacts, preseason catch limits, the prohibition on fishing in
both state and Federal waters on the same day, and underharvest
(exceeding spawning escapement goals). The vast majority of commenters
supported some version of Federal management (mostly drift gillnet
fishers, commercial processors, and tribal groups), and a small
minority opposed any type of Federal management. Comments are organized
by topic into the following categories:
Scope of the Fishery Management Plan
National Standard 1
Status Determination Criteria and Annual Catch Limits
Inseason Management
Cook Inlet EEZ Commercial Salmon Fishing Management Measures
Federal Commercial Fishing Season and Fishing Periods
Monitoring, Recordkeeping, and Reporting Requirements
Other Commercial Salmon Fishing Management Measures and
Prohibitions
Recreational Fishing
National Standard 2
National Standard 3
National Standard 4
National Standards 5 and 7
National Standard 8
National Standard 10
Economic Impacts
[[Page 34725]]
General Support
General Opposition
Tribal Comments
Marine Mammals
Process Concerns
Other
Scope of the Fishery Management Plan
Comment 1: NMFS's decision to limit the scope of Federal management
to the Cook Inlet EEZ violates UCIDA v. NMFS, 837 F.3d 1055 (9th Cir.
2016), in which the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals held that NMFS must
manage the entire ``fishery,'' including State waters.
Response: NMFS disagrees that the Ninth Circuit's decision requires
this FMP to cover both State and Federal waters. Rather, limiting NMFS
management solely to Federal waters (i.e., the Cook Inlet EEZ) is
consistent with the court's decision in UCIDA v. NMFS. In that case,
UCIDA challenged amendment 12 to the Salmon FMP, which had excluded the
Cook Inlet EEZ from the Salmon FMP. The Ninth Circuit considered only
whether NMFS had the legal authority to exclude portions of the EEZ
from the FMP. In ruling against NMFS, the Court held that NMFS must
include the Cook Inlet EEZ in the Salmon FMP because it has an
obligation to issue an FMP for each fishery under its authority that
requires conservation and management. The phrase ``under its
authority'' was critical to that Ninth Circuit decision, which
considered whether a State could manage a fishery in Federal waters
outside the context of an FMP. Nothing in UCIDA v. NMFS implied that a
Federal FMP must cover fishing that occurs in State waters if a
harvested stock occurs in both State and Federal waters. Not only was
that question not before the Ninth Circuit, but requiring NMFS to
manage in State waters through an FMP would violate the plain language
of Magnuson-Stevens Act section 306(a), which provides that states
retain management jurisdiction over fishing in state waters.
In fact, the Ninth Circuit explicitly recognized that the Cook
Inlet EEZ constitutes a fishery, stating that ``the statute requires an
FMP for a fishery, a defined term,'' and adding ``[n]o one disputes
that the exempted area of Cook Inlet''--i.e. the Cook Inlet EEZ--``is a
salmon fishery.'' 837 F.3d at 1064. The portion of Cook Inlet at issue
in the litigation over amendment 12 was the Cook Inlet EEZ, not all of
Cook Inlet. In this action, NMFS is complying with the Ninth Circuit's
decision by incorporating the very ``fishery'' at issue in that case--
the Cook Inlet EEZ salmon fishery--into the Salmon FMP.
Comment 2: NMFS's decision to limit the scope of Federal management
to the Cook Inlet EEZ violates the plain language of the Magnuson-
Stevens Act. The term ``fishery,'' as defined within section 3 of the
Magnuson-Stevens Act, requires that amendment 16 include a definition
of ``fishery'' that extends throughout the range of salmon in Cook
Inlet, including State waters.
Response: NMFS disagrees that its definition of the ``fishery''
violates the Magnuson-Stevens Act. As explained in the preamble to the
proposed rule and the response to Comment 1, the ``fishery'' that is
subject to Federal management under amendment 16 are the salmon stocks
harvested by the commercial and recreational fishing sectors within the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area. Defining the fishery as geographically constrained
to the Cook Inlet EEZ is consistent with the Magnuson-Stevens Act.
Section 3 of the Magnuson-Stevens Act broadly defines a ``fishery'' as
one or more stocks of fish that can be treated as a unit for purposes
of conservation and management and which are identified on the basis of
geographical, scientific, technical, recreational, and economic
characteristics; and any fishing for such stocks.
NMFS has determined that salmon stocks in the Cook Inlet EEZ can be
treated as a unit for purposes of conservation and management because
they all fall within the geographical management area under NMFS's
jurisdiction, the best scientific information available supports NMFS's
determination that the EEZ has unique ecological characteristics due to
the mixed stock nature of fishing in the EEZ, and fishing for these
stocks in the EEZ has distinct technical and economic characteristics
that distinguish it from State water fisheries, as discussed in the
response to Comment 55.
The Magnuson-Stevens Act expressly limits the management authority
of NMFS and the Council to the EEZ, with a narrow exception. Section
101(a) of the Magnuson-Stevens Act establishes the Nation's sovereign
rights and exclusive fishery management authority over all fish and all
Continental Shelf fishery resources within the EEZ. Section 3(11) of
the Magnuson-Stevens Act defines the inner boundary of the EEZ as a
line coterminous with the seaward boundary of each of the coastal
States. Section 302(a)(l)(G) states that the Council has authority over
the fisheries in the Arctic Ocean, Bering Sea, and Pacific Ocean
seaward of Alaska. Because Alaska's seaward boundary is 3 nautical
miles (nmi) (5.56 kilometers) from its coast (3-nmi boundary line), 43
U.S.C. 1301(b), the inner boundary of the EEZ, and therefore the
Council's authority, starts 3 nmi (5.56 kilometers) from the Alaskan
coast and extends to the outer boundary of the EEZ 200 nmi (370.4
kilometers) seaward of the coast of Alaska. In section 306, the
Magnuson-Stevens Act expressly states that it shall not be construed as
extending or diminishing the jurisdiction or authority of any State
within its boundaries. Therefore, the Magnuson-Stevens Act does not
contemplate the extension of Federal authority into State waters,
except under the very limited circumstances described in section 306(b)
(discussed further in the response to Comment 4). In sum, given the
geographic limits placed on NMFS's authority to manage fisheries, it is
necessary for the ``fishery'' to be geographically constrained to the
EEZ.
Comment 3: NMFS's decision to define the fishery as geographically
constrained to the Cook Inlet EEZ is arbitrary. There cannot be two
adjacent management schemes for salmon; one in Federal waters and one
in State waters, because one management scheme will always depend on
the other. Salmon management depends on escapement goals. That means an
FMP for just the EEZ will always depend on the State which sets the
escapement goals.
Response: Defining the fishery as geographically constrained to the
Cook Inlet EEZ is not arbitrary; it is required by the Magnuson-Stevens
Act and is consistent with fisheries management throughout the EEZ off
Alaska and throughout the U.S. Nearly all stocks harvested in the EEZ
nationwide also occur in State waters, but as explained in the response
to Comment 2, the Magnuson-Stevens Act explicitly left jurisdiction
over state waters to the states.
Recognizing Federal and State jurisdictional boundaries is a
foundational principle in the management of natural resources that
straddle jurisdictions in the U.S. In mining, forestry, oil, gas, and
fisheries, the location of the activity determines the applicable
regulations, even if the relevant resource is also present in an
adjacent jurisdiction. Furthermore, this is consistent with the
management approach for other fisheries off Alaska. For example, in the
GOA, the State manages fisheries for pollock and Pacific cod in State
waters and NMFS manages pollock and Pacific cod fisheries in Federal
waters. For these fisheries, the State determines when State waters
will be open to fishing for pollock and Pacific cod, while the Council
recommends and NMFS makes
[[Page 34726]]
those determinations for the EEZ, taking into account any anticipated
harvest in State waters.
Similar to the Federal management of the Cook Inlet EEZ, the
Pacific Fishery Management Council's Salmon FMP expressly limits
Federal management to the fisheries in EEZ waters. That FMP covers
salmon stocks caught in the EEZ off the coasts of Washington, Oregon,
and California.
NMFS disagrees that a stock of anadromous fish cannot be
successfully managed by different adjacent management regimes. NMFS and
State management agencies regularly have separate fisheries that
harvest the same stocks of fish. Management will be coordinated to the
extent practicable. NMFS will establish catch limits for the Cook Inlet
EEZ that are based on achieving escapement goals as defined in the
Federal stock assessment, while accounting for both State and Federal
expected harvests.
There are cooperative management arrangements where a single
management agency can make decisions for both State and Federal waters.
But these are dependent on a mutually accepted delegation of management
authority or international treaties. For example, NMFS's management
jurisdiction over the Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands king and Tanner
crab fisheries is limited to the Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands Area
EEZ, but because the Council recommended delegated management of the
EEZ to the State through the Crab FMP--and NMFS determined State
management was consistent with the FMP and the Magnuson-Stevens Act--
the State executes delegated management actions for crab stocks in
Federal waters while also managing these stocks within State waters.
While there is often coordination between NMFS and the State to ensure
that fishery management decisions achieve the common goal of
sustainability, State and Federal authority remains constrained by
jurisdictional limits.
Management of the Salmon FMP's East Area is different from the
management of salmon in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area because of both the
delegation of management authority to the State and the Pacific Salmon
Treaty. Management of the salmon commercial troll and recreational
fisheries in the East Area EEZ occurs across the State and EEZ boundary
because the Council voted to delegate management of the salmon
fisheries in the East Area EEZ to the State, the State was willing to
accept such a delegation of authority, and NMFS determined State
management was consistent with both the Salmon FMP and the Magnuson-
Stevens Act. The Council and NMFS considered delegating management of
the Cook Inlet EEZ to the State, similar to the arrangement in the East
Area. However, the State refused to accept delegated management on two
occasions and NMFS has no authority to compel a state to accept such
delegation. As a result, there is no alternative to having separately
managed salmon fisheries in Cook Inlet, and the State and Federal
fisheries are separated along the jurisdictional EEZ boundary.
Comment 4: Even if states generally retain jurisdiction over state
waters pursuant to Magnuson-Stevens Act 306(a), here Magnuson-Stevens
Act 306(b) requires NMFS to preempt State management and assert
management authority over salmon fishing in the state waters of Cook
Inlet.
Response: NMFS disagrees that Magnuson-Stevens Act section 306(b)
requires NMFS to assert management jurisdiction over the State waters
of Cook Inlet and/or implement management measures for State waters
through this FMP amendment.
Magnuson-Stevens Act section 306(b) includes two criteria that must
both be met before NMFS can assert management authority over fishing in
State waters: (1) the fishery must occur predominantly in the EEZ and
(2) after notice and opportunity for a hearing, the Secretary must
determine that a State is ``substantially and adversely'' affecting the
carrying out of an FMP. Even when these criteria are met, Magnuson-
Stevens Act section 306(b) explicitly states that NMFS cannot assert
management authority over internal (fresh) waters, meaning the scope of
Magnuson-Stevens Act section 306(b) is narrower than claimed by the
commenter even when it does apply.
Historically, the State has managed salmon fishing in Cook Inlet as
a single fishery with no distinction between State and Federal waters.
Under State management, approximately 75 percent of total upper Cook
Inlet salmon harvests occurred in State waters. NMFS has previously
determined that the State-managed fishery did not occur predominantly
in the EEZ, and thus for that reason alone it had no basis for
asserting management authority over State waters under Magnuson-Stevens
Act section 306(b)(1)(A). In addition, NMFS has consistently found that
State management is consistent with Magnuson-Stevens Act requirements
and the goals and objectives of the FMP. Thus, both criteria for
preemption under Magnuson-Stevens Act section 306(b) have not been
satisfied. As a result of litigation brought by drift gillnet
fishermen, among others, status quo management as a single fishery by
the State is no longer possible. NMFS acknowledges that amendment 16
will create a new fishery in Cook Inlet, which will occur entirely
within Federal waters.
Even assuming the 306(b)(1)(A) criteria was met for the Cook Inlet
EEZ salmon fishery after implementation of amendment 16--though total
harvest of Cook Inlet salmon stocks will continue to occur
predominantly within State waters--for NMFS to assert management
jurisdiction over State waters it would also have to determine that
State management ``substantially and adversely'' affects implementation
of the Salmon FMP, after notice and opportunity for a hearing. The
procedures and requirements for notice and the hearing at 50 CFR part
600, subpart G are prescriptive, none have occurred here, and NMFS has
no basis to begin proceedings at this time. No fishing has yet occurred
under amendment 16 to the Salmon FMP and this final rule, and NMFS has
no information that suggests that State action or inaction will prevent
the Council or NMFS from carrying out the management measures and
management objectives specified in amendment 16. Thus, the criteria for
preemption under Magnuson-Stevens Act section 306(b)(1)(B) has not been
satisfied.
Comment 5: Every other FMP in Alaska sets management measures,
including ACL and TAC, for the fishery in both State and EEZ waters.
The King Crab closure around Kodiak Island does not allow the fishery
in State waters to continue without direction, nor does the Pacific Cod
TAC in the GOA apply for the EEZ waters only with the State waters
fishery unregulated; the same is true for every other stock of fish
except salmon. For the Salmon FMP, NMFS is trying to make us believe
the rules governing this fishery are different, even after the Federal
court decision that have determined they are not.
Response: NMFS disagrees. Federal ACLs and TACs are not established
for State waters in other Federal FMPs. The BOF has established State
managed fisheries in State waters, for example, the GOA Pacific cod
fishery that the State manages by setting a guideline harvest level
(GHL) outside the Federal harvest specifications process. For some
fisheries, the BOF bases the GHL amount on a percentage of the Federal
ABC. However, the GHL fishery is managed by the State. To comply with
the Federal ACL regulations and National Standard 1 guidelines, NMFS
manages Pacific cod in Federal waters to ensure the sum of all State
waters and
[[Page 34727]]
Federal waters Pacific cod removals from the GOA do not exceed the
Federal Pacific cod ABC (and therefore ACL) for the GOA. Accordingly,
each year the Council recommends, and NMFS approves, a TAC in the GOA
that is set at an amount to accommodate the State's GHL for the Pacific
cod caught in State waters. This is consistent with the Magnuson-
Stevens Act and National Standard guidelines that direct, as a
fundamental component of sustainable fisheries management, that catch
should not exceed the ACL and that all sources of mortality from
fishing activities should be evaluated for stock status and
specification of Federal harvest limits. If the State changed the
applicable State waters GHL, there are no limits on the amount of
Pacific cod that may be harvested in State waters, and NMFS would
adjust the Federal TAC accordingly to ensure that total Pacific cod
removals do not exceed the Federal Pacific cod ABC and ACL. In other
words, as under amendment 16, the Federal TAC accounts for State water
harvest but does not constrain or limit State water harvest.
The commenter also appears to reference the State Pacific cod
parallel fishery. In this parallel fishery, some of the Federal TAC is
harvested in State waters, under State regulations generally mirroring
those used in Federal waters. NMFS does not establish a TAC for State
waters or manage in State waters; rather, NMFS deducts catch in the
parallel fishery from the Federal TAC per a longstanding arrangement
that ensures this fishery does not create conservation concerns. The
State originally developed and implemented parallel fisheries to
provide fishing opportunities within State waters before the State had
capacity and expertise to independently develop and manage State water
groundfish fisheries (GHL fisheries). While the State has since
developed State-managed groundfish fisheries, parallel fisheries have
been maintained to address allocation issues with respect to vessel
gear type, operation type, and size. The State opposes the Federal
management approach for salmon in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area and has not
expressed interest in either a delegation of management authority or
taking State action to develop a parallel fishery for salmon.
Therefore, NMFS must manage salmon fishing in the Cook Inlet EEZ in the
same manner as it manages the vast majority of fish stocks off Alaska--
by accounting for projected State water GHL harvest when establishing
harvest limits for the EEZ, and debiting catch that occurs in the
parallel fisheries against the Federal TAC during the fishing season.
In regards to the crab fisheries in the GOA, there are no federally
managed crab fisheries in the GOA, and there is no GOA crab FMP. The
king crab closure around Kodiak is a State management measure.
Comment 6: The proposed FMP violates both the letter and the spirit
of the District Court's ruling in 2022, the Ninth Circuit's order in
2016, and the Magnuson-Stevens Act. NMFS's repeated failure to provide
the relief requested has caused severe economic harm to the drift
gillnet fleet. Amendment 16 violates nearly all of the National
Standards and imposes a harvest plan that is both burdensome and
inefficient. Do not approve this action.
Response: NMFS disagrees. NMFS developed amendment 16 to comply
with the decisions of the Ninth Circuit and the District Court, the
Magnuson-Stevens Act, and other applicable Federal law. NMFS considered
all Magnuson-Stevens Act requirements for FMPs and balanced the
competing demands of the National Standards when developing amendment
16. NMFS finds this final rule to be consistent with all 10 National
Standards, as detailed in section 5.1 of the Analysis and further
addressed in responses to comments under the National Standard headings
below. Economic impacts are further addressed in responses to comments
below.
Because the State refused to accept delegated management authority,
amendment 16 must necessarily establish an entirely separate management
jurisdiction and, therefore, results in decreased management efficiency
relative to the status quo (management of all salmon fishing in Upper
Cook Inlet by the State). Separate Federal management infrastructure
and regulations must be established while all existing State management
measures remain in place. In order to manage the fishery in the Cook
Inlet EEZ Area, NMFS must begin collecting the data essential to manage
the fishery and required by the Magnuson-Stevens Act. In particular,
NMFS must know who is participating in the fishery, how many vessels
are active, and where catch is occurring, and must be able to debit
catch against established limits during the season to prevent
overfishing, even though collecting this information will involve new
recordkeeping, reporting, and monitoring requirements for participants
that are separate from those required in State waters.
Comment 7: NMFS is effectively deferring to State management by
managing conservatively, claiming that it is unprepared and
procedurally limited in its ability to manage the fishery.
Response: NMFS disagrees that it is implicitly deferring to State
management by managing conservatively. This will be the first year
since Alaska Statehood that there will be a federally-managed salmon
fishery in the Cook Inlet EEZ, and currently all data collection and
management infrastructure are run by the State. In light of these
realities, ``managing conservatively'' is a responsible approach to
fishery management, ensuring that NMFS does not harm salmon stocks as
it builds infrastructure and expertise, and begins collecting the data
needed to manage a new Federal fishery. It is unreasonable and
imprudent to expect that NMFS could greatly increase total harvests
from the status quo in the first year of a new fishery, with less
management flexibility, less information, and less management
experience in Cook Inlet. The best available science suggests status
quo harvest levels in the EEZ could not be significantly increased
without reducing or eliminating the harvestable surplus for other users
and further increasing the risk that stocks of lower abundance will not
achieve spawning escapement goals (which have not always been achieved
in all years even under status quo EEZ harvests). While NMFS's approach
is necessarily precautionary, the proposed 2024 Cook Inlet EEZ Area
harvest specifications (89 FR 25857, April 12, 2024) would establish
TACs for all species except coho salmon (due to elevated conservation
risks and high uncertainty) that are higher than the recent 10-year
average estimated Cook Inlet EEZ Area harvest.
As described in the preamble to the proposed rule, this action
contains all of the management measures required for NMFS to administer
and manage all salmon fishing in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area consistent
with the Magnuson-Stevens Act. No management decisions are deferred to
the State and NMFS will not rely on the State--implicitly or
otherwise--to achieve OY or prevent overfishing (one of the flaws the
District Court identified with amendment 14).
Using the best scientific information available, each year NMFS
will prepare a SAFE report and develop harvest specifications based on
the recommendations from the Council's SSC. As described in the
response to Comment 5, although NMFS must necessarily account for
projected
[[Page 34728]]
removals from State-managed fisheries in setting the harvest levels for
the Cook Inlet EEZ Area, and other Federal fisheries off Alaska, that
is part of making decisions based on best scientific information
available and consistent with National Standard 2. Accounting for State
action is not the same as deferring to State action. The processes by
which Federal reference points are independently developed and annually
reviewed is described in the preamble to the proposed rule and
amendment 16.
Although NMFS has not historically managed salmon fishing in the
Cook Inlet EEZ, it has the ability to do so successfully. Acknowledging
that the State has decades of institutional expertise and management
tools that make it currently more capable of efficient administration
(as described in the Analysis) is not an indictment of NMFS's
management. Further, while Federal notice requirements limited the
suite of management alternatives and options when developing amendment
16 and preclude rapid fishery openings and closings as occurs under
State management, no procedural limitations will prevent NMFS from
implementing amendment 16, which has been designed to comply with all
Magnuson-Stevens Act requirements. NMFS is confident it can effectively
manage this fishery.
Comment 8: Regulations for Cook Inlet should allow fishing 110
miles (177.03 km) out from the mouth of the fish spawning grounds. For
sport fishing, regulations should allow snagging one mile (1.61 km)
from the mouth of any rivers in the inlet.
Response: This final rule would allow recreational salmon fishing
in all waters of the Cook Inlet EEZ Area. EEZ waters of the West Area
(3-200 nmi (5.56-370.4 km) off Alaska) outside of the Cook Inlet EEZ
Area remain closed to commercial salmon fishing, as under the status
quo, but recreational salmon fishing is authorized. Waters within 3 nmi
(5.56 km) of shore are State waters and not subject to this action.
Comment 9: Several commenters suggested it would be best if all
salmon fishing in Cook Inlet was managed by ADF&G. Some commenters
expressed skepticism about the track record of Federal fisheries
management (e.g., halibut fishery declines and salmon bycatch concerns)
and other Federal resource management in Alaska. Other commenters noted
that the State has more expertise and better flexibility to manage
salmon, which is desirable given the complexity and challenge of salmon
management in Cook Inlet. One commenter noted that Federal management
may prioritize non-Alaskan constituencies.
Response: NMFS acknowledges the complexity and challenges of salmon
management in Cook Inlet. The challenges associated with Federal
management are identified sections 2.4 and 2.5 of the Analysis. NMFS
developed amendment 16 to address these challenges to the extent
practicable.
NMFS is required to implement Federal management of salmon fishing
in the Cook Inlet EEZ. The Ninth Circuit held that section 302(h)(1) of
the Magnuson-Stevens Act requires a Council to prepare and submit FMPs
for each fishery under its authority that requires conservation and
management. United Cook Inlet Drift Ass'n v. NMFS, 837 F.3d 1055, 1065
(9th Cir. 2016). Because NMFS determined that the Cook Inlet EEZ salmon
fishery requires conservation and management, the Ninth Circuit ruled
that it must be included in the Salmon FMP. Because of this litigation
and the State's subsequent decision not accept a delegation of
management authority for the Cook Inlet EEZ, management of all salmon
fishing in Cook Inlet by the State is not possible at this time.
Additional discussion of Federal jurisdiction is provided in the
response to Comment 3.
Further, this rule will not prioritize any constituency. Consistent
with National Standard 4, amendment 16 does not discriminate between
residents of different states in allocating fishery resources and is
fair and equitable to all fishermen. Consistency with National Standard
4 is discussed further below.
National Standard 1
Comment 10: The Magnuson-Stevens Act requires that NMFS set MSY and
OY for fishing that occurs in both Federal and state waters. Only by
doing so can NMFS ensure that the State's action in the State waters
fishery does not interfere with NMFS's obligation to follow the
Magnuson-Stevens Act in the Federal-waters fishery and achieve OY. NMFS
should define OY for both State and Federal waters so as to prevent the
overescapement caused by State management decisions.
Response: NMFS disagrees that it must set MSY and OY for fishing
that occurs in both State and Federal waters. As discussed in the
preamble to the proposed rule, MSY is a reference point, informed by
the best available scientific information. The Magnuson-Stevens Act and
National Standard 1 guidelines require that every FMP include an
estimate of MSY for the stocks and stock complexes that require
conservation and management (Sec. 600.310(e)(1)). MSY is defined as
the largest long-term average catch or yield that can be taken from a
stock or stock complex under prevailing ecological, environmental
conditions and fishery technological characteristics (e.g., gear
selectivity), and the distribution of catch among fleets (Sec.
600.310(e)(1)). Thus, under National Standard 1, NMFS acknowledges that
MSY should be defined for a stock or stock complex, regardless of where
fishing occurs, and thus it is not set for State waters or Federal
waters. Because MSY is not a management target, it does not depend on
any management actions. Rather, it describes the capacity of a stock to
be harvested sustainably, regardless of who manages fishing or how
harvest is authorized. Only by accounting for catch wherever it occurs
can NMFS understand the largest long-term average catch or yield that
can be taken from the entire stock or stock-complex. Amendment 16
provides that, for salmon stocks harvested in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area,
MSY is defined at the stock or stock complex level (as described
below), consistent with National Standard 1 guidelines for establishing
MSY. Because MSY must be defined in terms of stocks or stock complexes,
this definition of MSY does not subdivide between State and EEZ waters
in Cook Inlet.
NMFS disagrees that OY should be established for fishing occurring
in both State and Federal waters. In contrast to MSY, OY may be
established at the stock, stock complex, or fishery level (Sec.
600.310(e)(3)). With respect to the yield from a fishery, the Magnuson-
Stevens Act defines ``optimum'' as the amount of fish that will provide
the greatest overall benefit to the Nation. Under amendment 16, the
fishery is properly defined as all harvest of co-occurring salmon
stocks in the Cook Inlet EEZ for the reasons stated in Comments 1, 3,
4, and 29. Because there is limited ability to target individual stocks
of salmon in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area, stocks of varying abundance are
inevitably all harvested in the same fishing trip. The amount of
harvest that will provide the greatest overall benefit to the Nation in
this highly mixed stock fishery where vessels operating in the EEZ
cannot discriminate between stocks of varying abundance is very
different from the amount of harvest that may be optimum for stocks or
fisheries in State waters where vessels are better able to target
individual stocks of fish near their natal streams. Thus, OY is better
defined for the Cook Inlet EEZ fishery rather than at the stock or
stock complex level, taking into account the
[[Page 34729]]
interactions among various stocks in the EEZ.
Furthermore, by defining OY at the level of the Cook Inlet EEZ
fishery under Federal jurisdiction, NMFS ensures that OY is entirely
within its purview and control to achieve on a continuing basis. In
vacating amendment 14, the U.S. District Court for the District of
Alaska found that NMFS had impermissibly deferred too much management
authority to the State, stating ``hinging federal management targets on
the changing landscape of state decisions is an improper delegation of
management authority to the State.'' United Cook Inlet Drift Ass'n v.
Nat'l Marine Fisheries Serv., No. 3:21-cv-00255 at *28 (D. Alaska, June
21, 2022). In developing amendment 16, NMFS took a different approach.
For the first time since Alaska Statehood, there will be two salmon
fishery management jurisdictions in Cook Inlet. To avoid relying on the
State to achieve any Federal management targets under amendment 16,
NMFS has established OY for the Cook Inlet EEZ fishery and developed a
harvest specifications process that will achieve that OY on a
continuing basis while preventing overfishing of any of the salmon
stocks of varying abundance that co-occur in the EEZ.
Comment 11: Amendment 16 addresses the complexities of a mixed
stock fishery, with the added burden of separate adjacent
jurisdictional authorities. The proposed rule addresses MSY and OY, the
jurisdictional issues, and notes reliance on the State's scientific
knowledge and management authority but does not describe what triggers
fishing in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area. Because the State did not accept
delegated management and because NMFS lacks management expertise,
amendment 16 implements Federal management that is not reliant on State
input. However, because the State frequently develops the best
scientific information available for Cook Inlet salmon stocks,
amendment 16 should be modified to provide that NMFS authorize EEZ
fishing only after receiving notice from the State that doing so will
not negatively impact the State's management goals and strategies.
Response: NMFS acknowledges the jurisdictional complexity related
to this action, and the State's expertise in salmon management. This
action is intended to establish a Federal salmon management framework
that is not dependent on the State and has the flexibility to adapt to
changing conditions. The annual status determination criteria, harvest
specifications, and inseason management will be dependent on the best
scientific information available and the circumstances present in each
fishing year.
NMFS expects that it will develop management expertise and
strengthen cooperative relationships with various Agency partners
related to management of the Cook Inlet EEZ Area over time. NMFS
acknowledges that the mixed stock nature of and status of weaker salmon
stocks within the fishery can make it difficult to harvest all of the
surplus yield for all component stocks and that the interaction between
stocks must also factor into the definition of OY.
NMFS disagrees that the FMP should include language requiring
approval from the State prior to opening salmon fishing in the Cook
Inlet EEZ Area. Consistent with the direction of the District Court,
NMFS has implemented management measures including a fishing season,
fishing periods, and TACs to ensure that OY can be achieved without
relying on the State.
Comment 12: Under the State's management and based on the State's
preliminary numbers, the overescapement of sockeye in just two rivers
in Upper Cook Inlet exceeded the total commercial harvest of sockeye
for the entirety of Upper Cook Inlet and likely exceeded the escapement
necessary for all other rivers in Cook Inlet. According to NMFS's own
scientific information included in its analysis, overescapement is
problematic because it results in ``foregone yield in the current''
year and ``may be expected to result in reduction in future
recruitment,'' (i.e., reduction in long-term yield). To further put
these numbers in perspective, overescapement of sockeye in the Kenai
and Kasilof in 2023 was more than NMFS's OY range--approximately
291,631 to 1,551,464--for the entire Cook Inlet EEZ salmon fishery for
all species of salmon in Upper Cook Inlet. There is no discussion in
proposed amendment 16 of how NMFS's management measures for the Cook
Inlet EEZ salmon fishery will address and prevent rampant
overescapement by the State and the resulting unutilized waste to
ensure compliance with National Standard 1. Amendment 16 focuses only
on the concept of avoiding overfishing, without making any meaningful
effort to simultaneously prevent drastic underfishing by optimizing
yield.
