[Federal Register Volume 70, Number 86 (Thursday, May 5, 2005)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 23829-23833]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 05-9003]


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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

50 CFR Part 679

[Docket No. 050421110-5110-01; I.D. 041505F]
RIN 0648-AT03


Pacific Halibut Fisheries; Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic 
Zone Off Alaska; Individual Fishing Quota Program; Community 
Development Quota Program

AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and 
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.

ACTION: Proposed rule; request for comments.

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SUMMARY: NMFS proposes an amendment to the Pacific halibut regulations 
for waters in and off Alaska.

[[Page 23830]]

This proposed action modifies the Individual Fishing Quota (IFQ) 
Program and the Western Alaska Community Development Quota (CDQ) 
Program by allowing quota share holders in International Pacific 
Halibut Commission (IPHC) Regulatory Area (Area) 4C to fish their Area 
4C IFQ in Area 4D. This proposed action is intended to enhance 
harvesting opportunities for halibut by IFQ and CDQ fishermen and is 
necessary to promote the objectives of the Northern Pacific Halibut Act 
of 1982 (Halibut Act) with respect to the IFQ and CDQ Pacific halibut 
fisheries, consistent with the regulations and resource management 
objectives of the IPHC.

DATES: Written comments must be received no later than June 6, 2005.

ADDRESSES: Send comments to Sue Salveson, Assistant Regional 
Administrator, Sustainable Fisheries Division, Alaska Region, NMFS, 
Attn: Lori Durall. Comments may be submitted by:
     Mail: P.O. Box 21668, Juneau, AK 99802.
     Hand Delivery to the Federal Building: 709 West 9th 
Street, Room 420A, Juneau, AK.
     Fax: 907-586-7557.
     E-mail: [email protected]. Include in the subject 
line of the e-mail the following document identifier: IFQ Halibut 4CD 
RIN 0648-AT03. E-mail comments, with or without attachments, are 
limited to 5 megabytes.
     Webform at the Federal eRulemaking Portal: 
www.regulations.gov Follow the instructions at that site for submitting 
comments.
    Copies of the environmental assessment (EA), regulatory impact 
review (RIR), and initial regulatory flexibility analysis (IRFA) 
prepared for this action are available from NMFS at the above address 
or by calling the Sustainable Fisheries Division, Alaska Region, NMFS, 
at 907-586-7228.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Bubba Cook, 907-586-7425 or 
[email protected].

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

Background and Need for Action

    Management of the Pacific halibut (Hippoglossus stenolepis) 
(halibut) fishery in and off Alaska is based on an international 
agreement between Canada and the United States. This agreement, titled 
the ``Convention Between the United States of America and Canada for 
the Preservation of the Halibut Fishery of the Northern Pacific Ocean 
and Bering Sea'' (Convention), was signed at Ottawa, Canada on March 2, 
1953, and was amended by the ``Protocol Amending the Convention,'' 
signed at Washington, D.C., March 29, 1979. The Convention is 
implemented in the United States by the Halibut Act.
    Generally, the IPHC develops halibut fishery management regulations 
pursuant to the Convention and submits those regulations to the U.S. 
Secretary of State for approval. NMFS publishes approved IPHC 
regulations in the Federal Register as annual management measures. NMFS 
published the IPHC's current annual management measures on February 25, 
2005 (70 FR 9242).
    The Halibut Act also authorizes the North Pacific Fishery 
Management Council (Council) to develop halibut fishery regulations in 
and off Alaska that are in addition to, but not in conflict with, the 
approved IPHC regulations (Halibut Act, section 773(c)). Regulations 
developed by the Council will be implemented only upon approval of the 
U.S. Secretary of Commerce (Secretary).

