[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 35 (Tuesday, February 23, 2016)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 8886-8894]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2016-03670]



[[Page 8886]]

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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

50 CFR Parts 679 and 680

[Docket No. 151020969-6095-01]
RIN 0648-BF46


Fisheries of the Exclusive Economic Zone Off Alaska; Bering Sea 
and Aleutian Islands Crab Rationalization Program

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

ACTION: Proposed rule.

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SUMMARY: NMFS issues a proposed rule that would modify regulations 
governing the Crab Rationalization (CR) Program. This proposed rule is 
comprised of three actions. Under the first action, this proposed rule 
would modify regulations to create an exemption for participants in the 
Western Aleutian Islands golden king crab (WAG) fishery from the 
prohibition against resuming fishing before all CR Program crab have 
been fully offloaded from a vessel. This action is intended to allow 
participants in the WAG fishery to offload live crab to remote ports 
near the fishing grounds to supply live crab markets. Under the second 
action, this proposed rule would amend CR Program regulations to 
clarify current document submission requirements for persons applying 
to receive captain and crew crab quota share, called C shares, by 
transfer. Under the third action, this proposed rule would amend 
License Limitation Program (LLP) regulations to remove the requirement 
for endorsements on crab LLP licenses for specific crab fisheries in 
the Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands that are no longer managed under 
the LLP. This proposed rule is intended to promote the goals and 
objectives of the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management 
Act, the Fishery Management Plan for Bering Sea/Aleutian Islands King 
and Tanner Crabs, and other applicable laws.

DATES: Submit comments on or before March 24, 2016.

ADDRESSES: You may submit comments, identified by NOAA-NMFS-2015-0136, 
by any of the following methods:
     Electronic Submission: Submit all electronic public 
comments via the Federal eRulemaking Portal. Go to www.regulations.gov/#!docketDetail;D=NOAA-NMFS-2015-0136, click the ``Comment Now!'' icon, 
complete the required fields, and enter or attach your comments.
     Mail: Submit written comments to Glenn Merrill, Assistant 
Regional Administrator, Sustainable Fisheries Division, Alaska Region 
NMFS, Attn: Ellen Sebastian. Mail comments to P.O. Box 21668, Juneau, 
AK 99802-1668.
    Instructions: Comments sent by any other method, to any other 
address or individual, or received after the end of the comment period, 
may not be considered by NMFS. All comments received are a part of the 
public record and will generally be posted for public viewing on 
www.regulations.gov without change. All personally identifying 
information (e.g., name, address), confidential business information, 
or otherwise sensitive information submitted voluntarily by the sender 
will be publicly accessible. NMFS will accept anonymous comments (enter 
``N/A'' in the required fields if you wish to remain anonymous).
    Electronic copies of the Regulatory Impact Review/Initial 
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (RIR/IRFA) (collectively referred to as 
the ``Analysis'') and the Categorical Exclusion prepared for this 
proposed rule may be obtained from http://www.regulations.gov or from 
the NMFS Alaska Region Web site at http://alaskafisheries.noaa.gov.
    Written comments regarding the burden-hour estimates or other 
aspects of the collection-of-information requirements contained in this 
proposed rule may be submitted to NMFS (see ADDRESSES) and by email to 
[email protected] or fax to (202) 395-5806.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Keeley Kent, 907-586-7228.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: 

Authority for Action

    The king and Tanner crab fisheries in the exclusive economic zone 
of the Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands (BSAI) are managed under the 
Fishery Management Plan for Bering Sea/Aleutian Islands King and Tanner 
Crabs (Crab FMP). The Crab FMP was prepared by the North Pacific 
Fishery Management Council (Council) under the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery 
Conservation and Management Act (Magnuson-Stevens Act) as amended by 
the Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2004 (Pub. L. 108-199, section 
801). Regulations implementing most provisions of the Crab FMP, 
including the CR Program, are located at 50 CFR part 680. Regulations 
implementing specific provisions of the Crab FMP that pertain to the 
LLP Program are located at 50 CFR part 679.

Background

    The Crab FMP was approved by the Secretary of Commerce on June 2, 
1989. The Crab FMP establishes a State/Federal cooperative management 
regime that defers crab management to the State of Alaska with Federal 
oversight. State regulations are subject to the provisions of the FMP, 
including its goals and objectives, the Magnuson-Stevens Act national 
standards, and other applicable Federal laws. The Crab FMP has been 
amended several times since its implementation.
    NMFS published the final rule to implement the CR Program on March 
2, 2005 (70 FR 10174). Fishing under the CR Program started with the 
2005/2006 crab fishing year. The CR Program is a catch share program 
for nine BSAI crab fisheries that allocates those resources among 
harvesters, processors, and coastal communities. Under the CR Program, 
NMFS originally issued QS to eligible harvesters as determined by 
eligibility criteria and participation in the CR Program fisheries 
during qualifying years. A harvester's allocation of QS for a fishery 
was based on the landings made by his or her vessel in that fishery. 
Specifically, each allocation was the harvester's average annual 
portion of the total qualified catch in a crab fishery during a 
specific qualifying period. NMFS issued four types of QS: Catcher 
vessel owner (CVO) QS was assigned to holders of LLP licenses who 
delivered their catch onshore or to stationary floating crab 
processors; catcher/processor vessel owner (CPO) QS was assigned to LLP 
holders that harvested and processed their catch at sea; captains and 
crew onboard catcher/processor vessels were issued catcher/processor 
crew (CPC) QS; and captains and crew onboard catcher vessels were 
issued catcher vessel crew (CVC) QS. CVC and CPC QS are also known as 
``crew shares'' or ``C shares.'' Each year, a person who holds QS may 
receive IFQ, which is an exclusive harvest privilege for a portion of 
the annual total allowable catch (TAC). Under the CR Program, QS 
holders can form cooperatives to pool the harvest of the IFQ on fewer 
vessels to minimize operational costs and to provide additional 
flexibility in harvesting operations.
    NMFS also issued processor quota share (PQS) under the CR Program. 
Each year, PQS yields an exclusive privilege to receive (for 
processing) a portion of the IFQ in each of the nine CR Program crab 
fisheries. This annual exclusive processing privilege is called IPQ. 
IFQ

[[Page 8887]]

derived from CVO QS is subject to annual designation as either Class A 
IFQ or Class B IFQ. Ninety percent of the IFQ derived from CVO QS for a 
fishery is designated as Class A IFQ, and the remaining 10 percent of 
the IFQ is designated as Class B IFQ. Class A IFQ must be matched and 
delivered to a processor with IPQ. Each year there is a one-to-one 
match of the total pounds of Class A IFQ with the total pounds of IPQ 
issued in each crab fishery and region. Class B IFQ is not required to 
be delivered to a processor with IPQ.
    This proposed rule includes three actions: The first action would 
exempt the WAG fishery from the CR Program prohibition against a vessel 
resuming fishing before the vessel has offloaded all CR Program crab 
from the vessel; the second action would amend CR Program regulations 
to clarify document submission requirements for individuals submitting 
an application to receive C shares by transfer; and the third action 
would amend LLP regulations to remove four BSAI crab species that are 
no longer managed under the LLP.

