[Federal Register Volume 77, Number 93 (Monday, May 14, 2012)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 28311-28315]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2012-11670]
[[Page 28311]]
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DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
50 CFR Part 648
[Docket No. 120330235-2014-01]
RIN 0648-BC04
Fisheries of the Northeastern United States; Atlantic Sea Scallop
Fishery; Closure of the Delmarva Access Area
AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
ACTION: Temporary rule; emergency action.
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SUMMARY: NMFS issues this temporary rule under its authority to
implement emergency measures under the Magnuson-Stevens Fishery
Conservation and Management Act (Magnuson-Stevens Act). This emergency
rule closes the Delmarva Scallop Access Area (Delmarva) to all scallop
vessels for the remainder of the 2012 scallop fishing year and
reallocates unused 2012 limited access full-time vessel (FT) scallop
Delmarva trips to the Closed Area I Access Area (CAI). Closing Delmarva
will prevent high levels of fishing effort in this area, which could
have reduced long-term scallop biomass and yield from Delmarva, and
could have compromised the overall success of the scallop area
rotational management program. This emergency action reallocates 2012
Delmarva trips to CAI to ensure equity in trip allocations and to
minimize economic impacts of closing the Delmarva. The New England
Fishery Management Council (Council) recommended that NMFS take this
action quickly in order to minimize any fishing effort in the Delmarva,
and ensure the industry is aware of any allocation adjustments as soon
as possible before CAI opens on June 15, 2012.
DATES: Effective June 13, 2012, through November 10, 2012. Comments
must be received by June 13, 2012.
ADDRESSES: The Environmental Assessment (EA) is available by request
from: Daniel S. Morris, Acting Regional Administrator, National Marine
Fisheries Service, Northeast Region, 55 Great Republic Drive,
Gloucester, MA 01930-2276, or via the Internet at http://www.nero.noaa.gov.
You may submit comments on this document, identified by NOAA-NMFS-
2012-0071, by any of the following methods:
Electronic Submission: Submit all electronic public
comments via the Federal e-Rulemaking Portal www.regulations.gov. To
submit comments via the e-Rulemaking Portal, first click the ``submit a
comment'' icon, then enter NOAA-NMFS-2012-0071 in the keyword search.
Locate the document you wish to comment on from the resulting list and
click on the ``Submit a Comment'' icon on the right of that line.
Mail: Submit written comments to Daniel S. Morris, Acting
Regional Administrator, NMFS, Northeast Regional Office, 55 Great
Republic Drive, Gloucester, MA 01930. Mark the outside of the envelope,
``Comments on Emergency Rule to Close the Delmarva Access Area.''
Fax: (978) 281-9135; Attn: Emily Gilbert.
Instructions: Comments must be submitted by one of the above
methods to ensure that the comments are received, documented, and
considered by NMFS. 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. 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 personal identifying
information (e.g., name, address, etc.) submitted voluntarily by the
sender will be publicly accessible. Do not submit confidential business
information, or otherwise sensitive or protected information. NMFS will
accept anonymous comments (enter ``N/A'' in the required fields if you
wish to remain anonymous). Attachments to electronic comments will be
accepted in Microsoft Word or Excel, WordPerfect, or Adobe PDF file
formats only
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Emily Gilbert, Fishery Policy Analyst,
978-281-9244; fax 978-281-9135.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
The management unit of the Atlantic sea scallop fishery ranges from
the shorelines of Maine through North Carolina to the outer boundary of
the Exclusive Economic Zone. The Atlantic Sea Scallop Fishery
Management Plan (Scallop FMP) was first established in 1982 and now
includes a number of amendments and framework adjustments that have
revised and refined the fishery's management. One of the foundations of
the Scallop FMP's success is the rotational area management program.
Area-based management was developed in 1998 in the scallop fishery and
expanded through 2004. The rotational area management program was
formally established in 2004 in the Scallop FMP. Under rotational
management, areas that contain large concentrations of small scallops
are closed before the scallops are harvested or disturbed, then the
areas re-open when scallops are larger, producing more yield-per-
recruit. These areas are known as scallop ``access areas.''