The IFQ and CDQ Fisheries

    In December 1991, the Council adopted a limited access system for 
managing the halibut fishery in and off Alaska under authority of the 
Halibut Act. This limited access system included an IFQ Program for 
Areas 2C through 4D, and the CDQ program for Areas 4B through 4E. The 
Council designed the IFQ and CDQ Programs to allocate specific 
harvesting privileges among U.S. fishermen and eligible western Alaska 
communities to resolve management and conservation problems associated 
with ``open access'' fishery management, and to promote the development 
of fishery-based economic opportunities in western Alaska. Acting on 
behalf of the Secretary, NMFS initially implemented the IFQ and CDQ 
programs through regulations published in the Federal Register on 
November 9, 1993 (58 FR 59375). Fishing for halibut under these two 
programs began on March 15, 1995.
    Each quota share (QS) represents a transferable harvest privilege, 
within specified limitations, which is converted annually into IFQ. 
Fishermen granted IFQs are authorized to harvest a specified amount of 
halibut in the Areas specified on an IFQ permit issued to the 
fishermen.
    NMFS and the State of Alaska jointly manage the CDQ Program based 
on a program design developed by the Council. Currently, 65 communities 
are eligible to participate in the CDQ Program, representing about 
27,000 western Alaska residents. These communities are located within 
50 nautical miles of the Bering Sea coast or on an island in the Bering 
Sea and are predominantly populated by Alaska Natives. The eligible 
communities formed six non-profit corporations known as CDQ groups to 
manage and administer allocations, investments, and economic 
development projects.

Catch Sharing Plan (CSP) for Area 4

    The CSP for Area 4 originally was developed by the Council to 
apportion the IPHC's halibut catch limit for Area 4 among Areas 4A, 4B, 
4C, 4D, and 4E as necessary to carry out the socioeconomic objectives 
of the IFQ and CDQ programs. The Area 4 CSP was published in the 
Federal Register on March 20, 1996 (61 FR 11337) and implemented that 
same year.
    NMFS subsequently modified the Area 4 CSP to remove Areas 4A and 4B 
from the CSP in 1998, to allow the catch limits for these two areas and 
a combined Area 4C-E to be set according to the IPHC's revised area 
specific biomass-based methodology. The IPHC considers Area 4A, Area 
4B, and the combined Area 4C-E to have separate halibut populations for 
purposes of management. A complete description of the proposed 
revisions to the Area 4 CSP, catch limit apportionments, and 
geographical description of each subarea was published in the Federal 
Register on January 12, 1998 (63 FR 1812). These modifications were 
approved March 17, 1998 (63 FR 13000). Beginning in 1998, the IPHC has 
annually implemented the measures specified in the Area 4 CSP to 
apportion the combined Area 4C-E catch limit independently among Areas 
4C, 4D, and 4E. The annual management measures addressing the Area 4C-E 
catch limit in 2005 were published on February 25, 2005 (70 FR 9242).
    The IPHC assesses the halibut resource in Areas 4C-E as a single 
stock unit. The IPHC continues to use survey-based estimates scaled to 
adjoining areas for the combined Area 4C-E because the information 
needed for an analytical assessment is not available. In the past, the 
IPHC scaled the combined area to Area 3A because it represented the 
nearest area with an analytical estimate. Since the development of an 
analytical estimate for Area 4A in 2003, the IPHC now estimates the 
Area 4C-E biomass as 142 percent of the Area 4A biomass. The combined 
area quota is subsequently broken out by subarea according to the CSP.
    Since its implementation in 1998, the CSP has been applied to the 
annual combined Area 4C-E catch limit established by the IPHC. A direct 
allocation of 80,000 lb (36.3 mt) is made to Area 4E in the revised CSP 
when the Area 4C-E catch limit is greater than 1,657,600 lb (751.9 mt). 
The purpose is

[[Page 23831]]

to provide CDQ fishermen in Area 4E with additional harvesting 
opportunity. The entire Area 4E catch limit is assigned to the CDQ 
reserve and subsequently allocated to qualifying CDQ groups. The 
remainder of the combined catch limit is allocated as 46.43 percent to 
Area 4C, 46.43 percent to Area 4D, and 7.14 percent to Area 4E.