Action 1: Exempt the WAG Fishery From Full Offload Requirements

WAG Fishery Delivery Requirements
    The WAG fishery is a relatively small but lengthy fishery 
prosecuted in extremely remote waters in the western Aleutian Islands. 
Historically, the community of Adak has been an active processing port 
for the WAG fishery. To recognize this history and to ensure that Adak 
continues to receive socioeconomic benefits from crab deliveries, the 
CR Program allocates 10 percent of the WAG fishery TAC to the community 
of Adak as the Adak Community Allocation (Sec.  680.40(a)(1)). The CR 
Program also imposes a regional delivery requirement for the WAG 
fishery to support processing facilities operating in the remote 
western Aleutian Islands region. In addition to processor share landing 
requirements, Class A IFQ (along with IPQ) are subject to regional 
landing requirements, under which harvests from those shares must be 
landed in specified geographic regions.
    For the WAG fishery, Sec.  680.40(c)(4) specifies that 50 percent 
of the Class A IFQ and a corresponding amount of IPQ in the WAG fishery 
are designated for delivery to any processor in the West region, which 
includes all locations west of 174[deg] W. longitude. The West region 
includes the communities of Adak and Atka. The other 50 percent of the 
Class A IFQ and IPQ are not subject to a regional designation and can 
be delivered to any processor with corresponding IPQ. Class B, CVC, 
CPO, CPC IFQ, and the Adak Community Allocation are also not subject to 
the regional delivery requirements. Crab harvested with West designated 
Class A IFQ must be delivered to a processor located in the West region 
with West designated IPQ (Sec.  680.42(b)(5)). Class A IFQ and IPQ crab 
without a West region designation is considered undesignated and may be 
delivered anywhere within the State of Alaska (Sec.  
680.40(b)(2)(ii)(B)).
    Regional designations were applied to harvester QS during the 
initial allocation, based on landings histories, but adjustments were 
necessary as substantially less than 50 percent of the historical 
landings were made in the West region. The West designation was 
intended primarily to aid the development of processing in the 
community of Adak. Adak had little historical processing prior to the 
end of the qualifying period, as the community was occupied exclusively 
by the U.S. military during the development of the AI commercial 
fisheries. With the departure of the military in the late 1980s, the 
community has worked to develop civilian industries, including fish 
processing. Atka is recognized as a second potential beneficiary of the 
region designation. That community has also begun to develop fish 
processing capacity in recent years, but has yet to develop significant 
crab processing capability.
    Since implementation of the Program, the only shore-based 
processing plant in the West region has been located in the community 
of Adak. However, the crab processing capacity in Adak has been 
inconsistent or absent in some years since implementation of the CR 
Program due to a variety of operational challenges (see Section 3.5.5 
of the Analysis). If processing capacity is not available in the West 
region, the West regional delivery requirement is not viable and would 
result in unutilized TAC in the WAG fishery.
    In response to the potential lack of processing capacity in the 
West region in some years, the Council recommended, and NMFS 
implemented, Amendment 37 to the Crab FMP on June 20, 2011 (76 FR 
35781). Amendment 37 created an annual application process for eligible 
contract signatories to request that NMFS exempt holders of West-
designated IFQ and IPQ in the WAG fishery from the West regional 
delivery requirement (Sec.  680.4(o)). The eligible contract 
signatories are WAG fishery QS holders, PQS holders, and the cities of 
Adak and Atka.
    Upon approval of a completed application, NMFS exempts all West-
designated Class A IFQ and IPQ from the West regional delivery 
requirement for the remainder of the crab fishing year. This exemption 
allows all West-designated Class A IFQ and IPQ holders to deliver and 
receive WAG crab at processing facilities outside the West region 
(Sec.  680.7(a)(2) and (a)(4)). The eligible contract signatories have 
applied for, and NMFS has granted, an exemption for all crab fishing 
years from 2011/2012 through 2015/2016 (http://alaskafisheries.noaa.gov/fisheries-data-reports?tid=289).

WAG Fishery

    The WAG fishery has a relatively small annual total allowable catch 
compared to other BSAI crab fisheries, such as the Bristol Bay red king 
crab or snow crab fisheries. The TAC for the 2015/2016 crab fishing 
year in the WAG fishery is 2.98 million pounds. The WAG QS holders have 
formed a harvest cooperative to ensure the efficient harvest of this 
remote fishery. In recent years the fleet has been comprised of only 
two to three catcher vessels and a single catcher/processor. Section 
3.5.1 of the Analysis provides additional detail on historical and 
recent participation in the WAG fishery.
    Currently, the WAG fishing season starts on August 1 and ends on 
April 30. Since implementation of the CR program, harvesters have 
extended their fishing time over most of the crab season; the first 
deliveries typically occur in September and the last deliveries 
generally occur during March of the following calendar year. A trip for 
a vessel in the WAG fishery generally lasts one to four weeks, with an 
average trip lasting 2.5 weeks. There are relatively few fishing trips 
in the WAG fisheries compared to other BSAI crab fisheries. In the two 
most recent crab fishing years (2012/2013 and 2014/2015), vessels made 
a total of 9 landings of West region IFQ and 10 to 11 landings of 
undesignated IFQ.
    Crab harvesting vessels have several tanks to hold live crab until 
it is processed. The average tank capacity of the catcher vessels that 
participate in the WAG fishery is between 120,000 and 150,000 pounds 
(see Section 3.5.3 of the Analysis). Any crab that arrives at the 
processor dead are weighed by the processor, reported as deadloss, and 
debited from the QS holder's IFQ account. Therefore, vessels have an 
incentive to keep crab alive, regardless of the market opportunities 
they are pursuing.