There are currently five scallop access areas: Closed Area I (CAI),
Closed Area II, Nantucket Lightship, Delmarva, and Hudson Canyon. When
an area is re-opened, scallop vessels are allocated a certain number of
trips into the area, based on their permit type. The limited access
fleet, the larger ``trip boat'' fleet, consists of full-time (FT),
part-time, and occasional vessels. Each vessel is allocated a certain
number of trips, with FT vessels receiving area-specific trips and the
other two types of limited access vessels receiving a fewer number of
trips that are not specific to a certain access area. The smaller ``day
boat'' fleet, known as the limited access general category individual
fishing quota (IFQ) fleet, receive a fleet-wide allocation into most
access areas. Once the fleet-wide trip allocation in a given access
area is harvested, the area closes to IFQ vessels and the vessels can
continue to fish their IFQ in other access areas or locations within
the scallop management unit.
In order to manage the access areas' schedules, and to identify new
potential access areas, the Council develops biennial framework
adjustments, which also set the overall scallop allocations and
expected fishing effort for upcoming fishing years (FYs). The
specifications contained in these framework adjustments use the most
recent scallop survey information available at the time of development
to project scallop biomass levels in various access areas for future
years (e.g., estimates from 2010 surveys are used to determine the
specifications for FYs 2011 and 2012). As a result, projections of
scallop biomass for the second year of a framework are often outdated
for some areas: Updated surveys may show more or less harvestable
scallop biomass in a given area than originally anticipated.
The scallop FY begins on March 1 of each year and the FY 2012
scallop specifications are the second-year specifications developed by
the Council through Framework Adjustment 22 to the Scallop FMP
(Framework 22) (76 FR 43774, July 21, 2011). Framework 22 set the
access area schedules for FYs 2011 and 2012 based on 2010 survey
results.
[[Page 28312]]
In an attempt to account for unexpected changes in biomass levels, as
well as optimize yield, Framework 22 included a new way to allocate
access area trip for FT vessels: Although all FT vessels received a
total of 4 access area trips in FY 2011 and in FY 2012, not all trips
were allocated to the same access areas. Instead, Framework 22 included
``split trip'' allocations for FT vessels, where half the fleet is
allocated a trip in one access area and half the fleet is allocated a
trip in another access area. This split trip allocation scheme was
successful in FY 2011. However, as explained in greater detail below,
results from recent 2011 surveys show that the ``split trip'' access
area allocations based on these older surveys should be adjusted for FY
2012 for the Delmarva and CAI access areas.
New Information Regarding Current Scallop Biomass Levels in Delmarva
At the Council's Scallop Plan Development Team (PDT) meeting on
January 5, 2012, staff from the Northeast Fisheries Science Center, the
Virginia Institute of Marine Science (VIMS), and the University of
Massachusetts School for Marine and Atmospheric Science presented
results from their 2011 Delmarva scallop resource surveys. All three
surveys, which represent the best available scientific information
regarding the status of the scallop resource, indicated that the
scallop biomass in Delmarva is substantially lower than expected for FY
2012.
The Delmarva estimates ranged from 5.1 M lb (2,313 mt) to 13.0 M lb
(5,897 mt), depending on the type of survey used (i.e., dredge or
video) and when the survey was conducted. For example, the VIMS dredge
survey that estimated biomass of 5.1 M lb (2,313 mt) was the last
survey of the area; it was conducted in October 2011, when nearly all
vessels had fully fished their Delmarva trips, and also when scallop
meat weights are at their lowest. For comparison, based on the 2010
survey estimates, Framework 22 allocated the FT vessel fleet 5.6 M lb
(2,540 mt) and 2.8 M lb (1,270 mt) of scallops from this area in FYs
2011 and 2012, respectively. In 2011, all 313 FT vessels with permits
in the Atlantic sea scallop fishery were each allocated one trip
(18,000 lb/trip; 8,165 kg/trip) into Delmarva; in FY 2012, only 156 FT
vessels were allocated one trip each into Delmarva. The recent survey
information is supported by what was observed during FY 2011 fishing
activity in Delmarva, where catch rates were much lower in the area
than anticipated, and much lower than catch rates in other areas. Catch
rates in Delmarva declined from about 2,000 lb (907 kg) per day in the
start of FY 2011 to less than 1,000 lb (454 kg) per day later in the
FY. The new survey results indicate that the scallop biomass in
Delmarva is not high enough to support the FY 2012 allocations set
through Framework 22.