Response: NMFS acknowledges that Kenai and Kasilof sockeye salmon
stocks have exceeded escapement goals in recent years, resulting in
foregone yield. As described in the preamble to the proposed rule,
salmon fishing in the Cook Inlet EEZ necessarily targets mixed stocks
of salmon. Conservation measures to prevent overfishing on less
abundant co-occurring salmon stocks are a primary driver of this
foregone yield as they limit a complete harvest of the most abundant
sockeye salmon stocks to prevent overfishing on less abundant salmon
stocks. As referenced within the 2024 SAFE report, which was reviewed
by the SSC, during recent years when Kenai and Kasilof river sockeye
salmon escapement goals were exceeded, some sockeye, coho, and Chinook
salmon escapement goals in Cook Inlet were not achieved at the status
quo level of salmon harvest; thereby highlighting the difficulty of
managing mixed stock fisheries to enable the harvest of potential yield
while also achieving conservation objectives. Management measures that
are required to prevent overfishing on all stocks are consistent with
the Magnuson-Stevens Act.
As described in the response to Comments 18, 25, and 55, Cook Inlet
is a mixed stock fishery within which there are weak stocks (i.e.,
stocks of relatively low abundance). This situation requires management
decisions that can result in overescapement of abundant stocks, such as
Kenai and Kasilof sockeye salmon. Providing for greater harvest of the
more abundant stocks in the EEZ would create a significant risk of not
meeting escapement goals for less abundant stocks and reducing or
eliminating the harvestable surplus of these stocks available to all
other salmon users. As noted above, NMFS has evaluated historical EEZ
harvest levels and found that harvest in the EEZ could not be increased
to fully harvest surplus Kenai and Kasilof salmon without causing
serious impacts to other salmon harvesters and major conservation
problems for other stocks. Whether management in State waters could be
modified to increase harvest of these stocks closer to their natal
streams without increasing pressure on the stocks of lower abundance in
the EEZ is outside the scope of this action, as NMFS has no
jurisdiction over State waters (as described in the response to Comment
10). The potential for overescapement to reduce future yields is
addressed in the response to Comment 18.
The Magnuson-Stevens Act has no prohibition against foregone
harvest, and in fact suggests foregone harvest is necessary when
additional harvest of an abundant stock would also result in bycatch of
species for which there is a conservation concern. In contrast, the
[[Page 34730]]
Magnuson-Stevens Act explicitly mandates that NMFS prevent overfishing.
Therefore, in defining OY for a mixed stock fishery, NMFS cannot look
at the strongest stocks in isolation. Here, OY is appropriately limited
to EEZ waters and defined so as to identify the amount of cumulative
harvest of all co-occurring EEZ stocks that provides the greatest net
benefit to the Nation while preventing overfishing. This is consistent
with NMFS's approach to salmon management on the West Coast where
``weak stock'' management is required to avoid exceeding limits for the
stocks with the most constraining limits. Each year when setting
harvest specifications, NMFS will evaluate the maximum potential
harvest available in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area and will work to provide
harvest opportunities to the extent possible, subject to the
constraints of scientific and management uncertainty. As the
information available to NMFS to manage salmon fishing in the Cook
Inlet EEZ Area improves through implementation of this new Federal
fishery management regime, it is possible that harvest levels could
increase.
The State's management decisions prior to NMFS implementing
amendment 16 regarding allocations among fishery sectors under State
jurisdiction are State decisions that are outside the scope of this
action.
Comment 13: This definition of OY is inconsistent with a 2018 NMFS
legal memorandum describing that OY should not be subdivided between
State and Federal waters.
Response: NMFS disagrees that amendment 16's definition of OY is
inconsistent with the 2018 NMFS legal memorandum filed in UCIDA v.
NMFS. The relevant portion of the legal memorandum stated, ``because
the fisheries take place in the EEZ and State waters without formal
recognition of the boundary between these two areas, the OY should not
and cannot be subdivided into separate parts for the EEZ and State
waters.'' At that time, management of Cook Inlet had never been divided
into separate State and Federal management regimes under the FMP. As
such, it was assumed that continued State management over the drift
gillnet fishery throughout both Federal and State waters would continue
through delegation under Magnuson-Stevens Act section 306(a).
Delegation of certain Federal management authorities to the State would
have maintained a single fishery that could operate without specific
regard for the EEZ boundary, but the State declined delegation.
Therefore, under amendment 16, which will create separate Federal and
State fisheries, it is appropriate to define OY for the specific
fishery under NMFS's jurisdiction--the Cook Inlet EEZ salmon fishery.
Comment 14: If NMFS could acknowledge that achieving OY/MSY
escapement goals should be the driving factor in developing its FMP,
then much of the complication built into amendment 16 would go away.
Response: NMFS acknowledges that an FMP must contain conservation
and management measures, including ACLs and accountability measures, to
achieve OY on a continuing basis and provisions for information
collection that are designed to determine the degree to which OY is
achieved. As stated above, here OY is defined for the fishery--which
currently includes seven stocks or stock complexes of varying
abundance--and accounts for the mixed stock nature of the salmon
fishery in the EEZ and the needs of multiple user groups in identifying
the harvest levels that will produce the greatest net benefit to the
Nation across a variety of run sizes. The FMP's management measures are
explicitly designed to achieve OY on a continuing basis while
preventing overfishing, consistent with National Standard 1.
NMFS does not agree that achieving MSY or MSY escapement goals are
its mandates. MSY is not a management target, as described above, and
MSY identifies the maximum sustainable harvest level an individual
stock could theoretically support if it was possible to target that
stock in isolation and without uncertainty. OY is prescribed on the
basis of MSY, as reduced by any relevant economic, social, or
ecological factors. Here, for Tier 1 and 2 salmon stocks, MSY in the
Cook Inlet EEZ represents all salmon in excess of the stock's
escapement goal in a given year. For Tier 3 stocks, which have no
reliable estimates of escapement, maximum catch over a recent range of
years that are representative of current biological and environmental
conditions is used as a proxy for MSY. But because it is not possible
to target individual stocks of salmon in the EEZ, it is not possible to
design conservation and management measures intended to fully harvest
MSY for each stock, as such harvest levels would result in overfishing
of the least abundant stocks. Instead, OY is defined for the fishery on
the basis of MSY--in that it aims to achieve as much surplus yield for
each stock as possible--but is reduced from MSY to account for
interactions between stocks (ecological factors) and identify the
harvest levels that will continue to support multiple active fishery
sectors without resulting in any one stock routinely missing its
escapement goal (i.e., likely overfishing) or any user group losing
access to the resource (economic factors). Fully harvesting MSY for
Kenai late run sockeye in the EEZ, for example, could decimate co-
occurring populations of salmon bound for Northern Cook Inlet,
completely eliminating fishing opportunities for other users. Such an
outcome would benefit one user group to the exclusion of all others and
thus would not produce the greatest net benefit to the Nation. Here,
NMFS has defined OY by carefully considering net benefits, the
competing demands of the numerous stakeholders and tribes who rely on
Cook Inlet salmon stocks, and the fundamental characteristic of co-
occurring, mixed stocks in the Cook Inlet EEZ. NMFS concludes the
management measures in this final rule will achieve OY as defined in
amendment 16 on a continuing basis.
Comment 15: Federal oversight of this fishery is a must to obtain
maximum harvest and sustainable yield.
Response: The Magnuson-Stevens Act mandates that Federal fishery
management measures shall prevent overfishing while achieving OY, which
is different from achieving maximum harvest or MSY. To the degree that
the commenter is suggesting that Federal management will result in
harvests equal to MSY, NMFS disagrees. To the contrary, many stocks of
fish in the EEZ are harvested at levels well below their MSY because of
the complex interactions between stocks; achieving MSY for certain
stocks would result in overfishing of other stocks, which would be
inconsistent with the first mandate of National Standard 1. Instead,
Federal fishery management measures must achieve OY on a continuing
basis. OY is defined as the amount of fish that:
(1) Will provide the greatest overall benefit to the Nation,
particularly with respect to food production and recreational
opportunities, and taking into account the protection of marine
ecosystems;
(2) Is prescribed as such on the basis of the maximum sustainable
yield from the fishery, as reduced by any relevant economic, social, or
ecological factor; and
(3) In the case of an overfished fishery, provides for rebuilding
to a level consistent with producing the maximum sustainable yield in
such fishery (16 U.S.C. 1802(33)).
Comment 16: Using historical catch data from 1999-2021 is incorrect
as a proxy for MSY and OY. This period begins after the State increased
[[Page 34731]]
escapement levels, resulting in large overescapements of sockeye in the
Kenai and Kasilof Rivers and under-harvest of coho, pink and chum
salmon. Because the State has not been managing the fishery on the
basis of MSY, this historical catch data has no relationship with MSY.
This continues poor State management practices in Federal management.
NMFS should include harvest data from the 1980s.
Response: NMFS disagrees. To start, historical catch is not used as
a basis for establishing MSY in this action for any stocks or stock
complexes with escapement goals or estimates of total run size (Tier 1
and Tier 2 stocks). Rather, MSY represents the maximum potential
harvest of a run in excess of the spawning escapement goal. The annual
SAFE reports will review the best scientific information available
regarding escapement goals and estimated run sizes. For Tier 3 stocks
with no data on run size or total escapement, maximum catch over a
recent range of years that is representative of current conditions is
used as a proxy for MSY because it represents the best scientific
information available to estimate MSY. In prescribing OY on the basis
of MSY, NMFS used the best scientific information available to identify
the range of harvest levels in the EEZ that will provide the greatest
net benefit to the Nation by ensuring all stocks harvested in the EEZ
can meet their escapement goals and the greatest number and diversity
of stakeholders and fishery sectors will retain access to the resource.
In other words, NMFS defined OY as the harvest levels that are expected
to capture as much yield in excess of escapement goals as possible in
the EEZ without any individual stock routinely not achieving these
escapement goals and risking overfishing, thereby maintaining a
harvestable surplus for all other salmon users.
The best scientific information available regarding the appropriate
harvest levels in this mixed stock fishery are currently estimates of
historic catch in years of high and low abundance across stocks from
1999-2021. As explained in the Analysis, the 1999-2021 time period was
chosen due to the advent of the current abundance-based approach to
management of salmon in Upper Cook Inlet. In addition, this time series
represents the recent range of salmon productivity conditions that are
representative of reasonably foreseeable future conditions, reflects a
range of time when management measures both increased and decreased
fishing opportunity in EEZ waters, and captures a range of different
social and economic conditions within fishing communities. Furthermore,
this period also reflects the time for which high quality and
comparable data for nearly all fisheries and fishing communities
throughout Cook Inlet are available. The OY range considers but does
not include the 1980s because there was a different ecological regime
in place in the North Pacific (highly productive for salmon stocks),
seafood markets for salmon were significantly different (strong Asian
demand and less competition from farmed salmon), and the regional
population was significantly smaller. These factors all influence
NMFS's consideration of the greatest net benefit to the Nation,
including consideration of food production and recreational
opportunities and taking into account the protection of marine
ecosystems.
The harvest levels from 1999-2021 have resulted in numerous viable
fisheries while preventing stocks from becoming overfished. While it
may be possible to develop better information in the future as NMFS
collects more data specific to the EEZ--and section 302(h)(5) of the
Magnuson-Steven Act requires the Council to review OY on a continuing
basis--at present, historic catch is the best scientific information
available. Therefore, ranges of catch in years of high and low salmon
abundance is an appropriate method to determine OY.
This action establishes a Federal management framework that
accommodates varying levels of harvest over time as the information
available to inform harvest specifications and both relative and
absolute abundances of salmon change each year. NMFS reviewed fishery
data dating back to 1966 when developing a definition for OY. Harvests
by the drift gillnet fleet, and all other salmon users in Cook Inlet,
have fluctuated dramatically over time based on both salmon abundance
cycles and management decisions. Ultimately, as explained above, NMFS
determined that the best scientific information available for
prescribing OY is currently the estimates of historic catch in years of
high and low abundance across stocks from 1999-2021.
Comment 17: The proposed calculation of MSY, OY, and TAC includes 3
years, 2018, 2020 and 2021, which were declared economic disasters by
the Secretary of Commerce. This data should be omitted from all
analyses of historic harvest.
Response: This action does not use historical catch data to define
MSY or to set TACs, as explained above.
For the reasons explained in response to Comment 16, the best
available science for developing OY includes historic catch data. Of
the 2018, 2020, and 2021 fishery disaster determinations referenced by
the commenter, only the 2020 disaster determination applied to the
drift gillnet fleet. The 2018 and 2021 determinations only applied to
the East Side set net fishery sector. The East Side set net fishery
does not operate in EEZ waters. Further, NMFS disagrees that disaster
and low harvest years should be omitted from consideration in defining
OY, as they represent part of the range of conditions experienced in
the fishery. In defining the lower bound of OY for the Cook Inlet EEZ
Area, the three lowest EEZ harvests are averaged together, and this
number identifies what optimum harvest levels might be in years when
low stock abundance reduces harvest opportunities.
It should be noted that OY is not an annual management target but
is a long-term objective. Harvests may fall above or below the OY range
in some years. Furthermore, OY may appropriately encompass very low
harvests when that is what is required to prevent overfishing on all
stocks. For example, in the GOA groundfish FMP, the lower bound of the
OY range is defined by the year with the absolute lowest fishery
harvest in the time series and in the BSAI King and Tanner Crab FMP,
the lower bound of the OY range is zero.
Comment 18: Multiple commenters expressed concern about
overescapement reducing future yields of Cook Inlet salmon stocks.
Commenters stated that underfishing (too little harvest) can jeopardize
the capacity of a salmon stock to produce MSY on a continuing basis by
allowing too many salmon to enter the stream to spawn and exceeding the
carrying capacity of the spawning and rearing habitat, thereby reducing
future runs. ADF&G data indicates all the salmon stocks in Cook Inlet
are underfished, and with such low exploitation rates, we cannot be
overfishing. The commenters stated that most salmon stocks in Cook
Inlet are underfished with returns that have exceeded escapement goals.
For example, Kenai and Kasilof River sockeye salmon have consistently
exceeded escapement goals, sometimes by over a million fish. This
action will continue or increase overescapement and result in
overcompensation. Management practices that jeopardize the long-term
health of the salmon resource reduce opportunities for harvesters and
processors and harm the economies of fishing communities.
Response: NMFS disagrees that all salmon stocks in Cook Inlet are
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underfished, that overfishing cannot occur in Cook Inlet, and that
amendment 16 will jeopardize the long-term health of the salmon
resource if the stocks of highest abundance exceed their escapement
goals when harvest restrictions are required to protect stocks of lower
abundance. As discussed in the 2024 SAFE report, escapements for some
stocks of sockeye, coho, and Chinook salmon have been below spawning
escapement goals during recent years when Kenai and Kasilof sockeye
salmon have exceeded the upper bound of their escapement goals.
As discussed in section 3.1 of the Analysis, the need to conserve
weaker stocks by reducing fishing effort sometimes results in foregone
yield from more productive stocks. For salmon, this can result in
escapement goals being exceeded, which is sometimes referred to as
overescapement. NMFS has evaluated the best available science on
overescapement. Appendix 14 of the Analysis is an independent analysis
of the potential for overcompensation (reduced yield as a result of
overescapement) in Kenai and Kasilof river sockeye salmon stocks. The
SSC reviewed this analysis, which found that ADF&G's escapement goals
were established within the range expected to produce MSY for those
stocks, that ADF&G's point estimates of MSY were accurate, and that
there is limited evidence for overcompensation across the observed
range of escapements for Kenai and Kasilof sockeye salmon. Thus, while
instances of overescapement will result in foregone yield in the
current year, existing spawner-recruitment information does not
indicate that overescapement has resulted in substantial reductions in
recruitment and yield for the primary stocks harvested by the drift
gillnet fleet in Cook Inlet. In other words, though the Kenai and
Kasilof sockeye salmon stocks have recently exceeded their escapement
goals, this has not resulted in a conservation problem for those stocks
and available data does not indicate that overescapement has resulted
in a reduction in future yields. NMFS concludes that increased fishing
effort in the EEZ to fully harvest the available yield for Kenai and
Kasilof sockeye salmon would result in serious conservation concerns
for stocks of lower abundance, which would fail to achieve their
escapement goals.
For Cook Inlet salmon stocks without escapement goals, information
is not available to analyze overescapement or its potential impacts on
future yields. In the absence of specific stock information,
conservative management using suitable proxies while following the
precautionary principle is consistent with the National Standard 1
guidelines for dealing with data-poor stocks (Sec. 600.310(e)(1)(v)(B)
and (h)(2)). The guidelines provide flexibility in setting MSY and
other reference points based on insufficient data and in consideration
of stocks with unusual life history characteristics, including salmon.
The risk of overfishing as a result of harvest rates that are too high
is much greater than the uncertain and speculative risk of underharvest
or overescapement. Therefore, precautionary management is appropriate
for data-poor fish stocks.
From a practical perspective, it is not possible to manage the
mixed stock salmon fishery in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area by harvesting
surplus yield on all stocks because the composition, abundance, and
productivity of stocks and species in the fishery vary substantially.
Overescapement occurs in Cook Inlet, as noted in section 3.1 of the
Analysis. Overescapement usually results from (1) a lack of fishing
effort, (2) unexpectedly large salmon runs, or (3) management or
economic constraints on the fishery. In this instance, management must
constrain harvest of the largest, most productive salmon stocks to
protect less abundant salmon stocks and species.
Comment 19: The Exxon Valdez litigation had documented damage to
the Kenai River due to overescapement and the Exxon Valdez Oil Spill
Trustees Council funded ADF&G research on damage from Kenai Sockeye
overescapement and plaintiffs' compensation in part was for damage to
future runs caused by overescapement. Now the State is managing the
sockeye fishery in a manner that results in substantial overescapement,
similar to what occurred after the oil spill.
Response: The response to Comment 18 explains that the best
scientific information available indicates that large escapements of
sockeye salmon to the Kenai River have not resulted in reduced future
yields and are not a conservation concern compared to the clear risks
of overfishing and/or stocks failing to meet the lower bound of
escapement goals. The claims and damages paid to plaintiffs in the
decades of litigation arising from the Exxon Valdez oil spill are
beyond the scope of this action.
Comment 20: The result of the overescapement on the Kenai and
Kasilof rivers caused by commercial fishery restrictions wastes a food
resource that belongs to the whole nation (see the Supreme Court's case
of Hughes v. Oklahoma which reversed Greer v. Connecticut). It is in
the whole Nation's interest as to what happens to salmon in Alaska.
When Alaska became a state, the State compact with Congress was for the
State to manage its fish and wildlife in the national interest. The
State created ADF&G to manage fish and game in the national interest.
It is no longer doing that. This is the reason for the involvement of
NMFS and the Department of Commerce.
Response: The U.S. Supreme Court in Hughes v. Oklahoma, 441 U.S.
322, 338 (1979), held that a State could not prohibit transporting fish
out of state for sale once caught. Hughes v. Oklahoma is not relevant
to this action.
NMFS has determined that this action would achieve OY for the Cook
Inlet EEZ Area and, in doing so, will result in the greatest overall
net benefit to the Nation. The National Standard 1 guidelines provide
that OY means the amount of fish that will provide the greatest overall
benefit to the Nation, particularly with respect to food production and
recreational opportunities, and taking into account the protection of
marine ecosystems. This means NMFS must look at the impacts of its
harvest management on all salmon stocks and stakeholders and cannot
look at the interests of the drift gillnet fleet alone.
As noted in the preamble to the proposed rule, amendment 16 defines
OY as the average range of target EEZ harvest across all species that
maximizes fishing opportunities while preventing overfishing on any one
stock. This OY range provides the greatest overall net benefits to the
Nation because it ensures sustainable stock levels throughout the
ecosystem, preserves multiple viable commercial fishery sectors for
continued food production, and maintains a viable recreational fishing
sector that attracts participants from throughout the Nation.
This OY range is expected to result in drift gillnet harvests near
historic levels, protect less abundant salmon stocks transiting to
Northern Cook Inlet, and ensure other commercial and non-commercial
stakeholders in Cook Inlet continue to have access to salmon resources.
Any management plan designed only to prevent overescapement in the
Kenai and Kasilof rivers by increasing EEZ harvest would upset this
balance, preempting other users, and likely causing stocks of lower
abundance--particularly in Northern Cook Inlet--to more regularly miss
their escapement goals, ultimately resulting in overfishing.
[[Page 34733]]
Comment 21: Use the flexibility within the National Standard 1
guidelines (Sec. 600.310(h)(2)) to adopt an escapement-based inseason
management methodology similar to the State. If the State is allowing
too much harvest in its jurisdiction, it will be reflected in too low
escapement numbers, and Federal managers will know to restrict fishing.
Likewise, if the State is not providing for enough harvest, daily
escapement numbers will indicate a higher than acceptable final
escapement, and Federal managers will know to allow more fishing time.
One commenter noted that an alternative approach is needed for salmon
because of the following: (1) unlike groundfish stocks, salmon
reproduce only once; (2) the harvestable surplus is entirely new
recruits and the catch comprises almost exclusively mature salmon; (3)
productivity of a specific year class cannot be improved by limiting
harvest in subsequent years; (4) foregone harvest cannot be recaptured
in future years; and (5) abundance cannot be estimated effectively in
advance. Therefore, inseason estimates of abundance using
contemporaneous data, with appropriate management actions taken to
assure escapement and optimum production in future years, is the most
effective way to avoid the risk of overfishing.
Response: As set forth under section 301 of the Magnuson Stevens
Act, National Standard 1 provides that conservation and management
measures shall prevent overfishing while achieving, on a continuing
basis, the optimum yield from each fishery for the United States
fishing industry. Section 303(a)(15) of the Magnuson Stevens Act
requires that each FMP establish mechanisms for specifying ACLs to
prevent overfishing and include accountability measures to prevent ACLs
from being exceeded and to correct overages of the ACL if they do
occur. The National Standard 1 guidelines at Sec. 600.310(h)(2)
contemplate limited circumstances in which alternative approaches to
establishing ACLs may be appropriate, and specifically cite Pacific
salmon as an example of stocks that may require an alternative approach
to ACLs. However, while Sec. 600.310(h)(2) provides NMFS some
flexibility to consider alternative means of establishing ACL
mechanisms and accountability measures in FMPs, the National Standard 1
guidelines do not provide discretion to consider alternative means of
establishing other reference points, like OFL or ABC. And any
alternative approach to establishing ACLs must be consistent with the
Magnuson-Stevens Act.
The primary function of status determination criteria, ACLs, and
related requirements is to ensure that a scientifically-based approach
is used for controlling catch to maintain stock abundance at the level
necessary to prevent overfishing, ensure no stocks become overfished,
and achieve OY in the fishery. Therefore, an alternative approach that
is consistent with the Magnuson-Stevens Act must document how the
alternative management measures would limit catch and explain how such
measures would rely on the best scientific information available.
When the Council was developing the alternatives for analysis, the
Council and NMFS considered using the State's salmon escapement goal
management as an alternative approach for satisfying the ACL
requirements of the Magnuson-Stevens Act under delegated management to
the State (Alternative 2). Under amendment 12, the Council recommended
this alternative approach for ACLs in the East Area. Escapement goals
are specified annually, in terms of numbers of fish. The biology of
salmon is such that escapement is the point in the species life history
best suited for routine assessment and long-term monitoring. Using
spawning escapement goals is consistent with the long-standing practice
of using spawning escapement to assess the status of salmon stocks.
Under this alternative approach (not adopted in amendment 16), the
mechanisms for specifying ACLs salmon stocks would be the State's
scientifically-based management measures used to determine stock status
and control catch to achieve the number of spawners necessary to
produce MSY. The State's salmon management program is based on
scientifically defensible escapement goals and inseason management
measures to prevent overfishing. Accountability measures would include
the State's inseason management measures and the escapement goal
setting process that incorporates the best scientific information
available on stock abundance.
Using the State's inseason management approach as an alternative
approach to establishing ACLs is not possible under Federal management
of a new fishery in the EEZ that will be managed separately from
fishing in State waters. NMFS currently has no infrastructure for
collecting escapement information in Cook Inlet and there is no
guarantee NMFS managers would have access to information collected by
the State quickly enough to make real time management decisions.
Additionally, escapement information is not available from any source
for many salmon stocks in Cook Inlet. The responses to Comments 23 and
28 provide additional discussion of the procedural challenges of
implementing escapement-based inseason management in this situation.
For management of the Cook Inlet EEZ Area as an entirely separate
jurisdiction, using escapement-based inseason management as an
alternative approach for ACLs may have additional limitations. Because
there is a lag of multiple days (or longer for the Northern District
salmon stocks currently with the greatest conservation risks) between
encountering EEZ fisheries and being counted at escapement monitoring
stations, that data may not be timely for the current management
situation. This lag between receipt of data and action can have huge
consequences in a fishery where a single opening can harvest well over
300,000 salmon per day. Further, just because one stock has reached an
escapement goal and can sustain additional harvest that does not mean
that all of the other stocks, which are highly mixed in EEZ waters, can
support additional harvest. This issue is compounded by fishing in EEZ
waters occurring before all other users. Basing management solely on
escapement would make it more difficult to ensure there was at least
some harvestable surplus available to all salmon users in Cook Inlet
across all jurisdictions when cooperation is not guaranteed through
established agreements.
During the development of this action--first at the Council, then
as a Secretarial FMP amendment after the Council failed to recommend
any management measures--no one identified any alternative means of
specifying ACLs for the Cook Inlet EEZ Area that would be consistent
with the Magnuson-Stevens Act, rely on the best scientific information
available, and limit catch to ensure no overfishing occurred.
Therefore, amendment 16 uses the default ACL approach described in the
National Standard 1 guidelines--establishing preseason harvest limits
based on the best scientific information available at the time stock
assessments are drafted and harvest specifications are recommended.
This is similar to how ACLs are set for salmon along the US West Coast
and how the 2019 Pacific Salmon Treaty Agreement establishes pre-season
limits on Chinook harvest under the Treaty.
Comment 22: The State, several regional sportfishing organizations,
and
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stakeholders in the Northern District believe amendment 16 will disrupt
conservation and management benefits realized by the State's management
plans, which these commenters have found to successfully balance the
complexity and challenges of managing multiple user groups in a highly
populated area. They emphasize that the State's management plans were
developed by the BOF to ensure long-term sustainability of both strong
and weak salmon stocks, optimize yields and opportunities of the
diverse fisheries, and allocate benefits among user groups. They feel
this action will result in overfishing of weak salmon stocks, produce
suboptimum yields, and confound the State's effective in-season
management. This is not consistent with the Magnuson-Stevens Act or
National Standard 1.
Response: NMFS recognizes the complex and challenging nature of
Cook Inlet salmon fisheries. NMFS disagrees that amendment 16 will
undermine the State's Central District Drift Gillnet Fishery Management
Plan, result in overfishing, or produce suboptimal yields.
As described in the preamble to the proposed rule, NMFS recognizes
that salmon harvest in the Cook Inlet EEZ occurs first and can impact
the amount of salmon available to upstream users and to meet spawning
escapement goals. In developing this final rule, NMFS considered the
management measures implemented by the BOF and worked to balance
competing interests and provide opportunity for all users of salmon
throughout Cook Inlet.
NMFS acknowledges that, in some years, this action may allow for
more days of drift gillnet fishing in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area relative
to previous State management plans. NMFS will use TACs that account for
uncertainty and harvest in other fisheries in order to prevent
overfishing on any less abundant salmon stocks transiting through the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area. As described in section 2.5.2.1 of the Analysis
and the response to Comment 25, TACs will account for stocks of lower
abundance and prevent overfishing on weak stocks. The TACs are expected
to result in total harvests fairly consistent with the status quo. NMFS
will have inseason management authority to adjust TACs and close or
reopen the fishery as needed to account for inseason conditions. NMFS
and the Council will use the best scientific information available and
work to improve salmon monitoring and assessment where possible/
practicable, and will coordinate with the State to the extent possible.
Further, as discussed in the section on changes from the proposed to
final rule, NMFS is reducing the number of open fishing periods from
two to one from July 16 to July 31 to directly respond to the comments
from users in Northern Cook Inlet who said they depend on the
conservation corridor established under State management.
NMFS expects that this final rule will continue to provide for a
harvestable surplus for all Upper Cook Inlet salmon fishery sectors in
both State and Federal waters. NMFS anticipates that under this final
rule all Cook Inlet salmon fisheries will remain viable and produce
economic benefits commensurate with the status quo.
Status Determination Criteria and Annual Catch Limits
Comment 23: Many commenters raised concerns about using TACs for
salmon harvest in the EEZ, including the following perspectives.
Use of a TAC established on preseason projections will result in
inappropriate catch. While uncertainty may be accounted for when
setting ABC and OFL, it lacks the benefit of inseason information on
run strength, weak stocks, harvests, and other important factors. Cook
Inlet salmon run sizes and timing are variable and unpredictable,
especially in recent years. Establishing a TAC increases the likelihood
of either overfishing or underfishing and reduces the likelihood of
remaining within the escapement goal range for those stocks with goals.
Further, if there are deviations from forecasted run size, procedural
constraints on Federal management may exacerbate the resulting
problems. These issues combined could jeopardize sustainability,
especially for weak stocks, and could result in overfishing of weak
stocks.
Commenters from the drift gillnet fleet emphasized that forecasts
will be inaccurate, management objectives will not be met, harvest will
be unnecessarily reduced, MSY and OY will not be achieved, and this
action will cause adverse economic impacts.
Other commenters voiced concerns that a TAC would not be
conservative enough given that this action sets TACs for a first-in-
line fishery, which would require the State to reduce State water
fisheries harvest if the pre-season forecasts are not realized.
Commenters from other commercial and recreational salmon fishery
sectors in Upper Cook Inlet, as well as associated communities, were
significantly concerned that TACs would not be precautionary enough and
EEZ harvests would reduce or eliminate the harvestable surplus
available to other users. Some commenters cited unpredictable
escapement data that would require unexpected fishery closures.
