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Docket ID: [Docket No. 030821210-3210-01; I.D.081103A]
RIN ID: RIN 0648-AR36
SUBJECT CATEGORY: Fisheries Off West Coast States and in the Western Pacific; Pacific Coast Groundfish Fishery; Amendment 16-1
DOCUMENT SUMMARY: NMFS issues this proposed rule to implement Amendment 16-1 to the Pacific Coast Groundfish Fishery Management Plan (FMP). Amendment 161 would set a process for and standards by which the Council will specify rebuilding plans for groundfish stocks declared overfished by the Secretary of Commerce. Amendment 161 is intended to ensure that Pacific Coast groundfish overfished species rebuilding plans meet the requirements of the MagnusonStevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act (MagnusonStevens Act), in particular National Standard 1 on overfishing and Sec. 304(e), which addresses rebuilding overfished fisheries. Amendment 161 is also intended to partially respond to a court order in which NMFS was ordered to provide Pacific Coast groundfish rebuilding plans as FMPs, FMP amendments, or regulations, per the MagnusonStevens Act.
SUMMARY: West Coast States and Western Pacific fisheries—; Pacific Coast groundfish,
This Federal Register document is also accessible via the Internet at the Office of the Federal Register's website at: http://www/access/gpo.gov/su_docs/aces140.html .
NMFS is proposing this rule to implement Amendment 161 to the FMP. Amendment 161 mainly revises the FMP and not Federal regulations. However, the specific standards that govern the harvest levels for overfished species rebuilding plans would be codified in the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR). Thus, this proposed rule would establish a new section in the Federal groundfish regulations at 50 CFR 660.370 for overfished species rebuilding plans. This proposed rule to implement Amendment 161 will be shortly followed by a proposed rule to implement Amendment 162, which was adopted by the Council in June 2003. If approved, Amendment 162 would place rebuilding plans for canary rockfish, darkblotched rockfish, lingcod, and Pacific ocean perch in the FMP and in Federal regulations. NMFS expects to publish a Notice of Availability for Amendment 162 in autumn 2003. This proposed rule is based on recommendations of the Council, under the authority of the Pacific Coast Groundfish FMP and the MagnusonStevens Act. The background and rationale for the Council's recommendations are summarized below. Further detail appears in the EA/RIR/IRFA prepared by the Council for Amendment 161.
Amendment 12 to the FMP was intended to provide a process for developing overfished species rebuilding plans. Under Amendment 12, rebuilding plans were to be standalone documents that described an overfished stock's status and articulated rebuilding goals and strategies for achieving those goals. Amendment 12 was challenged, and the court ordered NMFS to develop rebuilding plans as fishery management plans, plan amendments, or regulations. Amendment 161 is intended to partially respond to this Court order (Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc. v. Evans, 168 F. Supp. 2d 1149 (N.D. Cal 2001).)
Amendment 161 would require that Pacific Coast groundfish
overfished species rebuilding plans be added into the FMP via FMP
amendment, and then implemented through Federal regulations. For each
approved overfished species rebuilding plan, the following parameters
would be specified in the FMP: estimates of unfished biomass
(B
The two rebuilding parameters that control the establishment of the annual or biennial optimum yield of each overfished species will be codified in the CFR: the target year for rebuilding and the harvest control rule to be used to rebuild the stock. If, after a new stock assessment, the Council and NMFS conclude that these should be revised, the revision will be done through a rulemaking, and the updated values codified in the CFR.
Amendment 161 additionally sets schedules and standards for reviewing rebuilding plans. The current FMP sets five goals for evaluating rebuilding plans: (1) Achieve the population size and structure that will support the maximum sustainable yield (MSY) within the specified time period; (2) minimize, to the extent practicable, the social and economic impacts associated with rebuilding, including adverse impacts on fishing communities; (3) fairly and equitably distribute both the conservation burdens (overfishing restrictions) and recovery benefits among commercial, recreational, and charter fishing sectors; (4) protect the quantity and quality of habitat necessary to support the stock at healthy levels in the future, and; (5) promote widespread public awareness, understanding, and support for the rebuilding program. Amendment 161 would require that the Council review rebuilding plan goals 25 every two years, but goal 1 only with new stock assessments, since new stock assessment data would be needed to determine whether rebuilding trajectories were being met. Stock assessments are generally updated every 24 years, with overfished species having higher priority in assessment scheduling.
