Federal Register, January 11, 2002 (Nbr. Vol. 67, No. 8)
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U.S. Code - Title 5: Government Organization and Employees - 5 USC 601 - Sec. 601. Definitions
U.S. Code - Title 5: Government Organization and Employees - 5 USC 553 - Sec. 553. Rule making
Code of Federal Regulations - Title 50: Wildlife and Fisheries - 50 CFR 660.302 - Definitions.
Code of Federal Regulations - Title 50: Wildlife and Fisheries - 50 CFR 660.306 - Prohibitions.
Federal Register: January 11, 2002 (Volume 67, Number 8)Rules and RegulationsPage 1539-1554From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]DOCID:fr11ja02-8[Page 1539]Part IIDepartment of CommerceNational Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration50 CFR Parts 600 and 660Magnuson-Stevens Act Provisions; Fisheries off West Coast States and in the Western Pacific; Pacific Coast Groundfish Fishery; Ground fis[Page 1540]h Fishery Management Measures; Emergency Rule and Proposed RuleDEPARTMENT OF COMMERCENational Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration50 CFR Parts 600 and 660Docket No. 011231309-1309-01; I.D. 121301BRIN 0648-A069Magnuson-Stevens Act Provisions; Fisheries off West Coast States and in the Western Pacific; Pacific Coast Groundfish Fishery; Groundfish Fishery Management MeasuresAGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.ACTION: Emergency rule; groundfish fishery management measures for January through February 2002; request for comments.SUMMARY: NMFS announces the January through February 2002 management measures for groundfish taken in the U.S. exclusive economic zone (EEZ) and state waters off the coasts of Washington, Oregon, and California. Management measures for January through February 2002 are intended to prevent overfishing; rebuild overfished species; minimize incidental catch and discard of overfished and depleted stocks; provide equitable harvest opportunity for both recreational and commercial sectors; and, within the commercial fisheries, allow achievement of harvest guidelines and limited entry and open access allocations to the extent practicable.DATES: Effective January 1, 2002, through February 28, 2002. Comments must be received no later than 5 p.m., local time (l.t.) on February 11, 2002.ADDRESSES: Send comments to D. Robert Lohn, Administrator, Northwest Region (Regional Administrator), NMFS, 7600 Sand Point Way NE., Bldg. 1, Seattle, WA 98115-0070, or fax to 206-526-6736; or Rodney McInnis, Acting Administrator, Southwest Region, NMFS, 501 West Ocean Blvd., Suite 4200, Long Beach, CA 90802-4213, or fax to 562-980-4047. Comments will not be accepted if submitted via E-mail or Internet. Information relevant to this emergency rule and the proposed rule for the annual specifications and management measures published elsewhere in this issue of the Federal Register, which includes an environmental assessment/regulatory impact review/initial regulatory flexibility analysis (EA/RIR/IRFA), is available for public review during business hours at the offices of the NMFS Northwest Regional Administrator and the NMFS Southwest Regional Administrator, or may be obtained from the Pacific Fishery Management Council (Council), at 7700 NE Ambassador Place, Portland, OR 97220, phone: 503-326-6352. Additional reports referred to in this document may also be obtained from the Council. This emergency rule also is accessible via the Internet at the Office of the Federal Register's Web site athttp://www.access.gpo.gov/ su__docs/aces/aces140.html. Background information and documents are available at the NMFS Northwest Region Web site at http:// www.nwr.noaa.gov/1sustfsh/gdfsh01.htm and at the Council's Web site at http://www.pcouncil.org.FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Yvonne deReynier or Becky Renko (Northwest Region, NMFS), phone: 206-526-6140; fax: 206-526-6736 and; E-mail: yvonne.dereynier@noaa.gov, becky.renko@noaa.gov, or Svein Fougner (Southwest Region, NMFS) phone: 562-980-4000; fax: 562-980-4047 and; E-mail: svein.fougner@noaa.gov.SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: BackgroundThe Pacific Coast groundfish fishery management plan (FMP) requires that fishery specifications for groundfish be annually evaluated and revised as necessary, that OYs be specified for species or species groups in need of particular protection, and that management measures designed to achieve the OYs be published in the Federal Register and made effective by January 1, the beginning of the fishing year. The Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act (Magnuson- Stevens Act) and the FMP require that NMFS implement actions to prevent overfishing and to rebuild overfished stocks.Since 1990, the Council has developed annual specifications and management measures in a two-meeting process (usually its September and November meetings) followed by a NMFS final action published in the Federal Register and made available for public comment and correction. Each year specifications and management measures are effective until the specifications and management measures for the following year are published and effective. In 2001, the agency was challenged on this process in Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc. v. Evans, 2001 WL 1246622 (N.D.Cal. 2001) and the court ordered NMFS to provide prior public notice and allow public comment on the annual specifications. NMFS is publishing the 2002 specifications and management measures initially as a proposed rule available for a 30-day public comment elsewhere in this issue of the Federal Register, to be followed by a final rule.Given the timing of the court order, it was not possible to adjust the Council process so that the Council could recommend management measures earlier in the year. The Council finalized its 2002 specifications and management measures recommendations at its October 28 through November 2, 2001, meeting in Millbrae, CA. Given the complexity of the annual specifications and management measures package, NMFS did not have enough time to publish a proposed rule on the Council's recommendations, receive public comments, and implement a final rule by January 1, 2002. Thus, NMFS is publishing this emergency rule under the Magnuson-Stevens Act emergency authority at section 305(c), which finalizes and makes effective the groundfish management measures for January 1 through February 28, 2002.Absent a final rule by January 1, 2002, management measures for January and February 