Full Landing (Offload) Requirement

    The CR Program regulations prohibit a vessel from resuming fishing 
for CR

[[Page 8888]]

Program crab or taking CR Program crab on board a vessel once a landing 
(offload) has commenced and until all CR Program crab are offloaded 
(see Sec.  680.7(b)(3)). Under the CR Program regulations, a catcher 
vessel may offload portions of CR Program crab on the vessel at 
multiple processors, but the vessel is prohibited from fishing for CR 
Program crab between the offloads.
    NMFS implemented the prohibition against resuming fishing after a 
CR Program landing has commenced (hereafter called the full offload 
requirement) to facilitate enforcement of CR Program requirements for 
catch monitoring and full catch accounting. Under the CR Program, 
harvesting and processing activity is monitored to provide accurate and 
reliable accounting of the total catch and landings to manage quota 
share accounts, prevent overages of IFQ and IPQ, and ensure compliance 
with regional delivery requirements. Total fishery removals are 
estimated by monitoring measures that include collection of data on 
landed catch weight and crab species composition, bycatch, and 
deadloss.
    Under current CR Program regulations, vessels may offload portions 
of CR Program crab at multiple processors but are prohibited from 
resuming fishing or taking CR Program crab on board the vessel once a 
landing has commenced and until all CR crab are landed. Under Sec.  
680.7(b)(3), NOAA fisheries intended that this prohibition would 
prevent persons from, for example, discarding barnacled or deadloss CR 
crab at sea prior to debiting this crab from the QS holder's IFQ 
account and subsequently high grading with CR crab harvested after the 
partial offload. The prohibition was intended to ensure that all 
fishery removals are monitored and reported in the CR Program catch 
accounting system. See the final rule to implement the CR Program for a 
description of the monitoring and catch accounting provisions in the 
BSAI crab fisheries (70 FR 10174, March 2, 2005).

Catch Monitoring

    The CR Program delegates a significant portion of monitoring in the 
BSAI crab fishery to the State of Alaska. Under the Crab FMP, the 
Council and Secretary deferred to the Alaska Department of Fish and 
Game (ADF&G) the authority and responsibility for deploying observers 
on board any vessel participating in the BSAI crab fisheries under 
State of Alaska regulations (5 AAC 39.645). ADF&G has implemented 
specific monitoring requirements in the WAG fishery.
    ADF&G requires catcher/processors in the WAG fishery to carry an 
observer onboard the vessel for 100 percent of the vessel's trips. 
Catcher vessels in the WAG fishery are required to carry an observer on 
board for the harvest of at least 50 percent of their total harvest 
weight for each 3-month period of the overall 9-month season. The 
portion of actual observed harvest for catcher vessels in the WAG 
fishery has ranged from 57 percent to 70 percent annually. See Section 
3.6.2 of the Analysis for additional information on the ADF&G catch 
monitoring and observer requirements for the WAG fishery.
    ADF&G also utilizes dockside samplers to sample and monitor 
deliveries of crab from unobserved vessels to shoreside processors in 
the WAG fishery. At the time of landing, either the observer or 
dockside sampler collects the average weight of retained crab, conducts 
biological samples, and summarizes fishing effort data and landing 
data. The observer or dockside sampling data are used to debit the 
appropriate IFQ account under which the crab was harvested and the IPQ 
account under which the crab was received for processing in the CR 
Program online catch accounting system.
    ADF&G observer sampling protocol specifies that a trip commences 
when an observer boards the vessel and ends when there is a complete 
offload of all crab from the vessel. If a vessel makes a partial 
landing, the trip is not considered to have ended until the final 
landing is made and all crab is offloaded from the vessel. If an 
observer is not deployed on a vessel in the CR Program crab fisheries, 
dockside samplers sample and monitor the landing of crab to a shoreside 
processor.
    ADF&G also requires operators of vessels in the BSAI crab fisheries 
to complete a daily fishing log, which is issued by NMFS. Data from the 
daily fishing log are used to verify landings and to ensure accurate 
accounting for all fishery removals. Section 3.6.2 of the Analysis 
provides additional information on ADF&G's catch sampling and 
monitoring protocols for the CR Program crab fisheries.

Need for Action

    In 2014, the processing facility in Adak began taking deliveries of 
WAG crab from catcher vessels to supply the live crab market. The crab 
are offloaded from the vessel and held at the processing facility until 
packed for transport on a commercial airline flight from Adak for 
delivery to domestic and international markets. The amount of crab 
offloaded at Adak and delivered to the live market is limited by the 
amount of aircraft hold space that is available to ship crab on bi-
weekly flights from Adak. Aircraft capacity is approximately 8,000 to 
14,000 pounds of crab per flight, depending on the type of aircraft. 
Vessels operating in the WAG fishery make crab deliveries 
opportunistically to the processing facility when live markets are 
available. Harvesters receive a higher price per pound for the live 
market than for crab delivered and processed to supply the traditional 
market for cooked and frozen crab sections (see Sections 3.5.4 and 
3.5.5.1 of the Analysis for more information about deliveries to the 
live crab market from Adak).
    The processing facility in Adak is currently able to receive only 
limited amounts of deliveries of crab for the live market, 
approximately 400,000 pounds for the 2015/2016 crab fishing year. As 
described in Section 3.5.5 of the Analysis, the processing facility in 
Adak has encountered a number of operational challenges since it was 
established in 1999 and is not currently able to receive and process a 
full offload of crab, which can be up to 150,000 pounds in the WAG 
fishery. Since the 2014/2015 crab fishing year, catcher vessels 
delivering crab for the live market have made partial landings at the 
Adak processing facility and transited several hundred miles from the 
fishing grounds to Dutch Harbor and Akutan to deliver the remaining 
crab onboard the vessel to a processor that can accept a larger vessel 
load of crab from the vessels.
    In February 2015, the Council received requests from 
representatives for WAG fishery participants and representatives of the 
community of Adak to exempt the WAG fishery from the CR Program 
prohibition against a person's resuming fishing before all crab have 
been offloaded from a vessel. At its October 2015 meeting, the Council 
reviewed an analysis of the WAG fishery and the potential effects of 
the proposed exemption. After reviewing the Analysis and receiving 
public testimony, the Council recommended a regulatory amendment to 
exempt participants in the WAG fishery from the prohibition at Sec.  
680.7(b)(3) against a person's resuming fishing before all CR Program 
crab have been offloaded from the vessel.
    The Council recommended this proposed regulatory amendment to 
reduce inefficiencies and costs associated with requiring crab 
harvesting vessels to travel significant distances to land a partial 
load of WAG. This proposed rule would allow vessels harvesting WAG to 
make partial

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landings for delivery to the live market and continue harvesting crab 
before fully offloading at a processor that can receive a larger vessel 
load of crab.