New Information Regarding Current Scallop Recruitment Levels in
Delmarva
In addition to identifying lower-than-expected scallop biomass in
Delmarva, the 2011 results also indicated that this access area is one
of the few areas in the Mid-Atlantic where there is relatively strong
recruitment, meaning an abundance of small scallops (1.57 to 2.95 in
(40 to 75 mm)) that have reached maturity (i.e., are able to
reproduce). These small scallops will benefit from additional
protection through closure of the area--a closure will allow them to
grow larger (to the 3.5-in (89-mm) minimum size for harvest) and
produce more scallops before they are harvested. Recruitment helps
define the health of the resource in terms of reproduction and growth,
and helps predict future abundance levels of harvestable scallops.
Recruitment levels also help shape the area rotation program for future
years.
New Information Regarding Current Scallop Biomass Levels in CAI
The 2011 surveys estimated scallop biomass in CAI between 28-40 M
lb (12,700-18,144 mt), depending on the survey results used and what
time of year the surveys took place. These levels are higher than
Framework 22's 2011 projections based on the 2010 survey results, which
estimated CAI biomass to be closer to 26 M lb (11,793 mt) in 2011, and
indicate that more fishing effort could be allocated to CAI in FY 2012.
In FY 2011, the scallop fishery harvested about 8.8 M lb (3,992 mt) of
scallops from this area and Framework 22 allocated 157 FT vessels one
trip each (18,000 lb/trip; 8,165 kg/trip) into CAI for FY 2012.
Based on the most recent information on the status of the scallop
resource described above, NMFS takes this emergency action to close
Delmarva for the remainder of FY 2012, and reallocates any unused FT
trips from Delmarva to CAI in FY 2012. By closing Delmarva, this action
will prevent localized overfishing of the scallop resource, protect
scallop recruitment, and improve future scallop yield in the Mid
Atlantic. By reallocating FT vessel trips into a more productive
scallop access area, this action ensures equity across the scallop
fleet for FY 2012 and supports overall scallop harvest levels that are
consistent with Framework 22.
Continued fishing in Delmarva during FY 2012 would result in longer
fishing trips that damage scallop resources and increase the risk of
overharvesting the available resource.
Based on FY 2011 catch rates, if Delmarva did not close in FY 2012,
catch rates could continue to be around 1,000 lb (454 kg) per day,
compared to about 2,200 lb (998 kg) per day or higher in CAI, which
would result in longer fishing trips that damage scallop resources and
increase the risk of overharvesting the available resource. Although
some vessels received Delmarva allocations at the start of FY 2012,
which began March 1, 2012, very few limited access vessels have fished
their FY 2012 trips in the area to date due to the poor conditions.
However, if Delmarva remained open for the remainder of FY 2012, FT
vessels with Delmarva ``split trip'' allocations would eventually take
their trips or risk losing a full access area trip. As previously
mentioned, unlike other scallop vessels that have non-specific
allocations that can be fished in Delmarva or elsewhere, FT limited
access vessels must fish their trips in specific areas, or trade their
trips with other FT vessels to fish in other areas. If this area
remained open with these low catch rates, the 156 FT vessels with
Delmarva allocations would not likely be able to trade their Delmarva
trips for other more productive areas. Without any other alternatives,
these vessel operators would have continued to fish in Delmarva until
they reached the 18,000-lb (8,165 kg) limit, which would have required
much longer trips to catch their full possession limit. This would have
increased the amount of time and area that the scallop fishing gear is
in contact with the sea floor (i.e., increased area swept), which in
turn would have resulted in negative impacts on the scallop resource
due to increased fishing pressure.