Previous Revision of the CSP

    In 1999, four CDQ groups with CDQ halibut fishing authority in Area 
4D requested a regulatory change to allow CDQ halibut allocated to them 
in Area 4D to be harvested in Area 4E. The Council subsequently 
recommended a CSP change authorizing halibut CDQ issued in Area 4D to 
be harvested in Area 4E. In January 2002, the IPHC concurred in the 
Council's recommendation because it considers the halibut in Areas 4C, 
4D, and 4E to be a single stock unit for management purposes. The 
Council based its recommendation on the fact that most of the 
communities in CDQ groups with only Area 4D halibut CDQ had to travel 
extended distances offshore to harvest Area 4D halibut CDQ or the quota 
had to be harvested by large, non-local vessels. In 2003, the CSP and 
the regulations were amended by the Secretary to allow only Area 4D QS 
holders to harvest their CDQ in Area 4E (68 FR 9902, March 3, 2003).

The Proposed Revision of the CSP

    Halibut IFQ and CDQ fishermen in Area 4C have experienced a steady 
drop in catch rates since 1985. The drop is consistent among gear types 
and amounts to a decline in catch rates of greater than 70 percent over 
the past ten years. The reduced catch rates have consequently reduced 
the total harvest of halibut by IFQ and CDQ fishermen in Area 4C. 
During the 2003 fishing season, Area 4C fishermen landed just 42 
percent of the total Area 4C IFQ halibut allocation compared to a 
statewide average of 97 percent for all Areas. Only 45 percent of the 
Area 4C CDQ halibut allocation was landed by 4C fishermen during the 
2003 fishing season compared to an average of 94 percent in other CDQ 
areas. The declines in catch rates and consequent poor harvests have 
generated considerable concern among Area 4C community residents who 
depend heavily on the halibut resource to support their local 
economies.
    Recent research conducted by the IPHC indicates localized depletion 
in Area 4C. Localized depletion results from concentrated fishing 
effort in a limited area that exceeds the sustainable level for fishing 
in that area. Although effort and catches of halibut have increased in 
Area 4C over the last 10 years, catch per unit effort (CPUE) has 
declined steadily since commercial fishing began. Catches increased 
because fishing effort increased, offsetting the decline in CPUE. IPHC 
research shows that a comparison of CPUE with effort indicates a 
continuous pattern of increasing effort and decreasing CPUE. The IPHC 
suggests that increased effort in Area 4C is unlikely to produce 
increased catch.
    The commercial catch taken in Area 4C is highly concentrated around 
the two Pribilof Islands of St. Paul and St. George. For commercial 
catches between 1993 and 2004, with known latitude/longitude locations, 
approximately 73 percent of the Area 4C catch was taken within 18 
nautical miles of St. Paul Island and 25 percent within 18 nautical 
miles of St. George Island. More importantly, much of the directed 
effort for the halibut fishery during the 1993-2004 time period 
occurred in relatively small areas south of the Pribilof Islands and 
were concentrated in the southwest corner of Area 4C. The IPHC notes 
that 46.43 percent of the entire Area 4C-E catch limit is allotted for 
only 5.1 percent of the total Area 4C-E fishing grounds located in Area 
4C. The available fishing grounds in Area 4C consists of only 561 
square nautical miles out of a total of 11,076 square nautical miles 
comprising Area 4C. The limited fishing grounds in Area 4C results in a 
concentrated fishing effort in a relatively small fishing area. The 