This Proposed Rule and the Anticipated Effects

Action 1: Exempt the WAG Fishery From Full Offload Requirements

    Under Action 1, this proposed rule would create an exemption for 
the WAG fishery from the prohibition at Sec.  680.7(b)(3) that 
precludes a person from resuming fishing before all crab has been 
offloaded from a vessel. This proposed rule would not alter current 
landing, reporting, and enforcement requirements in CR Program 
regulations.
    This proposed rule would relieve a restriction on fishing activity 
in the WAG fishery and could increase operational efficiencies and 
revenues for participants in the WAG fishery. The Council determined 
that this proposed rule is necessary for the WAG fishery due to the 
remote and economically challenging characteristic of the fishery as 
well as the possibility of mutual benefits to harvesters, processors 
located in the western Aleutians, and any communities that develop a 
live market opportunity. As described below, the Council determined, 
and NMFS agrees, that this proposed rule is not likely to have negative 
impacts on the management of the WAG fishery or on the catch monitoring 
and accounting requirements established by the CR Program.
    The Council considered whether this proposed rule could increase 
the amount of unreported discards of crab. After reviewing the 
Analysis, the Council and NMFS determined that crab discards are 
appropriately monitored and accounted for under the CR Program and this 
proposed rule would not likely create additional incentive for 
participants in the WAG fishery to discard crab. Section 3.6.1 of the 
Analysis describes that experience with the CR Program has shown that 
unreported discards of crab are unlikely due to a number of practices 
that occur at sea and when crab are delivered to a processor.
    First, it is common practice in the crab fisheries for vessel crews 
to sort catches at sea and to discard crab that are less than the legal 
size or that are damaged or diseased before placing the crab in the 
vessel's holding tank. The CR Program does not require full retention 
of legal-sized crab on the fishing grounds because it would require a 
vessel to keep damaged and diseased crab in a holding tank with healthy 
crab. Because crab can be discarded prior to being placed in the vessel 
tank, crew have an incentive to retain only healthy crab of legal size 
and to discard all dead, damaged, or diseased crab during sorting 
rather than retaining the crab onboard and discarding it prior to or 
after arrival at a processor. The impact of crab that are discarded 
during sorting on crab stocks is accounted for because observers 
collect information on at-sea discards in all crab fisheries, and this 
information is used to estimate discard mortality for all vessels in 
the fishery and is incorporated into crab stock assessments (see 
Section 3.6.2 of the Analysis).
    Second, vessels are unlikely to discard unreported crab at sea due 
to quota overages because the CR Program cooperative structure, online 
quota transfers, and post-delivery quota transfers give fishery 
participants several options to coordinate harvests and obtain 
additional IFQ to cover any overages. In addition, the CR Program 
regulations specify that crab cooperative members are jointly and 
severally liable for violations, which provides a strong incentive for 
vessel operators to comply with CR Program regulations.
    Third, attempts by vessels to illegally discard crab at sea rather 
than weighing and deducting them from quota after delivering to a 
processor would likely be noticed by the vessel observer, port 
samplers, plant personnel, or local enforcement agents. If a vessel 
operator were to depart the processor with crab onboard, the crab that 
was not delivered and accounted for would likely be noticed by one or 
more of the above personnel who would likely notify an enforcement 
agent.
    Finally, Section 3.6.1 of the Analysis describes that while catcher 
vessels in the WAG fishery are required to carry an observer on board 
for 50 percent of their harvest, in practice, between 57 and 70 percent 
of the WAG fishery harvest had observer coverage in recent years (see 
Section 3.6.2.1 of the Analysis). The presence of an observer on board 
further reduces the likelihood of unreported discards.
    The Council considered the impacts of this proposed rule on Federal 
management of the WAG fishery. Section 3.7.4 of the Analysis describes 
that this proposed rule would not change the current CR Program landing 
and reporting requirements, or catch accounting system. Under this 
proposed rule, all retained crab catch must be weighed, reported, and 
debited from the appropriate IFQ account under which the crab was 
harvested, and from the IPQ account under which the catch was 
processed.
    Section 3.7.5 of the Analysis describes the impacts of this 
proposed rule on the State of Alaska management of the WAG fishery. The 
Crab FMP delegates much of the management of the BSAI crab fisheries to 
the State of Alaska using the following three categories of management 
measures: (1) Those that are fixed in the FMP and require an FMP 
amendment to change; (2) those that are framework-type measures that 
the State can change following criteria set out in the FMP; and (3) 
those measures that are neither rigidly specified nor require a 
framework adjustment in the FMP. State observer and observer sampling 
requirements are category three management measures under the Crab FMP 
and may be adopted under State laws subject to the appeals process 
provided for in the Crab FMP.
    NMFS expects that if the proposed rule is approved and implemented, 
ADF&G would make minor modifications to its sampling and observer 
coverage protocols for WAG fishery vessels that deliver crab to Adak 
for supply to the live market. ADF&G will likely request that vessel 
operators participating in the WAG fishery and intending to make a 
partial offload before resuming fishing in the WAG fishery do the 
following: (1) Keep those crab intended for delivery to the live market 
in a separate tank from crab intended for delivery to the traditional 
processing market, and (2) record the fishing activity (pot strings) 
for harvest of these crabs separately in the daily fishing log. This 
would ensure that ADF&G can continue to collect biological information 
for all crab harvested prior to and after the partial offload. Under 
these protocols, ADF&G would be able to link logbook and offload data 
to ensure that status quo sampling and accurate accounting of effort 
can occur under this proposed rule. If the proposed rule is 
implemented, NMFS anticipates ADF&G would continue to coordinate with 
vessels in the WAG fishery to ensure that accurate biological data and 
catch accounting needs are met with minimal impacts on State of Alaska 
management of the WAG fishery consistent with requirements of the 
Magnuson-Stevens Act, the Crab FMP, and ADF&G regulations.
    NMFS does not expect that the anticipated revisions to the ADF&G 
observer protocols will negatively impact participants in the WAG 
fishery for reasons described in Section 3.7.5 of the Analysis. First, 
vessels delivering crab for supply to the live market already keep 
those crab in separate tanks from crab delivered for supply to

[[Page 8890]]

