[Federal Register Volume 74, Number 212 (Wednesday, November 4, 2009)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 57105-57116]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E9-26559]


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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

50 CFR Part 300

[Docket No. 0812191631-91238-03]
RIN 0648-AX53


Pacific Halibut Fisheries; Subsistence Fishing

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

ACTION: Final rule.

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SUMMARY: NMFS issues a final rule to revise the criteria for rural 
residents to participate in the subsistence fishery for Pacific halibut 
in waters in and off Alaska. This action is necessary to allow 
subsistence halibut fishing opportunities for rural residents who 
reside in locations outside the legal boundaries of specified 
communities and who were prohibited from participating in the 
subsistence halibut fishery by previous regulations. This action is 
intended to allow these inadvertently-excluded rural residents to 
participate in the subsistence halibut fishery and to support the 
conservation and management provisions of the Northern Pacific Halibut 
Act of 1982.

DATES: This rule is effective December 4, 2009.

ADDRESSES: Electronic copies of the Regulatory Impact Review (RIR) 
prepared for this action, and the environmental assessment (EA) 
prepared for the original subsistence halibut action (68 FR 18145; 
April 15, 2003) may be obtained from http://www.regulations.gov or from 
the Alaska Region Web site at http://www.alaskafisheries.noaa.gov.
    Written comments regarding the burden-hour estimates or other 
aspects of the collection-of-information requirements contained in this 
final rule may be submitted by mail to NMFS, Alaska Region, P.O. Box 
21668, Juneau, AK 99802-1668, Attn: Ellen Sebastian, Records Officer; 
in person at NMFS, Alaska Region, 709 West 9th Street, Room 420A, 
Juneau, Alaska; and by e-mail to [email protected], or fax to 
202-395-7285.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Becky Carls, 907-586-7228.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

Background

    Management of the Pacific halibut (Hippoglossus stenolepis) 
(hereafter ``halibut'') fishery in and off Alaska is based on an 
international agreement between Canada and the United States. This 
agreement, entitled 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 amended by the ``Protocol 
Amending the Convention,'' signed at Washington, D.C., March 29, 1979. 
The Convention, administered by the International Pacific Halibut 
Commission (IPHC), is given effect in the United States by the Northern 
Pacific Halibut Act of 1982 (Halibut Act).
    The IPHC promulgates regulations pursuant to the Convention. The 
IPHC's regulations are subject to approval by the Secretary of State 
with concurrence from the Secretary of Commerce (Secretary). After 
approval by the Secretary of State and the Secretary, the IPHC 
regulations are published in the Federal Register as annual management 
measures pursuant to 50 CFR 300.62. NMFS published the IPHC's current 
annual management measures on March 19, 2009 (74 FR 11681).
    The Halibut Act also authorizes the North Pacific Fishery 
Management Council (Council) to develop halibut fishery regulations, 
including limited access regulations, in its geographic area of concern 
that would apply to nationals or vessels of the United States (Halibut 
Act, section 773c(c)). Such an action by the Council is limited to only 
those regulations that are in addition to, and not in conflict with, 
IPHC regulations. Council-developed regulations must be approved and 
implemented by the Secretary. Any allocation of halibut fishing 
privileges must be fair and equitable and consistent with other

[[Page 57106]]

applicable federal law. The Council used its authority under the 
Halibut Act to recommend a subsistence halibut program in October 2000 
to recognize and manage the subsistence fishery for halibut. Like the 
original subsistence halibut program and subsequent amendments to it, 
this action was developed by the Council under the authority of the 
Halibut Act.
    The Halibut Act at sections 773c (a) and (b) provides the Secretary 
with the general responsibility to carry out the Convention with the 
authority to, in consultation with the Secretary of the department in 
which the U.S. Coast Guard is operating (currently the Secretary of 
Homeland Security), adopt such regulations as may be necessary to carry 
out the purposes and objectives of the Convention and the Halibut Act. 
The Secretary has delegated authority to NMFS to implement the Halibut 
Act.