In addition, if Delmarva remained open in FY 2012, vessel operators
would have taken longer fishing trips due to lower scallop biomass
levels, which would negatively impact scallop recruitment in the short
and medium term, and could reduce the long-term biomass and yield from
Delmarva and the Mid-Atlantic overall. Vessel operators would have
continued to fish in Delmarva until they reached the 18,000-lb (8,165
kg) limit, which will which negatively impact scallop recruitment due
to the potential harvest and disturbance of the small-sized and less
mature scallops. The success of the entire scallop access area
rotational management program depends on timely openings and closing of
access
[[Page 28313]]
areas in order to protect scallop recruitment and optimize yield. This
is particularly true in the Mid-Atlantic, where recruitment has been
well below average for several years. By closing Delmarva for the
remainder of FY 2012, this action avoids the potential for localized
overfishing of the area and promotes future yield from the area by
protecting the small scallops located in the area.
Reallocating unused FY 2012 Delmarva trips to CAI would ensure
equity across the scallop fleet, while not compromising the scallop
resource.
The reallocation to CAI of unused FT vessel trips from Delmarva is
not expected to result in excessive fishing in CAI for FY 2012, based
on the most recent survey results. By reallocating to CAI any unused FT
vessel trips (up to 156) currently assigned to Delmarva, this action
increases the total number of CAI trips from 157 to up to 313. The
increase in CAI trips results in an FY 2012 CAI allocation of 5.6 M lb
(2,540 mt) of scallops, an area with an estimated scallop biomass of
between 28-40 M lb (12,700-18,144 mt). This increase doubles the amount
of fishing effort that was initially allocated to CAI at the start of
FY 2012, but the recent surveys show that the scallop biomass in this
area can support this level of fishing.
The FT Delmarva trips that will be converted to CAI once this
action is effective include any undeclared FY 2012 trips and all FY
2012 Delmarva compensation trips. If a vessel began an FY 2012 Delmarva
scallop trip, ended the trip prior to landing its full possession
limit, and has received a subsequent FY 2012 Delmarva compensation trip
in order to harvest the remainder of the possession limit, that
compensation trip will also be converted to CAI upon the effective date
of this action. Any vessel that has gained a Delmarva trip through a
trip exchange will also have that trip converted to a CAI trip. In
addition, this action reallocates the unused Delmarva FY 2012 observer
set-aside (up to 36,000 lb; 16.3 mt) to CAI to account for the increase
in FT trips.
NMFS's policy guidelines for the use of emergency rules (62 FR
44421; August 21, 1997) specify the following three criteria that
define what an emergency situation is, and justification for final
rulemaking: (1) The emergency results from recent, unforeseen events or
recently discovered circumstances; (2) the emergency presents serious
conservation or management problems in the fishery; and (3) the
emergency can be addressed through emergency regulations for which the
immediate benefits outweigh the value of advance notice, public
comment, and deliberative consideration of the impacts on participants
to the same extent as would be expected under the normal rulemaking
process. NMFS's policy guidelines further provide that emergency action
is justified for certain situations where emergency action would
prevent significant direct economic loss, or to preserve a significant
economic opportunity that otherwise might be foregone. NMFS has
determined that the issue of closing Delmarva meets the three criteria
for emergency action for the reasons outlined below.
The emergency results from recent, unforeseen events or recently
discovered circumstance. Although the last survey in Delmarva was
completed in October 2011, the results of the three 2011 Delmarva
scallop resource surveys were not available until the January 5, 2012,
Scallop PDT meeting. There is now evidence that there is significantly
less biomass in Delmarva than projected through Framework 22. In
addition, the surveys show that small scallops, or recruitment, are
present within Delmarva and that there is not substantial recruitment
elsewhere in the Mid-Atlantic.
The emergency also presents serious conservation and management
problems in the fishery. Allowing fishing effort in Delmarva in FY 2012
with the current low biomass levels could result in negative impacts on
recruitment and could reduce the long-term biomass and economic yield
from this area. Since there has been well below average recruitment in
the Mid-Atlantic for several years, protecting scallop recruitment in
this area is essential for the future success of area rotation to
maximize yield and economic benefits to the scallop fishery.