IPHC also notes that incidental catch of halibut in other fisheries has 
reduced recruitment and immigration into Area 4C, further exacerbating 
the localized depletion. The diminished harvests, limited fishing 
grounds, and reduced recruitment and immigration suggests a decrease in 
halibut abundance over time in Area 4C which results in a decreased 
CPUE. The IPHC recommends a reduction in effort in Area 4C to observe 
how the halibut biomass responds and further determine the productivity 
of stock.
    Current regulations at 50 CFR 679.42(a)(1) prohibit harvesting 
halibut IFQ or CDQ in a regulatory area other than the area for which 
the quota is allocated. Halibut IFQ and CDQ allocated in a particular 
area may be harvested only in that same area, in accordance with 
biomass-based quotas, except that halibut CDQ allocated for Area 4D may 
be harvested in Area 4E. One solution for reducing fishing effort in 
Area 4C while continuing to allow Area 4C fishermen to fully harvest 
their IFQ or CDQ is to redistribute fishing effort from Area 4C to Area 
4D.
    The CSP assigns 46.43 percent of the combined 4C-E catch to Area 
4D, which is an amount equal to that allocated to Area 4C. However, for 
the same percentage, Area 4D has approximately ten times more fishing 
grounds at 5,605 square nautical miles than Area 4C at 561 square 
nautical miles. Fishermen in Area 4D have harvested an average of 92 
percent of the IFQ allocation for Area 4D over the past ten years, 
achieving 100 percent during 2003 and 2004. Fishermen also harvested an 
average of 89 percent of the Area 4D CDQ allocation over the past ten 
years, achieving 80 and 84 percent during 2003 and 2004, respectively. 
On average, Area 4D conducted only 32 percent of the IFQ landings that 
Area 4C conducted over the past ten years inferring that less effort 
was required to achieve the full harvest of the 4D IFQ halibut 
allocation. Likewise, CDQ landings of halibut from Area 4D were only 19 
percent of those from Area 4C over the past ten years inferring that 
less effort was required to achieve the full harvest of the 4D CDQ 
harvest. Therefore, less effort was required to harvest the Area 4D IFQ 
and CDQ halibut allocation in Area 4D, indicating a higher CPUE in Area 
4D.
    Allowing Area 4C IFQ and CDQ holders to harvest their IFQ and CDQ 
in Area 4D would provide several benefits to Area 4C IFQ and CDQ 
holders including: (1) reducing fishing effort within Area 4C, thereby 
alleviating localized depletion; (2) increasing human health and safety 
in the small boat fleet that harvests halibut near St. Paul and St. 
George Islands by reducing competition with larger vessels that may 
harvest their IFQ in either Area 4C or 4D; and (3) increasing the 
geographic area available for harvesting Area 4C quota, thereby 
spreading out the fishing fleet. Furthermore, despite a potential 
increase in fishing effort in Area 4D resulting from the proposed 
action, the IPHC notes that the ratio of halibut harvest to available 
fishing grounds would remain much lower in Area 4D than in Area 4C. 
Therefore, the likelihood that the localized depletion problem in Area 
4C would simply be transposed to Area 4D would remain low.
    In December 2004, the Council recommended a regulatory amendment 
that would allow an Area 4C QS holder to harvest his or her IFQ and CDQ 
in Area 4D. The Council made its recommendation based on the 
diminishing harvests and the resulting decline of economic conditions 
in the Area 4C communities. In January 2005, the IPHC approved a 
regulatory change to the halibut annual management

[[Page 23832]]