the traditional market. This practice facilitates the offload process 
for live crab and reduces the likelihood of deadloss. Vessel operators 
have an incentive to continue this practice under the status quo and 
under this proposed rule. If all crab were kept in one tank and sorted 
by market at the time of offload, the vessel operator would have to 
remove water from the tank in order to offload the crab to supply the 
live market, refill the tank with water for the remaining crab to 
supply the traditional market, and transit back to the fishing grounds 
with these crab onboard before delivery for traditional processing. 
This process could increase the likelihood of deadloss among the crab 
remaining on the vessel. Second, the request for vessel operators to 
record pot strings pulled prior to the partial offload separately from 
pot strings pulled after the offload does not significantly increase 
the reporting burden for vessel operators or significantly change data 
processing or analytical protocols for ADF&G.
    Section 3.7.2 of the Analysis describes that this action could 
result in a reduction in quality for crab destined for the traditional 
crab market. Crab destined for the live crab market are chosen for 
survivability, and vessels carefully select large, clean, undamaged 
crab for delivery to the live market. If the proposed rule results in 
an increased portion of WAG crab delivered for supply to the live 
market, processors that do not participate in the live crab market may 
receive a relatively larger portion of lower quality crab (e.g., 
smaller or with barnacles) that were not selected for the live market. 
That Analysis notes that vessels in the WAG fishery currently land crab 
in Adak destined for the live crab market, and so it is likely that a 
slight reduction in quality for WAG crab destined for the traditional 
crab market is occurring under the current CR Program regulations.
    If vessels make more deliveries of WAG crab for the live market, 
there could be an additional reduction in the quality of crab delivered 
to processors that supply the traditional markets as a larger portion 
of the WAG fishery TAC is supplied to the live market. However, NMFS 
determined that the amount of high quality WAG crab supplied to the 
live market is unlikely to increase significantly in the future. The 
Adak processing facility is limited by its ability to ship 
approximately 14,000 pounds of crab out by air freight bi-weekly, and 
this capacity limitation is unlikely to change under this proposed rule 
(see the Appendix to the Analysis). Therefore, NMFS does not expect 
this action to affect the current quality of WAG crab landings to 
processors that supply the traditional market.
    Section 3.7.2 of the Analysis describes the impacts of this 
proposed rule on processors and communities that participate in the WAG 
fishery. This action could have a positive impact on western Aleutian 
Islands processors because it would allow for increased fishery 
activity. Increased fishery activity would benefit communities in the 
western Aleutian Islands by providing benefits through fuel sales and 
secondary services from vessels landing in a community. Additionally, 
increased fishery activity would promote increased local labor 
opportunities. This action, if approved, could also benefit communities 
in the western Aleutian Islands by providing increased revenue from raw 
fish taxes and State of Alaska fisheries business tax revenue, which is 
shared by the State of Alaska with the cities or boroughs where fish 
are landed (see Section 3.7.2 of the Analysis).
    This action may adversely impact processors located in Dutch Harbor 
and Akutan by redistributing some WAG fishery landings to the western 
Aleutian Islands to supply the live market. NMFS does not expect these 
impacts to be significant because partial offloads of WAG crab are 
currently occurring at the processing facility in Adak to supply the 
live market. This proposed rule would likely facilitate a small 
increase in the amount of the WAG fishery TAC delivered for the live 
crab market relative to the much larger amount of crab that would 
continue to be delivered and processed to supply the traditional 
markets.
    Sections 3.7.1 and 3.7.2 of the Analysis describe that this action 
would support the WAG fishery harvesters, processors, and communities 
that seek to diversify into the live crab market. The vessels currently 
participating in the WAG fishery could receive additional WAG fishery 
revenues under this proposed rule due to the increased price they 
receive for crab in the live market. In addition, these WAG fishery 
harvesters could potentially reduce operating costs and efficiency by 
making small offloads of WAG crab to the western Aleutian Islands and 
resuming fishing to harvest a full vessel load of crab before 
transiting to offload the crab at a processor that can process all the 
vessel's crab. This may result in reduced fuel costs and time spent 
returning to the fishing grounds.

Action 2: Clarify Document Submission Requirements for Transfers of C 
Shares

    The second action under this proposed rule would correct 
regulations governing the approval criteria for an application to 
receive C Shares (CPC and CVC QS) by transfer. Under the CR Program, 
individuals must meet specific eligibility requirements to receive C 
shares by transfer. Amendment 31 to the Crab FMP modified several 
regulations governing the acquisition, use, and retention of C share QS 
under the CR Program (80 FR 15891, March 26, 2015).
    The eligibility requirements to receive C shares by transfer are 
located at Sec.  680.41(c)(1)(vii). An applicant must meet initial 
eligibility criteria, which include having U.S. citizenship, at least 
150 days of sea time in a U.S. commercial fishery, and recent 
participation as crew in at least one delivery of crab in the past 
year. In addition, Sec.  680.41(c)(1)(vii) specifies that until May 1, 
2019, in lieu of participation as crew in one of the CR Program 
fisheries in the 365 days prior to application submission, an 
individual may meet the crew participation requirement to receive C 
share QS by transfer if that person 1) received an initial allocation 
of CVC or CPC QS, or 2) demonstrates participation as crew in at least 
one delivery of crab in a CR crab fishery in any 3 of the 5 crab 
fishing years starting on July 1, 2000, through June 30, 2005.
    The approval criteria for NMFS to approve an application to receive 
C shares by transfer are located at Sec.  680.41(i). The regulations 
state that NMFS will not approve a transfer application unless it has 
determined that the applicant has met all approval criteria.
    The approval criteria regulations previously included criteria for 
an individual to demonstrate to NMFS that he or she meets the 
eligibility requirements at Sec.  680.41(c)(1)(vii) at the time of 
transfer. These approval criteria were removed in error by incorrect 
amendatory language in the final rule that implemented regulations to 
provide harvesting cooperatives, crab processing quota shareholders, 
and Western Alaska Community Development Quota groups with the option 
to make Web-based transfers (74 FR 51515, October 7, 2009). These 
approval criteria are necessary to clarify for applicants that they 
must meet the eligibility requirements at Sec.  680.41(c)(1)(vii) at 
the time of transfer, specifically that they must meet the 
participation within the prior 365 days for their application for 
transfer to be approved. This proposed rule would add these approval 
criteria at

[[Page 8891]]

Sec.  680.41(i)(11) to correct the error, and to ensure that the 
regulations are consistent with the original intent of the CR Program.
    An applicant must submit the following two applications to NMFS to 
demonstrate that he or she meets the eligibility requirements at Sec.  
680.41(c)(1)(vii) at the time of transfer: (1) An Application for BSAI 
Crab Eligibility to Receive QS/PQS by Transfer; and (2) Application for 
Transfer of Crab QS or PQS. The applicant may submit the Application 
for BSAI Crab Eligibility to Receive QS/PQS by Transfer in advance of, 
or concurrently with, the Application for Transfer of Crab QS or PQS.
    This proposed rule would add Sec.  680.41(i)(11) to correct the 
regulations and clarify that NMFS will not approve an application to 
receive C share QS by transfer unless the applicant submits evidence 
demonstrating required participation criteria specified at Sec.  
680.41(c)(1)(vii). Acceptable evidence for demonstrating required 
participation criteria specified at Sec.  680.41(c)(1)(vii) is limited 
to an ADF&G fish ticket signed by the applicant or an affidavit from 
the vessel owner attesting to the applicant's fishery participation.
    This proposed change would make minor clarifications to regulations 
governing NMFS' approval criteria for an application to receive C 
shares by transfer. This change would clarify document submission 
requirements for applicants to receive C shares by transfer. The 
impacts of this proposed changed are limited to a minor increase in 
recordkeeping and reporting requirements for applicants. The impacts 
are consistent with those analyzed for the final rule to provide 
harvesting cooperatives, crab processing quota share holders, and 
Western Alaska Community Development Quota groups with the option to 
make Web-based transfers (74 FR 51515, October 7, 2009) and for 
regulations implementing Amendment 31 to the Crab FMP (80 FR 15891, 
March 26, 2015).