Need for Action

    The need for this action was described in detail in the preamble to 
the proposed rule for this action (74 FR 39270; August 6, 2009) and is 
summarized below. The proposed rule is available via the Internet (see 
ADDRESSES). No substantive changes were made to the proposed regulatory 
text in this final rule; however, minor technical edits that are 
specified below were made to the regulatory text.
    The subsistence halibut regulations authorize eligible persons who 
possess subsistence halibut registration certificates (SHARCs) to 
conduct subsistence halibut fishing in waters in and off Alaska. Under 
regulations in effect prior to this rule, a person was eligible for a 
SHARC to harvest subsistence halibut only if he or she were a rural 
resident of a community with customary and traditional uses of halibut 
that is listed in the tables at Sec.  300.65(g)(1) (hereafter ``listed 
community''), or a member of an Alaska Native tribe with customary and 
traditional uses of halibut that is listed in the tables at Sec.  
300.65(g)(2). Members of Alaska Native tribes are not directly affected 
by this action. Therefore, the discussion of rural versus non-rural 
eligibility in the preamble of this final rule does not apply to Alaska 
Native tribal members. The definition of the term ``rural resident'' is 
the primary issue in this action. The previous definition that limited 
rural residents to persons residing in listed communities had 
inadvertent, adverse impacts on some rural residents; individuals who 
resided outside the boundaries of listed communities did not qualify 
for SHARCs.
    Under this final rule, rural residents of south of Cape Espenberg 
who reside within a designated ten-statute-mile boundary adjacent to 
the waters of the Bering Sea and Pacific Ocean or in other designated 
places outside of specified non-rural areas are eligible to subsistence 
fish for halibut. In June 2008, the Council recommended a wider 
geographic scope for rural resident eligibility to include individuals 
who reside in remote locations outside the boundaries of listed 
communities. The Council determined that those individuals or families 
in remote locations within the subsistence halibut use areas practice 
the same patterns of halibut use as residents of nearby listed 
communities that have customary and traditional uses and, therefore, 
should be eligible to participate in subsistence fishing for halibut. 
NMFS agrees with the Council's recommendation and determination 
concerning rural resident eligibility and, therefore, approves this 
final rule to allow inadvertently-excluded rural residents who reside 
in certain locations outside the legal boundaries of specified 
communities to participate in the subsistence halibut fishery. The land 
areas adjacent to the current non-subsistence marine waters areas are 
now designated as non-rural areas.
    Under this action, rural residents are considered eligible to 
participate in the subsistence halibut program if they meet the 
criteria for rural residency under one of two options. First, a person 
continues to be considered a rural resident if he or she is domiciled 
in a community specified at Sec.  300.65(g)(1). Second, under the new 
definition for a rural area, a person is considered a rural resident if 
he or she is domiciled in one of the following rural areas listed at 
Sec.  300.65(g)(3):
     Southeast Alaska east of 141[deg] W. long., except for the 
land areas of the Ketchikan Gateway Borough as these areas are 
described below, the land areas of the City and Borough of Juneau, and 
the Ketchikan and Juneau non-subsistence marine waters areas (see 
Figures 2 and 3);
     The Alaska Peninsula, Aleutian Islands, Kodiak Island 
Archipelago, and the area south of the northern boundary of the Bristol 
Bay Borough and south of 58[deg]39.2' N. lat. (see Figures 5, 6, and 
7);
     Nelson, Nunivak, and Saint Lawrence Islands (see Figure 
6); and
     All other areas of Alaska within ten statute miles of mean 
high water on the Bering Sea and Pacific Ocean coasts, south of Cape 
Espenberg, including along the Kuskokwim River to Bethel, and that are 
not specified as non-rural areas and that are not specified as the 
Anchorage-Matsu-Kenai or Valdez non-subsistence marine waters areas 
(see Figures 4, 5, 6, and 7).
    Qualifications for a rural SHARC continue to require domicile in a 
designated rural area for the 12 consecutive months immediately 
preceding the time when the assertion of residence is made, and no 
claim of residency in another state, territory, or country. The 
definitions for ``rural'' and ``rural resident'' listed at Sec.  300.61 
are revised to include the residents of the newly described rural 
areas.
    Expansion of the rural resident definition requires definitive 
specification of non-rural areas as exceptions to the rural areas 
because a resident of a non-rural area does not qualify for a SHARC. In 
general, the non-rural areas are those land areas adjacent to the 
existing non-subsistence marine waters areas, the definitions of which 
are retained, and include the non-subsistence marine waters areas. 
Under this action, the land areas of the following cities and boroughs 
are non-rural areas for the purposes of the subsistence halibut 
fishery: the Ketchikan Gateway Borough as those boundaries existed on 
May 18, 2008; the City and Borough of Juneau; the Greater Anchorage 
Area Borough; the Matanuska-Susitna Borough; the Kenai Peninsula 
Borough, excluding the southern tip of the Kenai Peninsula that 
includes the Seldovia Census Designated Place; and the City of Valdez.
    The previous figures that displayed the ``non-subsistence marine 
waters areas'' described at Sec.  300.65(h)(3) in which subsistence 
fishing for halibut is prohibited are revised to include the adjacent 
non-rural land areas. These revised figures show the rural and non-
rural areas of Southern Southeast Alaska, including Ketchikan; Northern 
Southeast Alaska, including Juneau; Prince William Sound, including 
Valdez; and Anchorage-Matsu-Kenai. Two new figures are added to show 
the rural and non-rural areas of the Alaska Peninsula and Aleutian 
Islands and of Western and Central Alaska.
    The SHARC application is revised to incorporate changes 
necessitated by this action. Prior to this action, one combined 
application was used by rural residents and by Alaska Native tribal 
members. To simplify the application process for the public, separate 
applications will be used by rural residents and by Alaska Native 
tribal members. Additionally, the regulations at Sec.  300.65(i)(2) are 
revised to simplify the application requirements that are listed in the 
regulations. The SHARC application requirements for a rural