Response: Under section 303(a)(15) of the Magnuson-Stevens Act, the
FMP must include a mechanism for specifying ACLs at a level that
overfishing does not occur in the fishery, including measures to ensure
accountability. NMFS is therefore required to have ACLs and management
measures to implement them, and amendment 16 includes these required
elements. TACs (i.e., preseason catch limits) are established to ensure
fishery harvests remain below ACLs. Because salmon of the same species
originate from separate stocks but cannot be visually distinguished, in
amendment 16, TACs are set at the species level based on the cumulative
estimated contribution by stock, at least until inseason genetic
information becomes available. There is uncertainty inherent to
forecast-based catch limits. In establishing TACs, NMFS will take into
account management uncertainty and public comment, just as NMFS and the
SSC will consider scientific uncertainty in setting OFL and ABC (and
therefore ACL since ACL equals ABC) each year. OFL and ABC are
specified for each stock or stock complex. TACs are established for
species rather than stocks or stock complexes because inseason it is
not currently possible to differentiate among stocks of the same
species. TACs for each species are set based on the aggregate ABC for
each component stock and stock complex and account for the assumed
contribution of each stock or stock complex to total catch to ensure
ABC is not exceeded for any one component stock. NMFS will monitor the
fishery daily and use inseason management measures and adjust the TAC,
if practicable, to ensure that catch amounts are appropriate for the
realized run strength. And NMFS expects that TACs set for the Cook
Inlet EEZ will be suitably precautionary to avoid overfishing.
Establishing TACs is consistent with the NMFS's management approach
for salmon stocks in ocean fisheries on the West Coast with an ACL
requirement (e.g., stocks that are not subject to a tribal/
international treaty or ESA exception). The Pacific Salmon Treaty also
establishes pre-season catch limits for Chinook salmon covered by the
Treaty. NMFS considered alternative approaches to establishing ACLs as
described in the response to Comment 21.
NMFS will consider all available information about Cook Inlet
salmon
[[Page 34735]]
run strength and coordinate with the State to the extent practicable
when making management decisions for the Cook Inlet EEZ Area. However,
this action establishes Federal reference points and harvest
specifications for the Federal fishery, as required by the Magnuson-
Stevens Act, which are different from existing State management
measures.
NMFS acknowledges that the ACL requirement and additional Federal
notice requirements--mandated by the Magnuson-Stevens Act and the APA--
are less flexible in adjusting fishing opportunity based on inseason
information about run size when compared to managing by monitoring
escapement goals and exercising emergency order authority pursuant to
State law, as under State management. This is described in section
2.5.2.6 of the Analysis. NMFS also acknowledges that fishing in the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area takes place before all other salmon fisheries in
upper Cook Inlet and that it can impact salmon escapement for each
stock as well as the harvestable surplus available to all other
subsequent salmon users. NMFS acknowledges the uncertainty inherent to
forecast-based catch limits. However, NMFS designed the harvest
specification process and management framework implemented by this
action to account for the inherent uncertainty in preseason estimates
and the need for inseason management, as well as the mixed-stock,
first-in-line nature of the Cook Inlet EEZ Area fishery, consistent
with the Magnuson-Stevens Act and the APA.
Comment 24: Appropriate harvest rates are not considered when
determining what should be harvested in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area. The
2002 ADF&G mark-recapture population estimate study (Regional
Information Report 2A03-20, published 2003) on coho, pinks, and chums
found that the commercial fishery harvest rates on coho were about 10
percent, pinks were around 2 percent, and chums were around 6 percent.
These harvest rates were the results of State management policies that
were in effect at that time. To further skew the harvest rates since
2002, when the study was done, the commercial fishery was even more
restricted by State salmon management plans that continue to fail to
meet the requirements of Magnuson-Stevens Act. All harvest rates should
be based on 81 percent overfishing exploitation rate and a 65 percent
MSY exploitation rate. MSY exploitation rates should be 63 percent for
coho, 53 percent for pinks, and 56 percent for chums to achieve MSY on
these stocks over the long term.
Response: Harvest rates (exploitation rates) could not be
considered for the Federal management of stocks of pink, chum, and coho
salmon in Upper Cook Inlet because there are not sufficient data
available to estimate such harvest rates. The mark-recapture studies
cited by the commenter are now more than 20 years old, and salmon
populations are not stable over time. Rather, as cited in the Analysis
and the SAFE report, a variety of publications, including State of
Alaska escapement goal reports, annual management reports, and stock
assessments, indicate that Alaska's salmon populations experience
substantial year-to-year fluctuations in abundance over time.
Population estimates from a given year are not indicative of the
population abundance during other years. There are no contemporary
estimates of total run size or overall spawning escapement for stocks
of coho, pink, and chum salmon for all of Upper Cook Inlet, and
historical estimates are highly uncertain. As such, exploitation rates
have not been estimated during recent years and therefore, it is not
possible to precisely estimate MSY for these stocks based on current
assessment methods. Moreover, there are no estimates of population
abundance for these stocks to inform preseason harvests specifications.
NMFS will use the best available scientific information to inform
harvest specifications and management decisions for the Cook Inlet EEZ
Area.
Comment 25: Several commenters, including Alaska Native tribes in
the region, emphasized the importance of precautionary salmon
management and felt that amendment 16 was not suitably precautionary
given large potential harvests by the drift gillnet fleet, which
includes a mixture of strong and weak stocks.
One commenter noted that many Northern District salmon stocks lack
estimates of annual escapement, escapement goals, and numeric data
(historic or current). Cook Inlet salmon fisheries harvest mixed stocks
and need to be managed to account for this. Precautionary management
would help meet escapement goals. NMFS should fund genetic data
collection and more escapement monitoring.
Another commenter suggested setting conservative TACs for the first
6 years. One commenter generally suggested that management measures in
addition to TACs would be needed. Another commented stated that NMFS
must develop a plan for pre-season commercial fishing closures as well
as in-season commercial fishing closures based on in-season
escapements.
Response: NMFS acknowledges the importance of precautionary fishery
management and avoiding overfishing on all salmon stocks. Furthermore,
NMFS acknowledges that some Cook Inlet salmon stocks are highly
abundant and may support additional harvests while other salmon stocks
are a major conservation concern and can support little or no harvest.
Over time, NMFS will work to expand the scientific information
available to manage Cook Inlet salmon stocks. Amendment 16 includes
accountability measures, and NMFS can implement additional
accountability measures if needed to avoid exceeding ACLs.
NMFS must establish harvest specifications before fishing begins.
NMFS agrees that there is a need for precaution when there is
significant scientific or management uncertainty associated with salmon
management in Cook Inlet. Drift gillnet fishing in Cook Inlet harvests
mixed stocks of salmon. The best scientific information available will
be used to assess the status of each salmon stock in Cook Inlet and set
harvest limits each year. The harvest limits set for each species will
consider the proportional contribution of each salmon stock to total
catch, when known. Species-level TACs may also be reduced from combined
ACLs to protect weak stocks when there is uncertainty about catch
composition (a key type of management uncertainty). Furthermore, NMFS
will close commercial fishing for all salmon species in the Cook Inlet
EEZ when catch limits for one or more stocks are met or exceeded, or if
other information becomes available that indicates overfishing is
likely. This will help ensure that overfishing does not occur on any
one stock.
NMFS disagrees that the management framework established by this
action is not sufficiently precautionary. As described in the preamble
to the proposed rule, every year the Council's SSC will establish ABCs
for each Cook Inlet salmon stock, accounting for scientific uncertainty
by reducing ABC from OFL. TAC would then be set for each salmon species
to account for management uncertainty to ensure that total catch does
not exceed the ABC for any stock and may also include additional
reductions to account for social, economic, and/or ecological factors.
As noted in the changes from proposed to final rule section, this
action reduces the number of fishing periods per week in the Cook Inlet
EEZ Area to one opening per week from July 16-July 31 to allow salmon
stocks of lower abundance to migrate northward. To further address
mixed-stock conservation needs, drift gillnet fishing
[[Page 34736]]
in the Cook Inlet EEZ area will be closed after a TAC for a single
species is reached or would be exceeded by another opening because
drift gillnet gear catches all stocks present in the EEZ and the fleet
could not focus harvest on only those species for which there is
remaining TAC.
NMFS acknowledges that there is some uncertainty in estimated EEZ
harvests but recognizes it as the best scientific information
available. Forecasted salmon abundance and associated uncertainty will
be considered each year to set harvest specifications that are
appropriately precautionary. After implementation of this action, NMFS
will collect high quality data to determine total EEZ harvests.
For further explanation of NMFS's approach to management of this
mixed stock fishery, see the response to Comment 55.
Comment 26: The State cannot commit to adjusting the work schedule
and timing of Cook Inlet salmon management and science products to
accommodate the proposed Federal harvest specification process. Salmon
scales take time to read and age, data takes time to analyze, and
models take time to run and fact check. Expediting these processes
could result in errors. We already anticipate that this action will
increase the volume and complexity of information requests that ADF&G
receives from fishery participants, increasing staff workload.
Response: Nothing in this action requires the State to change the
timing of their reports, publications, or other work products. However,
as described in sections 4.7.3.2 and 4.8 of the Analysis, NMFS
acknowledges that this action will increase costs and burden to State
and Federal fishery management agencies. NMFS acknowledges the timing,
logistical challenges, and costs associated with fishery data
collection, analyses, and the timing requirements of the Federal
process for the SSC and Council to recommend harvest specifications and
for NMFS to implement them by publishing proposed and final harvest
specifications in the Federal Register.
NMFS and the Council will use the best scientific information
available at the time that harvest specifications must be developed or
other fishery management decisions made. This may include information
from the State or other sources, and NMFS will work with the State to
the extent practicable. NMFS, the Council, and the SSC will evaluate
the level of uncertainty in available data and information and adjust
harvest specifications and other management measures accordingly.
Comment 27: To establish a reliable TAC based on the proportional
contribution of each stock to this fishery, better data must first be
established including in-season genetics and escapement information for
Northern Cook Inlet salmon stocks. Test fisheries need to take place
where northern-bound fish are most easily differentiated from Kenai-
bound fish. Using averages of previous years to establish the TAC is no
substitute for timely in-season management. NMFS may want to support
the State's test fishery or establish another test fishery to monitor
salmon numbers, species, and stocks entering upper Cook Inlet. Timely
genetic analysis from test fisheries could provide better real-time
abundance information for management.
Response: NMFS acknowledges that there are incomplete genetics and
escapement data for Cook Inlet salmon stocks, as described in section
2.5.2.2 of the Analysis. However, NMFS will use the best scientific
information that is available, including information from test
fisheries and historical data on genetic stock composition to manage
salmon fishing in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area. Any uncertainties in the
available scientific information will be accounted for, and management
measures will be adjusted based on the level of precaution warranted.
As discussed in the response to Comment 28, NMFS will monitor the
fishery and make management decisions on a daily basis depending on
currently available information on realized salmon abundance.
NMFS will work to improve the level of information available to
manage the fishery and may consider other management tools including
Federal test fisheries and genetics sampling to address future
management needs.
Inseason Management
Comment 28: Daily management of the fishery must take place like
all other State salmon fisheries.
Response: NMFS will monitor catch from each Federal fishing day,
catch in other fisheries, and any other information available about
inseason salmon abundance to make management decisions for the Cook
Inlet EEZ Area on a daily basis. NMFS may close the fishery, reopen it,
or--potentially--adjust the TAC amounts to account for emerging
inseason conditions. However, unlike the State and as described in the
proposed rule, NMFS must comply with the APA when implementing any
fishery management decision. The need to comply with the APA's notice
requirements for all inseason actions, and the Magnuson-Stevens Act
requirement to establish ACLs, make it infeasible to implement an
escapement-based salmon management approach like that used by the
State.
Comment 29: Catch per unit effort (CPUE) should be used instead of
a TAC to manage salmon fishing in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area.
Response: NMFS disagrees that CPUE should be used to manage salmon
fishing in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area as CPUE data alone would be
insufficient to meet Federal Magnuson-Stevens Act and National
Standards requirements. CPUE data would provide managers with the
information about catch rates of salmon in the fishery, but not about
the specific stocks caught. Even with stock specific catch information,
CPUE data for salmon harvests may not correspond to overall run size or
numbers of fish necessary to meet spawning escapement goals. As
described in section 2.4.4 of the Analysis, methods that use CPUE
(e.g., catch per delivery) would likely not provide sufficient
information to judge whether catches had exceeded a level thought to
cause overfishing for a stock. NMFS does agree that CPUE can, under
some circumstances, provide useful inseason information for fishery
managers.
Comment 30: The proposed TAC does not discuss the criteria that
will be used to close the fishery. The only criterion that is presented
is a salmon harvest of 291,631. This single criterion of 291,631 salmon
does not meet Magnuson-Stevens Act and the National Standards
requirements.
Response: This final rule does not establish a TAC of 291,631
salmon. NMFS will establish TACs in a separate proposed and final
harvest specifications process.
The preamble to the proposed rule for this action comprehensively
describe how TACs for each salmon species would be established
according to the process laid out in the Harvest Specifications and
Annual Processes section, while the criteria for closure are described
in the Inseason Management section. This action establishes the lower
bound of the OY range at 291,631 salmon. The OY range is not used to
establish harvest specifications or close salmon fishing. The OY range
is a long-term average amount of desired yield from the fishery, not an
annual management target, and thus 291,631 represents the lower bound
of the desired long-term average yield from the fishery. As described
in the response to Comment 10, the OY range specified by this action is
consistent with the
[[Page 34737]]
Magnuson-Stevens Act and the National Standards.
Cook Inlet EEZ Commercial Salmon Fishing Management Measures
Comment 31: Several commenters objected to the prohibition on drift
gillnet fishing in State and Federal waters on the same calendar day.
They indicated this will be inefficient, have adverse economic impacts,
decrease flexibility to harvest salmon as migration paths and run
timing vary, and be inconsistent with National Standard 6. Another
commenter noted that there is not a similar prohibition on recreational
fishing in both State and Federal waters on the same day. Some
commenters also suggested these requirements are intended to be
punitive against members of the drift gillnet fleet.
Response: This final rule provides that it is unlawful for
commercial fishery sector participants to:
Set drift gillnet gear within, or allow any portion of
drift gillnet gear to enter, State waters on the same calendar day that
drift gillnet gear is also deployed in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area while
commercial fishing for salmon in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area (Sec.
679.117(b)(1)(v));
Use a vessel named, or required to be named, on an SFFP to
fish for salmon in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area if that vessel fishes for
salmon in Alaska State waters on the same calendar day (Sec.
679.117(b)(1)(vii));
Possess salmon, harvested in Alaska State waters, on board
a vessel commercial fishing for salmon in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area or to
have salmon on board a vessel at the time a fishing trip commences in
the Cook Inlet EEZ Area (Sec. 679.117(b)(1)(viii) and (ix)); and
Land salmon harvested in Alaska State waters concurrently
with salmon harvested commercially in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area'' (Sec.
679.117(b)(1)(xii)).
As noted in the preamble to the proposed rule (Other Commercial
Fishery Management Measures and Prohibitions section), NMFS has
determined that there is a need to restrict vessels from fishing in
both State and Federal waters during the same calendar day. The Cook
Inlet EEZ Area is managed separately from adjacent waters managed by
the State. NMFS must be able to accurately account for harvest in the
Cook Inlet EEZ to avoid exceeding the Federal TAC, prevent overfishing,
and accurately manage to the established Federal reference points, as
required by the Magnuson-Stevens Act, which NMFS would be less able to
do if catches from State and Federal waters were mixed on a vessel
during a single fishing trip.
If vessels could fish in both State and Federal waters on the same
calendar day, landings could contain a mix of salmon harvested in both
the State and Federal fisheries. Some method to attribute a
proportional amount of catch to Federal waters would be needed. This
would embed assumptions about the correct proportions and thus would
substantially increase uncertainty for Federal managers and would
likely require significantly more conservative management decisions for
the Cook Inlet EEZ Area. This could also create an incentive for
fishermen to over-report State waters catch to keep the Cook Inlet EEZ
open to commercial salmon fishing longer, which would necessitate
additional monitoring, recordkeeping, and reporting measures. In short,
NMFS could not accurately monitor EEZ harvests and ensure the fishery
complies with all Magnuson-Stevens Act requirements if vessels could
move between State and Federal waters on the same day and land fish
caught in both jurisdictions.
As described in the response to Comment 37, these prohibitions do
allow vessels to choose whether to fish in State or Federal waters on
each calendar day. This allows vessels to operate where catches are
highest or efficiency is maximized depending on their port location or
any other factor.
Also as described in the response to Comment 37, NMFS did consider
management that would schedule the Federal drift gillnet fishery on
separate days to alleviate the catch accounting concern but chose not
to implement this approach due to significant uncertainty about the
total number of drift gillnet fishing days in Cook Inlet that would
result in highly unpredictable effort and catch.
NMFS acknowledges that there is not a prohibition on recreational
(sport) salmon fishing in State and Federal waters on the same day. As
described in section 4.5.2.2 of the Analysis, fewer than 70 salmon per
year are estimated to be harvested by recreational salmon fishing in
the Cook Inlet EEZ Area. Furthermore, recreational anglers are not
allowed to harvest additional salmon by fishing in either or both
areas--the same bag limit applies in State and Federal waters and
anglers are prohibited from catching or possessing a bag limit for both
State and Federal waters on the same day. Therefore, there is no
identified management need to prohibit recreational fishing in State
and Federal waters on the same calendar day. If recreational salmon
harvests in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area increase in the future, the Council
may recommend and NMFS may choose to implement additional restrictions
on recreational salmon fishing as needed.
Comment 32: If NMFS implemented escapement-based management rather
than a TAC, then there would be no need to prohibit vessels from
fishing in State and Federal waters in the same trip.
Response: Escapement-based management was considered during the
development of this action under Alternative 2, which would have
delegated management authority to the State. Delegated management under
Alternative 2 would not have included a prohibition on fishing in both
State and Federal waters on the same calendar day and provided for the
State's use of their escapement-based tools to achieve Federal
reference points. However, the State refused to accept delegated
management. The response to Comment 21 describes why escapement-based
management as currently conducted by the State could not be implemented
by this action.
Comment 33: Opening the whole EEZ and drift gillnet Area 2 will
spread out the small drift gillnet fleet (less than 300 boats in recent
years), reducing pressure on returning non-sockeye stocks and allowing
maximum harvest of abundant sockeye stocks.
Response: Under this final rule, the entire Cook Inlet EEZ Area
will be open to drift gillnet salmon fishing during established fishing
periods. Because this is similar to historical State management of the
Area, as described in the response to Comment 25, NMFS remains
concerned about mixed-stock harvests and impacts to less abundant
stocks and will manage salmon fishing within the Cook Inlet EEZ to
prevent overfishing on all stocks through the use of TACs and inseason
information.
While there have been fewer participants in recent years, this
trend could reverse and over 200 additional latent permits could
reenter the fishery, which must be considered in this long-term
management framework.
Drift gillnet Area 2 is entirely within State waters and will
continue to be managed by the State and is outside the scope of this
action.
Federal Commercial Fishing Season and Fishing Periods
Comment 34: Many commenters expressed concern about the amount of
fishing that this action will allow between July 15 and August 15, when
certain stocks are migrating north through the Cook Inlet EEZ. Fishing
by the drift fleet in EEZ waters from July 16 through July 31 is highly
impactful
[[Page 34738]]
due to large catches and mixed stocks. Commenters noted that currently
the drift gillnet fishery can only fish once per week during this
critical period for migrating stocks and additional openings from July
16 through July 31 are authorized only under certain conditions and in
limited areas. Multiple regional tribes, Northern district communities,
and regional sportfishing organizations recommended that NMFS allow
only one EEZ opening per week between July 15 and July 31, or until the
season closure date. The State and one other commenter proposed that
NMFS close the Cook Inlet EEZ to fishing after July 15.
Response: Upon reviewing the significant public comment received
regarding the number of fishing periods in the proposed rule for this
action and the importance of Cook Inlet salmon resources to all salmon
users throughout Cook Inlet, NMFS agrees that it is prudent for
conservation of Cook Inlet salmon stocks to reduce the number of
commercial fishery openings in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area to one per week
in late July. The reason for this change is discussed in detail above
in the section on changes from the proposed to final rule and briefly
summarized here.
In addition to establishing TACs that are suitably precautionary in
light of uncertainty, the other primary means by which NMFS prevents
overfishing and ensures all stocks are able to meet their escapement
goals is by managing the amount and timing of scheduled fishing
periods. In this final rule, NMFS has decided to decrease the number of
commercial fishing openings between July 16 and July 31 from two to one
per week. This more closely aligns with the number of openings under
the status quo and is responsive to the significant public comments
received on the importance of this time period to Northern Cook Inlet
salmon stocks that transit through the EEZ to spawning grounds. From
June 19 until July 15, and from August 1 to August 15, there will still
be two drift gillnet fishery openings per week, unless otherwise
closed. NMFS expects that when there are high salmon abundances, and no
constraining stocks, this management framework will allow for harvest
of TACs in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area.
Decreasing the number of fishing periods in the second half of July
may also have other important conservation and management benefits.
First, it allows for more even utilization of the beginning, middle,
and late returning components of each salmon stock. Second, it may
decrease the risk of a smaller TAC for one salmon species being reached
and resulting in a closure of the fishery before the larger, high value
sockeye salmon TAC can be fully achieved. For example, while Chinook
salmon are not harvested in large quantities by the drift gillnet fleet
in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area, declines in Chinook salmon abundance have,
in some cases, entirely eliminated the harvestable surplus of Chinook
(i.e., escapement goals cannot be achieved even if no fish are
harvested). As a result, the Chinook salmon TACs established for the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area are likely to be relatively small. Although very
few Chinook have historically been caught after August 1, significant
numbers have been caught in the second half of July. Reducing fishing
time in the second half of July makes it less likely that a Chinook TAC
will be reached, triggering a closure before the sockeye salmon TAC has
been harvested.
As described in the preamble to the proposed rule, NMFS considered
but rejected other management measures that would provide fewer drift
gillnet fishing periods per week in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area. NMFS
determined that allowing only one 12-hour drift gillnet fishing period
per week in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area throughout the entire season may
not allow for adequate harvest opportunities in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area
in years when salmon abundances are higher. Similarly, a fixed July 15
closure would be expected to unnecessarily limit harvest in the Cook
Inlet EEZ Area to less than half of its historical amount.
Comment 35: The State objected to the drift gillnet fishing season
ending on August 15, as it stated that allowing fishing in the Cook
Inlet EEZ during the August 1 to August 15 time period conflicts with
its 1 percent rule. Under that State regulation, from August 1 to
August 15, if less than 1 percent of the season's total drift gillnet
sockeye salmon harvest has been taken per fishing period for two
consecutive fishing periods in the drift gillnet fishery, the fishery
is restricted to the west side of Upper Cook Inlet where the fleet is
less likely to catch salmon from weak stocks or those needed to provide
a harvestable surplus to other users. These area restrictions are also
implemented if the East Side Set Net fishery is closed. The State
stated that the proposed closure date of August 15 rule is not based on
conservation objectives and fails to coordinate with the existing Cook
Inlet allocation processes.
Response: NMFS chose not to implement a regulation similar to the
State's 1 percent rule for the Cook Inlet EEZ Area. NMFS expects that
the season closure date of August 15 combined with the TAC will be
sufficient to address conservation and management of coho salmon stocks
in Cook Inlet. In most Federal fisheries, a TAC-based closure occurs
before a season closure date. NMFS does not anticipate that drift
gillnet fishing in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area will be open through August
15 in all years. NMFS will close the fishery when necessary to prevent
exceeding a TAC. However, in years when salmon abundance supports
higher TACs, two fishery openings per week for all of the season
besides July 16-July 31 is expected to provide sufficient opportunities
to harvest the available TAC by August 15 without creating conservation
concerns for stocks of lower abundance.
Comment 36: Consider opening drift gillnet fishing in the Cook
Inlet EEZ and Area 2 for two or three 12-hour periods a week. When the
Kenai River reaches the lower end of the sockeye escapement goal, the
commercial fleet should get additional openers to maximize harvest to
protect the river from overescapement.
Response: As described in the preamble to the proposed rule and
above, NMFS carefully considered the number of weekly commercial drift
gillnet fishing periods. As described in the response to Comment 2,
management of the Cook Inlet EEZ Area must balance utilization of
abundant salmon stocks with protecting less abundant stocks from
overfishing and ensuring stocks important to users other than the drift
gillnet fleet continue to meet their escapement goals. While two 12-
hour openings per week was proposed by NMFS, public commenters
identified significant potential conservation concerns associated with
increasing Cook Inlet EEZ Area commercial fishing time from the status
quo. Opening the Cook Inlet EEZ Area to commercial fishing for three
12-hour periods per week would represent a major increase in fishing
time and could significantly exacerbate the conservation concerns
identified in this final rule. Kenai sockeye salmon reaching their
escapement goal does not provide information to managers that other
salmon stocks (e.g., other sockeye, coho, and Chinook salmon) can also
support additional harvest at that time.
There are also potential procedural challenges associated with
significant inseason changes or adjustments. Sections 2.5.2.6 and
2.5.13 of the Analysis detail the constraints of the harvest
specifications (i.e., the TAC amounts) that it must publish prior to
the fishing season. If there are
[[Page 34739]]
unexpectedly large salmon returns, fishing may continue for the
remaining days for the season until any TAC amount is reached. If a TAC
amount is reached and the fishery closes, but the best scientific
information available indicates there is still a harvestable surplus,
NMFS may adjust the TAC and reopen the fishery until August 15, or the
revised TAC amount(s) is reached, whichever comes first. In addition,
the Federal reference points established by this action and required by
the Magnuson-Stevens Act are not directly equivalent to State
escapement goals.
Drift gillnet Area 2 is entirely within State waters and will
continue to be managed by the State and is outside the scope of this
action.
Comment 37: Do not conduct Federal openings on the exact same
schedule as State openings. Combining the two on the same day will
result in nothing more than lost opportunity and inefficiency of effort
and cost.
Response: This final rule at Sec. 679.118(e) provides that the
Cook Inlet EEZ will be open to drift gillnet fishing for two, 12-hour
periods each week, from 7 a.m. Monday until 7 p.m. Monday, and from 7
a.m. Thursday until 7 p.m. Thursday from the later of the third Monday
in June or June 19 until July 15, and from August 1 to August 15, and
one, 12-hour fishing period on Thursdays from July 16 to July 31, until
either (1) the TAC is reached, or (2) August 15, whichever comes first.
As discussed in the proposed rule and sections 2.5.9 and 4.8 of the
Analysis, NMFS considered whether to open the Cook Inlet EEZ Area to
drift gillnet fishing on different days than when State waters are
open. NMFS chose to open the Cook Inlet EEZ Area on the same days to
avoid unpredictable impacts to Cook Inlet salmon stocks, as additional
days of fishing in a week would put additional pressure on stocks of
lower abundance, allowing those stocks less opportunity to pass through
the EEZ with sufficient abundance to both meet escapement goals and
provide a harvestable surplus to all other users. If the EEZ were open
on days when adjacent State waters were closed, and the State
maintained its existing management plan, it is likely there would be a
significantly increased number of total drift gillnet fishing days in
upper Cook Inlet. This would increase the likelihood of harvests that
are too high (the drift gillnet fleet has the potential to harvest over
300,000 salmon per opening) and it may not be possible to mitigate the
impacts of additional fishing days each week in Cook Inlet, even with
severe restrictions or closures of later occurring fishery sectors.
Further, to achieve OY while preventing overfishing in salmon
fisheries, an important consideration is balancing harvest and
escapement over the period salmon are returning. Providing regular
periods when fishing is closed allows early, middle, and late returning
components of each salmon stock to move up Cook Inlet to their natal
spawning streams. By largely maintaining the existing fishing schedule,
these migratory periods where fishing is closed--and which have largely
been successful in allowing Northern District stocks to meet their
escapement goals--are maintained.
Fishery participants may select whether to fish in State or Federal
waters each day to maximize their harvest opportunities as salmon
stocks move up Cook Inlet. NMFS acknowledges that, within a single
fishing day, this may decrease efficiency and increase costs during
times when salmon abundance may be unpredictably concentrated on the
State/EEZ boundary. Across years, there is a high level of variability
in the spatial and temporal distributions of salmon stocks migrating
through Cook Inlet waters, including the Cook Inlet EEZ Area, due to
changes in wind, tide, water temperature, and other factors. Therefore,
it is very difficult to predict with accuracy any change in efficiency
that may result from this rule.
Comment 38: Several drift gillnet stakeholders requested that the
commercial fishing season start several weeks early (June 1) and finish
later (September 15) to increase harvests of all salmon species,
including pink and chum salmon.
Response: As described in the preamble to the proposed rule,
historically drift gillnet fishing in Cook Inlet has not occurred prior
to the third week in June as sockeye, coho, chum, and pink salmon are
not present in commercially significant quantities in the Cook Inlet
EEZ. The start date is based on this history of commercial fishing in
the EEZ area. Further, as discussed in the preamble to the proposed
rule, NMFS has concerns about additional impacts from the drift gillnet
fleet to Chinook salmon that are present in the Cook Inlet EEZ before
June 19. Opening after mid-June helps avoid potential additional
impacts to early-run Cook Inlet Chinook salmon stocks. These stocks
migrate through upper Cook Inlet in May and early June. For these
reasons, NMFS did not choose to open drift gillnet fishing within the
Cook Inlet EEZ prior to the third week in June.
NMFS has concerns that additional fishing time after August 15
could result in disproportionate impacts to coho salmon stocks in Cook
Inlet. Fishing in the Cook Inlet EEZ after August 15 would be expected
to primarily increase harvests of this species. Based on recent indices
of spawning escapements, additional harvests of coho salmon may result
in a failure to achieve spawning escapement goals. The EEZ is
relatively far from Northern District streams and associated weirs
where escapements are monitored. As such, fishery openings targeting
coho salmon (which have an elevated conservation concern) in the EEZ
carry the largest risk in terms of potential harvest on Northern
District stocks prior to information about the achievement of spawning
escapement goals. In contrast, State waters are closer to natal streams
and can be prosecuted more precisely on target stocks and during a time
when escapement data is more likely to be available since there is
significantly less travel time between the State fishery and weirs.