Action 3: Removing Certain Crab Species From LLP Regulations

    The third action under this proposed rule would amend LLP 
regulations for consistency with the Crab FMP to avoid public confusion 
about the regulatory requirements that apply to certain crab stocks. 
This proposed rule would modify the LLP regulations at Sec.  
679.4(k)(1)(ii) to eliminate the following four crab species: Eastern 
Aleutian Islands red king crab; scarlet or deep sea king crab; grooved 
Tanner crab; and triangle Tanner crab. These stocks were removed from 
the Crab FMP in 2008 and are no longer subject to Federal management.
    The LLP limits access to the directed groundfish, crab, and scallop 
fisheries in the BSAI and the Gulf of Alaska. The LLP requires each 
vessel to have an LLP license on board the vessel at all times while 
directed fishing for license limitation species, with limited 
exemptions. The LLP limits the number, size, and specific operation of 
vessels deployed in BSAI crab fisheries managed under the Crab FMP and 
established several area/species endorsements for crab LLP licenses. 
The LLP licenses for these fisheries were initially issued in 2000 and 
are not reissued unless the LLP license is transferred to another 
person. The preamble to the final rule implementing the LLP provides a 
detailed explanation of the rationale for specific provisions in the 
LLP (63 FR 52642, October 1, 1998).
    The CR Program was implemented in 2005 and removed BSAI crab 
fisheries that are managed under the CR Program from the LLP. With the 
allocation of QS and PQS, management under the LLP was no longer needed 
to limit fishing effort. The fisheries not included in the CR Program 
remained under the Crab FMP and under the governance of the LLP. 
Fishermen participating in those fisheries are required to have a crab 
LLP license with the appropriate area/species endorsement on the 
vessel. Although the Crab FMP establishes a State/Federal cooperative 
management regime that delegates crab management to the State of Alaska 
with Federal oversight, NMFS manages Crab FMP stocks subject to LLP 
requirements.
    Amendment 24 to the Crab FMP was approved in 2008. Amendment 24 
removed 12 BSAI crab stocks not in the CR Program from the Crab FMP and 
deferred management to the State of Alaska for these fisheries (73 FR 
33925, June 16, 2008). These stocks were removed from the Crab FMP 
because the majority of catch in these fisheries occurs in State of 
Alaska waters or the State of Alaska had closed the directed fishery or 
managed only a limited incidental or exploratory fishery. Among the 
twelve stocks removed from the Crab FMP were Eastern Aleutian Islands 
red king crab, scarlet or deep sea king crab, grooved Tanner crab, and 
triangle Tanner crab that had been managed by NMFS under the LLP. Upon 
removal of these species from the Crab FMP, NMFS no longer had 
authority to manage those species under the LLP program. The State of 
Alaska currently manages these fisheries under State regulations.
    Amendment 24 to the Crab FMP did not require implementing 
regulations. As a result, Eastern Aleutian Islands red king crab, 
scarlet or deep sea king crab, grooved Tanner crab, and triangle Tanner 
crab were not removed from LLP regulations when Amendment 24 was 
implemented. In order to align LLP regulations with the Crab FMP and 
avoid confusion about regulatory requirements, NMFS proposes to modify 
the LLP regulations at Sec.  679.4(k)(1)(ii) to eliminate these species 
from the LLP regulations. The proposed rule would not change current 
management of these crab fisheries.
    Currently, the LLP regulations specify that crab LLP licenses may 
have four area/species endorsements:
     Aleutian Islands opilio/bairdi crab;
     Eastern Aleutian Islands red king crab;
     Bering Sea Minor Species (includes Bering Sea golden king 
crab, scarlet or deep sea king crab, grooved Tanner crab, and triangle 
Tanner crab); and
     Norton Sound red and blue king crab.
    Three of these four LLP license endorsements specify one fishery 
for which the endorsement authorizes participation when the fishery is 
included in the Crab FMP (i.e., Aleutian Islands opilio/bairdi, Eastern 
Aleutian Islands red king, and Norton Sound red and blue king). The 
Bering Sea Minor Species endorsement is an umbrella endorsement that 
applies to specific area/species endorsements defined in the LLP 
regulations: The Bering Sea golden king crab, scarlet or deep sea king 
crab, grooved Tanner crab, and triangle Tanner crab fisheries. 
Amendment 24 removed the scarlet or deep sea king crab, grooved Tanner 
crab, and triangle Tanner crab fisheries from the Crab FMP, but the 
Bering Sea golden king crab fishery remained in the Crab FMP and 
subject to Federal management under the LLP.
    To implement this proposed rule, NMFS would modify LLP licenses to 
remove the Eastern Aleutian Islands red king endorsement from LLP 
licenses because that fishery was removed from the Crab FMP under 
Amendment 24 and is no longer subject to Federal management. Current 
LLP license records indicate there are 30 LLP licenses with this 
endorsement.
    NMFS does not need to reissue LLP licenses with a Bering Sea Minor 
Species endorsement for the removal of the scarlet or deep sea king 
crab, grooved Tanner crab, and triangle Tanner crab fisheries from the 
Crab FMP. Even though scarlet or deep sea king crab, grooved Tanner 
crab, and triangle Tanner crab fisheries are no longer subject to 
Federal management, the Bering Sea golden king crab fishery

[[Page 8892]]

is still included in the FMP and is subject to Federal management under 
the LLP. Therefore an LLP license with a Bering Sea Minor Species 
endorsement is still required for participation in this fishery. 
Because of this, NMFS does not need to remove the endorsement as a 
whole. The LLP regulations determine the specific area/species 
endorsements to which the Bering Sea Minor Species endorsement applies, 
so NMFS has determined that it can implement this proposed change by 
amending the LLP regulations, rather than reissuing the licenses 
carrying this endorsement. Current LLP license records indicate there 
are 287 LLP licenses with this endorsement.
    NMFS would incur minor administrative costs to reissue LLP licenses 
to remove the Eastern Aleutian Islands red king endorsement. As 
described above, this proposed action would not change current 
management of the Eastern Aleutian Islands red king, Bering Sea golden 
king crab, scarlet or deep sea king crab, grooved Tanner crab, and 
triangle Tanner crab fisheries. This proposed action would not have 
impacts on crab stocks or on fishery participants beyond those analyzed 
in the analysis for Amendment 24 to the Crab FMP (73 FR 33925, June 16, 
2008).