[[Page 57107]]

resident include indicating the basis upon which the applicant is 
eligible to harvest subsistence halibut as a rural resident. Additional 
requirements include listing a post office box number, describing the 
physical location of the domicile if there is no street address, and 
adding ``or area'' to the requirement to list the community that 
qualifies the fisherman as eligible to fish for subsistence halibut. 
The SHARC application for an Alaska Native tribal member clearly states 
what is needed for address or location information and includes listing 
the community or area of residence, and no longer requires the dates of 
residence in a community because that information is not necessary for 
an Alaska Native tribal member.
    The specific location of any SHARC holder's domicile must be 
provided on the SHARC application due to existing regulations limiting 
cash reimbursement for subsistence halibut fishing expenses. These 
regulations, at Sec.  300.66(j)(1) and Sec.  300.66(j)(2), are revised 
to include (A) references to the new qualification for a rural resident 
that is described at Sec.  300.65(g)(3), and (B) a limit on 
reimbursement of actual expenses of qualified subsistence fishermen who 
reside outside listed rural communities-the fisherman's actual expenses 
may be reimbursed only by rural residents who reside within ten statute 
miles of the rural location listed on the fisherman's SHARC 
application. Additionally, the text at Sec.  300.66(j)(2) is revised to 
parallel the construction used at Sec.  300.66(j)(1) regarding 
reimbursement of rural residents and specifies that Alaska Native 
tribal members may be reimbursed for only actual expenses for ice, 
bait, food, and fuel. The words ``actual expenses'' were inadvertently 
omitted from the previous regulatory text.
    The SHARC application for a rural resident includes the requirement 
to provide the name, complete mailing address, and phone number of an 
adult age 18 years or older who can verify that the residence listed by 
the applicant is the applicant's domicile and that it was the 
applicant's domicile for 12 months prior to the date of the 
application. The verifying person may not be the applicant's wife, 
husband, parent, or child and may not be living at the rural residence 
listed by the applicant. This requirement for a verifier enhances the 
ability of NMFS to determine whether a SHARC applicant is truly 
qualified as a rural resident eligible to fish for subsistence halibut.
    Under this action, there are several other minor changes to the 
regulations. First, added to the regulations at Sec.  300.61, is a 
definition for SHARC, which is the documentation issued by NMFS of the 
registration required to participate in subsistence fishing. Second, 
the regulations at Sec.  300.65(g) include a reference to the new 
qualification for a rural resident described at Sec.  300.65(g)(3). 
Third, a misspelling of Sheldon Point (Nunam Iqua) is corrected in the 
regulations at Sec.  300.65(g)(2) in the table for the IPHC halibut 
regulatory area 4E. Fourth, the regulations at Sec.  300.65(h)(3) no 
longer specify ``non-rural areas'' but ``non-subsistence marine waters 
areas'' instead; therefore, regulations at Sec. Sec.  300.65(h)(4) and 
300.66(g) are revised to reflect that change. Finally, the meaning of 
the ``area of tribal membership'' that is defined at Sec.  
300.65(h)(4)(iii) is revised to specify that this means the IPHC 
regulatory area under which an organized tribal entity is listed at 
Sec.  300.65(g)(2), or the area of the Bering Sea that is closed to 
commercial halibut fishing and adjacent to the rural area in which the 
Alaska Native tribal headquarters is located.