This action does not modify management of State waters, and it is
expected that the majority of coho salmon harvests, which occur in
State waters after August 15, will be unaffected by this action.
NMFS disagrees that closing the fishery later than August 15 would
increase pink and chum salmon harvests. Historically, by August 15,
over 99 percent of the average Chinook, sockeye, pink, and chum salmon
harvest has been completed in both State and EEZ waters as those salmon
species have largely moved through Cook Inlet EEZ waters and up into
Cook Inlet State marine and fresh waters by that time (section
4.5.1.2.1. of the Analysis). Therefore, additional Cook Inlet EEZ Area
fishing time after August 15 would be expected to impact only coho
salmon, for which there are conservation concerns.
Comment 39: With amendment 16, NMFS's inseason management authority
to close the fishery should be based on best available science and
salmon escapement goals. NMFS needs more access to funding and
resources to carry out these goals.
Response: NMFS will use the best scientific information available
when making any inseason management decisions. NMFS will consider all
sources of information when determining what constitutes the best
scientific information available. However, for the reasons explained in
Comment 23, NMFS inseason management decisions are based on TACs. NMFS
will consider the escapement goals and the best scientific information
available regarding
[[Page 34740]]
projected run sizes for an upcoming fishing season during the stock
assessment and harvest specifications process. The SSC and NMFS will
account for scientific uncertainty in these projections when setting
ABC, and the Council and NMFS will also consider management uncertainty
in recommending and establishing TACs. Inseason closures before the end
of the season are most likely to be based on information suggesting an
additional opener would result in exceeding a TAC for any species or
could result in overfishing of any stock. NMFS will consider available
spawning abundance information inseason (i.e., progress toward meeting
escapement goals) to ensure the abundance assumptions underlying the
TACs are appropriate and will identify any potentially needed
management changes.
NMFS will strive to make timely and efficient inseason management
decisions, consistent with the APA, Federal regulations, and other
applicable law. NMFS will work to build capacity and resources for
salmon management in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area over time, however NMFS
has determined that it can successfully implement amendment 16 at this
time.
Comment 40: Pacific salmon evolved into the species we know today.
Today, various stocks of salmon are considered threatened or endangered
under the Endangered Species Act (ESA). Originally, indigenous people
developed a social custom that delayed the start of salmon fishing and
allowed salmon to reach their spawning grounds and complete their
lifecycle, and this has been continued by government regulators.
Flexibility in the opening and closing dates is needed to account for
variations in run timing and migration patterns, especially under
climate change, to avoid adversely affecting sport and subsistence
fishers. The proposed new date of the third (or possibly fourth) Monday
in June allows more flexibility.
Response: NMFS recognizes the evolution of conservation and
management measures for salmon stocks as jurisdictions have changed
over time. No salmon stocks spawning in Alaska are listed under the
ESA. As described in the response to Comment 38, NMFS established the
fixed season start and end dates to maintain historical harvest
patterns and avoid adverse impacts to non-target salmon stocks within
the Cook Inlet EEZ Area. However, NMFS does agree that flexibility is
important to account for variations and contingencies and expects that
the TACs and associated inseason actions will ensure that harvest is
adjusted to the specific conditions experienced during each fishing
season to provide harvest opportunity and prevent overfishing, within
the established commercial fishery season dates (approximately June 19
to August 15). NMFS may close and reopen fishing during the season to
account for run conditions.
Comment 41: The season ending date needs to reflect the size of the
return, which is not known until the very end of a salmon run or
shortly thereafter.
Response: NMFS acknowledges that the realized run size of a stock
is not fully known until the end of the fishing season, but has
selected a fixed season closure date that falls after nearly all EEZ
harvest has historically taken place and avoids potential new impacts
on coho stocks of lower abundance. However, NMFS will use its inseason
management authorities specified at Sec. 679.25 to adjust the closure
of the fishery based on TAC or other scientific information each year--
up to August 15--including available indices of abundance (e.g., test
fishery data and spawning escapements).
Monitoring, Recordkeeping, and Reporting Requirements
Comment 42: ADF&G supports the monitoring, recordkeeping,
reporting, legal gear, and prohibitions proposed for the commercial
salmon fishery in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area. These requirements are
necessary to minimize conflicts between fisheries in State and Federal
waters, ensure accurate catch accounting, and facilitate enforcement of
Federal regulations. The proposed prohibitions on fishing in both State
and EEZ waters on the same day and having on board or delivering fish
harvested in both State and EEZ waters are particularly important to
meeting these objectives and the State supports including them in the
final rule. We also support the proposed prohibitions on landing or
otherwise transferring salmon that is caught within the Cook Inlet EEZ
Area in the EEZ to ensure that harvesting vessels delivering to a
tender vessel do so within State waters.
Response: NMFS acknowledges the support for these fishery
management measures. NMFS agrees that the measures in this final rule
are necessary to minimize conflicts between fisheries in State and
Federal waters, ensure accurate catch accounting, and facilitate
enforcement of Federal regulations.
Comment 43: ADF&G supports the proposed monitoring requirements to
enforce the prohibitions on drift gillnet fishing in State and Federal
waters on the same day, including requirements for commercial salmon
fishing vessels in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area to operate a VMS and
complete a Federal logbook. NMFS may wish to consider onboard
monitoring requirements such as electronic monitoring or observers to
ensure adequate total catch accounting.
Response: NMFS acknowledges the support for the VMS and Federal
logbook management measures described in the proposed rule and required
by this final rule. As discussed in sections 2.5.6 and 4.7.2.2 of the
Analysis, NMFS considered but did not require electronic monitoring or
observers due to high costs and limited additional management utility
beyond the measures contained in this final rule.
Comment 44: NMFS received comments that a VMS requirement is not
necessary. These comments indicated that the drift gillnet fishery has
minimal or no bycatch of marine mammals, sea birds, or protected fish
stocks; there are no closed economic zones nearby; and that there is no
VMS requirement in salmon fisheries in the East and West Areas of the
EEZ, where ADF&G reporting requirements are deemed sufficient.
Commenters also asserted that NMFS did not provide a legitimate or
sufficient justification for the VMS requirement. Several commenters
also said that they felt NMFS was imposing it as a punishment. One
commenter asked if other forms of electronic monitoring are required.
Commenters also noted that the VMS devices cost 3,000 dollars, which
can be a significant portion of their gross earnings in seasons when
there is a declared fishery disaster, and require additional monthly
fees to operate.
Response: The final rule at Sec. 679.117(b)(1)(xiv) prohibits a
vessel named, or required to be named, on an SFFP from operating in the
waters of Cook Inlet with drift gillnet gear on board any day the Cook
Inlet EEZ Area is open to commercial salmon fishing without a
functioning VMS as described in Sec. 679.28(f). Regulations at Sec.
679.28(f)(6)(x) requires a vessel named, or required to be named, on an
SFFP issued under Sec. 679.114 to use VMS when operating in the waters
of Cook Inlet with drift gillnet gear on board on any calendar day the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area is open to commercial salmon fishing. NMFS has
determined that use of a VMS is necessary to effectively and
efficiently manage the fishery. A VMS requirement is not punitive, it
is not based on assumed bycatch of protected species nor intended to
reduce bycatch, and NMFS disagrees that there are no closed fishing
areas adjacent to the Cook Inlet EEZ Area. NMFS relies on VMS for most
Federal fisheries off Alaska, particularly
[[Page 34741]]
when fishing vessels must comply with area restrictions. Vessels drift
gillnet fishing for salmon in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area are prohibited
from fishing in the adjacent EEZ waters south of the Anchor Point line
at all times and, on the same calendar day, in the State waters
directly adjacent to the eastern, western, and northern boundaries of
the Cook Inlet EEZ Area. As stated above, for the purposes of catch
accounting and enforcement it is critical for NMFS to understand where
a vessel has been fishing--in State or Federal waters. Drift gillnet
vessels that are fishing for salmon in the Cook Inlet EEZ are therefore
subject to closed areas, and VMS is a standard technology used to
monitor compliance with these regulations.
NMFS acknowledges that VMS is not a requirement in the East Area
commercial troll salmon fishery. However, management of the East Area
is delegated to the State, which allows fishing to occur seamlessly
across the EEZ boundary. The State has well-established monitoring and
enforcement infrastructure as well as other regulations to manage the
fishery without the use of VMS. Similarly, the delegated management
approach proposed for the Cook Inlet EEZ Area under Alternative 2
(section 2.4.8.1 the Analysis) was not expected to include a VMS
requirement given the State's existing management tools and expertise.
However, the State would not accept delegated management authority, and
therefore under this final rule VMS is needed to enforce the
prohibition against harvesting salmon in both State and Federal waters
on the same calendar day.
As described in sections 2.5.6 and 4.7.2.2 of the Analysis, NMFS
considered but chose not to require more costly onboard observers or
electronic monitoring camera systems in this fishery. Therefore, VMS
data and logbooks are necessary to ensure accuracy of reported fishing
effort, catch accounting, and compliance with regulations. Critically,
NMFS managers will depend on VMS to determine the effort and projected
catch in order to inform management decisions. Furthermore, without
VMS, NOAA Fisheries Office of Law Enforcement would have to rely
exclusively on resource-intensive patrols by air and sea; methods that
are not as consistent as VMS in verifying that no fishing is occurring
in closed waters and confirming fleet-wide reported fishing effort
information.
Vessel owners will be responsible for the cost of obtaining and
operating a VMS. As discussed in section 4.7.2.2.7 of the Analysis,
NMFS estimates the cost of purchasing a compliant VMS unit at 3,100
dollars. One-time installation and tax costs are estimated at 888
dollars. Annual service and maintenance is estimated at 206 dollars.
NMFS acknowledges that these requirements place additional burden on
fishermen. However, Federal funds may be available to qualified vessel
owners or operators for complete reimbursement of the cost of
purchasing type-approved VMS units, which could offset over 75 percent
of the total purchase and installation cost for fishery participants.
To facilitate compliance with the VMS requirement, NMFS has
provided information on obtaining VMS and opportunities for
reimbursement within the small entity compliance guide published with
this final rule. Beyond VMS, this final rule does not require other
electronic monitoring for vessels commercially fishing for salmon in
the Cook Inlet EEZ.
Comment 45: VMS devices impose a significant privacy cost,
requiring vessel owners to transmit their exact location to NMFS every
hour of every day, regardless of why they are using their vessel.
Response: NMFS disagrees. VMS use would be required when operating
a vessel named, or required to be named, on an SFFP in the waters of
Cook Inlet with drift gillnet gear on board, and only on days when the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area is open to commercial salmon fishing. When a vessel
is operated outside the waters of Cook Inlet, the Cook Inlet EEZ Area
is closed, or no drift gillnet gear is onboard the vessel, the VMS unit
would not be required to be activated and transmitting. VMS data are
collected for many Federal fisheries. Section 402(a)(2) of the
Magnuson-Stevens Act authorizes the collection of data necessary for
the efficient management of fisheries but provides for restrictions on
the release of that data beyond NMFS. VMS collects vessel location
information in near real time that it uses to ensure efficient
management and compliance with regulations. VMS data collected for law
enforcement purposes is considered confidential under sections
311(b)(1)(a)(vi) and 402 of the Magnuson-Stevens Act. Federal
regulations at Sec. 679.28(f)(3)(v) provide that vessel owners
participating in a fishery that requires a VMS must make the VMS
transmitter available to ``NMFS personnel, observers, or an authorized
officer.'' Federal regulations at Sec. 600.1509(b) limit the
circumstances under which personally identifying information, including
business identifiable information, can be disclosed beyond authorized
entities, such as NMFS. NMFS does not release confidential data to the
public unless directed by a court order. If NMFS uses VMS data in
publications, it is aggregated to prevent release of confidential
information.
Comment 46: Will the drift gillnet fishery participants be required
to maintain a digital logbook?
Response: This final rule does not require a digital logbook. Under
regulations at Sec. 679.115, this action requires vessel operators to
complete and submit logbooks in paper or electronic format. NMFS will
make logbook sheets available to participants at no cost.
Comment 47: The proposed rule appears to allow new participants
into the commercial fishery by requiring only a Federal fisheries
permit and provides no explanation or justification for doing so.
Commercial fishing for salmon in Federal and State waters in Cook Inlet
has been restricted to State CFEC limited entry permit holders since
1974. If the permitting requirements under this action allow new
participants by no longer requiring a CFEC permit, that will
significantly devalue the CFEC permits held by existing participants.
If NMFS is not opening the fishery up to new participants, it must
clarify the ambiguity in the proposed rule in response to this comment.
Response: This action does not modify the State requirements
related to CFEC permits. As described in section 2.5.6 of the Analysis,
NMFS issues Federal permits authorizing participation in Federal
fisheries and allowing for implementation of Federal monitoring,
recordkeeping, and reporting requirements in order to manage fisheries.
This final rule at Sec. 679.114(b)(1) requires vessel owners or
operators to obtain a SFFP to commercially fish for salmon in the Cook
Inlet EEZ. NMFS will issue SFFPs free of charge. A SFFP is not a
Federal limited entry permit. As described in section 2.5.15 of the
Analysis, a Federal limited entry program was considered but not
selected.
Although the SFFP is not a limited entry permit, vessels that land
salmon from the Cook Inlet EEZ in Alaska must also comply with all
applicable State requirements, which include the requirement to have
the appropriate State CFEC permit, which is a limited entry permit.
Because landing or transferring fish in the EEZ is prohibited, and
there are significant logistical constraints to landing salmon outside
of Alaska, NMFS anticipates that all participating vessels will land
[[Page 34742]]
their fish within the State of Alaska where they would be required to
have State CFEC S03H limited entry permits. This will help ensure that
historical participants in the fishery are not displaced or disrupted
by new entrants and avoid negative impacts to CFEC permit values.
As described in section 2.5.15 of the Analysis, in the future the
Council may consider whether it is necessary to recommend an FMP
amendment to limit entry in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area.
Comment 48: Can a vessel registered in a separate Alaska gillnet
area (e.g., a vessel fishing in Bristol Bay state waters) participate
in the Federal Cook Inlet fishery?
Response: No, as explained in response to Comment 47, in order to
use drift gillnet gear in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area, participants are
required to have a SFFP. State CFEC permit requirements fall under the
purview of the State and are not modified by this final rule. NMFS
anticipates that a CFEC S03H permit for Cook Inlet drift gillnet would
continue to be required to land fish caught using drift gillnet gear in
the Cook Inlet EEZ Area in Alaska. Participants should consult the
applicable State of Alaska regulations for a definitive answer
regarding landing requirements.
Comment 49: The State supports maintaining the requirement for
drift gillnet vessels in the EEZ to have the appropriate CFEC permit(s)
to land salmon or other species caught in the EEZ within the State or
enter State waters.
Response: NMFS acknowledges this comment. This final rule does not
modify any State requirements for landing salmon or other species
caught in the EEZ within the State or transiting through State waters
with drift gillnet gear on board.
Other Commercial Salmon Fishing Management Measures and Prohibitions
Comment 50: The State supports the proposed legal gear definition
for drift gillnet fishing of a net no longer than 200 fathoms (365.76
m) in length, 45 meshes deep, and maximum mesh size of no greater than
6 inches (15.24 cm). The proposed definition is consistent with State
regulations and would help maintain consistency with recent fishery
operations in terms of effort and selectivity and enable managers to
estimate projected catches in the fishery more effectively.
Response: NMFS acknowledges this comment.
Comment 51: Are the net length requirements the same as State
waters or can a single permit fish 200 fathoms (365.76 m) in Federal
waters?
Response: This final rule at Sec. 679.118(f)(1) limits the length
of drift gillnet gear in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area to a maximum length of
200 fathoms (365.76 m) for all participants. Fishery participants
should consult State of Alaska regulations when determining what amount
of gear is allowable when transiting State waters and landing salmon in
Alaska with the CFEC permit(s) they hold.
Comment 52: One commenter stated that no more than 150 fathoms
(274.32 m) of gillnet gear per permit should be allowable. Another
suggested that NMFS impose the same State of Alaska CFEC rules
regarding permits (i.e., allow 150 fathoms (274.32 m) for 1 CFEC
permit, and 200 fathoms (365.76 m) for 2 CFEC permits).
Response: NMFS disagrees with these recommendations. As described
in section 4.5.1.2.1 of the Analysis, up to 200 fathoms (365.76 m) of
drift gillnet gear may be used by participants who are drift gillnet
fishing in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area. NMFS does not anticipate this final
rule will increase the allowable length of gear and result in increased
harvests in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area, as State restrictions on the
amount of gear a vessel can have on board will still apply when
transiting through State waters following a fishing trip in the Cook
Inlet EEZ Area.
Fishery participants should consult State of Alaska regulations to
determine the amount of fishing gear they are allowed to have on board
while transiting through State waters and landing salmon in Alaska.
Recreational Fishing
Comment 53: The State supports the proposed management measures for
recreational anglers in the EEZ, including requirements for allowable
gear, processing harvested salmon and reporting harvest. The proposed
rule would establish bag and possession limits in Federal regulations
consistent with current State regulations; however, we note that State
regulations could change in the future and result in different
regulations for anglers harvesting salmon in State waters and the EEZ.
Response: NMFS acknowledges this comment.
National Standard 2
Comment 54: NMFS failed to use the best scientific information, as
required by National Standard 2. One example of this is the data used
to calculate a potential TAC, as it is unknown what percent of fish
have been harvested in the EEZ. ``Best guess'' data should not be used.
Similarly, NMFS relied on State catch records, but those may be
skewed by 20 percent or more due to the history of overescapement and
pulling the in-river fish counters prior to the end of the later runs.
The one good historical reference is the Offshore Test Fishery, which
should be used in the analysis and to set TACs. Previous years run data
cannot be considered reliable because Cook Inlet has not been properly
managed for many years which has resulted in overescapement and stock
declines. Consider modifying the historical percent of drift gillnet
harvests attributed to the Cook Inlet EEZ to 65 percent.
Response: NMFS disagrees that the management measures implemented
by amendment 16 and this final rule rely on information that is
inconsistent with National Standard 2. National Standard 2 provides
that conservation and management measures shall be based upon the best
scientific information available. NMFS considered and weighed all of
the information available in making the decisions, including public
testimony, to develop and approve amendment 16, respectively.
NMFS used the best scientific information to inform the Analysis,
which includes comprehensive fish ticket data including locale codes.
Previously, data regarding harvests, landings, and statistical areas in
Upper Cook Inlet did not differentiate between State and Federal
waters. Therefore, NMFS had to develop a methodology to estimate
historic salmon harvest in the Cook Inlet EEZ. The methodology used to
develop EEZ harvest estimates for the Cook Inlet EEZ Area is presented
in section 4.5.1.2.3 of the Analysis, along with a description of the
associated uncertainties. This method and the results were reviewed and
approved by the SSC, which agreed that the Analysis and harvest
specification process relies on the best scientific information
available. NMFS received no comments providing additional data to
estimate EEZ harvest and no suggested alternate methodologies and
cannot arbitrarily increase the attribution of historical harvest to
the EEZ in the absence of any supporting data. Therefore, NMFS
determined that the estimates presented in the Analysis constitute the
best scientific information available.
However, this action establishes a fishery management framework
that is adaptive, and is expected to improve the scientific information
available for management of Cook Inlet salmon stocks over time. Once
amendment 16 is implemented, NMFS will collect the
[[Page 34743]]
landings information needed to directly and precisely determine EEZ
harvests. NMFS will review the information available to manage Cook
Inlet salmon stocks each year, including any data gaps and
uncertainties. As actual data is collected on harvest in this new
fishery, NMFS will include that information in the ongoing assessment
of what constitutes best scientific information available at that time,
reviewed by the SSC, to establish harvest specifications and manage the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area.
NMFS agrees that the offshore test fishery may be a useful source
of information for management of the Cook Inlet EEZ salmon fishery, but
disagrees that it should have relied on it. The offshore test fishery
provides standardized CPUE information. However, as described in the
response to Comment 29 and in section 2.4.4 of the Analysis, CPUE data
could not provide sufficient information to evaluate salmon abundance
and determine whether catches exceed a level that could cause
overfishing.
National Standard 3
Comment 55: Defining fishing as limited to the Cook Inlet EEZ
violates National Standard 3. NMFS's definition of the fishery fails to
manage salmon stocks as a unit throughout their range. Splitting the
fishery into a Federal and State fishery makes the Federal fishery
subordinate to the State fishery because the State fishery will
continue overescapement. If there are harvestable surpluses, waiting to
find out via the State fishery will mean the EEZ fishery will be
compromised by State management.
Response: As explained in greater detail in the proposed rule, NMFS
has determined that amendment 16 is consistent with National Standard
3. As set forth under section 301 of the Magnuson Stevens Act, National
Standard 3 provides that, to the extent practicable, an individual
stock of fish shall be managed as a unit throughout its range, and
interrelated stocks of fish shall be managed as a unit or in close
coordination.
The key term here is ``practicable.'' It is not practicable for
NMFS to manage salmon stocks into State waters where NMFS has no
management jurisdiction, and, thus, NMFS has designed management
measures that allow it to manage stocks of salmon as a unit throughout
the portion of their range under NMFS's authority, grouping
interrelated stocks of salmon together because vessels cannot target
individual stocks in the EEZ. Amendment 16 will allow NMFS to manage to
optimum levels of EEZ harvest while preventing overfishing, but NMFS
cannot rely on National Standard 3 as a basis to assert management
authority over State waters.
Furthermore, the National Standard 3 guidelines explain how to
structure appropriate management units for stocks and stock complexes
(Sec. 600.320). These guidelines state that the purpose of National
Standard 3 is to induce a comprehensive approach to fishery management
(Sec. 600.320(b)). The guidelines define management unit as a fishery
or that portion of a fishery identified in an FMP as relevant to the
FMP's management objectives and state that the choice of a management
unit depends on the focus of the FMP's objectives and may be organized
around biological, geographic, economic, technical, social, or
ecological perspectives (Sec. 600.320(d)). As discussed above, in
defining the fishery, NMFS primarily focused on co-occurring salmon
stocks harvested within the Cook Inlet EEZ Area, as that geographic
area defines the routine limits of NMFS's management jurisdiction.
There are unique technical, ecological, and economic features of
salmon fishing in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area that further support limiting
the management unit to the Cook Inlet EEZ. As described in the preamble
to the proposed rule, drift gillnet gear captures all salmon in an
area, and an entangled salmon cannot be released without an extremely
high mortality rate. Further, in EEZ waters, salmon stocks are highly
mixed, and catch in the EEZ includes both the Kenai and Kasilof stocks
of sockeye salmon that are currently highly abundant, as well as much
less abundant Northern District salmon stocks. In contrast, in
nearshore waters, individual salmon stocks can be targeted by fishing
adjacent to the river a specific salmon stock is returning to. This is
not possible in EEZ waters. In other words, the EEZ is ecologically
unique compared to near-shore waters due to the highly mixed stock
nature of the fishery, with varying abundances and compositions of the
stocks caught. The stocks that are mixed in the EEZ may be more
discretely targeted in State waters management districts. Therefore,
salmon fishery management in the EEZ requires an approach that ensures
the stocks of lowest abundance are not overharvested before they reach
their natal streams. The Cook Inlet EEZ Area is also economically
unique because the drift gillnet fleet has exclusive use of the area
for commercial salmon fishing. Within State waters, there are multiple
commercial and non-commercial fishery sectors operating to selectively
target specific individual stocks to the extent practicable, with
management measures in place to limit catch and mortality on stocks at
risk of overfishing.
Federal management of the Cook Inlet EEZ Area under amendment 16
achieves National Standard 3 objectives through coordination with the
State to the extent practicable before, during, and after each fishing
season, as described in the harvest specifications and annual processes
section of this preamble. This includes reviewing the available
scientific information for management of Cook Inlet salmon stocks held
by the State, as well as other sources, and estimating what harvests
are expected in State waters to inform harvest limits for the Cook
Inlet EEZ Area that are designed to prevent overfishing on all Cook
Inlet salmon stocks. NMFS and the Council will evaluate both where
harvest of salmon stocks may be constrained by the presence of stocks
of low abundance and where there may be opportunities to harvest
additional salmon that would not otherwise be utilized. NMFS will
provide data on early EEZ catches to the State to inform run strength
forecasts for management of all other upper Cook Inlet salmon
fisheries.
National Standard 4
Comment 56: This action discriminates against Cook Inlet commercial
fishers. Amendment 16 violates National Standard 4 as it does not
allocate fishing privileges in a way that is fair and equitable. It
places a TAC on one group of harvesters (the drift gillnet fleet) in
one area (the EEZ), without a similar requirement on any other group.
This can severely affect the economic viability of the drift gillnet
fleet if the TAC is set incorrectly, and the drift gillnet fleet is
precluded from harvesting the excess salmon. In addition, requiring a
VMS system to commercial fish in Federal waters is not equitable as
there is no similar requirement for the recreational fishery sector, or
any VMS requirement for vessels fishing salmon in the East Area.
Response: NMFS disagrees that amendment 16 is inconsistent with
National Standard 4, or that it allocates harvest in a manner that is
not fair and equitable to the drift gillnet fleet. As set forth under
section 301 of the Magnuson Stevens Act, National Standard 4 provides
that conservation and management measures shall not discriminate
between residents of different states. This final rule does not in any
way discriminate between residents of different states. National
Standard 4 further provides that, if it becomes necessary to allocate
or assign
[[Page 34744]]
fishing privileges among various United States fishermen, such
allocation shall be (1) fair and equitable to all such fishermen; (2)
reasonably calculated to promote conservation; and (3) carried out in
such manner that no particular individual, corporation, or other entity
acquires an excessive share of such privilege.
To start, this action allocates all commercial fishing privileges
in the Cook Inlet EEZ to the drift gillnet fleet--NMFS cannot conclude
that an allocation made to a single sector is not fair and equitable
for that sector. No other commercial sector is subject to a TAC because
no other commercial sector is permitted to fish in the EEZ at all. The
drift gillnet fleet has historically harvested over 99.99 percent of
the salmon caught in the Cook Inlet EEZ. The recreational fishery
sector in the Cook Inlet EEZ harvests the remaining amount, an
estimated average of 66 fish per year. This action is expected to
maintain the harvest range of both sectors in the EEZ and does not
allocate any harvest away from the drift gillnet fleet.
Although allocations must be fair and equitable and reasonably
calculated to promote conservation, not all management measures
required by the Magnuson-Stevens Act are subject to the same analysis.
Neither the use of TACs to manage fishery effort nor the requirement to
install VMS are allocations. The Magnuson-Stevens Act requires ACLs for
fisheries managed under the Magnuson-Stevens Act, and TACs are how NMFS
implements ACLs. And because fishing will take place adjacent to
multiple closed areas, VMS is needed to enforce and monitor time and
area closures. But even if NMFS were required to show that TACs or VMS
requirements were fair and equitable to the drift gillnet fleet when
compared to regulations that apply to the only other authorized sector
in the EEZ, the recreational sector, it easily meets that burden here.
Because the recreational sector catches under 100 fish per year in the
EEZ and because recreational anglers are prohibited from possessing or
landing the bag limit for both State and Federal waters on the same
day--and thus there is no way that sector could increase its harvest
opportunities compared to the status quo--neither a TAC nor VMS is
needed to control recreational harvest or enforce rules for
recreational fishermen.
The rationale for requiring VMS for commercial salmon fishing
vessels in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area but not the East Area is described
in the response to Comment 44.
If harvests by the recreational fishery sector increase, then NMFS
may implement monitoring, recordkeeping, or reporting measures. For the
time being, on-the-water and dockside enforcement of the recreational
fishery sector is sufficient because the same bag limits apply across
State and Federal waters for a single calendar day.
The allocation decisions referenced in National Standard 4 do not
apply to decisions made by other management authorities that govern
fishing outside of the Cook Inlet EEZ.
Comment 57: The proposed TAC does not address priority use for
Federal Subsistence.
Response: Although it is unclear from the comment what the
commenter means by ``Federal Subsistence,'' NMFS acknowledges that, in
Alaska, subsistence taking of fish and wildlife is regulated by Federal
law under Title VIII of the Alaska National Interests Land Conservation
Act (ANILCA), which accords a priority for taking of fish and wildlife
for subsistence uses over recreational/sport and commercial users on
Federal public lands in Alaska (16 U.S.C. 3102, 3114). However, here
NMFS is managing the Cook Inlet EEZ Area (i.e., Federal marine waters)
pursuant to the Magnuson-Stevens Act, and therefore Title VIII of
ANILCA does not apply to this action regulating Federal marine waters
in the Cook Inlet EEZ. The Magnuson-Stevens Act does not have a
subsistence priority for fisheries in the EEZ.
Comment 58: Multiple commenters, including municipalities, trade
associations, and fishing guides located in the Matanuska-Susitna
Valley indicated that stable and predictable salmon fishing
opportunities for all commercial and non-commercial users have both
provided food security and an economic base for the region (communities
of Palmer, Wasilla, Knik, Houston, Willow, Skwentna, Talkeetna, and
Trapper Creek). These commenters cited several economic studies, which
concluded that a broad base of fishing activities and fishing
activities with conservative regulations, limits, and harvest
opportunities (e.g., recreational and subsistence) generate
considerable economic benefit for each fish harvested.
Response: NMFS acknowledges the importance of salmon to fishermen
and communities in Northern Cook Inlet, and when there are declines in
salmon abundance, it results in adverse economic impacts. For
discussion of the potential economic impacts on communities from this
action, see sections 4.7.1.3 to 4.7.1.4 of the Analysis.
Comment 59: Several commenters felt this action would increase Cook
Inlet EEZ Area salmon harvests, which would require the State to
implement more restrictive fishery management measures for the Northern
District commercial and non-commercial fisheries and may cause
overfishing of weak stocks, such as the Susitna sockeye stock and the
coho stock. By increasing commercial harvest, this action will
exacerbate the inequity between the drift gillnet fleet and Northern
Cook Inlet fishing groups. Drift gillnet permit holders have
historically been the only commercial fishermen allowed to harvest
salmon in Federal waters and also have better harvest opportunities in
State waters.