As stated above, the first goal of rebuilding plans is to: ``Achieve the population size and structure that will support the maximum sustainable yield (MSY) within the specified time period.'' Amendment 161 specifies that the rebuilding plan for each species will set a speciesspecific standard for determining the adequacy of rebuilding progress for the particular species toward that goal. The Council had considered whether to set a single standard that would apply to all species, but decided that the variations in life histories, productivity, and abundances of the different overfished species warranted a speciesspecific rebuilding standard in each rebuilding plan.
Amendment 161 also considered how rebuilding plans would operate if an overfished species were to become listed as either threatened or endangered under the Endangered Species Act (ESA). Under Amendment 16 1, ESA jeopardy standards and/or recovery plans would take precedence over rebuilding plans if they establish higher recovery standards than those already set in the rebuilding plans. If a species is listed as threatened or endangered under the ESA and is subsequently delisted, but still not rebuilt to BMSY under the MagnusonStevens Act, then the rebuilding plan would continue to provide standards for the management and rebuilding of that species.
Finally, Amendment 161 included several minor changes to the FMP
text. These changes include: (1) revising the list of species managed
under the FMP to correct misspellings and to specify certain rockfish
species already managed under the FMP as part of the FMP's generic
inclusion of all species of the family Scorpaenidae; (2) revising the
FMP definitions of ``Maximum Fishing Mortality Threshold'' or ``MFMT''
and of ``Minimum Stock Size Threshold'' or ``MSST'' to ensure that they
match the definition of these terms in the National Standard
Guidelines; (3) revising the requirements for items to be included in
the annual Stock Assessment and Fishery Evaluation (SAFE) report and the schedule for delivery of different sections of that
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report; (4) requiring the federal groundfish observer program in the
FMP, matching existing Federal regulations at 50 CFR 660.360, and; (5)
reorganizing sections of Chapters 4 and 5 of the FMP for a more logical
progression of information, without a revision to the requirements or effects of the FMP.
Regulations to implement Amendment 161 would establish a new
section of the Federal groundfish regulations at 50 CFR 660.370,
``Overfished Species Rebuilding Plans.'' Because Amendment 161
provides a framework for future rebuilding plans, the regulations
implemented through this proposed rule would similarly provide a
framework within federal groundfish regulations for future species
specific rebuilding plans. Amendment 162, which NMFS plans to make available for public review in autumn 2003, would propose
implementation of the first four overfished species rebuilding plans
(canary rockfish, darkblotched rockfish, lingcod, Pacific ocean perch)
within 50 CFR 660.370. In the future, overfished species rebuilding
plans would be reviewed under the schedule set by Amendment 161 and
Federal regulations implementing speciesspecific rebuilding plans
would be amended through a public noticeandcomment rulemaking. Classification
At this time, NMFS has not determined whether Amendment 161, which this proposed rule would implement, is consistent with the national standards of the MagnusonStevens Act and other applicable laws. NMFS, in making that determination, will take into account the data, views, and comments received during the comment period.
This proposed rule has been determined to be not significant for purposes of Executive Order 12866.
The Council has prepared an IRFA that describes the economic impact this proposed rule, if adopted, would have on small entities. The IRFA is available from the Council (see ADDRESSES). A summary of the IRFA follows:
A description of the action, why it is being considered, and the legal basis for this action are contained in the SUMMARY and BACKGROUND at the beginning of this proposed rule. There are no recordkeeping, reporting, or other compliance issues forthcoming from this proposed rule. This proposed rule does not duplicate, overlap, or conflict with other Federal rules.
A fishharvesting business is considered a ``small'' business by the Small Business Administration (SBA) if it has annual receipts not in excess of $3.5 million. Approximately 2,000 vessels participate in the West Coast groundfish fisheries. Of those, about 500 vessels are registered to limited entry permits issued for either trawl, longline, or pot gear. About 1,500 vessels land groundfish against open access limits while either directly targeting groundfish or taking groundfish incidentally in fisheries directed at nongroundfish species. All but 1020 of those vessels are considered small businesses by the SBA. This proposed rule is not expected to yield disproportionate economic impacts between those small and large entities. In the 2001 recreational fisheries, there were 106 Washington charter vessels engaged in salt water fishing outside of Puget Sound, 232 charter vessels active on the Oregon coast and 415 charter vessels active on the California coast.