Response to Comments

    The proposed rule published in the Federal Register on August 6, 
2008 (74 FR 39269). The 30-day comment period on the proposed rule 
ended September 8, 2009. NMFS received a total of three letters that 
contained five unique comments on the proposed rule. Two letters were 
received from private citizens and one letter was received from a 
fishing industry association. A summary of these comments and NMFS's 
responses follows.
    Comment 1: One commenter was concerned about continuing to be 
excluded from the subsistence halibut fishery. The commenter resides 
full time in Resolute Cove, Day Harbor, Alaska, which is accessible 
only by water. The nearest road access is about 33 miles away in 
Seward, Alaska. The commenter is retired and depends on local fishing, 
especially in winter when travel is difficult.
    Response: Day Harbor, Alaska, which is located in the Kenai 
Peninsula Borough, is a non-rural area under this action. ``Therefore 
residents of this area are excluded from the subsistence halibut 
fishery.'' The marine waters in that area that are within the State of 
Alaska (State) have been classified as non-subsistence marine waters 
areas since the inception of the program. The Council recommended that 
the boundaries for non-subsistence areas match the boundaries for Anon-
subsistence use areas established by the State of Alaska Joint Board of 
Fisheries and Game. These boundaries are based on whether customary and 
traditional use is a principal part of the economy of the area and are 
not based on population size or remoteness. Substantively changing the 
boundaries of the non-subsistence marine waters areas or the adjacent 
land areas is beyond the scope of this action. A request to change the 
classification of the marine waters and land in this area to be 
qualified for subsistence halibut purposes may be made by the public to 
the Council.
    Comment 2: It appears that the proposed changes would exclude 
Loring, Alaska, from the subsistence halibut fishery. Loring is a small 
rural community located on Naha Bay, which is near Ketchikan and about 
12 miles from the road system on Revillagigedo Island. Most of the 
permanent residents of Loring fish and hunt to supplement their food 
supply. Loring was excluded as an eligible community under the earlier 
requirements for subsistence halibut fishing as the population was less 
than 20. This latest development continues to exclude Loring residents 
from subsistence halibut fishing even though Loring is a well-defined 
remote and rural community whose residents have subsistence fished for 
halibut since the early 1800s. The town of Loring and its residents 
should be included in the revised proposals for subsistence halibut 
fishing. The total number of families who would benefit would be around 
two or three, so it would not significantly impact the halibut stocks.
    Response: Residents of Loring, Alaska, are excluded from the 
subsistence halibut fishery under this rule.``The marine waters near 
Loring have been classified as a non-subsistence marine waters area 
since the inception of the program.'' Loring is 11 nautical miles from 
the closest waters that are open to subsistence halibut fishing. Please 
see the response to Comment 1 for how the boundaries for non-
subsistence areas were established. Substantively changing the 
boundaries of the non-subsistence marine waters areas or the adjacent 
land areas is beyond the scope of this action. A request may be made by 
the public to the Council to change the classification of the marine 
waters and land in this area to be qualified for subsistence halibut 
purposes.
    Comment 3: The commenter supports this action to allow 
inadvertently excluded rural residents who reside outside the city 
limits of Petersburg to participate in the subsistence halibut fishery.
    Response: NMFS notes the support for this action.