Response: As described in section 4.7.1.3 of the Analysis, this
action is not expected to increase salmon harvests in the Cook Inlet
EEZ. Therefore, historical harvests by all fishery sectors in both
State and EEZ waters should be maintained. As described in the response
to Comment 25, this action will account for weak stocks and uncertainty
when setting TACs for the Cook Inlet EEZ. NMFS acknowledges that
harvest in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area occurs before all other salmon users
in upper Cook Inlet and before there is robust information on realized
inseason salmon abundance, both generally and for specific stocks. The
uncertainty associated with this and risks of reducing or eliminating
the harvestable surplus for other salmon users will be accounted for in
both the harvest specification process and inseason management
decisions. NMFS also acknowledges that the drift gillnet fleet is one
of the largest salmon harvesters in Cook Inlet and has fishing
opportunities in both State and Federal waters.
Comment 60: The Magnuson-Stevens Act emphasizes fairness in
allocation and the production of food. To that end, the drift gillnet
fleet should have not only meaningful harvest opportunities for sockeye
but also a fair chance to bring northbound coho to market.
Response: As described in section 4.5.1.2.2 of the Analysis, the
drift gillnet fleet is generally the largest or second largest
harvester of coho salmon in Cook Inlet. On average, they harvest over
30 percent of the coho salmon in Cook Inlet, with an increasing harvest
trend from 1999 to 2021. This results in an approximately even split
between the drift gillnet fleet, the commercial set gillnet sector, and
all non-commercial fishery sectors (recreational, personal use, and
subsistence). This action is not expected to significantly reduce drift
gillnet harvests of coho salmon. NMFS
[[Page 34745]]
determined that this action balances food production and recreational
opportunities across all users in Cook Inlet while also protecting
salmon stocks and the marine ecosystem. If there are increased harvests
by the drift gillnet fleet, it is expected that the harvest of other
users would necessarily be reduced, which NMFS concludes would reduce
the fairness of salmon resource allocations in Cook Inlet by preempting
or even eliminating harvest opportunities for other users, many of
which can only operate in State waters.
Comment 61: Where in amendment 16 are the management plans the
State will follow? For example, amendment 16 does not address closures
of the East Side set net fishery and the implications for Federal
management. The East Side set net fishery is the second largest fishery
in Cook Inlet but has been ignored. The failure to include the entire
fishery has decimated the East Side set net fishery, which has been
restricted and closed based on illegal and unscientific objectives.
Response: NMFS does not include management measures in this action
for salmon fishing in State waters. The East Side set net fishery
sector and other salmon fishery sectors operating in State waters are
described in section 4.6 of the Analysis. The East Side set net fishery
sector occurs entirely within State waters. NMFS has no jurisdiction to
implement management measures within State waters in Cook Inlet. NMFS
will consider the harvests of other fisheries, including the East Side
set net fishery sector, in making management decisions for the Cook
Inlet EEZ Area. Comments on State management of the East Side set net
fishery are outside of the scope of this action.
National Standard 5 and 7
Comment 62: The restriction on fishing in State and Federal waters
on the same calendar day violates National Standard 5 because it is
impossible to fish near the boundary line between State and Federal
waters, given large Cook Inlet tides and current speeds in excess of 7
knots (12.96 kph) and the difficulty of staying within the irregularly-
shaped Federal boundary line. Drift gillnetters lack the technology to
determine where the boundary line is located while fishing.
Response: NMFS disagrees that the prohibition on fishing in both
State and Federal waters in a single calendar day is not practicable
and disagrees that the prohibition violates National Standard 5, which
provides that conservation and management measures shall consider
efficiency in the utilization of fishery resources where practicable.
Under State management, participants have successfully remained within
the boundaries open to drift gillnet fishing within either State or EEZ
waters. This action does not modify legal fishing gear or other
operational elements in a way that is expected to increase the
difficulty of staying within an open area. Nothing in this rule
prohibits participants who are concerned about their ability to remain
within Federal waters during certain fishing conditions from setting
and retrieving their gear farther away from the State/EEZ boundary.
Vessels participating in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area drift gillnet fishery
are expected to be aware of their fishing location and fish only in
locations and at times open to that fishery. In other Federal fisheries
off Alaska and elsewhere, federally permitted vessels fishing in EEZ
waters are commonly prohibited from fishing in State waters and are
able to successfully remain with the Federal waters open to fishing
immediately adjacent to the EEZ boundary. Examples include the Pacific
cod fisheries in the Kodiak, Chignik, and South Alaska Peninsula areas,
and the Aleutian Islands and Dutch Harbor subdistricts of the Bering
Sea-Aleutian Islands Area.
As for the availability of suitable technology to verify vessel
locations, NMFS has provided charts depicting the boundary and will
provide electronic charts compatible with smartphone applications and
commonly used commercial navigation products available at the NMFS
Alaska Region website at https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/region/alaska.
More information is provided in the small entity compliance guide
published with this action.
Comment 63: Amendment 16 does not adequately consider or promote
efficiency in the utilization of fishery resources, and it fails to
minimize costs and avoid unnecessary duplication to the extent
practicable in violation of National Standards 5 and 7.
NMFS's analysis notes that amendment 16 will increase direct costs
and burdens to drift gillnet vessels harvesting salmon in the Cook
Inlet EEZ Area due to requirements including obtaining a SFFP,
installing and operating a VMS, and maintaining a Federal logbook. NMFS
also chose to open fishing in the EEZ on the same days and at the same
times that the State fishery is open and to prohibit participants from
fishing in State and Federal waters during the same trip. This
limitation makes no sense, is extremely inefficient, is impracticable
for participants, and appears punitive.
Response: NMFS disagrees that any of the above-described
requirements are punitive, impractical, or inconsistent with either
National Standard 5 or 7. As set forth under section 301 of the
Magnuson Stevens Act, National Standard 5 provides that conservation
and management measures shall, where practicable, consider efficiency
in the utilization of fishery resources, except that no such measure
shall have economic allocation as its sole purpose. National Standard 7
provides that conservation and management measures shall, where
practicable, minimize costs and avoid unnecessary duplication.
This action considers efficiency in the utilization of fishery
resources and minimizes costs and avoids unnecessary duplication to the
extent practicable. NMFS recognizes that a system in which a single
authority manages both State and Federal waters could allow for a more
efficient means of conducting the catch accounting necessary to avoid
overfishing. This is not possible here. Because the State did not
accept delegated management authority nor would it commit to providing
the information required for management within the needed timeframe,
NMFS must establish Federal monitoring, recordkeeping, and reporting
requirements to supply this essential information to Federal fishery
managers, consistent with the mandates of the Magnuson-Stevens Act. As
discussed in the response to Comment 31, to account for fish caught
solely in the Federal EEZ, it is necessary for NMFS to prohibit fishing
in State and Federal waters on the same trip. As such, this requirement
is consistent with National Standard 7.
As described thoroughly in the response to Comment 44 and in
section 4.7.2.2 of the Analysis, NMFS identified the minimum level of
information required to effectively manage and enforce salmon fishing
in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area. NMFS considered the additional costs and
burden of these measures, including the costs of VMS equipment, on
participants. NMFS managers will depend on VMS to determine the effort
and projected catch in order to inform management decisions.
Furthermore, without VMS, NOAA Fisheries Office of Law Enforcement
would have to rely exclusively on resource-intensive patrols by air and
sea; methods that are not as consistent as VMS in verifying that no
fishing is occurring in closed waters and confirming fleet-wide
reported fishing effort information. NMFS considered but did not choose
to require management measures that would provide additional
information
[[Page 34746]]
but impose disproportionate costs to participants such as fishery
observers and electronic monitoring camera systems. Federal funds may
be available to qualified vessel owners or operators for complete
reimbursement of the cost of purchasing type-approved VMS units, which
could offset over 75 percent of the total purchase and installation
cost for fishery participants.
Logbooks are similarly necessary to ensure accuracy of reported
fishing effort, catch accounting, and compliance with regulations.
Logbook sheets will be available for participants to obtain from NOAA's
website, free of charge.
National Standard 8
Comment 64: Amendment 16 violates National Standard 8 because it
fails to take into account the importance of fishery resources to the
Cook Inlet fishing communities and does not utilize economic and social
data to provide for the sustained participation of such communities and
to minimize adverse economic impacts on such communities.
Response: NMFS disagrees that amendment 16 violates National
Standard 8. As set forth under section 301 of the Magnuson Stevens Act,
National Standard 8 provides that conservation and management measures
shall, consistent with the conservation requirements of the Act
(including the prevention of overfishing and rebuilding of overfished
stocks), take into account the importance of fishery resources to
fishing communities by utilizing economic and social data (based on the
best scientific information available), in order to (1) provide for the
sustained participation of such communities, and (2) to the extent
practicable, minimize adverse economic impacts on such communities.
Section 4 of the Analysis extensively documents the importance of
salmon to Cook Inlet fishing communities throughout the Cook Inlet
region as well as communities in Washington and Oregon. Many of these
communities are jointly dependent on commercial salmon fishing (both
drift gillnet and set gillnet), as well as non-commercial salmon
fishing (recreational participants and guides, subsistence, ceremonial,
and educational fishery sectors). NMFS carefully considered the costs
and benefits of each management measure. As described in the Analysis
and the preamble to the proposed rule, NMFS selected measures that
balance the burden on participants with providing the information that
is essential for NMFS to manage salmon fishing in the Cook Inlet EEZ
Area. Further, NMFS expects that participants drift gillnet fishing in
the Cook Inlet EEZ Area will be able to maintain their existing range
of harvests and may be able to increase harvests if conservation
conditions allow for it. Overall, because harvest levels of all sectors
are expected to remain more or less consistent with status quo
conditions, no long term community level impacts are expected. And
because this rule is expected to maintain more or less status quo
fishing opportunities for all users in Cook Inlet--with some
possibility of additional days for the drift gillnet fleet--it
appropriately provides for the sustained participation of fishing
communities throughout Cook Inlet, including communities with residents
that participate in State water fisheries. Many public commenters from
Northern Cook Inlet expressed concern with any management plan that
would increase EEZ harvests and thereby decrease salmon returns to the
Northern Cook Inlet, causing adverse economic impacts on those
communities. Instead, NMFS selected a management strategy that will
preserve the complicated balance among various groups throughout Cook
Inlet that has provided for the sustained participation of all Cook
Inlet fishing communities for decades.
National Standard 10
Comment 65: There is no meaningful discussion of National Standard
10 Safety for this action. In the recent 10 year period, many vessels
have been lost or damaged during periods of bad weather. Amendment 16
needs to address what happens and how the fishery will still achieve OY
when these regular bad weather events occur.
Response: NMFS disagrees; the impacts of amendment 16 on the safety
of human life at sea are discussed in sections 4.5.1.7 and 4.7.4 of the
Analysis and NMFS finds this rule in consistent with National Standard
10. National Standard 10 provides that conservation and management
measures shall, to the extent practicable, promote the safety of human
life at sea. Overall impacts to public health and safety from this
action are not expected to be significant. The VMS requirement provides
a valuable tool for search and rescue efforts to locate a vessel in
distress by regularly providing position information. This action also
closes fishing in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area prior to the advent of
deteriorating late summer and fall weather conditions. NMFS
acknowledges that an inseason closure of the Cook Inlet EEZ under this
action could result in vessel congestion in the fishing areas that
remain open. In addition, closures of traditional, local fishing areas
may induce vessel operators to take additional risks, such as fishing
in weather and sea conditions that they would normally avoid, to remain
economically viable. However, NMFS expects that the safety benefits
resulting from VMS will more than offset any marginal, indirect adverse
effects on safety that this action may have.
Economic Impacts
Comment 66: Multiple commenters cited studies and information
highlighting the economic importance of salmon fisheries to
participants and regional Alaskan communities. Several commenters
support amendment 16 as a vehicle to conserve the salmon species on
which these fisheries depend.
Response: NMFS acknowledges this comment. Economic information,
community information, and an analysis of expected economic impacts are
presented in section 4 of the Analysis.
Comment 67: Many commenters and their families are long-term Cook
Inlet drift gillnet participants who feel State management has left
drift gillnet fishery participants struggling, and worry this will
continue under amendment 16. They allege this action does not correct
the perceived errors in State management and will continue to reduce
harvester and processor participation.
Response: NMFS acknowledges relatively low revenues to the Cook
Inlet drift gillnet fleet and decreases in participation in recent
years. Under this action, NMFS will be responsible for managing salmon
fishing within the Cook Inlet EEZ Area. NMFS has no jurisdiction to
modify salmon management within State waters.
As discussed in the response to Comment 10, NMFS recognizes that
some of the management measures necessary to meet Federal managements
in the EEZ will require additional costs and time commitments from
participants. As described in the Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
in the Classifications section of this preamble, NMFS designed the
management measures related to collection of information for management
purposes to minimize the financial impact on participants to the extent
practicable. NMFS selected these measures after evaluating a range of
options for information collection, as described in sections 2.5.6 and
4.7.2.2 of the Analysis. More information is provided in the response
to comments related to Monitoring, Recordkeeping, and Reporting
Requirements.
Because EEZ fishing opportunity is expected to be similar to the
status quo under this action, salmon harvests in
[[Page 34747]]
the Cook Inlet EEZ Area and other areas of Cook Inlet are expected to
remain at or near existing levels. As described in section 4.7.1.3,
temporary shutdown or permanent closing of some processing businesses
would only be expected to occur if there were substantial decreases in
production. This is not expected to occur because harvest levels are
expected to remain near existing levels. However, in the event NMFS
closed the EEZ under this action, that likely means fishery conditions
would also be expected to result in EEZ closure or severe restrictions
under status quo management by the State. The most likely reason for
closure is the low abundance of stocks that pass through the EEZ as
they move into the Northern District of Cook Inlet. Thus, as compared
to the status quo, no substantial reductions in EEZ harvest are
anticipated when considered in the context of run strength in a given
fishing season.
NMFS disagrees that State management has arbitrarily left the drift
gillnet fleet struggling. The low abundance of specific salmon stocks
in Cook Inlet has been challenging to all salmon fishery sectors in
Cook Inlet. The State has taken necessary management action to protect
these weak stocks, which has reduced harvest for all users. As
described in section 4.5.1.2.2 of the Analysis, despite these
conservation challenges, the drift gillnet fleet has, on average,
harvested an increasing percentage of the available harvestable surplus
for all salmon species over this same time period (1999-2021).
Further, the Analysis includes an examination of the social and
economic impacts of the alternatives. Section 3 of the Analysis
evaluates the impact of the proposed action on salmon stocks and other
parts of the environment while section 4.7 of the Analysis discusses
the impact on fishing communities in comparison to the status quo.
Based on the Analysis, NMFS concluded that this final rule will not
have a significant impact on the human environment.
Comment 68: A commenter stated support for NMFS's proposed action
to manage the Cook Inlet EEZ because the local economy on the Kenai
Peninsula is fragile, with people affected by economic disasters such
as fishing closures and fires and faced with few employment
opportunities.
Response: NMFS acknowledges this comment.
Comment 69: Several local government representatives and bodies
requested that NMFS implement management for the Cook Inlet EEZ Area
that provides for a healthy commercial fishing industry including
processors and support services, considers all user groups, and
considers the impact that management of the Cook Inlet EEZ can have on
all Alaska communities that rely on sportfishing for economic
development and subsistence use of salmon.
Response: NMFS acknowledges this comment. One of NMFS's primary
concerns in developing amendment 16 is ensuring that all Cook Inlet
salmon users, processors, and fishing communities retain access to and
benefits from Cook Inlet salmon resources.
Comment 70: NMFS has not adequately addressed the economic impacts
on fishermen and communities where the harvest is landed, including
consideration of landing taxes, employment on the vessels, and in the
processing plants.
Response: NMFS disagrees. The economic impacts of salmon fishing
under the alternatives in Cook Inlet were comprehensively described and
analyzed throughout section 4 of the Analysis. This included
consideration of revenues, taxes, employment, and dependency. As
summarized in section 4.10 of the Analysis, this action is expected to
maintain harvest levels and opportunities commensurate with status quo
conditions to the extent possible while accounting for uncertainty and
the expectation that Federal management should improve over time as
management expertise is developed. In fact, as noted above, this action
allows for the possibility of slight increases in fishing days and
harvest for the drift gillnet fleet when possible without impacting
stocks of lower abundance. Thus, because this action is expected to
maintain status quo harvest opportunities or even increase harvest
opportunities for participants willing to comply with regulations in
Federal waters, the best scientific information available supports
NMFS's conclusion that minimal adverse economic impacts are anticipated
from this action. Landings, landings taxes, employment, and processing
are not expected to be significantly affected by this final rule
compared to status quo conditions.
Comment 71: Market conditions arising from competition with farm-
raised salmon account for a large part of the economic losses in salmon
fisheries around Alaska. Permitting increased harvest of salmon in the
Cook Inlet EEZ is unlikely to correct this problem but will likely
adversely affect other Upper Cook Inlet salmon users.
Response: NMFS acknowledges that market conditions can have
significant impacts on fishery values and that fisheries management
decisions made in other jurisdictions do affect market conditions.
Sections 4.5.1 and 4.7.1.3 of the Analysis describe market conditions.
In the near-term, this action is not expected to result in the
harvesting of significantly more or less salmon in the Cook Inlet EEZ.
Therefore, it should not directly affect the market conditions for
commercially harvested salmon.
NMFS also acknowledges that management of the Cook Inlet EEZ Area
may impact the harvestable surplus available to all other salmon users
in Upper Cook Inlet. Again, because NMFS does not anticipate a
significant change in harvest in the Cook Inlet EEZ as a result of this
action, NMFS disagrees that this action will adversely affect the
fishing opportunity, and associated economic value, for other users in
the Upper Cook Inlet area.
As described in sections 4.5.1.3.4.2 and 4.6 of the Analysis,
commercial catches and fishery values in nearly all Cook Inlet salmon
fishery sectors were above the long-term average from 2010 to 2014. The
ability to realize high fishery values are dependent on the number and
value of harvested species. Drift gillnet fishery catches during recent
years have been constrained by mixed stock management considerations,
including constraining fishing time and area in order to avoid
overharvesting less abundant salmon stocks.
Section 4.6 of the Analysis included an examination of the
potentially affected fisheries, including personal use, set net,
freshwater, subsistence, and educational fisheries and determined that
harvests near status quo levels are likely to be maintained by this
action.
General Support
Comment 72: I support Federal management of fisheries in Alaska.
Response: NMFS acknowledges this comment.
Comment 73: Federal management will ensure optimum yield and
sustainable fish populations.
Response: NMFS acknowledges this comment.
Comment 74: I support this action. Federally regulating fishing for
all salmon in the Cook Inlet EEZ will help save the resources so that
salmon fishing by all users can continue. However, I want more input
from Alaskans.
Response: NMFS acknowledges this comment. The public had multiple
opportunities to provide input, including at AP, SSC, and Council
meetings in 2022 and 2023; during a public hearing hosted online by
NMFS
[[Page 34748]]
on Mary 18, 2023; and during the public comment period on the proposed
rule and notice of availability for Amendment 16. Public input on this
action from all members of the public was considered and is summarized
and responded to in this final rule.
General Opposition
Comment 75: NMFS does not need to recreate the wheel to create this
FMP. It should adopt the FMP management plan put forward by Cook Inlet
Fisherman's Fund, which is based on historic regulations and would
manage the Cook Inlet fishery to comply with the court orders,
Magnuson-Stevens Act, and other applicable laws.
The commenter's proposed FMP amendment can be viewed at https://www.regulations.gov/comment/NOAA-NMFS-2023-0065-0071.
The commenter's FMP includes the following primary provisions:
Escapement based management.
Management measures for all commercial salmon fishery
sectors in both State and Federal waters.
Management of Chinook stocks throughout upper Cook Inlet
with the commercial fishery allowed whatever harvest necessary to
achieve the MSY/OY objectives for sockeye, coho, pink, and chum stocks.
Prioritize restrictions on non-resident sport fishing over
resident sport-fishing when restrictions are needed to achieve OY.
A commercial fishing season from May through December,
with two or three 12 hour regular commercial fishing periods per week.
The State or NMFS would retain authority to adjust this fishing
schedule to manage for MSY escapement goals or exploitation rates as
required.
Response: NMFS disagrees that this commenter's proposed FMP
amendment should be adopted. As explained in the responses to Comments
3 and 4, NMFS cannot adopt Federal management measures that apply to
the State waters of Cook Inlet. As explained in the response to Comment
23, NMFS cannot implement escapement based management through amendment
16. NMFS disagrees that commercial salmon fishing should be exempt from
management restrictions required to conserve Chinook salmon or other
salmon stocks. Even with severe restrictions to both recreational and
commercial salmon fishing, Chinook salmon stocks in Cook Inlet are not
meeting escapement goals under the status quo. Forgoing any
restrictions on commercial fishing to harvest all available yield of
sockeye, coho, pink, and chum salmon stocks would result in
overfishing, which is inconsistent with NMFS's National Standard 1
mandate. NMFS disagrees that achieving MSY, particularly for a single
fishery sector, constitutes achieving OY or maximizing net benefits to
the nation. As explained in the response to Comment 39, a dramatic
increase the fishing season duration and number of commercial fishing
periods in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area would result in overfishing and
reduce or eliminate the harvestable surplus for other salmon users in
Cook Inlet. And NMFS may not discriminate between residents of
different states when adopting Federal management measures. Section 2.7
of the Analysis generally explains why other provisions in stakeholder-
submitted FMP amendments are inconsistent with the Magnuson-Stevens
Act.
Amendment 16 complies with the Ninth Circuit ruling by amending the
Salmon FMP to include the Cook Inlet EEZ Area. It complies with the
District Court's order by implementing a federally-managed fishery in
the EEZ that includes all Magnuson-Stevens Act requirements--including
ACLs--and does not rely on the State to achieve any of the FMP's
management objectives. The Analysis provides a comprehensive
description of the purpose and need for this action, the management
alternatives considered, and an analysis of their respective impacts.
Comment 76: Despite having the flexibility and resources to do an
excellent job, NMFS is making amendment 16 unnecessarily complicated
and difficult.
Response: NMFS developed amendment 16, the proposed rule, and this
final rule in compliance with the Magnuson-Stevens Act and all other
applicable Federal law. Management of Cook Inlet salmon fisheries is
complex and challenging. The fishery includes multiple stocks of
varying abundance, no stocks can be targeted in isolation in EEZ
waters, and Cook Inlet includes many stakeholders beyond the drift
gillnet fleet with competing demands. There is no simple solution to
fisheries management in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area if NMFS is to consider
the perspectives of all stakeholders and tribes, as it must. The
Analysis identifies the strengths and weaknesses of each management
alternative under consideration, including procedural constraints and
currently available expertise.
NMFS intends to do an effective job managing the Cook Inlet EEZ
Area salmon fishery, and expertise in this new Federal fishery will
increase over time.
Comment 77: This unprecedented action should not be implemented. It
will disrupt management of Cook Inlet waters and lead to further
lawsuits. While not everyone will be happy with any rule, the action's
legality and the resources are most important.
Response: NMFS acknowledges that this action implements a separate
Federal salmon fishery management regime within Cook Inlet for the Cook
Inlet EEZ Area and that salmon users have diverse preferences for
management measures. As described in the response to Comment 9, NMFS
must implement Federal management of the Cook Inlet EEZ to comply with
applicable court orders, the Magnuson-Stevens Act, and all other
applicable Federal law.
Tribal Comments
Comment 78: Regional tribes were not adequately consulted in the
development of amendment 16, which may have adverse impacts to salmon
stocks that tribes have traditionally depended on since time
immemorial. Three federally recognized regional tribal groups requested
government-to-government tribal consultation.
Response: NMFS acknowledges the importance of salmon to many tribal
entities located throughout Cook Inlet and adjacent lands. NMFS's
efforts to engage and consult with tribes on this action are described
in detail in the Tribal Summary Impact Statement of this rule. In
brief, NMFS participated in three tribal engagement meetings on this
action before the Council failed to take action and NMFS began
developing a Secretarial FMP amendment. NMFS offered to consult with
tribes after the Council failed to take action, and NMFS subsequently
held consultations with two tribes in May and June, 2023. NMFS held a
public hearing on the action in May 2023, to which it invited all
impacted tribes. After publishing the proposed rule in October 2023,
NMFS directly solicited comments on the proposed rule from impacted
tribes in the fall of 2023. In December 2023, NMFS held an engagement
meeting with the tribal fishing group, and in January 2024, NMFS held
two informational meetings with tribal entities throughout the
Southcentral Alaska region.
Many of the tribes NMFS engaged with requested an indigenous
subsistence fishery set-aside to be incorporated into amendment 16 and
this final rule. However, given the impending court deadline of May 1,
2024 for publication of this action, there was not sufficient
opportunity to work with interested tribes on developing a proposal
that could be analyzed and incorporated into amendment 16 while
[[Page 34749]]
remaining on schedule to comply with the court order. NMFS received
additional tribal consultation requests related to the possibility of
an indigenous subsistence fishery in the Cook Inlet EEZ and will honor
them.
Comment 79: Multiple tribes in the region noted that this action
impacts sovereign federally recognized Tribes and their citizens and
ask that NMFS, as part of its Federal trust responsibilities to tribes,
co-develop with Alaska Native tribes a tribal subsistence fishery or
set-aside (tribal fishery) and include it as part of this action. Many
reasons were provided in support, including that Alaska Natives have
used Cook Inlet salmon since ancestral times; they have stewarded
salmon for thousands of years; tribal inherent fishing rights have long
been ignored; a lack of equitable tribal representation in Federal
fisheries management; obligations under international law, Executive
orders, and ANILCA; and that a new subsistence set-aside fishery in the
EEZ would be highly beneficial for tribal members unable to
sufficiently meet their needs with other harvest opportunities. It was
suggested that a tribal fishery be modeled after the subsistence
halibut fishery.
Response: NMFS recognizes that Alaska tribes are seeking more
equitable fisheries management and increased involvement in Federal
fisheries management processes. Furthermore, NMFS acknowledges the
long-standing and ancestral use of salmon fishery resources by Alaskan
tribes.
NMFS evaluated the impacts of this action on tribes in the Analysis
and the tribal impact summary statement. NMFS recognizes that salmon
fishing in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area occurs before all other fishing in
Cook Inlet and impacts the harvestable surplus available to all others
who rely on the salmon resources in Cook Inlet, including tribal and
subsistence users. As described in section 4.7.1.3 of the Analysis,
because this action is expected to maintain salmon harvests near status
quo levels, NMFS does not expect that amendment 16 will decrease the
harvestable surplus for ongoing tribal and subsistence fisheries in
Cook Inlet.
To create a new tribal fishery within the Cook Inlet EEZ would
require an FMP amendment, including further analysis and consideration
by NMFS and the Council. NMFS has committed to honor requests for
tribal consultation regarding the potential establishment of a tribal
fishery in the Cook Inlet EEZ. FMPs are adaptive and the Council may
recommend and NMFS may amend the FMP in the future to incorporate
feedback from tribes received in upcoming consultations.
Comment 80: The proposed action and subsequent management directly
impacts the sovereign federally recognized tribes of the Cook Inlet and
their citizens, which directly ties to their vital cultural way of life
that has sustained their people for millennia. NMFS must partner with
the Cook Inlet Tribes, thereby fulfilling their Federal trust
responsibilities and guaranteeing the utilization and sustainability of
traditional resources. The requirement to engage directly, government-
to-government, is found in international law, treaties, declarations,
Presidential Executive Orders (E.O.), and Secretarial Orders (See U.S.
Department of the Interior's Secretary Order No. 3335 affirming the
Federal trust responsibility of the United States to Indian Tribes and
their citizens). Furthermore, the White House signed E.O. 14096 on
Environmental Justice in April 2023. The E.O. directly cites tribal
sovereignty and self-governance, recognizing the requirement for tribal
consultation and enhanced collaboration with tribes on Federal
policies, stating, in part, that we must recognize, honor, and respect
the different cultural practices--including subsistence practices, ways
of living, Indigenous Knowledge, and traditions--in communities across
America.
Response: As described in response to Comment 78 and in the Tribal
Summary Impact Statement section of this final rule, NMFS provided
multiple informational meetings to tribes and conducted tribal
consultations. Impacts to tribes, their members and all other salmon
users in Cook Inlet will continue to be considered in management of the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area. NMFS will continue to consult and work with
interested tribes to develop potential future management actions for
the Cook Inlet EEZ Area that may provide subsistence or tribal fishing
opportunities.
Marine Mammals
Comment 81: I support including the Cook Inlet EEZ in the Salmon
FMP. Consider the importance of available salmon to the Cook Inlet
beluga whales, which are endangered under the ESA. Cook Inlet beluga
whales rely on salmon as prey. Failure to protect against overfishing
or otherwise could amount to an illegal ``taking'' under the ESA.
Harassing or harming the beluga whale is another reason the Salmon FMP
must include the Cook Inlet EEZ.
Response: NMFS acknowledges that salmon are important prey to Cook
Inlet beluga whales and that the availability of salmon prey for Cook
Inlet beluga whales is a factor identified in the recovery plan. NMFS
Sustainable Fisheries Division consulted with NMFS Protected Resources
Division under ESA section 7 to evaluate the potential impacts of these
management measures to all ESA-listed species, including Cook Inlet
beluga whales, that may be affected by this action. As described in
section 3.3.1 of the Analysis, the best scientific information
available at this time suggests that status quo salmon prey
availability is adequate for belugas. This final rule is not expected
to appreciably alter salmon availability to belugas compared to the
status quo. NMFS will continue to review and consider any new
information on the importance and availability of salmon prey to Cook
Inlet beluga whales.
Comment 82: Drift gillnet gear can be destructive and its continued
use in Cook Inlet may have adverse impacts to endangered beluga whales.