Classification

    Pursuant to section 305(d) of the Magnuson-Stevens Act, the NMFS 
Assistant Administrator has determined that this proposed rule is 
consistent with the Crab FMP, other provisions of the Magnuson-Stevens 
Act, and other applicable law, subject to further consideration of 
comments received during the public comment period.
    This proposed rule has been determined to be not significant for 
the purposes of Executive Order 12866.
    An IRFA was prepared, as required by section 603 of the Regulatory 
Flexibility Act. The IRFA describes the economic impact this proposed 
rule, if adopted, would have on small entities. Copies of the IRFA are 
available from NMFS (see ADDRESSES).
    The IRFA describes this proposed rule, why this rule is being 
proposed, the objectives and legal basis for this proposed rule, the 
type and number of small entities to which this proposed rule would 
apply, and the projected reporting, recordkeeping, and other compliance 
requirements of this proposed rule. It also identifies any overlapping, 
duplicative, or conflicting Federal rules and describes any significant 
alternatives to this proposed rule that would accomplish the stated 
objectives of the Magnuson-Stevens Act and other applicable statues and 
that would minimize any significant adverse economic impact of this 
proposed rule on small entities. The description of this proposed rule, 
its purpose, and its legal basis are described in the preamble and are 
not repeated here.

Number and Description of Small Entities Regulated by This Proposed 
Rule

    The Small Business Administration defines a small commercial 
shellfish fishing entity as one that has annual gross receipts, from 
all activities of all affiliates, of less than $5.5 million (79 FR 
33647, June 12, 2014).
    Under Action 1, the entities directly regulated by this proposed 
rule are those entities that participate in the WAG fishery: Vessel 
operators, QS holders, and IFQ holders. This proposed rule would not 
directly affect PQS holders, IPQ holders, or communities. Three vessels 
were active in the 2013/2014 WAG fishery. These vessels received the 
majority of their revenue from shellfish from 2012 through 2014. The 
entities directly regulated by this proposed rule are members of a 
cooperative that exceeds the $5.5 million revenue threshold for a 
shellfish entity and are not considered small entities (see Section 4.3 
of the Analysis). The number of WAG fishery QS holders is listed in 
Table 3-3 in Section 3.5.2 of the Analysis. Gross revenue information 
is not available for these QS holders. Of the QS holders listed, at 
least 3 of the entities holding CVO QS are known to be large entities 
as defined by the Small Business Administration. The remaining 11 CVO 
QS holders and 8 CVC QS holders are assumed to be small entities. This 
proposed rule, if approved, would exempt these directly regulated small 
entities from the prohibition against resuming fishing before all CR 
Program crab have been offloaded. This exemption is intended to provide 
an opportunity for these entities to benefit from increased economic 
efficiencies and increased revenues in the WAG fishery. Therefore, no 
directly regulated small entities are expected to be adversely impacted 
by this proposed rule.
    Under Action 2, this proposed rule would correct an error to add 
regulatory text that was inadvertently removed. The effect of Action 2 
on directly regulated small entities is described in the IRFA prepared 
for a final rule implementing regulations to provide harvesting 
cooperatives, crab processing quota share holders, and Western Alaska 
Community Development Quota groups with the option to make web-based 
transfers (74 FR 51515, October 7, 2009) and for regulations 
implementing Amendment 31 to the Crab FMP (80 FR 15891, March 26, 
2015). This proposed rule would not change the impacts on small 
entities from the impacts considered in the IFRAs prepared for these 
actions.
    Under Action 3, this proposed rule would remove regulatory 
requirements for LLP licenses that are no longer applicable under the 
Crab FMP as described in the analysis for Amendment 24 to the Crab FMP 
(73 FR 33925, June 16, 2008). Action 3 would not have any impact on 
directly regulated entities because no entities are currently 
participating in these crab fisheries, and this proposed rule would not 
preclude them from doing so under the appropriate State of Alaska 
regulations. Action 3 would require the reissuance of LLP licenses to 
the 30 license holders with the Eastern Aleutian Islands red king crab 
endorsement, however, this would not require any action taken on the 
part of any small entities.

Recordkeeping and Reporting Requirements

    Action 1 of this proposed rule would not require any modifications 
to the current Federal recordkeeping and reporting requirements for the 
CR Program. Action 2 of this proposed rule references the collection-
of-information requirement for the Application for Transfer of Crab QS 
or PQS (OMB control number 0648-0514), however, this proposed rule 
would not require modifications to the application and would not 
increase the public reporting burden associated with it. Action 3 of 
this proposed rule, if approved, would not require LLP license holders 
to take any action relative to their LLP licenses and would not impact 
any public reporting burden. There was a collection-of-information 
requirement for the initial issuance of LLPs, OMB Control Number 0648-
0334, however after initial issuance, LLPs do not expire.

Collection-of-Information Requirements

    This proposed rule references collection-of-information 
requirements subject to review and approval by the Office of Management 
and Budget (OMB) under the Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA). These 
requirements have been approved by OMB and are listed below by OMB 
Control Number.

OMB Control Number 0648-0334

    The crab LLP is mentioned in this rule, but there would be no 
change in burden or cost results. NMFS would modify LLP licenses to 
remove the Eastern Aleutian Islands Red King Crab

[[Page 8893]]

endorsement. NMFS does not expect that removal of the Eastern Aleutian 
Islands Red King Crab endorsement area/species endorsement would impact 
LLP license holders.

OMB Control Number 0648-0514

    The Application for Crab Rationalization (CR) Program Eligibility 
to Receive QS/PQS or IFQ/IPQ by Transfer and the Application for 
Transfer of Crab QS/PQS are mentioned in this rule, but there would be 
no change in burden or cost results. The fishery participation approval 
criteria for an individual to receive C share QS by transfer were 
incorrectly deleted from the regulations with a final rule published on 
October 7, 2009 (74 FR 51515) and would be replaced by this action.
    These estimates include the time for reviewing instructions, 
searching existing data sources, gathering and maintaining the data 
needed, and completing and reviewing the collection of information.
    Public comment is sought regarding: Whether these proposed 
collections of information are necessary for the proper performance of 
the functions of the agency, including whether the information shall 
have practical utility; the accuracy of the burden statement; ways to 
enhance quality, utility, and clarity of the information to be 
collected; and ways to minimize the burden of the collection of 
information, including through the use of automated collection 
techniques or other forms of information technology. Send comments on 
these or any other aspects of the collection of information, to NMFS 
(see ADDRESSES), and by email to [email protected] or fax to 
202-395-5806.
    Notwithstanding any other provision of the law, no person is 
required to respond to, nor shall any person be subject to penalty for 
failure to comply with, a collection of information subject to the 
requirement of the PRA, unless that collection of information displays 
a currently valid OMB control number. All currently approved NOAA 
collections of information may be viewed at: http://www.cio.noaa.gov/services_programs/prasubs.html.