Additionally, catch rates are much lower for Delmarva than
Framework 22 originally projected, and lower than other access areas
that are currently open to vessels for FY 2012. When catch rates fall,
vessels must fish longer to get the same total catch, increasing area
swept, or time that fishing gear is in the water. Increased area swept
has greater impacts on bycatch, habitat, and protected resources, as
well as increased costs for fishing vessels due to longer trips.
The increase in fishing costs would also have negative impacts on
the producer surplus and net economic benefits from the fishery.
Assuming catch rates in FY 2012 are similar on average to catch rates
in FY 2011, CAI trips would cost about $16,500 per FT vessel, about
half as much as trip costs estimated for that vessel to take a Delmarva
trip. Total fleet net revenue for those 156 vessels, assuming no used
trips, which would each be reallocated a CAI trip instead of a Delmarva
trip is estimated to be $25.5 million, $2.6 million more than if
Delmarva had remained open and those vessels were required to fish
their trips in that area.
These potentially serious conservation and management consequences
of high fishing effort in Delmarva in FY 2012 justify the emergency
closure of this area.
NMFS also finds that this emergency can be addressed through
emergency regulations for which the immediate benefits to both the
scallop resource and those who depend on it outweigh the value of
advance notice, public comment, and deliberative consideration of the
impacts on participants to the same extent as would be expected under
the normal rulemaking process. Although the Council has the authority
to develop a management action to modify the scallop access area trip
allocations, an emergency action can be developed and implemented by
NMFS more swiftly than a Council action that is subject to procedural
and other requirements not applicable to the Secretary. If the normal
regulatory process is used to revise the trip allocations (e.g.,
considering ``pay back'' measures for vessels with unused FY 2012
Delmarva trips during the development of Framework 24, which would set
the specifications for FYs 2013-2014) it would take substantially
longer for the revised trip allocations to be implemented, could result
in unintended impacts to future FY annual catch limits (ACLs), and
could result in triggering economically harmful management actions that
otherwise may have been avoided. By implementing these measures through
emergency action, it is possible to maintain overall catch allocations
for scallops for the remainder of FY 2012 and avoid unnecessary adverse
biological and economic impacts.
This emergency action closes Delmarva in FY 2012 for 150 days
(after a 30-day delay in effectiveness), and NMFS anticipates extending
this action for an additional 186 days, which would carry these
measures into May 2013. This emergency action is expected to be
replaced by Framework Adjustment 24 to the Scallop FMP (Framework 24),
which sets the specifications for FYs 2013 and 2014. The Council is
currently developing Framework 24 management measures but it is likely
Delmarva would continue to be closed for FY 2013. NMFS expects that
Framework 24
[[Page 28314]]
measures will be implemented in May 2013, if approved, which would
coincide with the expiration of this emergency action.
Classification
The Assistant Administrator for Fisheries, NOAA, has determined
that this rule is necessary to respond to an emergency situation and is
consistent with the national standards and other provisions of the
Magnuson-Stevens Act and other applicable laws. The rule may be
extended for a period of not more than 186 days as described under
section 305(c)(3)(B) of the Magnuson-Stevens Act.
The Assistant Administrator for Fisheries, NOAA, finds good cause
under section 553(b)(B) of the Administrative Procedure Act (APA) that
it is contrary to the public interest and impracticable to provide for
prior notice and opportunity for the public to comment. As more fully
explained above, the reasons justifying promulgation of this rule on an
emergency basis make solicitation of public comment contrary to the
public interest.