[[Page 57108]]

    Comment 4: The commenter is very apprehensive that the most recent 
information regarding subsistence halibut in this proposed rule is from 
2007, and supports action to gather accurate harvest numbers as quickly 
as possible. The commenter supports additional efforts for a harvest 
logbook or harvest report that must be submitted within one week of 
completion of subsistence harvest.
    Response: Information on subsistence halibut harvests is submitted 
voluntarily through a survey of SHARC holders. Although mandatory 
subsistence halibut harvest information is not required, 58 percent of 
SHARC holders participated in the 2007 harvest survey according to the 
report on subsistence harvests of halibut in Alaska published by the 
State in December 2008. This amount of participation is sufficient for 
a reasonably accurate harvest estimate. The collection of catch 
information from subsistence halibut participants is modeled on the 
State-wide sport fish harvest survey, a similar voluntary harvest 
reporting program.
    The data from 2007 are the most recent data available from all 
areas of the State of total halibut removals that include subsistence 
halibut harvest estimates. These data indicate that sport fisheries 
harvested 10.3 percent of the total and subsistence fisheries harvested 
1.4 percent of the total. Rigorous recordkeeping and reporting 
requirements for these two fisheries likely would increase the 
precision of these estimates. This is unnecessary, however, for the 
relatively small proportions of the total harvest. More rigorous 
recordkeeping and reporting requirements are imposed on fisheries that 
remove larger amounts of halibu-the commercial harvest of halibut and 
bycatch of halibut during directed commercial fisheries for other 
species.
    For those who live in remote locations, requiring the submission of 
the information within a week of the conclusion of fishing is an 
unreasonable reporting burden that is not justified based on the amount 
of halibut harvested in subsistence fishing State-wide. However, the 
suggestion to require a harvest logbook or other reporting tools for 
subsistence halibut fishermen in specific areas may be made to the 
Council.
    Comment 5: The commenter appreciates the emphasis on legal 
participation in the program being limited to Alaska residents and is 
concerned with the number of ``part-time'' Alaska residents who are in 
the State for only a few months of the year in the summer, yet claim 
Alaska residency.
    Response: The subsistence halibut program is not limited to Alaska 
residents. Alaska Native tribal members who reside outside the State 
may qualify to subsistence fish for halibut. For rural residents, the 
program is limited to those persons who reside in certain designated 
locations with customary and traditional use in waters in and off the 
geographical area under the Council's jurisdiction.

Changes from the Proposed Rule

    No substantive changes are made in this final rule from the 
proposed rule. The regulations at Sec.  300.65(i)(2) were revised to 
more precisely delineate the application submission requirements for a 
SHARC, which are detailed on the application form. To correct errors 
that occurred in the proposed rule, minor technical edits are made as 
follows: (1) add degree signs in the geographic coordinates at Sec.  
300.65(g)(3)(i) and Sec.  300.65(g)(4)(v), (2) correct the spelling of 
``Behm Narrows'' at Sec.  300.65(g)(4)(i), (3) add italics to text at 
Sec.  300.65(h)(3)(iii) and Sec.  300.65(h)(3)(iv), and (4) insert 
quotation marks around the phrase ``area of tribal membership'' at 
Sec.  300.65(h)(4)(iii).

Classification

    Regulations governing the U.S. fisheries for Pacific halibut are 
developed by the IPHC, the Pacific Fishery Management Council, the 
Council, and the Secretary. Section 5 of the Halibut Act (16 U.S.C. 
773c(c)) allows the regional council having authority for a particular 
geographical area to develop regulations governing the allocation and 
catch of halibut in U.S. Convention waters as long as those regulations 
do not conflict with IPHC regulations. This action is consistent with 
the Council's authority and the Secretary's authority to allocate 
halibut catches among fishery participants in the waters in and off 
Alaska.
    This rule has been determined to be not significant for purposes of 
Executive Order 12866. This rule also complies with the Secretary's 
authority under the Halibut Act to implement management measures for 
the halibut fishery.
    The Chief Council for Regulation of the Department of Commerce 
certified to the Chief Council for Advocacy of the Small Business 
Administration during the proposed rule stage that this action would 
not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small 
entities. The factual basis for the certification was published in the 
proposed rule and is not repeated here. No comments were received 
regarding this certification. As a result, a regulatory flexibility 
analysis was not required and none was prepared.
    This rule contains collection-of-information requirements subject 
to the Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA) and which have been approved by 
OMB under control number 0648-0460. Public reporting burden for the 
SHARC applications for a rural resident or an Alaska Native tribal 
member are each estimated to average ten minutes per response. This 
estimate includes the time for reviewing instructions, searching 
existing data sources, gathering and maintaining the data needed, and 
completing and reviewing the collection of information. Send comments 
regarding this burden estimate, or any other aspect of this data 
collection, including suggestions for reducing the burden, to NMFS (see 
ADDRESSES) and by e-mail to [email protected], or fax to 202-
395-7285.
    Notwithstanding any other provision of the law, no person is 
required to respond to, and no person shall 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.
    Executive Order 13175 of November 6, 2000 (25 U.S.C. 450 note), the 
Executive Memorandum of April 29, 1994 (25 U.S.C. 450 note), and the 
American Indian and Alaska Native Policy of the U.S. Department of 
Commerce (March 30, 1995) outline the responsibilities of the NMFS in 
matters affecting tribal interests. Section 161 of Public Law 108-199 
(188 Stat 452), as amended by section 518 of Public Law 108-447 (118 
Stat 3267), extends the consultation requirements of Executive Order 
13175 to Alaska Native corporations. Consultations occurred with the 
Alaska Native Subsistence Halibut Working Group in December 2008, 
pursuant to the requirements of Executive Order 13175.