measures that would allow the Council's recommendation to take effect 
in 2005 if it is approved by the Secretary.
    This action proposes to change the Area 4 CSP and the IFQ and CDQ 
regulations to incorporate the Council's recommendation that Area 4C 
halibut IFQ or CDQ may be harvested either in Area 4C or in Area 4D. No 
changes are proposed, however, to the existing Area 4 CSP that 
apportions the combined Area 4C-E annual catch limit among Areas 4C, 
4D, and 4E. The authority to allocate the annual Area 4 catch limit 
according to the Area 4 CSP is specified at 50 CFR 300.65(b) and will 
continue to be implemented by the IPHC in its annual management 
measures pursuant to 50 CFR 300.62. The following paragraph would be 
added to the Area 4 CSP:
    An IFQ or CDQ holder with an allocation of Area 4C halibut IFQ 
and CDQ may harvest all or part of that allocation in Area 4D. This 
provision is based on the Council's recommendation in December 2004, 
to allow IFQ and CDQ fishermen in Area 4C additional halibut IFQ and 
CDQ harvesting opportunities. The framework that allocates the IPHC 
catch limits among Areas 4C, 4D, and 4E remains unchanged.
    This change in the Area 4 CSP will complement regulatory changes at 
Sec.  679.7(f)(4) and Sec.  679.42(a)(1). If approved and implemented 
as proposed, fishermen who possess Area 4C IFQ or CDQ would receive a 
statement in accordance with Sec.  679.40(c)(3) that would specify the 
maximum amount of Area 4C halibut that may be harvested in Area 4C or 
4D. In the first year of implementation, however, this statement will 
be issued before the effective date of the proposed regulatory change 
and, therefore, would not include a reference to Area 4D. Therefore, 
proposed paragraph 679.42(a)(1)(i) would authorize harvest of Area 4C 
IFQ and CDQ in Area 4D during the 2005 fishing year. In subsequent 
years, however, the proposed change to the CSP, the proposed minor 
regulatory changes, and the permit statement would allow Area 4C QS 
holders to harvest their IFQ and CDQ in Area 4D.
    This proposed rule would make a minor change to Sec.  679.7(f)(4) 
which prohibits retaining IFQ halibut on a vessel in excess of the 
total amount of unharvested IFQ applicable to the IFQ regulatory area 
in which the vessel is deploying gear and that is simultaneously held 
by all IFQ holders on board. The total amount of IFQ or CDQ available 
to individual Area 4C IFQ or CDQ holders will not change as a result of 
this action. The proposed change would substitute the word ``area(s)'' 
for ``area'' and add ``CDQ'' to correspond with IFQ, clarifying that 
the total amount of unharvested IFQ or CDQ assigned to Area 4C may be 
harvested in either Area 4C or 4D. Therefore, an Area 4C IFQ or CDQ 
holder may harvest only the total amount of IFQ or CDQ halibut assigned 
to Area 4C in either Area 4C or 4D, but may not harvest the total 
amount assigned in both Areas 4C and 4D.
    NMFS proposes to monitor each IFQ or CDQ holder's halibut catch in 
Areas 4C and 4D. If the catch in Area 4D exceeds the group's initial 
allocation for Area 4D, then NMFS will subtract this additional catch 
from the group's Area 4C allocation. Halibut IFQ or CDQ catch from Area 
4C also will be subtracted from each IFQ or CDQ holder's Area 4C 
allocation. Any amount of halibut IFQ or CDQ catch in Area 4D that 
exceeds the 4D allocation and is subtracted from the Area 4C allocation 
will no longer be available for harvest in Area 4C. This procedure 
would allow each IFQ or CDQ holder to decide where to catch their Area 
4C halibut IFQ or CDQ allocation without requiring transfers. Each IFQ 
or CDQ holder would have to monitor the harvest of Area 4C and 4D 
halibut IFQ or CDQ to ensure that: (1) its total catch in Area 4C does 
not exceed its Area 4C allocation, minus any portion of its Area 4C 
quota harvested in Area 4D, (2) its total catch in Area 4D does not 
exceed the sum of its Area 4C and Area 4D allocations, minus any 
portion of its Area 4C allocation harvested in Area 4C, and (3) its 
total catch in Areas 4C and 4D does not exceed the sum of its Area 4C 
and Area 4D allocations.
    Although CDQ assigned to Area 4D QS currently may be harvested in 
Area 4E, this proposed action would not allow CDQ assigned to Area 4C 
to be harvested in Area 4E. The current prohibition against harvesting 
halibut IFQ and CDQ in an area different from the area to which it is 
assigned will remain effective, except that halibut CDQ assigned to 
Area 4D may be harvested in Area 4E. If the Secretary approves this 
action, a second exception to the prohibition would allow Area 4C IFQ 
or CDQ holders to fish their IFQ and CDQ in Area 4C or 4D, but this 
action would not authorize Area 4C CDQ holders to fish their CDQ in 
Area 4E.