Response: As described in section 3.3.1 of the Analysis, NMFS has
no information indicating that the drift gillnet gear used in the Cook
Inlet EEZ Area has resulted in entanglements of Cook Inlet beluga
whales or habitat degradation. This action does not modify drift
gillnet fishing in Cook Inlet in any way that is expected to increase
the entanglement risk for Cook Inlet beluga whales.
Process Concerns
Comment 83: One commenter stated that the EEZ line being used was
ruled illegal in U.S. v. Alaska in 1975. This commenter alleges NMFS
continues to use an illegal EEZ boundary. If NMFS were to use a proper
boundary line (50 to 60 miles (80.47 to 96.56 km) north), the majority
of the fishery would occur in State waters, undermining its argument
that it cannot regulate State waters under section 306(b) of the
Magnuson-Stevens Act.
Another commenter suggested that the EEZ boundary was incorrect for
fisheries jurisdiction and should only be used for oil and gas leasing
purposes. Federal waters for fishing have not been designated and need
to be decided by the Boundary Commission as in Southeast Alaska.
Response: NMFS disagrees that it is using an incorrect EEZ
boundary. NMFS also disagrees that Federal waters boundaries for the
purpose of fisheries jurisdiction have not been defined in Cook Inlet.
Under the Magnuson-Stevens Act, the EEZ is defined as the zone
established by Proclamation Numbered 5030, dated March 10, 1983. For
purposes of applying this Act, the inner boundary of that zone is a
line
[[Page 34750]]
coterminous with the seaward boundary of each of the coastal States.
The baselines used to determine the EEZ boundary are reviewed and
approved by an interagency committee called the U.S. Baseline
Committee, which is chaired by the Department of State. In 2006, a new
method was used to calculate the baseline and NOAA navigation charts
published in 2006 depict changes in the 3 nmi (5.56 km) boundary in
parts of Alaska. In 2011, the U.S. Baseline Committee reviewed some of
the changes to the baseline in Cook Inlet based on feedback from the
State and updated their recommendations. However, not all areas where
the baseline changes occurred have been reviewed by the Baseline
Committee. For this reason, NMFS manages and enforces Federal fisheries
according to the decisions of the U.S. Baseline Committee for the areas
they reviewed and approved after considering input from the State since
2006. NMFS recognizes the historical (pre-2006) t3-nmi (5.56 km) state-
waters boundary line for all other areas. This information is
documented in a letter from NMFS to Alaska Department of Fish and Game
that is posted on NMFS Alaska Region website.
To the extent this comment is alleging the U.S. Baseline Committee
erred in approving this EEZ boundary, the decisions of the Baseline
Committee are outside the scope of this action. For NMFS's response to
the contention that it has authority to regulate state waters under
section 306(b) of the Magnuson-Stevens Act, see the response to Comment
4.
Comment 84: NMFS has repeatedly disregarded instruction from
courts, and a special master should be appointed to oversee development
of Federal management of Cook Inlet.
Response: NMFS disagrees that it disregarded instruction from any
court. NMFS has worked to ensure that Federal management of salmon
fishing in the Cook Inlet EEZ will be in place by May 1, 2024,
consistent with the Ninth Circuit and District Court orders.
Comment 85: One commenter felt that NMFS has been disingenuous,
duplicitous, insulting to stakeholders, and deliberately obstructive
throughout this process and produced poor work product that suggests it
does not understand the fishery. It was also suggested that this action
fails to reflect consideration or incorporation of input that the
stakeholders from the drift gillnet fleet have provided on multiple
occasions over several years, including the Council's stakeholder
committee, resulting in an unworkable product.
Response: NMFS disagrees. The proposed rule and Analysis prepared
for this action contains all relevant information about salmon
fisheries in Cook Inlet and perspectives provided by stakeholders
during the development of this action. Amendment 16 and this final rule
implement Federal management in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area in accordance
with the Magnuson-Stevens Act and as appropriate in recognition of the
multiple users of salmon throughout Cook Inlet.
Throughout the development of this action, some stakeholders
advocated for many provisions to increase harvests by the drift gillnet
fleet that NMFS is not implementing for reasons discussed in a number
of responses to comments. This input, as well as recommendations from
the stakeholder committee, is also summarized in section 2.7 of the
Analysis, which provides a comprehensive discussion of why certain
recommendations were not incorporated into the management alternatives
under consideration. Many of the drift gillnet fleets requests can be
distilled to two basic premises, neither of which are consistent with
the Magnuson-Stevens Act: (1) NMFS must apply Federal management to
both State and Federal waters in Cook Inlet; and (2) NMFS must manage
to fully harvest MSY for Kenai and Kasilof sockeye salmon, as well as
all other salmon stocks and prevent overescapement. As described in the
response to Comment 4, NMFS does not have jurisdiction to assert
management authority over the State waters of Cook Inlet. As explained
throughout the Analysis, the preamble to the proposed rule, and in
responses to comments in this final rule, fully harvesting the entire
harvestable surplus for Kenai and Kasilof sockeye would require an
amount of fishery effort in the EEZ that would result in overfishing of
other salmon stocks and could completely eliminate fishery
opportunities and access to fishery resources for other users in Cook
Inlet. To achieve OY and ensure that the fishery results in the
greatest net benefits to the Nation, NMFS cannot prioritize access for
one user group over access for all others. And in mixed stock
fisheries, harvest is always constrained by the stocks of lowest
abundance, as the Magnuson-Stevens Act requires that fishery management
measures prevent overfishing.
NMFS's decision not to implement specific measures advocated for by
one group of fishery stakeholders--and which other stakeholders and
tribes oppose as likely to decrease their access to salmon and the
State opposes based on conservation concerns--does not mean NMFS is
being disingenuous, duplicitous, insulting, or deliberately
obstructive.
Comment 86: Most Council members could see their special interests
(trawlers) affected by further scrutiny over salmon management. These
conflicts are the reason that the Magnuson-Stevens Act requires science
to drive management. These conflicts and the lack of accountability are
why councils nationwide should be appointed by the president and be
held responsible for their decisions.
Alaska has a majority of seats on the Council, including the
commissioner of ADF&G, and the Council will mostly rule in favor of the
State's parochial interests. This prioritizes protecting State
interests and revenues.
Response: Amendment 16 is a Secretarial FMP amendment developed by
NMFS and was not recommended by the Council. When this action was
previously under Council consideration, none of the Council members had
financial interests that would have required recusal from voting had
the Council decided to recommend action. Regardless, the statutorily
prescribed system for appointing Council members is outside the scope
of this action.
Comment 87: ADF&G has a financial conflict of interest in managing
South Central Alaska Salmon stocks. They are funded, in part, by sport
fishing licenses and associated Federal matched funds. Therefore, they
have a financial incentive to favor the recreational and personal use
fisheries.
Response: The State of Alaska's allocation decisions among various
sectors within State waters are outside of the scope of this action. In
the Cook Inlet EEZ, nearly all catch is by the commercial drift gillnet
fleet. There is no Federal personal use fishery, and the recreational
sector catches less than 70 fish per year on average in the Cook Inlet
EEZ.
Comment 88: Multiple commenters suggested that ADF&G had
prioritized political considerations, or specific user groups, over
sustainability and has not managed salmon and other species properly,
which has resulted in the declines of Chinook and sockeye fisheries in
Cook Inlet and unnecessary litigation. One commenter felt that
amendment 16 results in more political management.
Response: NMFS disagrees that amendment 16 is political management.
As described throughout the preamble to the proposed rule, NMFS worked
to balance competing interests and demands of the National Standards in
the policy decisions inherent to this fishery management action. NMFS
will
[[Page 34751]]
manage salmon fishing in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area using best available
science to achieve OY and prevent overfishing on all Cook Inlet salmon
stocks. The State will continue to manage salmon fishing within State
waters.
NMFS found the State has prioritized protecting stocks with the
lowest abundance in regulating salmon fishing in Cook Inlet. As
described in sections 3.1, 4.5, and 4.6 of the Analysis, salmon
abundance is cyclical, and the harvests of different user groups have
both increased and decreased at different times. To the extent the
comment is criticizing allocation decisions made by the BOF (i.e.,
which user group(s) are allowed to harvest the available excess yield
of salmon), that is outside the scope of this action.
Comment 89: Our fisheries statewide are in peril because of multi-
jurisdictional authority and allocations to specific user groups based
on political agendas. Trawling back and forth across the mouth to Cook
Inlet occurred only weeks prior to our State-regulated 2023 commercial
salmon season being shut down due to a prediction of a shortage of what
turned out to be less than 1,500 Chinook salmon. This was under both
jurisdictions. So who should manage the anadromous fishery? The owner
of the resource.
Response: NMFS, with guidance from the Council, has jurisdiction
over salmon fishing in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area. This action addresses
directed fishing for salmon in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area. Comments
regarding salmon bycatch in trawl fisheries are outside of the scope of
this action.
Comment 90: The State should no longer manage the fishery as they
have failed to do so in a way that supports Alaskan interests.
Furthermore, there is no longer a fishery to manage in the EEZ, as the
president has taken away the ability of Alaskans to utilize Alaska's
natural resources, such as oil and gas.
Response: Under this rule, NMFS, not the State of Alaska, will
manage all salmon fishing (commercial and recreational) in the Cook
Inlet EEZ. Comments regarding executive actions that affect other
natural resources in Alaska are outside the scope of this action.
Comment 91: Alaskans who are licensed business owners and fishing
in the EEZ should be managing their resources. People in Washington DC
or Washington State are the reason many of our wild resources are being
depleted; they should not have a say in managing Alaska fisheries.
Response: The Magnuson-Stevens Act governs the management of the
fisheries in the EEZ. Section 2 of the Magnuson-Stevens Act provides
that the purpose of the Act is to exercise sovereign rights for the
purpose of exploring, exploiting, conserving, and managing all fish
within the exclusive economic zone. It further provides that, with
respect to management within the EEZ adjacent to Alaska waters, the
Council is responsible for developing and recommending fishery
management plans and regulations that implement those plans for
management. Comments from all stakeholders and members of the public
were considered in the development of amendment 16 and will be
considered every year in the annual management processes for
establishing salmon harvest specifications for the Cook Inlet EEZ Area.
Comment 92: Alaska's permanent fund dividend is declining and is
being used to build commercial vessel docks. This litigation, which
favors one fishing group over others, is costing millions of dollars.
Commercial fishing is not hurting anyone. Protecting recreational
fishing is not needed.
Response: Comments on the Alaska permanent fund, State government
revenues, and dock construction are outside of the scope of this
action. Comments about the cost of litigation are outside the scope of
this action. This action will implement conservation and management
measures for commercial drift gillnet and recreational fishing solely
within the Cook Inlet EEZ Area.
Other
Comment 93: The proposed rule is incomplete without a complete
overview of how offshore wind turbines, which are responsible for the
increase in deaths of whales, dolphins, and other cetaceans off the
East Coast, will be handled off Alaska.
Response: This action does not include elements related to offshore
wind energy. Therefore, this comment is outside of the scope of this
action.
Comment 94: Protect the hooligan (eulachon); that fishery needs
review.
Response: This comment is outside the scope of this action.
Comment 95: In the Cook Inlet area, salmon spawning and rearing
occurs on Federal lands and waters under the Department of the
Interior. The Department of the Interior should be consulted and
included in the development of this action.
Response: The United States Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS), an
agency within the Department of the Interior, has a representative on
the Council and is aware of the issue. The USFWS did not provide
comments to NMFS during the comment period on amendment 16 or the
proposed rule. In this action, NMFS implements federal management over
commercial and recreational fishing in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area
consistent with NMFS's authorities under the Magnuson-Stevens Act. The
authorities of other agencies, including the Department of the Interior
and USFWS, over lands and waters outside of the EEZ are outside the
scope of this action.
Classification
The NMFS Assistant Administrator (AA) has determined that this
action is consistent with the Salmon FMP, the National Standards, other
provisions of the Magnuson-Stevens Act, and other applicable law.
NMFS prepared an environmental assessment (EA) for amendment 16 and
the AA concluded that there will be no significant impact on the human
environment as a result of this rule. This action is expected to
maintain Cook Inlet EEZ salmon harvests at or near existing levels. The
same or similar vessels will continue to use the same or similar
fishing gear. As a result, no significant environmental impacts are
anticipated. Copies of the EA and Finding of No Significant Impact are
available from the NMFS (see ADDRESSES).
This final rule has been determined to be not significant for the
purposes of Executive Order 12866.
A Regulatory Impact Review was prepared to assess costs and
benefits of available regulatory alternatives. A copy of this analysis
is available from NMFS (see ADDRESSES). NMFS approved amendment 16 and
these regulations based on those measures that maximize net benefits to
the Nation when considering the viable management alternatives.
Specific aspects of the economic analysis are discussed below in the
Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (FRFA) section.
Small Entity Compliance Guide
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 shall publish
one or more guides to assist small entities in complying with the rule,
and shall designate such publications as ``small entity compliance
guides.'' Copies of the proposed rule, this final rule, and the small
entity compliance guide are available on the Alaska Region's website
at: https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/region/alaska.
[[Page 34752]]
Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
NMFS prepared a FRFA that incorporates the Initial Regulatory
Flexibility Analysis (IRFA) and a summary of the analyses completed to
support this final rule.
Section 604 of the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) requires that,
when an agency promulgates a final rule under section 553 of title 5 of
the U.S. Code (5 U.S.C. 553), after being required by that section or
any other law to publish a general notice of final rulemaking, the
agency shall prepare a FRFA (5 U.S.C. 604). Section 604 describes the
required contents of a FRFA: (1) A statement of the need for and
objectives of the rule; (2) a statement of the significant issues
raised by the public comments in response to the IRFA, a statement of
the assessment of the agency of such issues, and a statement of any
changes made to the proposed rule as a result of such comments; (3) the
response of the agency to any comments filed by the Chief Counsel for
Advocacy of the Small Business Administration (SBA) in response to the
proposed rule, and a detailed statement of any change made to the
proposed rule in the final rule as a result of the comments; (4) a
description of and an estimate of the number of small entities to which
the rule will apply or an explanation of why no such estimate is
available; (5) a description of the projected reporting, recordkeeping,
and other compliance requirements of the rule, including an estimate of
the classes of small entities that will be subject to the requirement
and the type of professional skills necessary for preparation of the
report or record; and (6) a description of the steps the agency has
taken to minimize the significant economic impact on small entities
consistent with the stated objectives of applicable statutes including
a statement of the factual, policy, and legal reasons for selecting the
alternative adopted and why each one of the other significant
alternatives to the rule considered by the agency which affect the
impact on small entities was rejected.
A description of this final rule and the need for and objectives of
this rule are contained in the preamble to the proposed rule and final
rule and are not repeated here.
Public and Chief Counsel for Advocacy Comments on the IRFA
An IRFA was prepared in the Classification section of the preamble
to the proposed rule. The Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the SBA did not
file any comments on the proposed rule. NMFS received no comments
specifically on the IRFA. No comments provided information that refuted
the conclusions presented in the IRFA.
Number and Description of Small Entities Regulated by This Final Action
This final rule will directly regulate commercial salmon fishing
vessels that operate in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area, charter guides and
charter businesses fishing for salmon in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area, and
entities receiving deliveries of salmon harvested in the Cook Inlet EEZ
Area.
For RFA purposes only, NMFS has established small business size
standards for businesses, including their affiliates, whose primary
industries are commercial fishing, charter fishing, seafood processing,
and seafood buying (see 50 CFR 200.2). A business primarily engaged in
commercial fishing (NAICS code 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 has combined annual
receipts not in excess of $11 million for all its affiliated operations
worldwide. For charter fishing vessels (NAICS code 713990), this
threshold is combined annual receipts not in excess of $9 million. For
shoreside processors (NAICS code 311710), the small business size is
defined in terms of number of employees, with the threshold set at not
greater than 750 employees. For entities that purchase seafood but do
not process it (NAICS code 424460), the small business threshold is not
greater than 100 employees.
From 2019 to 2021, there was an average of 567 S03H permits in
circulation, with an average of 361 active permit holders, all of which
are considered small entities based on the 11 million dollar threshold.
Because NMFS expects the State to maintain current requirements for a
commercial salmon fishing vessels landing any salmon in upper Cook
Inlet to hold a CFEC S03H permit, NMFS does not expect participation
from non-S03H permit holders in the federally managed salmon fishery in
the Cook Inlet EEZ Area. Therefore, the number of S03H permit holders
represents the maximum number of directly regulated entities for the
commercial salmon fishery in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area. From 2019 to
2021, there was an average of 11 shoreside processors and 6 direct
marketers, all of which are considered small entities based on the 750
employee threshold. From 2019 to 2021, there was an average of 4
catcher-sellers, all of which are considered small entities based on
the 100 employee threshold. From 2019 to 2021, there was an average of
58 charter guides that fished for salmon at least once in the Cook
Inlet EEZ Area, all of which are considered small entities based on the
9 million dollar threshold. Additional detail is included in sections
4.5 and 4.9 in the Analysis prepared for this action (see ADDRESSES).
Description of Significant Alternatives That Minimize Adverse Impacts
on Small Entities
NMFS considered, but did not select three other alternatives. The
alternatives, and their impacts to small entities, are described below.
Alternative 1 would take no action and would maintain existing
management measures and conditions in the fishery within recently
observed ranges, resulting in no change to impacts on small entities.
This is not a viable alternative because it would be inconsistent with
the Ninth Circuit's ruling that the Cook Inlet EEZ must be included
within the Salmon FMP and managed according to the Magnuson-Stevens
Act.
Alternative 2 would delegate management to the State. If fully
implemented, Alternative 2 would maintain many existing conditions
within the fishery. Fishery participants would have the added burdens
of obtaining a SFFP, maintaining a Federal fishing logbook, and
monitoring their fishing position with respect to EEZ and State waters
as described in sections 2.4.8 and 4.7.2.2 of the Analysis. However,
section 306(a)(3)(B) of the Magnuson-Stevens Act provides that NMFS
cannot delegate management to the State without a three-quarter
majority vote by the Council, which did not occur. Therefore,
Alternative 2 cannot be implemented and is not a viable alternative.
Alternative 4 would close the Cook Inlet EEZ but not impose any
additional direct regulatory costs on participants and would allow
directly regulated entities to possibly recoup lost EEZ harvest inside
State waters. However, the District Court ruled that Alternative 4 was
contrary to law. Therefore, Alternative 4 is not a viable alternative.
This action (Alternative 3) will result in a Cook Inlet EEZ salmon
fishery managed directly by NMFS and the Council. Within Alternative 3,
there were numerous sub-options for management measures. As described
below, NMFS worked to select specific management measures that
minimized cost and burden on participants to the extent practicable.
This action will increase direct costs and burdens to
[[Page 34753]]
commercial salmon fishing vessels that operate in the Cook Inlet EEZ
Area by requiring an SFFP, associated requirements to install and
operate a VMS, and maintaining a Federal logbook as described in
sections 2.5.6 and 4.7.2.2 of the Analysis. This action also requires
that TACs be set before each fishing season. The TAC will be set to
account for management uncertainty and reduce the risk of overfishing
without the benefit of inseason harvest data, but overall catch in the
EEZ is likely to remain near existing levels with a possibility for
slight increases from the status quo (particularly as Federal managers
collect data specific to the EEZ and develop expertise managing the
fishery). As is possible under the status quo, salmon harvest in the
EEZ could be reduced or prohibited in years when salmon returns are not
predicted to result in a harvestable surplus, with an appropriate
buffer to account for scientific and management uncertainty.
Processors receiving deliveries of salmon commercially harvested in
the Cook Inlet EEZ Area are required to obtain an SFPP. Entities
receiving deliveries of salmon commercially harvested in the Cook Inlet
EEZ but not processing the fish are required to obtain an RSRP. All of
these permits are available at no cost from NMFS. However, entities
with these permits are required to use eLandings and report landings
with all associated information by noon of the day following the
completion of each delivery, which increases direct costs and burden.
While these measures do increase costs to commercial fishery sector
participants, all of these elements are necessary to manage the fishery
and prevent overfishing. Specific consideration was given in their
development to minimize the burden on participants to the extent
practicable while also providing required information to Federal
fishery managers in a timely manner. More costly means of monitoring
catch--including observers and electronic monitoring--were considered
but rejected by NMFS. All entities that may be directly regulated by
this action could also choose to continue participating in only the
State waters fisheries to avoid being subject to these Federal
requirements.
Charter fishing vessels do not have any additional Federal
recordkeeping, reporting, or monitoring requirements but are subject to
Federal bag, possession, and gear regulations. These measures are the
same as existing State requirements and do not add additional burden.
Based upon the best scientific information available, there are no
significant alternatives to the action that have the potential to
comply with applicable court rulings, accomplish the stated objectives
of the Magnuson-Stevens Act and any other statutes, and minimize any
significant adverse economic impact of the action on small entities
while preventing overfishing. After a public process, NMFS concluded
that of the viable management options, Alternative 3, amendment 16 and
this final rule, best accomplish the stated objectives articulated in
the preamble for this action and in applicable statutes, and minimizes,
to the extent practicable, adverse economic impacts on directly
regulated small entities.
Recordkeeping, Reporting, and Other Compliance Requirements
This action implements new recordkeeping, reporting, and compliance
requirements. These requirements are necessary for the management and
monitoring of the Cook Inlet EEZ Area salmon fishery.
All Cook Inlet EEZ Area salmon fishery participants using drift
gillnet gear are required to provide additional information to NMFS for
management purposes. As in other North Pacific fisheries, processors
provide catch recording data to managers to monitor harvest. Processors
are required to record deliveries and processing activities to aid in
fishery administration.
To participate in the fishery, persons are required to complete
application forms, reporting requirements, and monitoring requirements.
These requirements impose costs on small entities in gathering the
required information and completing the information collections.
NMFS has estimated the costs of complying with the requirements
based on information such as the burden hours per response, number of
responses per year, and wage rate estimates from industry or the Bureau
of Labor Statistics. Persons are required to complete many of the
requirements prior to fishing, such as obtaining permits. Persons are
required to complete some requirements every year, such as the SFPP and
RSRP applications. Other requirements are more periodic, such as the
SFFP application, which must be submitted every 3 years. The impacts of
these changes are described in more detail in sections 2.5.6 and 4.7.2
of the Analysis prepared for this action (see ADDRESSES).
Vessels commercially fishing for salmon in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area
are required to obtain an SFFP, complete a Federal fishing logbook, and
install and maintain an operational VMS. NMFS issues SFFPs at no cost.
Although VMS costs may be significant for some participants, there may
be funds available from NMFS for reimbursement of the purchase costs.
Information on the VMS reimbursement program is contained in the small
entity compliance guide published with this Final Rule. The vessel will
also be required to mark buoys at each end of their drift gillnet with
their SFFP number. While commercially fishing for salmon in the Cook
Inlet EEZ Area, participants must remain within Federal waters and
cannot also fish in State waters on the same calendar day or conduct
any other types of fishing while in Federal waters.
Processors and other entities receiving landings of commercially
caught Cook Inlet salmon from the Cook Inlet EEZ Area are required to
obtain an SFPP or an RSRP, and report landings through eLandings by
noon of the day following completion of the delivery. NMFS issues SFPPs
and RSRPs at no cost.
For recreational salmon fishing, no additional Federal
recordkeeping and reporting requirements are established. The State's
existing recordkeeping and reporting requirements are expected to
provide the information needed to manage recreational fishing in the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area and satisfy Magnuson-Stevens Act requirements given
the small scale and very limited harvest by the recreational sector.
Information collected by the State includes creel sampling, the ADF&G's
Statewide Harvest Survey, harvest records for annual limits, and the
Saltwater Guide Logbooks.
Paperwork Reduction Act
This final rule contains collection-of-information requirements
subject to review and approval by the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) under the Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA). This final rule adds a
new collection of information for the Cook Inlet EEZ salmon fishery
under new OMB control number 0648-0818 and revises and extends for 3
years existing collection-of-information requirements for OMB Control
Number 0648-0445 (NMFS Alaska Region VMS Program). The public reporting
burden estimates provided below for these collections of information
include the time for reviewing instructions, searching existing data
sources, gathering and maintaining the data needed, and completing and
reviewing the collection of information.
[[Page 34754]]
OMB Control Number 0648-0818
A new collection of information is created for reporting,
recordkeeping, and monitoring requirements implemented by this action
that are necessary to federally manage the Cook Inlet EEZ Area salmon
fishery. This new collection contains the applications and processes
used by harvesters, processors, and other entities receiving deliveries
of Cook Inlet EEZ Area salmon to apply for and manage their permits;
provide catch, landings, and processing data; and mark drift gillnet
buoys. The data are used to ensure that the fishery participants adhere
to harvesting, processing, and other requirements for the Cook Inlet
EEZ Area salmon fishery.
The public reporting burden per individual response is estimated to
average 15 minutes for the SFFP application, 25 minutes for the SFPP
application, 20 minutes for the RSRP application, 15 minutes to
register for eLandings, 10 minutes for landing reports, 15 minutes for
the daily fishing logbook, and 30 minutes to mark drift gillnet buoys.
OMB Control Number 0648-0445
NMFS proposes to revise and extend by 3 years the existing
requirements for OMB Control Number 0648-0445. This collection contains
the VMS requirements for the federally managed groundfish and crab
fisheries off Alaska. This collection is revised because this action
requires vessels commercially fishing for salmon in the Cook Inlet EEZ
Area to install and maintain an operational VMS. The public reporting
burden per individual response is estimated to average 6 hours for
installation of a VMS unit, 4 hours for VMS maintenance, and 2 hours
for VMS failure troubleshooting. VMS transmissions are not assigned a
reporting burden because the transmissions are automatic.
Public Comments
We invite the general public and other Federal agencies to comment
on proposed and continuing information collections, which helps us
assess the impact of our information collection requirements and
minimize the public's reporting burden. Written comments and
recommendations for these information collections should be submitted
on the following website: https://www.reginfo.gov/public/do/PRAMain.
Find the particular information collection by using the search function
and entering either the title of the collection or the OMB Control
Number.
Notwithstanding any other provisions of the law, no person is
required to respond 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.
Tribal Summary Impact Statement
NMFS's responsibility to engage in tribal consultations on Federal
policies with tribal implications is outlined in Executive Order (E.O.)
13175, Consultation and Coordination with Indian Tribal Governments
(November 6, 2000), the Executive Memorandum (April 29, 1994), the
American Indian and Alaska Native Policy of the U.S. Department of
Commerce (March 30, 1995), the Department of Commerce Tribal
Consultation and Coordination Policy (78 FR 33331, June 4, 2013),
Presidential Memorandum (Tribal Consultation and Strengthening Nation-
to-Nation Relationships) (86 FR 7491, January 29, 2021), and the
updated NOAA Policy on Government-to-Government Consultations with
Federally Recognized Indian Tribes and Alaska Native Corporations (July
27, 2023). Congress required federal agencies to consult with Alaska
Native corporations on the same basis as federally recognized Indian
tribes under E.O. 13175 (Pub. L. 108-199, 118 Stat. 452, as amended by
Pub. L. 108-447, 118 Stat. 3267). NOAA interprets the term ``Alaska
Native corporations'' in this requirement to mean ``Native
corporation[s]'' as that term is defined under the Alaska Native Claims
Settlement Act (ANCSA) of 1971 (43 U.S.C. 1602).
Section 5(b)(2)(B) of E.O. 13175 requires a ``Tribal Summary Impact
Statement'' for any regulation that has tribal implications, imposes
substantial direct compliance costs on Native Tribal governments, and
is not required by statute. Although not required by section 5(b)(2)(B)
of E.O. 13175, the following is a tribal summary impact statement for
this final rule that is consistent with E.O. 13175 and summarizes and
responds to issues raised during all tribal consultations on Amendment
16 and the proposed rule.
Under E.O. 13175 and agency policies, NMFS notified all potentially
impacted federally recognized Tribal governments in Alaska and Alaska
Native Corporations and provided the opportunity to comment and respond
to the agency's invitation for tribal consultation on the action.
A Description of the Extent of NMFS's Prior Consultation With Tribal
Officials
On February 17, 2023, NMFS emailed tribal consultation invitation
letters to Alaska Native Tribes, Alaska Native Corporations, and Alaska
Native Organizations (``Alaska Native representatives''). The letter
notified Alaska Native representatives that the management of salmon
fisheries in the Federal (EEZ) marine waters of upper Cook Inlet would
be presented to the Council for review, with an invitation to
participate in the process and contribute to fishery decisions at the
April 2023 meeting. NMFS invited Alaska Native representatives to
consult with and provide comments to the agency directly via meeting or
by telephone.
NMFS received one response from the Chickaloon Village Traditional
Council (CVTC) to consult on management of salmon fisheries in the
Federal (EEZ) waters of Cook Inlet. The purpose was to complete
consultation between CVTC and NMFS Alaska Region per the agency's
government-to-government relationship regarding the management of
salmon fisheries in the EEZ waters of Cook Inlet before scheduled final
action at the April 2023 Council meeting to hear and better understand
the CVTC's perspectives regarding tribal impacts. NMFS also shared
information about the action and its potential implementation and
answered questions during the consultation.
NMFS was invited by Alaska Native representatives to speak on this
action at the Tikahtnu Forum Meeting on February 24, 2023, the
Kenaitze/Salamatof Hunting Fishing and Gathering Commission Meeting on
March 7, 2023, and the Cook Inlet Fishers Group on March 30, 2023, to
listen to tribal perspectives, provide information and answer questions
on the action.