This action provides benefits to both the scallop resource and the
scallop fishery by not jeopardizing the success of the access area
program in future years, not compromising future scallop biomass levels
and subsequent scallop harvest, and ensuring that some members of the
limited access scallop fleet will not be inequitably subjected to fewer
economic benefits than others. Specifically, by closing the Delmarva
for the remainder of FY 2012, this action avoids jeopardizing the
success of the access area program in future years by protecting
scallop recruitment in the Mid-Atlantic and avoiding localized
overfishing. In addition, by reallocating unused FT Delmarva trips (up
to 156 trips) into CAI in FY 2012, this action avoids potential
inequity in FY 2012 allocations and ensures that the limited access
scallop fleet would not risk exceeding its sub-ACL in FY 2013, if
vessels allocated Delmarva trips were compensated in FY 2013, rather
than FY 2012. This also avoids the potential for the limited access
fleet to be subjected to potential days-at-sea deductions in FY 2014 to
account for any overage of their FY 2013 ACL. In addition, this action
minimizes the likelihood of sea turtle interactions in the Mid-
Atlantic, which are known to begin in June, due to longer Delmarva
fishing trips. This action did not allow for prior public comment
because the review process and determination could not have been
completed before Delmarva opened on March 1, 2012, due to the inherent
time constraints associated with the Council's rulemaking process to
adjust FY 2012 allocations already specified through Framework 22. The
results of the three 2011 Delmarva scallop resource surveys were not
available until the January 5, 2012, Scallop PDT meeting, and thus
there was not enough time for NMFS to complete a rulemaking through the
Council's process under the Magnuson-Stevens Act before the Delmarva
area opened to fishing on March 1, 2012. This action is undertaken at
the request of the Council and is supported by the Fisheries Survival
Fund, an organization that represents a large portion of the scallop
industry, and that is an active participant in the development of
scallop fishery management measures. The Council urged that NMFS
implement this action quickly in order to minimize any fishing effort
in the Delmarva, and ensure the industry is aware of any allocation
adjustments before CAI opens on June 15, 2012. Had this action been
further delayed past the start of FY 2012 to account for public
comment, it is possible that FT vessels, uncertain whether or not they
would receive CAI trips instead of their Delmarva trips, would have
fished in the Delmarva when the meat weights would be highest (i.e.,
during the first few months of the fishing year), which would have
negative implications on the recruitment in the area.
In the interest of receiving public input on this action, the EA
analyzing this action will be made available to the public and this
temporary final rule solicits public comment.
This rule has been determined to be not significant for purposes of
Executive Order 12866.
This rule is exempt from the procedures of the Regulatory
Flexibility Act to prepare a regulatory flexibility analysis because
the rule is issued without opportunity for prior public comment.
List of Subjects in 50 CFR Part 648
Fisheries, Fishing, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
Dated: May 9, 2012.
Samuel D. Rauch III,
Acting Assistant Administrator for Fisheries, National Marine Fisheries
Service.
For the reasons set out in the preamble, 50 CFR part 648 is amended
as follows:
PART 648--FISHERIES OF THE NORTHEASTERN UNITED STATES
0
1. The authority citation for part 648 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 1801 et seq.
0
2. In Sec. 648.58, paragraph (f) is added to read as follows:
Sec. 648.58 Rotational Closed Areas.
(f) Delmarva Closed Area. No vessel may fish for scallops in, or
possess or land scallops from, the area known as the Delmarva Closed
Area. No vessel may possess scallops in the Delmarva Closed Area,
unless such vessel is only transiting the area as provided in paragraph
(c) of this section. The Delmarva Closed Area is defined by straight
lines connecting the following points in the order stated (copies of a
chart depicting this area are available from the Regional Administrator
upon request):
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Point Latitude Longitude
------------------------------------------------------------------------
DMV1........................... 38[deg]10' N 74[deg]50' W
DMV2........................... 38[deg]10' N 74[deg]00' W
DMV3........................... 37[deg]15' N 74[deg]00' W
DMV4........................... 37[deg]15' N 74[deg]50' W
DMV1........................... 38[deg]10' N 74[deg]50' W
------------------------------------------------------------------------
0
3. In Sec. 648.59, paragraphs (a) and (b)(5)(i) are suspended, and
paragraph (b)(5)(iii) is added to read as follows:
Sec. 648.59 Sea Scallop Access Areas.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(5) * * *
(iii) Limited access vessels. Based on its permit category, a
vessel issued a limited access scallop permit may fish no more than the
maximum number of trips in the Closed Area I Access Area, unless the
vessel owner has made an exchange with another vessel owner whereby the
vessel gains a Closed Area I Access Area trip and gives up a trip into
another Sea Scallop Access Area, as specified in Sec.