List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 300

    Alaska, Alaska Natives, Fisheries, Pacific halibut fisheries, 
Recordkeeping and reporting requirements.

    Dated: October 30, 2009.
Samuel D. Rauch III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for Regulatory Programs, National Marine 
Fisheries Service.

0
For the reasons set out in the preamble, 50 CFR part 300, subpart E is 
amended as follows:

[[Page 57109]]

PART 300--INTERNATIONAL FISHERIES REGULATIONS

Subpart E--Pacific Halibut Fisheries

0
1. The authority citation for 50 CFR part 300, subpart E continues to 
read as follows:

    Authority: 16 U.S.C. 773-773k.


0
2. In Sec.  300.61 revise the definitions for ``Rural'' and ``Rural 
resident'' and add a new definition for ``Subsistence halibut 
registration certificate (SHARC)'' in alphabetical order to read as 
follows:


Sec.  300.61  Definitions.

* * * * *
    Rural means, for purposes of the subsistence fishery for Pacific 
halibut in waters in and off Alaska, a community of Alaska listed at 
Sec.  300.65(g)(1) or an area of Alaska described at Sec.  300.65(g)(3) 
in which the non-commercial, customary, and traditional use of fish and 
game for personal or family consumption is a principal characteristic 
of the economy or area and in which there is a long-term, customary, 
and traditional use of halibut.
    Rural resident means, for purposes of the subsistence fishery for 
Pacific halibut in waters in and off Alaska:
    (1) An individual domiciled in a rural community listed in the 
table at Sec.  300.65(g)(1) and who has maintained a domicile in rural 
communities listed in the table at Sec.  300.65(g)(1), or in rural 
areas described at Sec.  300.65(g)(3), for the 12 consecutive months 
immediately preceding the time when the assertion of residence is made, 
and who is not claiming residency in another state, territory, or 
country; or
    (2) An individual domiciled in a rural area described at Sec.  
300.65(g)(3) and who has maintained a domicile in rural areas described 
at Sec.  300.65(g)(3), or in rural communities listed in the table at 
Sec.  300.65(g)(1), for the 12 consecutive months immediately preceding 
the time when the assertion of residence is made, and who is not 
claiming residency in another state, territory, or country.
* * * * *
    Subsistence halibut registration certificate (SHARC) means 
documentation, issued by NMFS, of the registration required at Sec.  
300.65(i).
* * * * *

0
3. In Sec.  300.65:
    A. Revise paragraphs (g) introductory text, (h)(3) introductory 
text, (h)(3)(iii) introductory text, (h)(3)(iv), (h)(4) introductory 
text, (h)(4)(iii), (i)(2), (j)(3)(i)(B), (k)(3)(i)(A) introductory 
text, and (k)(3)(i)(B).
    B. In paragraph (g)(2), in the table entitled (Halibut Regulatory 
Area 4E,( revise the entry for ``Sheldon Point (Nuna Iqua)''.
    C. Add new paragraphs (g)(3) and (g)(4).
    The additions and revisions read as follows:


Sec.  300.65  Catch sharing plan and domestic management measures in 
waters in and off Alaska.