On April 21, 2023, NMFS sent an announcement to Alaska Native
representatives stating the agency was under a court order to implement
an amendment to the Salmon FMP by May 1, 2024 to federally manage the
salmon fisheries that occur in the Cook Inlet EEZ, consistent with
Magnuson-Stevens Act requirements. NMFS provided a second invitation
for tribal consultation and engagement opportunities on this issue. Two
Alaska Native tribes responded to the invitation to consult on
amendment 16. NMFS held tribal consultation on this action with the
Salamatof Tribe on May 22, 2023, and with the Chickaloon Native Village
(CNV) on June 20, 2023. NMFS shared information regarding Federal
salmon management during the meeting but
[[Page 34755]]
primarily wanted to hear and better understand the Salamatof Tribe's
and CNV's perspectives regarding tribal impacts. Also, on June 22,
2023, NMFS received a letter from the Ninilchik Traditional Council
(NTC). NTC thanked NMFS for the invitation to consult and for engaging
with tribes on the action but declined NMFS's invitation to consult
based on lack of agency engagement in the past, lack of adequate time,
and because of NTC's concern that the action did not incorporate tribal
input in studies and impact statements related to traditional
ecological knowledge.
On April 26, 2023, NMFS notified Alaska Native representatives that
NMFS would hold a public hearing to receive input on an amendment to
the Salmon FMP to establish Federal management for salmon fishing in
the Federal waters of upper Cook Inlet. Alaska Native representatives
were given another opportunity to provide verbal comments at the public
hearing on May 18, 2023 or written comments by May 25, 2023 during the
public comment process.
On October 18, 2023, NMFS solicited public comment--including
comments from Alaska Native representatives--on the proposed rule that
would implement Federal management of commercial and recreational
salmon fishing in the Cook Inlet EEZ (88 FR 72314, October 19, 2023).
NMFS invited comment from Alaska Native representatives on the action
through December 18, 2023. Additionally, on October 20, 2023, NMFS
provided a response letter to the NTC thanking them for their concerns
and encouraging the NTC to reconsider engagement with NMFS on this
action.
On November 16, 2023, NMFS received a response from the Cook Inlet
Fishers Group asking for tribal engagement. On December 5, 2023, NMFS
met with tribal representatives from the Cook Inlet Tribal Fishers
Group, which included the Knik Tribal Council, CVTC, and NTC. The
purpose of this meeting was to engage with interested Cook Inlet Tribes
regarding Federal management of salmon fisheries in the Cook Inlet EEZ.
NMFS shared information about the action and its potential
implementation during the meeting but primarily wanted to hear and
better understand the Cook Inlet Tribes' perspectives regarding tribal
impacts. At the close of the meeting, participants agreed that a follow
up tribal engagement meeting on this action would be pertinent in
January 2024.
At the close of the amendment 16 public comment period on December
18, 2023, NMFS received written comments from NTC, Salamatof Tribe,
CVTC, and Kenaitze Tribe. The Salamatof Tribe requested separate
government-to-government engagement while the remaining Cook Inlet
tribes requested joint government-to-government consultation. On
January 8, 2024, NMFS met with the Salamatof Tribe to share a status
update on amendment 16 as well as hear and better understand their
perspectives on the need for an indigenous subsistence fishery set-
aside. On January 9, 2024, NMFS met with 11 Alaska Native
representatives, including the NVC, CVTC, Seldovia Village Tribe, NTC,
Knik Tribe, Native Village of Eklutna, Kenaitze Tribe, Chugach Regional
Resource Commission, Ninilchik Native Association, Tyonek Native
Corporation, and the Salamatof Tribe. NMFS listened to tribal concerns
and perspectives regarding the new idea for an indigenous subsistence
fishery set-aside and provided a status update on the amendment 16
process.
After the close of the amendment 16 public comment period, NMFS
also received three written tribal comments from the Chugach Regional
Resource Commission representing the Nanwalek Indian Reorganization Act
Council and Port Graham Village Council, Tyonek Conservation District,
and Native Village of Eklutna. The Chugach Regional Resource Commission
requested tribal consultation with Nanwalek IRA Council and Port Graham
Village Council. The Tyonek Conservation District expressed significant
interest in participating in natural resource management decisions that
could affect Cook Inlet. The Native Village of Eklutna requested to
further develop traditional stewardship, through a degree of co-
management with NMFS and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS), of
culturally important trust salmon stocks returning to traditional
areas.
Many tribal members requested an indigenous subsistence fishery
set-aside to be incorporated into amendment 16 and this final rule.
Such a modification could not have been made to amendment 16 without
publishing a new proposed rule, which was not possible given the
impending court deadline for implementation of a final rule. Creating
an indigenous subsistence fishery set-aside within the Cook Inlet EEZ
would require further analysis and consideration by NMFS and the
Council that are outside of the original scope and purpose of this
action. As noted in response the Comment 79, FMPs are adaptive and the
Council may recommend amending the Salmon FMP in the future to
incorporate feedback from tribes in upcoming consultations that NMFS
has committed to honoring.
A Summary of the Nature of Tribal Concerns
Comments from Alaska Native representatives received prior to the
close of the public comment period are summarized in the Comments and
Responses section of this final rule. NMFS also received three written
comments from Alaska Native representatives after the public comment
period closed. Tribal comments received after the public comment period
are included in the summary below.
Cook Inlet tribes expressed a significant interest in collaborating
with NMFS on this action. The primary question received from Alaska
Native representatives during tribal outreach and engagement on
amendment 16 was how this action would impact tribal subsistence
fishing. Based on the above tribal engagements, consultations, and
public comments, the nature of tribal concerns fell into four main
categories: (1) impacts to traditional lands/Federal trust
responsibility; (2) indigenous subsistence fishery set-aside; (3)
salmon status/fishery management; and (4) fish & habitat enhancement.
The nature of tribal concerns are summarized for each of these
categories below.
Impacts To Traditional Lands/Federal Trust Responsibility
All Cook Inlet tribes expressed that this action would affect their
traditional ancestral territories, customary areas of use, and vital
way of life and would impact environmental and cultural resources that
are imperative to the health, safety, and welfare of tribal citizens.
Cook Inlet tribes stated that NMFS must partner with them to fulfill
the Federal trust responsibility and international obligations for
tribal rights and food security, including access to traditional
resources such as salmon. Cook Inlet tribes stated that Federal,
territorial, and State regulations have dramatically reduced the
fishing opportunities for Alaska Native tribal citizens while globally
significant markets have been developed to sell Alaskan fish, which
have eroded indigenous rights and have had a huge impact on Alaska
Native peoples.
Indigenous Subsistence Fishery Set-Aside
Cook Inlet tribes expressed concerns that less weight was given to
tribal comments relative to the commercial fishing industry and that
they do not have a voice in the government process. Cook Inlet tribes
asked NMFS to be
[[Page 34756]]
mindful of this power imbalance and that the action impacts tribal
rights. Personal use, educational fishery permits, and a few (select)
subsistence permits are how tribal citizens currently harvest fish in
Cook Inlet. Cook Inlet tribes believe that Federal management of salmon
in the Cook Inlet EEZ provides a long overdue opportunity for an
indigenous subsistence fishery (e.g., tribal fishery set-aside) in the
Cook Inlet EEZ, ahead of commercial and recreational needs, and would
like to work with NMFS to develop an indigenous set-aside for salmon
harvest that has priority over other uses.
Salmon Status/Fishery Management
One Cook Inlet tribe felt overescapement was unsustainable for the
available habitat. Another tribe had significant concerns about the EEZ
fishing and wanted to maintain the conservation corridor in Cook Inlet.
Other tribes highlighted that there are numerous and increasing threats
to Cook Inlet salmon populations that decrease salmon runs originating
from Cook Inlet. Several Cook Inlet tribes support Federal management
of salmon in the Cook Inlet EEZ. Tribes generally emphasized that NMFS
must do more to achieve a precautionary fishery management approach
based on threats to Cook Inlet salmon populations. Tribes also stated
that by merely focusing on the commercial and recreational fishing that
was the subject of the District Court's 2022 order, NMFS ignores
subsistence needs, which are also included in the Magnuson-Stevens Act.
With subsistence use representing only one tenth of one percent of Cook
Inlet harvest, Cook Inlet tribes stated a subsistence fishery would not
threaten commercial or recreational fisheries, have a very small effect
on the salmon populations, and have a notably beneficial impact on
tribal cultural perpetuation, citizen health, and wellbeing. Cook Inlet
tribes requested that Federal fishery management be precautionary with
TACs based on timely in-season escapements and not historical harvest
averages and pre-season forecasts. Tribal recommendations included
funding better escapement data collection and genetic analysis of EEZ-
harvested salmon, development of a salmon database with in-season
genetic data, development of test fisheries, a fishery period from July
16 to August 15, allowing only one 12-hour fishing period per week, and
maintaining the current drift gillnet length of 150 fathoms (274.32 m).
Lastly, tribes recommend creating a tribal fishing opportunity modeled
after the Alaska Subsistence Halibut Program and providing proxy
fishing opportunities developed collectively with Tribal governments to
ensure tribal elders and other tribal citizens who are physically
unable to harvest fish in the Cook Inlet EEZ can access salmon.
Fish & Habitat Enhancement
All Cook Inlet tribes that commented want to work towards
increasing salmon runs and have been taking actions (e.g., fish and
habitat enhancement) over the past 50 years to address Alaska Native
community concerns by reducing invasive species; replacing fish passage
barriers in their district; restoring over 45 miles (72.42 km) of
upstream salmon habitat; leading regional efforts for the prevention,
early detection, and treatment of aquatic invasive plants; collecting
baseline stream data; and surveying streams for inclusion in the State
of Alaska Anadromous Waters Catalog for protection. Cook Inlet tribes
have also performed research to advise habitat assessments and salmon
restoration planning.
In summary, tribal concerns were focused on providing relief to
Alaska Native salmon fishing families and communities as well as
continued communication in the NMFS tribal engagement and consultation
process as it relates to fishery resource access that sustains the
tribal way of life. Detailed meeting summaries of the tribal concerns
listed above are available on the NMFS Alaska Region website (see
ADDRESSES).
NMFS's Position Supporting the Need To Issue the Regulation
This final rule is needed to implement Federal fisheries management
of the Cook Inlet EEZ. NMFS's position is stated in the preamble to the
proposed rule and this final rule, and in the comments and responses
section.
Statement of the Extent to Which the Concerns of Tribal Officials Have
Been Met
From the perspective of a number of Cook Inlet tribes, the primary
concern was over how this fishery would impact Alaska Native
subsistence fishing and, secondly, if the action would include a tribal
subsistence set-aside. The Analysis prepared for this action provides
information on the current subsistence fisheries in Cook Inlet and
indicates that there has not been a subsistence fishery in the EEZ
during the time period for which NMFS has data, though tribes have
stated that they did historically fish in EEZ waters. Throughout
litigation and for much of the development of amendment 16, a tribal
subsistence fishery did not come up as a management proposal. This
final rule, developed in response to court decisions on a strict
timeline, therefore authorizes only commercial drift gillnet and
recreational fishing in the EEZ. To address tribal concerns that
amendment 16 did not include an indigenous subsistence set-aside, NMFS
has committed to honoring the Cook Inlet tribal consultation requests
received in 2024 and welcomes further engagement and discussion.
NMFS and the Council have made significant efforts in conducting
direct outreach and engagement, and for NMFS in conducting tribal
consultations, with Alaska Native representatives, which include Alaska
Native tribes, Alaska Native corporations, and Native organizations and
communities over the last few years. NMFS made significant efforts to
involve Alaska Native representatives in the development of this
action. In conjunction with Council outreach, NMFS provided information
to Alaska Native representatives that were interested in engaging at
each step in the process and consulted with interested Alaska Native
representatives, as described above.
NMFS considered all input from these consultations and engagements,
consistent with E.O. 13175 and the agency's tribal consultation
obligations before reaching a final decision on this action. In
addition, NMFS committed to honoring the Cook Inlet tribal consultation
and information requests to discuss the possibility of a tribal
subsistence fishery in the Cook Inlet EEZ.
NMFS acknowledges the long-standing challenges that Alaska Native
representatives have had communicating with the agency and appreciates
the tribes' commitment to communicating needed improvements to the
consultation process. NMFS has taken several actions over the last
year, including building staff capacity and hosting listening sessions,
and intends to continue to improve tribal consultation.
List of Subjects
15 CFR Part 902
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
50 CFR Part 600
Administrative practice and procedure, Confidential business
information, Fish, Fisheries, Fishing, Fishing vessels, Foreign
relations, Intergovernmental relations, Penalties,
[[Page 34757]]
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Statistics.
50 CFR Part 679
Alaska, Fisheries, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
Dated: April 18, 2024.
Samuel D. Rauch III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for Regulatory Programs, National Marine
Fisheries Service.
For the reasons set out in the preamble, NMFS amends 15 CFR part
902 and 50 CFR parts 600 and 679 as follows:
TITLE 15--COMMERCE AND FOREIGN TRADE
PART 902--NOAA INFORMATION COLLECTION REQUIREMENTS UNDER THE
PAPERWORK REDUCTION ACT: OMB COLLECTION NUMBERS
0
1. The authority citation for 15 CFR part 902 continues to read as
follows:
Authority: 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.
0
2. Amend Sec. 902.1, in the table in paragraph (b), by adding in
numerical order entries for ``679.114'', ``679.115'',
``679.117(b)(1)(xiv)'', and ``679.118(f)(2)'' to read as follows:
Sec. 902.1 OMB control numbers assigned pursuant to the Paperwork
Reduction Act.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Current OMB
control No.
CFR part or section where the information collection (all numbers
requirement is located begin with
0648-)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * *
50 CFR ..............
* * * * *
679.114................................................. -0818
679.115................................................. -0818
679.117(b)(1)(xiv)...................................... -0445
679.118(f)(2)........................................... -0818
* * * * *
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * *
TITLE 50--WILDLIFE AND FISHERIES
PART 600--MAGNUSON-STEVENS ACT PROVISIONS
0
3. The authority citation for part 600 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 561 and 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
0
4. Amend Sec. 600.725, in the table in paragraph (v), under the
heading ``VII. North Pacific Fishery Management Council'' by revising
entry ``8'' to read as follows:
Sec. 600.725 General prohibitions.
* * * * *
(v) * * *
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Fishery Authorized gear types
------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * * * *
VII. North Pacific Fishery Management Council
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * * * *
8. Alaska Salmon Fishery (FMP): ...............................
A. East Area....................... A. Hook and line.
B. Cook Inlet EEZ Area............. B. Drift gillnet, handline, rod
and reel, hook and line.
* * * * * * *
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * *
PART 679--FISHERIES OF THE EXCLUSIVE ECONOMIC ZONE OFF ALASKA
0
5. The authority citation for part 679 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 773 et seq., 1801 et seq., 3631 et seq.;
Pub. L. 108-447; Pub. L. 111-281.
0
6. Amend Sec. 679.1 by revising paragraph (i)(1) to read as follows:
Sec. 679.1 Purpose and scope.
* * * * *
(i) * * *
(1) Regulations in this part govern commercial fishing for salmon
by fishing vessels of the United States in the West Area and commercial
and recreational fishing for salmon in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area of the
Salmon Management Area.
* * * * *
0
7. Amend Sec. 679.2 by:
0
a. Adding, in alphabetical order, the definition for ``Daily bag
limit'';
0
b. Revising the definition of ``Federally permitted vessel,''
0
c. Adding paragraph (7) to the definition of ``Fishing trip'';
0
d. Adding, in alphabetical order, the definitions for ``Possession
limit'' and ``Registered Salmon Receiver'';
0
e. Revising the definition of ``Salmon Management Area''; and
0
f. Adding, in alphabetical order, the definitions for ``Salmon
shoreside processor'' and ``Waters of Cook Inlet.''
The additions and revision read as follows:
Sec. 679.2 Definitions.
* * * * *
Daily bag limit means the maximum number of salmon a person may
retain in any calendar day from recreational fishing in the Cook Inlet
EEZ Area.
* * * * *
Federally permitted vessel means a vessel that is named on a
Federal fisheries permit issued pursuant to Sec. 679.4(b), a Salmon
Federal Fisheries Permit issued pursuant to Sec. 679.114(b), or a
Federal crab vessel permit issued pursuant to Sec. 680.4(k) of this
chapter. Federally permitted vessels must conform to regulatory
requirements for purposes of fishing restrictions in habitat
conservation areas, habitat conservation zones, habitat protection
areas, and the Modified Gear Trawl Zone; for purposes of anchoring
prohibitions in habitat protection areas; for purposes of requirements
for the BS and GOA nonpelagic trawl fishery pursuant to Sec. Sec.
679.7(b)(9) and (c)(5), and 679.24(f); and for purposes of VMS
requirements.
* * * * *
Fishing trip means:
* * * * *
(7) For purposes of subpart J of this part, the period beginning
when a vessel
[[Page 34758]]
operator commences commercial fishing for any salmon species in the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area and ending when the vessel operator offloads or
transfers any unprocessed salmon species from that vessel.
* * * * *
Possession limit means the maximum number of unprocessed salmon a
person may possess from recreational fishing in the Cook Inlet EEZ
Area.
* * * * *
Registered Salmon Receiver means a person holding a Registered
Salmon Receiver Permit issued by NMFS.
* * * * *
Salmon Management Area means those waters of the EEZ off Alaska
(see figures 22 and 23 to part 679) under the authority of the Salmon
FMP. The Salmon Management Area is divided into three areas: the East
Area, the West Area, and the Cook Inlet EEZ Area:
(1) The East Area means the area of the EEZ in the Gulf of Alaska
east of the longitude of Cape Suckling (143[deg]53.6' W).
(2) The West Area means the area of the EEZ off Alaska in the
Bering Sea, Chukchi Sea, Beaufort Sea, and the Gulf of Alaska west of
the longitude of Cape Suckling (143[deg]53.6' W), but excludes the Cook
Inlet EEZ Area, Prince William Sound Area, and the Alaska Peninsula
Area. The Prince William Sound Area and the Alaska Peninsula Area are
shown in figure 23 to this part and described as:
(i) The Prince William Sound Area means the EEZ shoreward of a line
that starts at 60[deg]16.8' N and 146[deg]15.24' W and extends
southeast to 59[deg]42.66' N and 144[deg]36.20' W and a line that
starts at 59[deg]43.28' N and 144[deg]31.50' W and extends northeast to
59[deg]56.4' N and 143[deg]53.6' W.
(ii) The Alaska Peninsula Area means the EEZ shoreward of a line at
54[deg]22.5' N from 164[deg]27.1' W to 163[deg]1.2' W and a line at
162[deg]24.05' W from 54[deg]30.1' N to 54[deg]27.75' N.
(3) The Cook Inlet EEZ Area, shown in figure 22 to this part, means
the EEZ of Cook Inlet north of a line at 59[deg]46.15' N.
* * * * *
Salmon shoreside processor means any person or vessel that
receives, purchases, or arranges to purchase, and processes unprocessed
salmon harvested in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area, except a Registered Salmon
Receiver.
* * * * *
Waters of Cook Inlet means, for the purposes of Sec. Sec.
679.28(f)(6)(x) and 679.117(b)(1)(xiv), all Federal waters and Alaska
State waters north of a line from Cape Douglas (58[deg]51.10' N) to
Point Adam (59[deg]15.27' N).
* * * * *
0
8. Amend Sec. 679.3 by revising paragraph (f) to read as follows:
Sec. 679.3 Relation to other laws.
* * * * *
(f) Domestic fishing for salmon. Management of the salmon
commercial troll fishery and recreational fishery in the East Area of
the Salmon Management Area, defined at Sec. 679.2, is delegated to the
State of Alaska. Regulations governing the commercial drift gillnet
salmon fishery and recreational salmon fishery in the Cook Inlet EEZ
Area, defined at Sec. 679.2, are set forth in subpart J of this part.
* * * * *
Sec. 679.7 [Amended]
0
9. Amend Sec. 679.7 by removing and reserving paragraph (h).
0
10. Amend Sec. 679.25 by:
0
a. Revising paragraph (a)(1) introductory text;
0
b. Adding paragraphs (a)(1)(vi) and (a)(2)(vi) through (viii); and
0
c. Revising paragraphs (b) introductory text and (b)(3) and (8).
The revisions and additions read as follows:
Sec. 679.25 Inseason adjustments.
(a) * * *
(1) Types of adjustments. Inseason adjustments for directed fishing
for groundfish, fishing for IFQ or CDQ halibut, or fishing for Cook
Inlet EEZ Area salmon issued by NMFS under this section include:
* * * * *
(vi) Adjustment of TAC for any salmon species or stock and closure
or opening of a season in all or part of the Cook Inlet EEZ Area.
(2) * * *
(vi) Any inseason adjustment taken under paragraph (a)(1)(vi) of
this section must be based on a determination that such adjustments are
necessary to prevent:
(A) Overfishing of any species or stock of fish or shellfish;
(B) Harvest of a TAC for any salmon species or stock that, on the
basis of the best available scientific information, is found by NMFS to
be incorrectly specified; or
(C) Underharvest of a TAC for any salmon species or stock when
catch information indicates that the TAC has not been reached, and
there is not a conservation or management concern for any species or
stock that would also be harvested with additional fishing effort.
(vii) The selection of the appropriate inseason management
adjustments under paragraphs (a)(1)(vi) of this section must be from
the following authorized management measures and must be based on a
determination by the Regional Administrator that the management
adjustment selected is the least restrictive necessary to achieve the
purpose of the adjustment:
(A) Closure of a management area or portion thereof, or gear type,
or season to all salmon fishing; or
(B) Reopening of a management area or season to achieve the TAC for
any of the salmon species or stock without exceeding the TAC of any
other salmon species or stock.
(viii) The adjustment of a TAC for any salmon species or stock
under paragraph (a)(1)(vi) of this section must be based upon a
determination by the Regional Administrator that the adjustment is
based upon the best scientific information available concerning the
biological stock status of the species or stock in question and that
the currently specified TAC is incorrect. Any adjustment to a TAC must
be reasonably related to the change in biological stock status.
(b) Data. Information relevant to one or more of the following
factors may be considered in making the determinations required under
paragraphs (a)(2)(i), (ii), (vi) and (vii) of this section:
* * * * *
(3) Relative distribution and abundance of stocks of groundfish
species, salmon species or stocks, and prohibited species within all or
part of a statistical area;
* * * * *
(8) Any other factor relevant to the conservation and management of
groundfish species, salmon species or stocks, or any incidentally
caught species that are designated as prohibited species or for which a
PSC limit has been specified.
* * * * *
0
11. Amend Sec. 679.28 by adding paragraph (f)(6)(x) to read as
follows:
Sec. 679.28 Equipment and operational requirements
* * * * *
(f) * * *
(6) * * *
(x) You operate a vessel named, or required to be named, on an SFFP
issued under Sec. 679.114 in the waters of Cook Inlet during a
calendar day when directed fishing for salmon using drift gillnet gear
is open in the Cook Inlet
[[Page 34759]]
EEZ Area and have drift gillnet gear on board or deployed.
* * * * *
0
12. Add subpart J, consisting of Sec. Sec. 679.110 through 679.119, to
read as follows:
Subpart J--Salmon Fishery Management
Sec.
679.110 Applicability.
679.111 through 679.113 [Reserved]
679.114 Permits.
679.115 Recordkeeping and reporting.
679.116 [Reserved]
679.117 Salmon fisheries prohibitions.
679.118 Management measures.
679.119 Recreational salmon fisheries.
Subpart J--Salmon Fishery Management
Sec. 679.110 Applicability.
This subpart contains regulations governing the commercial and
recreational harvest of salmon in the Salmon Management Area (See Sec.
679.2).
Sec. 679.111 through 679.113 [Reserved]
Sec. 679.114 Permits.
(a) Requirements--(1) What permits are available? The following
table describes the permits available under this subpart that authorize
the retention, processing, and receipt of salmon in the Cook Inlet EEZ
Area, respectively, along with date of effectiveness for each permit
and reference paragraphs for further information:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Permit is in effect For more
If permit type is: from issue date information, see . .
through the end of: .
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(i) Salmon Federal Fisheries 3 years or until Paragraph (b) of
Permit (SFFP). expiration date this section.
shown on permit.
(ii) Salmon Federal Until expiration Paragraph (c) of
Processor Permit (SFPP). date shown on this section.
permit.
(iii) Registered Salmon 1 year.............. Paragraph (d) of
Receiver Permit (RSRP). this section.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(2) Permit and logbook required by participant and fishery. For the
various types of permits issued pursuant to this subpart, refer to
Sec. 679.115 for recordkeeping and reporting requirements.
(3) Permit application. (i) A person may obtain an application for
a new permit, or for renewal or revision of an existing permit, from
NMFS for any of the permits under this section and must submit forms to
NMFS as instructed in application instructions. All permit applications
may be completed online and printed from the NMFS Alaska Region website
(See Sec. 679.2);
(ii) Upon receipt of an incomplete or improperly completed permit
application, NMFS will notify the applicant of the deficiency in the
permit application. If the applicant fails to correct the deficiency,
the permit will not be issued. NMFS will not approve a permit
application that is untimely or incomplete;
(iii) The owner or authorized representative of a vessel, owner or
authorized representative of a processor, and Registered Salmon
Receiver must obtain a separate permit for each vessel, entity,
operation, or facility, as appropriate to each Federal permit in this
section;
(iv) All permits are issued free of charge;
(v) NMFS will consider objective written evidence in determining
whether an application is timely. The responsibility remains with the
sender to provide objective written evidence of when an application to
obtain, amend, or to surrender a permit was received by NMFS (e.g.,
certified mail or other method that provides written evidence that NMFS
Alaska Region received it); and
(vi) For applications delivered by hand delivery or carrier, the
date the application was received by NMFS is the date NMFS staff signs
for it upon receipt. If the application is submitted by fax or mail,
the receiving date of the application is the date stamped received by
NMFS.
(4) Disclosure. NMFS will maintain a list of permit holders that
may be disclosed for public inspection.
(5) Sanctions and denials. Procedures governing permit sanctions
and permit denials for enforcement purposes are found at subpart D of
15 CFR part 904. Such procedures are not required for any other
purposes under this part.
(6) Harvesting privilege. Permits issued pursuant to this subpart
are neither a right to the resource nor any interest that is subject to
the ``Takings Clause'' provision of the Fifth Amendment to the U.S.
Constitution. Rather, such permits represent only a harvesting
privilege that may be revoked or amended subject to the requirements of
the Magnuson-Stevens Act and other applicable law.
(7) Permit surrender. (i) NMFS will recognize the voluntary
surrender of a permit issued under this subpart, if a permit is
authorized to be surrendered and if an application is submitted by the
permit holder or authorized representative and approved by NMFS; and
(ii) For surrender of an SFFP and SFPP, refer to paragraphs
(b)(3)(ii) and (c)(3)(ii) of this section, respectively.
(b) Salmon Federal Fisheries Permit (SFFP)--(1) Requirements. (i)
No vessel of the United States may be used to commercially fish for
salmon in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area unless the owner or authorized
representative first obtains an SFFP for the vessel issued under this
part. Only persons who are U.S. citizens are authorized to obtain an
SFFP; and
(ii) Each vessel used to commercially fish for salmon within the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area must have a legible copy of a valid SFFP on board
at all times. The vessel operator must present the valid SFFP for
inspection upon the request of any authorized officer.
(2) Vessel operation. An SFFP authorizes a vessel to conduct
operations in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area.
(3) Duration--(i) Length of permit effectiveness. NMFS issues SFFPs
on a 3-year cycle, and an SFFP is in effect from the effective date
through the expiration date, as indicated on the SFFP, unless the SFFP
is revoked, suspended, or modified under Sec. 600.735 or Sec. 600.740
of this chapter, or surrendered in accordance with paragraph (a)(7) of
this section.
(ii) Surrendered permit. (A) An SFFP may be voluntarily surrendered
in accordance with paragraph (a)(7) of this section. NMFS will not
reissue a surrendered SFFP to the owner or authorized representative of
a vessel named on an SFFP until after the expiration date of the
surrendered SFFP as initially issued.
(B) An owner or authorized representative who applied for and
received an SFFP must notify NMFS of the intention to surrender the
SFFP by submitting an SFFP application found at the NMFS Alaska Region
website and indicating on the application that surrender of the SFFP is
requested. Upon receipt and approval of an SFFP surrender application,
NMFS will withdraw the SFFP from active status.
(4) Amended permit. An owner or authorized representative who
applied for and received an SFFP must notify NMFS of any change in the
permit
[[Page 34760]]
information by submitting an SFFP application found at the NMFS Alaska
Region website. The owner or authorized representative must submit the
application form as instructed on the form. Except as provided under
paragraph (b)(3)(ii)(B) of this section, upon receipt and approval of
an application form for permit amendment, NMFS will issue an amended
SFFP.
(5) SFFP application. To obtain, amend, renew, or surrender an
SFFP, the vessel owner or authorized representative must complete an
SFFP application form per the instructions from the NMFS Alaska Region
website. The owner or authorized representative of the vessel must sign
and date the application form, certifying that all information is true,
correct, and complete to the best of their knowledge and belief. If the
application form is completed by an authorized representative, proof of
authorization must accompany the application form.
(6) Issuance. (i) Except as provided in subpart D of 15 CFR part
904, upon receipt and approval of a properly completed permit
application, NMFS will issue an SFFP required by paragraph (b) of this
section.
(ii) NMFS will send an SFFP with the appropriate logbooks to the
owner or authorized representative, as provided under Sec. 679.115.
(7) Transfer. An SFFP issued under paragraph (b) of this section is
not transferable or assignable and is valid only for the vessel for
which it is issued.
(c) Salmon Federal Processor Permit (SFPP)--(1) Requirements. No
salmon shoreside processor, as defined at Sec. 679.2, may process
salmon harvested in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area, unless the owner or
authorized representative first obtains an SFPP issued under this
subpart. A salmon shoreside processor may not be operated in a category
other than as specified on the SFPP. A legible copy of a valid SFPP
must be on site at the salmon shoreside processor at all times and must
be presented for inspection upon the request of any authorized officer.
(2) SFPP application. To obtain, amend, renew, or surrender an
SFPP, the owner or authorized representative of the salmon shoreside
processor must complete an SFPP application form per the instructions
from the NMFS Alaska Region website. The owner or authorized
representative of the salmon shoreside processor must sign and date the
application form, certifying that all information is true, correct, and
complete to the best of their knowledge and belief. If the application
form is completed by an authorized representative, proof of
authorization must accompany the application form.