Classification

    This proposed rule has been determined to be not significant for 
purposes of Executive Order 12866.
    The Council recommended this action to the Secretary for adoption 
pursuant to its authority under the Halibut Act. An RIR/IRFA for the 
proposed revisions to the Area 4 CSP and regulatory amendment describes 
the management background, the purpose and need for action, the 
management alternatives, and the socioeconomic impacts of the 
alternatives (see ADDRESSES).
    The IRFA prepared for this action assesses potential impacts on 
small entities for purposes of the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA). 
The Council reviewed two alternatives, a ``no action'' alternative and 
a preferred alternative to allow Area 4C QS holders to harvest their 
IFQ and CDQ in Area 4D subject to review after the third year of 
implementation. The no action alternative limits the opportunities of 
Area 4C QS holders to harvest their halibut allocations. The preferred 
alternative would allow an exception for Area 4C to the rule that 
requires all QS to be harvested in the area to which it is assigned.
    The objective of the proposed action is to increase opportunities 
of Area 4C QS holders to harvest their halibut allocations. The legal 
basis for the proposed action is explained in the preamble of this 
proposed rule. In summary, NMFS manages the North Pacific halibut 
fisheries of the Bering Sea in Convention waters under the authority of 
the Northern Pacific Halibut Management Act. Regulations at 50 CFR 
300.60 through 300.65 govern the Pacific halibut fishery in the waters 
of the U.S. The annual Pacific halibut management measures for 2005 
were published in the Federal Register on February 25, 2005 (70 FR 
9242).
    The proposed action would partially relieve the restriction 
limiting harvests of Pacific halibut IFQ and CDQ to the IPHC regulatory 
area to which it is assigned. The entities regulated by this action are 
those entities that are authorized to harvest halibut in Areas 4C and 
4D. These entities include six CDQ groups, and the owners and operators 
of longline catcher vessels and catcher/processor vessels in these 
areas who hold halibut IFQ or CDQ.
    The alternatives addressed in the IRFA may directly affect all six 
CDQ groups, which represent 65 western Alaska communities with a total 
2000 population of over 27,000, which receive halibut CDQ in halibut 
Areas 4C and 63 persons who held more than 4 million QS units in Area 
4C in 2004. There are 23 Category D vessels fishing halibut IFQs in 
Area 4C. Some fishermen have expressed interest in purchasing larger 
vessels to fish their category D QS. Other fishermen may hire Category 
C or B vessels to fish their Category D QS because of bad weather and 
safety reason. The halibut fleet in

[[Page 23833]]