The proposed action in this amendment affects only the administrative process by which individual species rebuilding plans are formulated, and so does not have significant adverse economic effects on consumers, producers or processors of groundfish. The EA/RIR/IRFA defines four issues for which alternatives were identified and selected by the Council. Of these four issues, only the alternatives identified under Issue 1 have regulatory implications. Under Issue 1, the Council considered the form (FMP amendments, regulations, a combination thereof) and required elements of a rebuilding plan. The remaining issues are concerned with setting internal Council standards for periodic review and modification of rebuilding plans (Issues 2 and 3), and defining the interaction of a rebuilding plan with recovery plans for a rebuilding species that is subsequently listed under the ESA (Issue 4).
The Council considered 4 alternatives under Issue 1, including a
status quo alternative. All alternatives, with the exception of the
status quo, would implement overfished species rebuilding plans as
either FMP amendments or Federal regulations. One alternative (Issue 1,
Alternative b) would have implemented rebuilding plans as FMP
amendments, with rebuilding parameters specified in the FMP. Another
alternative (Issue 1, Alternative c) would have implemented rebuilding
plans as Federal regulations, with TTARGET and a harvest control rule
for each overfished species specified in regulations. The final and
preferred alternative (Issue 1, Alternative d) would specify
T
While there will be no direct impact on small entities as a result of adopting any particular process for formulating rebuilding plans, the implementation of specific rebuilding plans for overfished species may entail substantial economic impacts for groundfish processors, commercial harvesters and recreational charter vessels. These type of impacts are specific to particular stocks or species and so will be addressed in the individual rebuilding plans themselves. While there may be slight differences between the alternatives in the amount of administrative capacity required to formulate and implement individual species rebuilding strategies, these differences are not quantifiable and will depend more on the variability of periodic stock assessments once a particular rebuilding plan is adopted than on the effects of these proposed actions or the subsequent adoption of individual rebuilding plans.
Based on the analysis within the IRFA, the agency does not believe the rule has a significant impact on a substantial number of small entities and has so advised the SBA. However, NMFS welcomes comments on this issue (see ADDRESSES) and will notify the public of its final determination in the final rule for this action.
Administrative practice and procedure, American Samoa, Fisheries,
Fishing, Guam, Hawaiian Natives, Indians, Northern Mariana Islands, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
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Dated: August 29, 2003.
Rebecca Lent,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for Regulatory Programs, National Marine Fisheries Service.
For the reasons set out in the preamble, 50 CFR part 660 is proposed to be amended as follows:
PART 660FISHERIES OFF WEST COAST STATES AND IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC
1. The authority citation for part 660 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
2. Section Sec. 660.370, ``Overfished Species Rebuilding Plans'' is added to read as follows:
For each overfished groundfish stock with an approved rebuilding
plan, this section contains the standards to be used to establish
annual or biennial OYs, specifically the target date for rebuilding the
stock to its MSY level and the harvest control rule to be used to rebuild the stock.
[FR Doc. 0322571 Filed 9403; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 351022S
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT Yvonne deReynier (Northwest Region,
NMFS), phone: 2065266150; fax: 2065266736 and; email:
yvonne.dereynier@noaa.gov.
14 CFR Part 39 40 CFR Part 52 14 CFR Part 71 33 CFR Part 165 26 CFR Part 1 50 CFR Part 679 40 CFR Part 180 47 CFR Part 73 33 CFR Part 117 50 CFR Part 17 44 CFR Part 67 50 CFR Part 648 14 CFR Part 97 33 CFR Part 100 40 CFR Part 63 26 CFR Part 301 50 CFR Part 622 39 CFR Part 111 40 CFR Part 300 50 CFR Part 660 44 CFR Part 65 40 CFR Parts 52 and 81 40 CFR Part 271 47 CFR Part 64 14 CFR Part 23 14 CFR Part 25 21 CFR Part 522 50 CFR Part 665 47 CFR Part 76 27 CFR Part 9