648.60(a)(3)(ii), or unless the vessel is taking a compensation trip
for a prior Closed Area I Access Area trip that was terminated early,
as specified in Sec. 648.60(c).
* * * * *
0
4. In Sec. 648.60:
0
a. Paragraphs (a)(3)(i)(B)(2), (a)(3)(i)(C)(2), (a)(3)(i)(D)(2),
(d)(1)(ii), (d)(1)(iv), and (e)(1)(ii) are suspended; and
0
b. Paragraphs (a)(3)(i)(B)(5), (a)(3)(i)(C)(5), (a)(3)(i)(D)(4),
(d)(1)(vi), and (e)(1)(iv) are added to read as follows:
Sec. 648.60 Sea scallop access area program requirements.
(a) * * *
(3) * * *
(i) * * *
(B) * * *
(5) In fishing year 2012, each full-time vessel shall have a total
of four access
[[Page 28315]]
area trips and is subject to the following seasonal trip restrictions
specified in paragraph (a)(3)(i)(B)(4) of this section. All full-time
vessels shall receive one trip into the Closed Area II Access Area and
one trip into the Hudson Canyon Access Area. Each vessel shall also
receive an additional two access area trips that must be allocated in
one of the following combinations: Two trips in the Closed Area I
Access Area; one trip in the Closed Area I Access Area and one trip in
the Nantucket Lightship Access Area; one trip in the Closed Area I
Access Area and one additional trip in the Hudson Canyon Access Area;
or one trip in the Nantucket Lightship Access Area and an additional
trip in the Hudson Canyon Access Area. These allocations shall be
determined by the Regional Administrator through a random assignment
and shall be made publically available prior to the start of the 2012
fishing year. A full description of the random assignment process for
FY 2012 is outlined in Section 2.4.2 of Framework 22 to the Scallop
Fishery Management Plan.
(i) If a full-time vessel was allocated, declared, and fully
harvested a 2012 fishing year Delmarva Access Area trip, as originally
allocated under Framework Adjustment 22 management measures, prior to
the Delmarva Access Area closure implemented under emergency action
authority, it will not receive a 2012 fishing year Closed Area I Access
Area trip once the Delmarva Access Area closes under emergency action.
If the vessel terminated a 2012 fishing year Delmarva Access Area trip
early and received a Delmarva Access Area compensation trip fish the
remainder of its allowed possession limit, as specified in Sec.
648.60(c), the compensation trip will reallocated to Closed Area I
Access Area trip once the Delmarva Access Area closes under emergency
action.
(ii) [Reserved]
(C) * * *
(5) For the 2012 fishing year, a part-time scallop vessel is
allocated two trips that may be distributed between access areas as
follows: Two trips in the Hudson Canyon Access Area; two trips in the
Closed Area I Access Area; one trip in the Closed Area I Access Area
and one trip in the Nantucket Lightship Access Area; one trip in the
Closed Area I Access Area and one trip in the Hudson Canyon Access
Area; or one trip in the Nantucket Lightship Access Area and one trip
in the Hudson Canyon Access Area. Part-time vessels are subject to the
seasonal trip restrictions specified in paragraph (a)(3)(i)(C)(4) of
this section.
(D) * * *
(4) For the 2012 fishing year, an occasional scallop vessel may
take one trip in the Hudson Canyon Access Area, or one trip in the
Closed Area I Access Area, or one trip in the Closed Area II Access
Area, or one trip in the Nantucket Lightship Access Area.
* * * * *
(d) * * *
(1) * * *
(vi) Closed Area I Access Area. For the 2011 and 2012 fishing
years, the observer set-asides for the Closed Area I Access Area are
111,540 lb (51 mt) and 72,000 lb (33 mt), respectively.
* * * * *
(e) * * *
(1) * * *
(iv) 2012: Hudson Canyon Access Area, Closed Area I Access Area,
Closed Area II Access Area, and Nantucket Lightship Access Area.
* * * * *
[FR Doc. 2012-11670 Filed 5-11-12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-22-P