(3) Issuance. Except as provided in subpart D of 15 CFR part 904,
upon receipt and approval of a properly completed permit application,
NMFS will issue an SFPP required by paragraph (c) of this section.
(4) Duration--(i) Length of effectiveness. An SFPP is in effect
from the effective date through the date of permit expiration, unless
it is revoked, suspended, or modified under Sec. 600.735 or Sec.
600.740 of this chapter, or surrendered in accordance with paragraph
(a)(7) of this section.
(ii) Surrendered permit. (A) An SFPP may be voluntarily surrendered
in accordance with paragraph (a)(7) of this section. NMFS may reissue
an SFPP to the person to whom the SFPP was initially issued in the same
fishing year in which it was surrendered.
(B) An owner or authorized representative who applied for and
received an SFPP must notify NMFS of the intention to surrender the
SFPP by submitting an SFPP application found at the NMFS Alaska Region
website and indicating on the application form that surrender of the
SFPP is requested. Upon receipt and approval of an SFPP surrender
application, NMFS will withdraw the SFPP from active status.
(5) Amended permit. An owner or authorized representative who
applied for and received an SFPP must notify NMFS of any change in the
permit information by submitting an SFPP application found at the NMFS
Alaska Region website. The owner or authorized representative must
submit the application form as instructed on the form. Upon receipt and
approval of an SFPP amendment application, NMFS will issue an amended
SFPP.
(6) Transfer. An SFPP issued under this paragraph (c) is not
transferable or assignable and is valid only for the salmon shoreside
processor for which it is issued.
(d) Registered Salmon Receiver Permit (RSRP)--(1) Requirements. An
RSRP authorizes the person identified on the permit to receive a
landing of salmon from an SFFP holder at any time during the fishing
year for which it is issued until the RSRP expires, as indicated on the
RSRP, or is revoked, suspended, or modified under Sec. 600.735 or
Sec. 600.740 of this chapter, or surrendered in accordance with
paragraph (a)(7) of this section. An RSRP is required for any person,
other than an SFPP holder, to receive salmon commercially harvested in
the Cook Inlet EEZ Area from the person(s) who harvested the fish. A
legible copy of the RSRP must be present at the time and location of a
landing. The RSRP holder or their authorized representative must make
the RSRP available for inspection upon the request of any authorized
officer.
(2) Application. To obtain, amend, renew, or surrender an RSRP, the
owner or authorized representative must complete an RSRP application
form per the instructions from the NMFS Alaska Region website. The
owner or authorized representative of a Registered Salmon Receiver must
sign and date the application form, certifying that all information is
true, correct, and complete to the best of their knowledge and belief.
If the application form is completed by an authorized representative,
proof of authorization must accompany the application form.
(3) Issuance. Except as provided in subpart D of 15 CFR part 904,
upon receipt and approval of a properly completed permit application,
NMFS will issue an RSRP required by paragraph (d) of this section.
(4) Duration. An RSRP is issued on an annual cycle defined as May
through the end of April of the next calendar year, to persons who
submit a Registered Salmon Receiver Permit application that NMFS
approves.
(i) An RSRP is in effect from the first day of May in the year for
which it is issued or from the date of issuance, whichever is later,
through the end of the current annual cycle, unless it is revoked,
suspended, or modified under Sec. 600.735 or Sec. 600.740 of this
chapter, or surrendered in accordance with paragraph (a)(7) of this
section.
(ii) An RSRP may be voluntarily surrendered in accordance with
paragraph (a)(7) of this section. An RSRP may be reissued to the permit
holder of record in the same fishing year in which it was surrendered.
(5) Amended permit. An owner or authorized representative who
applied for and received an RSRP must notify NMFS of any change in the
permit information by submitting an RSRP application found at the NMFS
Alaska Region website. The owner or authorized representative must
submit the application form as instructed on the form. Upon receipt and
approval of an RSRP amendment application, NMFS will issue an amended
RSRP.
Sec. 679.115 Recordkeeping and reporting.
(a) General recordkeeping and reporting (R&R) requirement. R&R
requirements include, but are not limited to, paper and electronic
documentation, logbooks, forms, reports, and receipts.
(1) Salmon logbooks and forms. (i) The Regional Administrator will
prescribe and provide logbooks required
[[Page 34761]]
under this section. All forms required under this section are available
from the NMFS Alaska Region website or may be requested by calling the
Sustainable Fisheries Division at 907-586-7228. These forms may be
completed online, or submitted according to the instructions shown on
the form.
(ii) The operator must use the current edition of the logbooks and
current format of the forms, unless they obtain prior written approval
from NMFS to use logbooks from the previous year. Upon approval from
NMFS, electronic versions of the forms may be used.
(iii) Commercial salmon harvest that occurred in the Cook Inlet EEZ
Area must be recorded in eLandings by an SFPP or RSRP holder. See
paragraph (b) of this section for more information.
(2) Responsibility. (i) The operator of a vessel, the manager of a
salmon shoreside processor (hereafter referred to as the manager), and
a Registered Salmon Receiver are responsible for complying with
applicable R&R requirements in this section.
(ii) The owner of a vessel, the owner of a salmon shoreside
processor, and the owner of a Registered Salmon Receiver are
responsible for ensuring their employees and agents comply with
applicable R&R requirements in this section.
(3) Fish to be recorded and reported. The operator of a vessel or
manager must record and report the following information (see
paragraphs (a)(3)(i) through (iv) of this section) for all salmon,
groundfish (see table 2a to this part), halibut and crab, forage fish
(see table 2c to this part), and sculpins (see table 2c to this part).
The operator of a vessel or manager may record and report the following
information (see paragraphs (a)(3)(i) through (iv) of this section) for
other species (see table 2d to this part):
(i) Harvest information from vessels;
(ii) Receipt information from vessels, buying stations, and tender
vessels, including fish received from vessels not required to have an
SFFP or FFP, and fish received under contract for handling or
processing for another processor;
(iii) Discard or disposition information, including fish reported
but not delivered to the operator or manager (e.g., fish used on board
a vessel, retained for personal use, discarded at sea), when receiving
catch from a vessel, buying station, or tender vessel; and
(iv) Transfer information, including fish transferred off the
vessel or out of the facility.
(4) Inspection and retention of records--(i) Inspection of records.
The operator of a vessel, a manager, and a Registered Salmon Receiver
must make available for inspection R&R documentation they are required
to retain under this section upon the request of an authorized officer;
and
(ii) Retention of records. The operator of a vessel, a manager, and
a Registered Salmon Receiver must retain the R&R documentation they are
required to make under this section as follows:
(A) Retain these records on board a vessel, on site at the salmon
shoreside processor or stationary floating processor (see Sec. 679.2),
or at the Registered Salmon Receiver's place of business, as
applicable, until the end of the fishing year during which the records
were made and for as long thereafter as fish or fish products recorded
in the R&R documentation are retained on site.
(B) Retain these records for 3 years after the end of the fishing
year during which the records were made.
(5) Maintenance of records. The operator of a vessel, a manager,
and a Registered Salmon Receiver must maintain all records described in
this section in English and in a legible, timely, and accurate manner,
based on Alaska local time (A.l.t.); if handwritten, in indelible ink;
if computer-generated, as a readable file or a legible printed paper
copy.
(6) Custom processing. The manager or Registered Salmon Receiver
must record products that result from custom processing for another
person in eLandings consistently throughout a fishing year using one of
the following two methods:
(i) For combined records, record landings, discards or
dispositions, and products of custom-processed salmon routinely in
eLandings using processor name, any applicable RSRP number or SFPP
number, and ADF&G processor code; or
(ii) For separate records, record landings, discards or
dispositions, and products of custom-processed salmon in eLandings
identified by the name, SFPP number or RSRP number, and ADF&G processor
code of the associated business entity.
(7) Representative. The operator of a vessel, manager, and RSRP
holder may identify one contact person to complete the logbook and
forms and to respond to inquiries from NMFS.
(b) Interagency Electronic Reporting System (IERS) and eLandings--
(1) Responsibility. (i) An eLandings User must obtain at his or her own
expense hardware, software, and internet connectivity to support
internet submissions of commercial fishery landings for which
participants report to NMFS: landing data, production data, and discard
or disposition data. The User must enter this information via the
internet by logging on to the eLandings system at https://elandings.alaska.gov or other NMFS-approved software or by using the
desktop client software.
(ii) If the User is unable to submit commercial fishery landings of
Cook Inlet EEZ salmon due to hardware, software, or internet failure
for a period longer than the required reporting time, the User must
contact NMFS Sustainable Fisheries Division at 907-586-7228 for
instructions. When the hardware, software, or internet is restored, the
User must enter this same information into eLandings or other NMFS-
approved software.
(2) eLandings processor registration. (i) Before a User can use the
eLandings system to report landings, production, discard, or
disposition data, he or she must request authorization to use the
system, reserve a unique UserID, and obtain a password by using the
internet to complete the eLandings processor registration at https://elandings.alaska.gov/elandings/Register;
(ii) Upon registration acceptance, the User must print, sign, and
mail or fax the User Agreement Form to NMFS at the address or fax
number shown on the form. Confirmation is emailed to indicate that the
User is registered, authorized to use eLandings, and that the UserID
and User's account are enabled; and
(iii) The User's signature on the registration form means that the
User agrees to the following terms:
(A) To use eLandings access privileges only for submitting
legitimate fishery landing reports;
(B) To safeguard the UserID and password to prevent their use by
unauthorized persons; and
(C) To ensure that the User is authorized to submit landing reports
for the processor permit number(s) listed.
(3) Information required for eLandings processor registration form.
The User must enter the following information (see paragraphs (b)(3)(i)
through (ix) of this section) to obtain operation registration and
UserID registration:
(i) Select the operation type from the dropdown list;
(ii) Enter a name that will refer to the specific operation. For
example, if the plant is in Kodiak and the company is East Pacific
Seafoods, the operation name might read ``East Pacific Seafoods-
Kodiak;''
(iii) Enter ADF&G processor code;
(iv) Enter all the Federal permits associated with the operation;
(A) If a processor for Cook Inlet EEZ salmon, enter the SFPP
number; and
[[Page 34762]]
(B) If a Registered Salmon Receiver, enter the RSRP number;
(v) Enter the home port code (see tables 14a, 14b, and 14c to this
part) for the operation;
(vi) If a tender operation, the operator must enter the ADF&G
vessel identification number of the vessel;
(vii) If a buying station or Registered Salmon Receiver operation
is a vehicle, enter vehicle license number and the state of license
issuance;
(viii) If a buying station, tender vessel, or custom processor,
enter the following information to identify the associated processor
where the processing will take place: operation type, ADF&G processor
code, and applicable SFPP number, and RSRP number; and
(ix) Each operation requires a primary User. Enter the following
information for the primary User for the new operation: create and
enter a UserID, initial password, company name, User name (name of the
person who will use the UserID), city and state where the operation is
located, business telephone number, business fax number, business email
address, security question, and security answer.
(4) Information entered automatically for eLandings landing report.
eLandings autofills the following fields from processor registration
records (see paragraph (b)(2) of this section): UserID, processor
company name, business telephone number, email address, port of
landing, operation type (for catcher/processors, motherships, or
stationary floating processors), ADF&G processor code, and Federal
permit number. The User must review the autofilled cells to ensure that
they are accurate for the landing that is taking place. eLandings
assigns a unique landing report number and an ADF&G electronic fish
ticket number upon completion of data entry.
(5) Registered Salmon Receiver landing report. The manager and a
Registered Salmon Receiver that receives salmon from a vessel issued an
SFFP under Sec. 679.114 and that is required to have an SFPP or RSRP
under Sec. 679.114(c) or (d) must use eLandings or other NMFS-approved
software to submit a daily landing report during the fishing year to
report processor identification information and the following
information under paragraphs (b)(5)(i)(A) through (C) of this section:
(i) Information entered for each salmon delivery to a salmon
shoreside processor or Registered Salmon Receiver. The User for a
shoreside processor, stationary floating processor, or Registered
Salmon Receiver must enter the information specified at (b)(5)(i)(A)
through (C) of this section for each salmon delivery provided by the
operator of a vessel, the operator or manager of an associated buying
station or tender vessel, and from processors for reprocessing or
rehandling product into eLandings or other NMFS-approved software:
(A) Delivery information. The User must:
(1) For crew size, enter the number of licensed crew aboard the
vessel, including the operator;
(2) Enter the management program name in which harvest occurred
(see paragraph (a)(1)(iii) of this section);
(3) Enter the ADF&G salmon statistical area of harvest;
(4) For date of landing, enter date (mm/dd/yyyy) that the delivery
was completed;
(5) Indicate (YES or NO) whether delivery is from a buying station
or tender vessel;
(6) If the delivery is received from a buying station, indicate the
name of the buying station;
(7) If the delivery is received from a tender vessel, enter the
ADF&G vessel registration number;
(8) If delivery is received from a vessel, indicate the ADF&G
vessel registration number of the vessel; and
(9) Mark whether the vessel logsheet has been received.
(B) Catch information. The User must record the number and landed
scale weight in pounds of salmon, including any applicable weight
modifier such as delivery condition code, and disposition code of fish
by species.
(C) Discard or disposition information. (1) The User must record
discard or disposition of fish: that occurred on and was reported by a
vessel; that occurred on and was reported by a salmon shoreside
processor or Registered Salmon Receiver; and that occurred prior to,
during, and/or after production at the salmon shoreside processor.
(2) The User for a salmon shoreside processor or Registered Salmon
Receiver must submit a landing report containing the information
described in paragraph (b)(5)(i) of this section for each salmon
delivery from a specific vessel by 1200 hours, A.l.t., of the day
following completion of the delivery. If the landed scale weight
required in paragraph (b)(5)(i)(B) of this section is not available by
this deadline, the User must transmit an estimated weight and count for
each species by 1200 hours, A.l.t., of the day following completion of
the delivery, and must submit a revised landing report with the landed
scale weight for each species by 1200 hours, A.l.t., of the third day
following completion of the delivery.
(3) By using eLandings, the User for a salmon shoreside processor
or a Registered Salmon Receiver and the operator of the vessel
providing information to the User for the salmon shoreside processor or
Registered Salmon Receiver accept the responsibility of and acknowledge
compliance with Sec. 679.117(b)(5).
(ii) [Reserved]
(c) Logbooks--(1) Requirements. (i) All Cook Inlet EEZ Area logbook
pages must be sequentially numbered.
(ii) Except as described in paragraph (c)(1)(iii) or (iv) of this
section, no person may alter or change any entry or record in a
logbook;
(iii) An inaccurate or incorrect entry or record in printed data
must be corrected by lining out the original and inserting the
correction, provided that the original entry or record remains legible.
All corrections must be made in ink; and
(iv) If after an electronic logsheet is signed, an error is found
in the data, the operator must make any necessary changes to the data,
sign the new logsheet, and export the revised file to NMFS. The
operator must retain both the original and revised logsheet reports.
(2) Logsheet distribution and submittal. The operator of a vessel
must distribute and submit accurate copies of logsheets to the salmon
shoreside processor or Registered Salmon Receiver and to NOAA Fisheries
Office of Law Enforcement Alaska Region according to the logsheet
instructions.
(3) Salmon drift gillnet vessel daily fishing log. The operator of
a vessel that is required to have an SFFP under Sec. 679.114(b), and
that is using drift gillnet gear to harvest salmon in the Cook Inlet
EEZ Area, must maintain a salmon drift gillnet vessel daily fishing
log.
(4) Reporting time limits. The operator of a vessel using drift
gillnet gear must record in the daily fishing log the information from
the following table for each set within the specified time limit:
[[Page 34763]]
Reporting Time Limits, Catcher Vessel Drift Gillnet Gear
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Required information Time limit for recording
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(i) SFFP number, set number, date and time Within 2 hours after
gear set, date and time gear hauled, completion of gear
beginning and end positions of set, length retrieval.
of net deployed, total number of salmon, and
estimated hail weight of groundfish for each
set.
(ii) Discard and disposition information..... Prior to landing.
(iii) Submit an accurate copy of the At the time of catch
groundfish discards reported on the daily delivery.
fishing log to shoreside processor or
Registered Salmon Receiver receiving catch.
(iv) All other required information.......... At the time of catch
delivery.
(v) Operator sign the completed logsheets.... At the time of catch
delivery.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sec. 679.116 [Reserved]
Sec. 679.117 Salmon fisheries prohibitions.
In addition to the general prohibitions specified in Sec. 600.725
of this chapter and Sec. 679.7, it is unlawful for any person to do
any of the following:
(a) The East Area and the West Area--(1) East Area. Engage in
commercial fishing for salmon using any gear except troll gear, defined
at Sec. 679.2, in the East Area of the Salmon Management Area, defined
at Sec. 679.2 and figure 23 to this part.
(2) West Area. Engage in commercial fishing for salmon in the West
Area of the Salmon Management Area, defined at Sec. 679.2 and figure
23 to this part.
(b) Cook Inlet EEZ Area--(1) Commercial fishery participants. (i)
Engage in commercial fishing for salmon in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area of
the Salmon Management Area, defined at Sec. 679.2 and figure 22 to
this part, with a vessel of the United States that does not have on
board a legible copy of a valid SFFP issued to the vessel under Sec.
679.114;
(ii) Engage in commercial fishing for salmon using any gear except
drift gillnet gear, described at Sec. 679.118, in the Cook Inlet EEZ
Area;
(iii) Have on board, retrieve, or deploy any gear, except a drift
gillnet legally configured for the Cook Inlet EEZ Area commercial
salmon fishery while commercial fishing for salmon in the Cook Inlet
EEZ Area;
(iv) Deploy more than one drift gillnet while commercial fishing
for salmon in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area;
(v) Deploy drift gillnet gear within, or allow any portion of drift
gillnet gear to enter, Alaska State waters on the same calendar day
that drift gillnet gear is also deployed in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area
while commercial fishing for salmon in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area;
(vi) Deploy drift gillnet gear in excess of the allowable
configuration for total length and mesh size specified at Sec.
679.118(f) while commercial fishing for salmon in the Cook Inlet EEZ
Area;
(vii) Use a vessel named, or required to be named, on an SFFP to
fish for salmon in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area if that vessel fishes for
salmon in Alaska State waters on the same calendar day;
(viii) Possess salmon, harvested in Alaska State waters, on board a
vessel commercial fishing for salmon in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area;
(ix) Have salmon on board a vessel at the time a fishing trip
commences in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area;
(x) Conduct recreational fishing for salmon, or have recreational
or subsistence salmon on board, while commercial fishing for salmon in
the Cook Inlet EEZ Area;
(xi) Use or employ aircraft (manned or unmanned) to locate salmon
or to direct commercial fishing while commercial fishing for salmon in
the Cook Inlet EEZ Area 1 hour before, during, and 1 hour after a
commercial salmon fishing period;
(xii) Land salmon harvested in Alaska State waters concurrently
with salmon harvested commercially in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area;
(xiii) Land or transfer salmon harvested while commercial fishing
for salmon in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area, within the EEZ off Alaska;
(xiv) Operate a vessel named, or required to be named, on an SFFP
in the waters of Cook Inlet without an operable VMS as required in
Sec. 679.28(f).
(xv) Discard any salmon harvested while commercial fishing for
salmon in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area.
(xvi) Engage in commercial fishing for salmon in the Cook Inlet EEZ
Area contrary to notification of inseason action, closure, or
adjustment issued under Sec. Sec. 679.25 and 679.118.
(2) Recreational fishery participants. (i) Engage in recreational
fishing for salmon using any gear except for handline, rod and reel, or
hook and line gear, defined at Sec. 600.10, in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area
of the Salmon Management Area, defined at Sec. 679.2 and figure 22 to
this part;
(ii) Use more than a single line, with more than two hooks
attached, per angler in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area;
(iii) No person shall possess on board a vessel, including charter
vessels and pleasure craft used for fishing, salmon retained in the
Cook Inlet EEZ Area that have been filleted, mutilated, or otherwise
disfigured in any manner, except that each salmon may be cut into no
more than two pieces with a patch of skin on each piece, naturally
attached. One piece from one salmon on board may be consumed.
(iv) Exceed the daily bag limits and possession limits established
under Sec. 679.119.
(v) Engage in recreational fishing for salmon in the Cook Inlet EEZ
Area contrary to notification of inseason action, closure, or
adjustment issued under Sec. 679.118.
(3) Processors and Registered Salmon Receivers. (i) Receive,
purchase or arrange for purchase, discard, or process salmon harvested
in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area without having on site a legible copy of a
valid SFPP or valid RSRP issued under Sec. 679.114;
(ii) Process or receive salmon harvested in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area
without submitting a timely and complete landing report as required
under Sec. 679.115;
(iii) Process salmon harvested in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area in the
EEZ off Alaska; and
(iv) Receive or transport salmon caught in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area
without an SFPP or RSRP issued under Sec. 679.114.
(4) Recordkeeping and reporting. (i) Fail to comply with or fail to
ensure compliance with requirements in Sec. 679.114 or Sec. 679.115.
(ii) Alter or forge any permit or document issued under Sec.
679.114 or Sec. 679.115;
(iii) Fail to submit or submit inaccurate information on any
report, application, or statement required under this part; and
(iv) Intentionally submit false information on any report,
application, or statement required under this part.
(5) General. Fail to comply with any other requirement or
restriction specified in this part or violate any provision under this
part.
[[Page 34764]]
Sec. 679.118 Management measures.
This section applies to vessels engaged in commercial fishing and
recreational fishing for salmon in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area.
(a) Harvest limits--(1) TAC. NMFS, after consultation with the
Council, will specify the annual TAC amounts for commercial fishing for
each salmon stock or species after accounting for projected
recreational fishing removals.
(2) Annual TAC determination. The annual determinations of TAC for
each salmon species or stock may be based on a review of the following:
(i) Resource assessment documents prepared regularly for the
Council that provide information on historical catch trends; updated
estimates of the MSY of the salmon stocks or stock complexes;
assessments of the stock condition of each salmon stock or stock
complex; SSC recommendations on reference points established for salmon
stocks; management uncertainty; assessments of the multispecies and
ecosystem impacts of harvesting the salmon stocks at current levels,
given the assessed condition of stocks, including consideration of
rebuilding depressed stocks; and alternative harvesting strategies and
related effects on the salmon species;
(ii) Social and economic considerations that are consistent with
Salmon FMP goals for the Cook Inlet EEZ Area, including the need to
promote efficiency in the utilization of fishery resources, including
minimizing costs; the desire to conserve, protect, and rebuild depleted
salmon stocks; the importance of a salmon fishery to harvesters,
processors, local communities, and other salmon users in Cook Inlet;
and the need to promote utilization of certain species.
(b) Annual specifications--(1) Proposed specifications. (i) As soon
as practicable after consultation with the Council, NMFS will publish
proposed specifications for the salmon fishery in the Cook Inlet EEZ
Area; and
(ii) NMFS will accept public comment on the proposed specifications
established by this section for a period specified in the notice of
proposed specifications published in the Federal Register.
(2) Final specifications. NMFS will consider comments received on
the proposed specifications and will publish a notice of final
specifications in the Federal Register unless NMFS determines that the
final specifications would not be a logical outgrowth of the notice of
proposed specifications. If the final specifications would not be a
logical outgrowth of the notice of proposed specifications, NMFS will
either:
(i) Publish a revised notice of proposed specifications in the
Federal Register for public comment, and after considering comments
received on the revised proposed specifications, publish a notice of
final specifications in the Federal Register; or
(ii) Publish a notice of final specifications in the Federal
Register without an additional opportunity for public comment based on
a finding that good cause pursuant to the Administrative Procedure Act
justifies waiver of the requirement for a revised notice of proposed
specifications and opportunity for public comment thereon.
(c) Management authority--(1) Fishery closures. (i) For commercial
fishing, if NMFS determines that any salmon TAC for commercial fishing
as specified under paragraph (b) of this section has been or may be
reached for any salmon species or stock, NMFS will publish notification
in the Federal Register prohibiting commercial fishing for salmon in
the Cook Inlet EEZ Area.
(ii) For recreational fishing, if NMFS determines that any salmon
ABC as specified under paragraph (b) of this section has been or may be
reached, NMFS will publish notification in the Federal Register
prohibiting retention of that salmon species when recreational fishing
in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area and may also prohibit recreational fishing
for one or more salmon species in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area. The Regional
Administrator maintains the authority to open or close the Cook Inlet
EEZ Area to recreational fishing for one or more salmon species if they
deem it appropriate for conservation or other management purposes.
Factors such as the ABC, anticipated harvest rates, expected mortality,
and the number of participants will be considered in making any such
determination.
(d) Commercial Fishery maximum retainable amounts (MRA)--(1)
Proportion of basis species. The MRA of an incidental catch species is
calculated as a proportion of the basis species retained on board the
vessel using the retainable percentages in table 10 to this part for
the GOA species categories.
(2) Calculation. (i) To calculate the MRA for a specific incidental
catch species, an individual retainable amount must be calculated with
respect to each basis species that is retained on board that vessel.
(ii) To obtain these individual retainable amounts, multiply the
appropriate retainable percentage for the incidental catch species/
basis species combination, set forth in table 10 to this part for the
GOA species categories, by the amount of the relevant basis species on
board, in round-weight equivalents.
(iii) The MRA for that specific incidental catch species is the sum
of the individual retainable amounts for each basis species.
(e) Seasons--(1) Fishing season. Directed fishing for salmon using
drift gillnet gear in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area may be conducted from
0700 hours, A.l.t., from the third Monday in June or June 19, whichever
is later, through 1900 hours, A.l.t., August 15.
(2) Fishing periods. Notwithstanding other provisions of this part,
fishing for salmon with drift gillnet gear in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area
is authorized during the fishing season only from 0700 hours, A.l.t.,
until 1900 hours, A.l.t., Mondays and from 0700 hours, A.l.t., until
1900 hours, A.l.t., Thursdays from the third Monday in June or June 19,
whichever is later, until July 15, and from August 1 until August 15.
From July 16 until July 31, fishing for salmon with drift gillnet gear
in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area is authorized during the fishing season only
from 0700 hours, A.l.t., until 1900 hours, A.l.t., Thursdays. Fishing
for salmon using drift gillnet gear at times other than during the
specified fishing periods is not authorized.
(f) Legal gear--(1) Size. Drift gillnet gear must be no longer than
200 fathoms (1.1 kilometer) in length, 45 meshes deep, and have a mesh
size of no greater than 6 inches (15.24 cm).
(2) Marking. Drift gillnet gear must be marked at both ends with
buoys that legibly display the vessel's SFFP number.
(3) Floating. The float line and floats of gillnets must be
floating on the surface of the water while the net is fishing, unless
natural conditions cause the net to temporarily sink. Staking or
otherwise fixing a drift gillnet to the seafloor is not authorized.
(4) Measurement. For purposes of paragraph (f)(1) of this section,
nets must be measured, either wet or dry, by determining the maximum or
minimum distance between the first and last hanging of the net when the
net is fully extended with traction applied at one end only.
Sec. 679.119 Recreational salmon fisheries.
(a) Daily bag limits and possession limits. For each person
recreational fishing for salmon in the Cook Inlet EEZ Area, the
following daily bag and possession limits apply:
(1) Chinook salmon. From April 1 to August 31, the daily bag limit
is one Chinook salmon of any size and the possession limit is one daily
bag limit
[[Page 34765]]
(one Chinook salmon). From September 1 to March 31, the daily bag limit
is two Chinook salmon of any size and the possession limit is one daily
bag limit (two Chinook salmon).
(2) Coho salmon, sockeye salmon, pink salmon, and chum salmon. For
coho salmon, sockeye salmon, pink salmon, and chum salmon, the daily
bag limit is a total of six fish combined, of any size, of which a
maximum of three may be coho salmon. The possession limit for coho
salmon, sockeye salmon, pink salmon, and chum salmon is one daily bag
limit (six fish total).
(3) Combination of bag/possession limits. A person who fishes for
or possesses salmon in or from the Cook Inlet EEZ Area, specified in
paragraph (a) of this section, may not combine such bag or possession
limits with any bag or possession limit applicable to Alaska State
waters.
(4) Responsibility for bag/possession limits. The operator of a
vessel that fishes for or possesses salmon in or from the Cook Inlet
EEZ Area is responsible for the cumulative bag or possession limit
specified in paragraph (a) of this section that apply to that vessel,
based on the number of persons aboard.
(5) Transfer at sea. A person who fishes for or possesses salmon in
or from the Cook Inlet EEZ Area under a bag or possession limit
specified in paragraph (a) of this section may not transfer a salmon at
sea from a fishing vessel to any other vessel, and no person may
receive at sea such salmon.
(b) Careful release. Any salmon brought aboard a vessel and not
immediately returned to the sea with a minimum of injury will be
included in the daily bag limit of the person catching the salmon.
0
13. Add figure 22 to part 679 to read as follows:
Figure 22 to Part 679--Cook Inlet EEZ Area
BILLING CODE 3510-22-P
[[Page 34766]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR30AP24.023
BILLING CODE 3510-22-C
0
14. Amend table 15 to part 679 by:
0
a. Adding in alphabetical order the entry ``Gillnet, drift'' under the
heading ``NMFS AND ADF&G GEAR CODES''; and
0
b. Removing the entry ``Gillnet, drift'' under the heading ``ADF&G GEAR
CODES''.
The addition reads as follows:
* * * * *
[[Page 34767]]
Table 15 to Part 679--Gear Codes, Descriptions, and Use
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Use alphabetic code to complete the following: Use numeric code to complete the following:
--------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------
Name of gear Electronic Numeric gear
Alpha gear NMFS logbooks check-in/check- code IERS eLandings ADF&G COAR
code out
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NMFS AND ADF&G GEAR CODES
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* * * * * * *
Gillnet, drift....................................... .............. .............. .............. 03 X X
* * * * * * *
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[FR Doc. 2024-08664 Filed 4-29-24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-22-P