* * * * *
    (g) Subsistence fishing in and off Alaska. No person shall engage 
in subsistence fishing for halibut unless that person meets the 
requirements in paragraphs (g)(1), (g)(2), or (g)(3) of this section.
* * * * *
    (2) * * *

                       Halibut Regulatory Area 4E
------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Place with Tribal Headquarters          Organized Tribal Entity
------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                * * * * *
 
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sheldon Point (Nunam Iqua)             Native Village of Sheldon's Point
------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                * * * * *
 
------------------------------------------------------------------------

    (3) A person is eligible to harvest subsistence halibut if he or 
she is a rural resident in one of the rural areas of Alaska described 
as follows:

    (i) Southeast Alaska east of 141[deg] W. long., except for the land 
areas of the Ketchikan Gateway Borough as described at paragraph 
(g)(4)(i) of this section, the land areas of the City and Borough of 
Juneau, and the Ketchikan and Juneau non-subsistence marine waters 
areas as defined in paragraphs (h)(3)(i) and (h)(3)(ii) of this section 
(see figures 2 and 3 to this subpart E).
    (ii) The Alaska Peninsula, Aleutian Islands, Kodiak Island 
Archipelago, and the area south of the northern boundary of the Bristol 
Bay Borough and south of 58[deg]39.2' N. lat. (see figures 5, 6, and 7 
to this subpart E).
    (iii) Nelson, Nunivak, and Saint Lawrence Islands (see figure 6 to 
this subpart E).
    (iv) All other areas of Alaska within ten statute miles of mean 
high water on the Bering Sea and Pacific Ocean coasts, south of Cape 
Espenberg, including along the Kuskokwim River to Bethel, and that are 
not specified as non-rural land or water areas as defined in paragraph 
(g)(4) of this section (see figures 4, 5, 6, and 7 to this subpart E).
    (4) Non-rural areas consist of the non-subsistence marine waters 
areas defined in paragraph (h)(3) of this section and the land areas of 
the following cities and boroughs for purposes of the subsistence 
fishery for Pacific halibut in waters in and off Alaska:
    (i) The Ketchikan Gateway Borough on May 18, 2008. This area 
encompasses all those islands bounded on the east, north, and west by 
Behm Canal, Behm Narrows, and Clarence Strait to its junction with 
Nichols Passage, and on the south by Nichols and Revillagigedo Channel 
to its junction with Behm Canal. The designated boundaries extend to 
the center line of Behm Canal, Behm Narrows, Clarence Strait, Nichols 
Passage, and Revillagigedo Channel, and include all the area of 
Revillagigedo, Gravina, Pennock, Betton, Grant and other Clover Passage 
and Naha Bay Islands, Hassler, Gedney, Black, Smeaton, Manzanita, 
Rudyerd, and Bold Islands, and all other offshore and adjacent islands 
and inlets thereto (see figure 2 to this subpart E).
    (ii) The City and Borough of Juneau (see figure 3 to this subpart 
E).
    (iii) The Greater Anchorage Area Borough (see figures 4 and 5 to 
this subpart E).
    (iv) The Matanuska-Susitna Borough (see figure 5 to this subpart 
E).
    (v) The Kenai Peninsula Borough excluding the area of the Seldovia 
Census Designated Place, the area south and west of that place, and the 
area south and west of a line that runs from 59[deg]27.5' N. lat., 
151[deg]31.7' W. long. to 59[deg]12.5' N. lat., 151[deg]18.5' W. long 
(see figure 5 to this subpart E).
    (vi) The City of Valdez (see figures 4 and 5 to this subpart E).
    (h) * * *
    (3) Subsistence fishing may be conducted in any waters in and off 
Alaska except in the four non-subsistence marine waters areas defined 
as follows:
* * * * *
    (iii) The Anchorage-Matsu-Kenai non-subsistence marine waters area 
in Commission Regulatory Area 3A (see figures 4, 5, 6, and 7 to this 
subpart E) is defined as:
* * * * *
    (iv) Valdez non-subsistence marine waters area in Commission 
regulatory area 3A (see figures 4 and 5 to this subpart E) is defined 
as the waters of Port Valdez and Valdez Arm located north of 
61[deg]01.38' N. lat., and east of 146[deg]43.80' W. long.
    (4) Waters in and off Alaska that are not specifically identified 
as non-subsistence marine waters areas in paragraph (h)(3) of this 
section are rural