Area 4C is larger and more diverse than in Area 4D, which is comprised 
of mostly larger vessels.
    Two CDQ groups hold Area 4C QS/CDQ. People in these communities 
benefit from the halibut CDQ and IFQ fisheries directly and indirectly. 
Some residents earn income from participating in the CDQ fishery, 
either by harvesting or processing halibut, which provides a direct 
effect on both the economic health of the individuals and their 
communities. Some residents earn income from participating in the CDQ 
fishery, which economically benefits the individuals and their 
communities through jobs harvesting and processing halibut.
    As of November 2004, there are 63 persons holding QS in Area 4C. In 
2002, 24 unique vessels made IFQ halibut landings in Area 4C. Reported 
ex-vessel price helps describe the small entities regulated by this 
action. NMFS publishes annually ``standard prices'' for halibut and 
sablefish that estimate the ex-vessel prices received by IFQ fishermen 
for their harvests. NMFS uses these prices for calculating permit 
holder cost recovery fee liabilities. In 2003, these price data suggest 
that the price of halibut might have been about $2.92 per pound for 
headed and gutted halibut (December 22, 2003, 68 FR 71036). This 
harvest limit and price imply maximum vessel revenues of less than 
$1,000,000 for halibut. Thus, no vessel subject to these restrictions 
could have been used to land the maximum gross revenue threshold for a 
``small'' catcher vessel established under RFA rules, which is more 
than $3,000,000 worth of halibut in 2003. Therefore all halibut vessels 
may be assumed to be small entities, for purposes of the IRFA. These 
estimates are likely to overestimate the numbers of small entities 
because they do not take account of income that might have been earned 
by the vessel in other fisheries or activities, and they do not take 
account of vessel affiliations. NMFS has defined all halibut vessels as 
small businesses for the purpose of regulatory flexibility analysis.
    Impacts on regulated small entities resulting from the proposed 
action appear to be positive. Qualitatively, the preferred alternative 
is likely to increase the amount of halibut harvested from the recent 
low levels up to the total catch limit specified for Area 4C. Any 
increase in harvest would have a positive economic impact on 
participating small entities. However, it is not possible to 
quantitatively estimate magnitudes of these impacts at this time.
    This proposed action does not impose new recordkeeping or reporting 
requirements on the regulated small entities. Additionally, this 
proposed action does not duplicate, overlap, or conflict with any other 
Federal rules. The alternatives described for this proposed action are 
not expected to result in adverse impacts on directly regulated small 
entities.

List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 679

    Alaska, Determinations and appeals, Fisheries, Recordkeeping and 
reporting requirements.

    Dated: April 29, 2005.
John Oliver
Deputy Assistant Administrator for Operations, National Marine 
Fisheries Service.
    For the reasons set out in the preamble, 50 CFR part 679 is 
proposed to be amended as follows:

PART 679--FISHERIES OF THE EXCLUSIVE ECONOMIC ZONE OFF ALASKA

    1. The authority citation for part 679 continues to read as 
follows:

    Authority: 16 U.S.C. 773 et seq.; 1540(f); 1801 et seq; 1851 
note; 3631 et seq.
    2. In Sec.  679.7, paragraph (f)(4) is revised to read as follows:


Sec.  679.7  Prohibitions.

* * * * *
    (f) * * *
    (4) Except as provided in Sec.  679.40(d), retain IFQ or CDQ 
halibut or IFQ or CDQ sablefish on a vessel in excess of the total 
amount of unharvested IFQ or CDQ, applicable to the vessel category and 
IFQ or CDQ regulatory area(s) in which the vessel is deploying fixed 
gear, and that is currently held by all IFQ or CDQ card holders aboard 
the vessel, unless the vessel has an observer aboard under subpart E of 
this part and maintains the applicable daily fishing log prescribed in 
the annual management measures published in the Federal Register 
pursuant to 50 CFR 300.62 and Sec.  679.5.
* * * * *
    3. In Sec.  679.42, paragraph (a)(1) is revised to read as follows:


Sec.  679.42  Limitations on use of QS and IFQ.

    (a) * * *
    (1) The QS or IFQ specified for one IFQ regulatory area must not be 
used in a different IFQ regulatory area, except:
    (i) Notwithstanding Sec.  679.4(d)(1), Sec. Sec.  679.7(f)(4) and 
(f)(11), Sec. Sec.  679.40(b)(1), (c)(3), and (e), from [EFFECTIVE DATE 
OF FINAL RULE] to November 15, 2005, all or part of the QS and IFQ 
specified for regulatory area 4C may be harvested in either Area 4C or 
Area 4D.
    (ii) For the year 2006 and subsequent annual IFQ fishing seasons, 
all or part of the QS and IFQ specified for regulatory area 4C may be 
harvested in either Area 4C or Area 4D.
* * * * *
[FR Doc. 05-9003 Filed 5-4-05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-22-S