Federal Rules That May Duplicate, Overlap, or Conflict With This 
Proposed Rule

    The Analysis did not reveal any Federal rules that duplicate, 
overlap, or conflict with this proposed rule.

Description of Significant Alternatives to This Proposed Rule That 
Minimize Economic Impacts on Small Entities

    An IRFA also requires a description of any significant alternatives 
to this proposed rule that would accomplish the stated objectives, are 
consistent with applicable statutes, and that would minimize any 
significant economic impact of this proposed rule on small entities. 
Under all actions, NMFS considered two alternatives--the no action 
alternative and the action alternative. During the Council's initial 
discussion of the problem, it also considered extending the exemption 
from the prohibition against resuming fishing before all CR Program 
crab have been landed to all CR Program fisheries. However, the Council 
rejected this approach because it was too broad for the stated 
objectives, which were specific to the WAG fishery.
    Under Action 1, the no action alternative is not expected to 
minimize adverse economic impacts for the small entities directed 
regulated by this proposed rule. These entities are currently required 
to make partial landings at the Adak processing facility and transit 
several hundred miles from the fishing grounds to deliver the remaining 
crab on board the vessel to a processor that can accept a full offload 
of crab from the vessels. The no action alternative results in 
operating inefficiencies and additional costs from requiring vessels to 
travel significant distances to land a partial load of WAG. The action 
alternative is expected to provide positive economic impacts for small 
entities compared to the no action alternative because it would lift a 
restriction on WAG fishery participants. The action alternative could 
improve operating efficiencies and increase fishery revenues for WAG 
fishery participants by supporting the opportunity to supply crab to 
the live market for a premium price compared to crab delivered to 
traditional markets.
    Under Action 2, the no action alternative would not correct an 
error in regulation. The action alternative corrects that error by 
reinstating the regulation that was incorrectly removed. This proposed 
rule would not change the impacts on small entities from the impacts 
considered in the FRFA prepared for the final rule implementing 
regulations to provide harvesting cooperatives, crab processing quota 
share holders, and Western Alaska Community Development Quota groups 
with the option to make Web-based transfers (74 FR 51515, October 7, 
2009) and for Amendment 31 to the Crab FMP (80 FR 15891, March 26, 
2015). The FRFA for the Web-based transfers rule described the impacts 
of the rule as beneficial to small entities because the rule would 
simplify the process for completing transfers. The FRFA for Amendment 
31 described that under Amendment 31, the submission of documentation 
demonstrating active participation for C share QS holders was necessary 
to implement the active participation requirements, but was not 
expected to have a significant impact on small entities due to the need 
to submit the information only upon the request to receive C shares by 
transfer.
    Under Action 3, the no action alternative would retain regulations 
for LLP license requirements that are no longer applicable under the 
Crab FMP. The action alternative would make LLP license requirements 
consistent with the Crab FMP and reduce potential confusion for small 
entities. Action 3 would require the reissuance of LLP licenses to the 
30 license holders with the Eastern Aleutian Islands red king crab 
endorsement, however, this would require no action taken on the part of 
any small entities. Action 3 would not have any impact on directly 
regulated entities because no entities are currently participating in 
these crab fisheries, and this proposed rule would not preclude them 
from doing so under the appropriate State of Alaska regulations.

List of Subjects

50 CFR Part 679

    Alaska, Fisheries, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.

50 CFR Part 680

    Alaska, Fisheries, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.

    Dated: February 12, 2016.
Samuel D. Rauch III,
Deputy Assistant Administrator for Regulatory Programs, National Marine 
Fisheries Service.

    For the reasons set out in the preamble, NMFS proposes to amend 50 
CFR part 679 and part 680 as follows:

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

0
1. The authority citation for 50 CFR 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
2. In Sec.  679.4:
0
a. Remove paragraph (k)(1)(ii)(A);
0
b. Redesignate paragraph (k)(1)(ii)(B) as new paragraph (k)(1)(ii)(A);
0
c. Revise newly redesignated paragraph (k)(1)(ii)(A);

[[Page 8894]]

0
d. Redesignate paragraph (k)(1)(ii)(C) as new paragraph (k)(1)(ii)(B) 
and paragraph (k)(1)(ii)(D)(1) as new paragraph (k)(1)(ii)(C);
0
f. Revise newly redesignated paragraph (k)(1)(ii)(C); and
0
g. Remove paragraph (k)(1)(ii)(D).
    The revisions read as follows:


Sec.  679.4  Permits.

* * * * *
    (k) * * *
    (1) * * *
    (ii) * * *
    (A) Aleutian Islands Area C. opilio and C. bairdi.
* * * * *
    (C) Minor Species endorsement for Bering Sea golden king crab 
(Lithodes aequispinus).
* * * * *

PART 680--SHELLFISH FISHERIES OF THE EXCLUSIVE ECONOMIC ZONE OFF 
ALASKA

0
3. The authority citation for 50 CFR part 680 continues to read as 
follows:

    Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1862; Pub. L. 109-241; Pub. L. 109-479.

0
4. In Sec.  680.7, revise paragraph (b)(3) to read as follows:


Sec.  680.7  Prohibitions.

* * * * *
    (b) * * *
    (3) Resume fishing for CR crab or take CR crab on board a vessel 
once a landing has commenced and until all CR crab are landed, unless 
fishing in the Western Aleutian Islands golden king crab fishery.
* * * * *
0
5. In Sec.  680.41, add paragraph (i)(11) to read as follows:


Sec.  680.41  Transfer of QS, PQS, IFQ and IPQ.

* * * * *
    (i) * * *
    (11) The person applying to receive the CVC QS or IFQ or CPC QS or 
IFQ by transfer has submitted proof of at least one delivery of a crab 
species in any CR crab fishery in the 365 days prior to submission to 
NMFS of the Application for transfer of crab QS/IFQ or PQS/IPQ, except 
if eligible under the eligibility requirements in paragraph 
(c)(1)(vii)(B) of this section. Proof of this landing is--
    (i) Signature of the applicant on an ADF&G fish ticket; or
    (ii) An affidavit from the vessel owner attesting to that person's 
participation as a member of a fish harvesting crew on board a vessel 
during a landing of a crab QS species within the 365 days prior to 
submission of an Application for transfer of crab QS/IFQ or PQS/IPQ.
* * * * *
[FR Doc. 2016-03670 Filed 2-22-16; 8:45 am]
 BILLING CODE 3510-22-P