[[Page 57110]]

for purposes of subsistence fishing for halibut. Subsistence fishing 
may be conducted in any rural area by any person with a valid 
subsistence halibut registration certificate in his or her name issued 
by NMFS under paragraph (i) of this section, except that:
* * * * *
    (iii) For purposes of this paragraph (h)(4), Aarea of tribal 
membership@ means rural areas of the Commission regulatory area under 
which the Organized Tribal Entity is listed in the tables set out in 
paragraph (g)(2) of this section, or the Bering Sea closed area 
adjacent to the rural area in which the Alaska Native tribal 
headquarters is located.
    (i) * * *
    (2) Registration. To register as a subsistence halibut fisherman, a 
person may request a cooperating Alaska Native tribal government or 
other entity designated by NMFS to submit an application on his or her 
behalf to the Alaska Region, NMFS. Alternatively, a person may apply by 
submitting a completed application to the Alaska Region, NMFS. 
Application forms are available on the NMFS Alaska Region Web site at 
http://alaskafisheries.noaa.gov, or by contacting NMFS at 800-304-4846, 
Option 2. NMFS will process a SHARC Application for an Alaska Native 
Tribal Member or a SHARC Application for a Rural Resident provided that 
an application is completed, with all applicable fields accurately 
filled-in, and all required additional documentation is submitted. 
Initial applications for a SHARC must be signed and mailed or faxed to 
NMFS (see instructions on form). Renewals may be submitted 
electronically, mailed, or faxed.
    (i) Non-electronic submittal. The applicant must sign and date the 
application certifying that all information is true, correct, and 
complete. The applicant must submit the paper application as indicated 
on the application.
    (ii) Electronic submittal. An individual can submit a SHARC renewal 
on-line using an application available at the Alaska Region website. By 
using the SHARC number and date of birth, and by submitting the 
application form, the applicant certifies that all information is true, 
correct, and complete.
* * * * *
    (j) * * *
    (3) * * *
    (i) * * *
    (B) Within the Ketchikan, Juneau, Anchorage-Matsu-Kenai, and Valdez 
non-subsistence marine waters areas as defined in paragraph (h)(3) of 
this section (see figures 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, and 7 to this subpart E).
* * * * *
    (k) * * *
    (3) * * *
    (i) * * *
    (A) In the Anchorage-Matsu-Kenai non-subsistence marine waters area 
defined in paragraph (h)(3) of this section (see figures 4, 5, 6, and 7 
to this subpart E), only the following tribes may use a Ceremonial or 
Educational permit:
* * * * *
    (B) In the Valdez non-subsistence marine waters area defined in 
paragraph (h)(3) of this section (see figures 4 and 5 to this subpart 
E), only the Native Village of Tatitlek may use a Ceremonial or 
Educational permit.
* * * * *

0
4. In Sec.  300.66, revise paragraphs (g), (j)(1), and (j)(2) to read 
as follows:


Sec.  300.66  Prohibitions.

* * * * *
    (g) Fish for subsistence halibut in and off Alaska in a non-
subsistence marine waters area specified at Sec.  300.65(h)(3).
* * * * *
    (j) * * *
    (1) Persons who qualify as rural residents under Sec.  300.65(g)(1) 
or (g)(3) and hold a SHARC in the person's name under Sec.  300.65(i) 
may be reimbursed for actual expenses for ice, bait, food, and fuel 
directly related to subsistence fishing for halibut, by residents of 
the same rural community or by rural residents residing within ten 
statute miles of the rural location listed on the person's SHARC 
application; or
    (2) Persons who qualify as Alaska Native tribal members under Sec.  
300.65(g)(2) and hold a SHARC in the person's name under Sec.  
300.65(i) may be reimbursed for actual expenses for ice, bait, food, 
and fuel directly related to subsistence fishing for halibut, by any 
Alaska Native tribe, or its members, or residents of the same rural 
community or by rural residents residing within ten statute miles of 
the rural location listed on the person's SHARC application.
* * * * *
    5. Revise figures 2, 3, 4, and 5 to subpart E of part 300 and add 
figures 6 and 7 to subpart E of part 300 to read as follows:
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[FR Doc. E9-26559 Filed 11-03-09; 8:45 am]
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