2002 would revert to those that were in place for January-February 2001. There are several species for which reverting to higher 2001 limits at the beginning of the year could result in either exceeding the annual commercial OYs or very early attainment of OYs during the year. This would also run counter to the Council's goal of having a year round fishery. While these circumstances could jeopardize the ability to stay within rebuilding targets for some species, they could also lead to significant foregone revenue from other target species whose fisheries might also have to be closed prematurely.Proposed trawl management for widow rockfish in 2002 allows no midwater fishing above the small-footrope trawl limit. The 2001 midwater trawl limit of 20,000 lb (9,072 kg) per 2 months produced landings of over 800 mt during the first 4 months of 2001. The landed catch OY for limited entry in 2002 is only 575 mt. Assuming the same catch rates as in 2001, not only would the rebuilding target be exceeded through use of the 2001 limits, but other fisheries which take widow rockfish incidentally, such as the $16 million whiting fishery, would likely have to be foregone. Similarly, the 65,000 lb (29,484 kg) limit for Dover sole north of Cape Mendocino in 2001 produced 3,800 mt of landings during the first four months. Were this to be repeated in[Page 1541]2002, less than half of the Dover sole OY would remain for the remaining 8 months of the year. Early attainment of Dover sole would likely result in closures or severe cutbacks in opportunities for other DTS complex (Dover sole, shortspine thornyhead, longspine thornyhead, sablefish) species and flatfish species during much of 2002. To address bycatch concerns for rebuilding species, proposed 2002 flatfish limits were also lowered during the first four months of the year relative to 2001. Failure to implement these reductions could jeopardize the ability to stay within rebuilding targets for some species.Within the fixed gear fisheries, several drastic reductions in shelf rockfish limits are being proposed to reduce mortality of yelloweye rockfish, which will be declared overfished in the Proposed Rules section of this issue of the Federal Register. Line gears will land at least 8 mt of yelloweye rockfish in 2001, and landed over 7 mt in 2000. Less than 5 mt of yelloweye rockfish mortality will be allocated to the commercial fishery for 2002, with an expectation that 1-2 mt will be caught as bycatch in trawl fisheries on the continental shelf. A new yelloweye rockfish bag limit and other yelloweye rockfish restrictions are imposed in the recreational fisheries to protect this species. Failure to implement the more restrictive fixed-gear landing limits proposed for shelf rockfish species in 2002 could lead to early attainment of yelloweye rockfish. This could jeopardize not only other longline fisheries, such as the $4 million primary sablefish season, but also trawl fisheries on the continental shelf. In a few cases, trip limits in January and February 2002 are higher than in 2001 because the proposed OYs have increased or because they provide an opportunity to harvest healthy stocks when they are segregated from the overfished stocks in the winter.Specifications and management measures proposed for March-December 2002 in the Proposed Rules section of this issue of the Federal Register, combined with this emergency rule, are a balance intended to protect overfished groundfish species while allowing harvesters some access to healthy groundfish stocks. The proposed specifications and management measures are designed to rebuild overfished stocks through constraining direct and incidental mortality to prevent overfishing, and to achieve as much of the OYs as practicable for healthier groundfish stocks managed under the FMP. The proposed specifications and management measures describe the rationale for the 2002 groundfish management measures and include trip, bag and size limits, time/area closures, and gear-and area-specific regulations, including the management measures implemented in this emergency rule.During 2002, NMFS and the Council will consider how to incorporate a NMFS proposed and final rulemaking process into the Council's annual specifications and management measures process without using an emergency rule to implement management measures for 2003.NMFS ActionsFor the reasons stated above, the Assistant Administrator for Fisheries, NOAA (Assistant Administrator or AA), concurs with the Council's recommendations and announces the following management actions for January 1 through February 28, 2002.A. General Definitions and ProvisionsThe following definitions and provisions apply to the 2002 management measures, unless otherwise specified in a subsequent Federal Register document: (1) Trip limits. Trips limits are used in the commercial fishery to specify the amount of fish that may legally be taken and retained, possessed, or landed, per vessel, per fishing trip, or cumulatively per unit of time, or the number of landings that may be made from a vessel in a given period of time, as follows: (a) A per trip limit is the total allowable amount of a groundfish species or species group, by weight, or by percentage of weight of legal fish on board, that may be taken and retained, possessed, or landed per vessel from a single fishing trip. (b) A daily trip limit is the maximum amount that may be taken and retained, possessed, or landed per vessel in 24 consecutive hours, starting at 0001 hours 1.t. Only one landing of groundfish maybe made in that 24-hour period. Daily trip limits may not be accumulated during multiple day trips. (c) A weekly trip limit is the maximum amount that may be taken and retained, possessed, or landed per vessel in 7 consecutive days, starting at 0001 hours 1.t. on Sunday and ending at 2400 hours 1.5 on Saturday. Weekly trip limits may not be accumulated during multiple week trips. If a calendar week includes days within two different months a vessel is not entitled to two separate weekly limits during that week. (d) A cumulative trip limit is the maximum amount that may be taken and retained, possessed, or landed per vessel in a specified period of time without a limit on the number of landings or trips, unless otherwise specified. The cumulative trip limit periods for limited entry and open access fisheries, which start at 001 hours 1.t. and end at 2400 hours 1.t., are as follows, unless otherwise specified: (i) The first 2-month period of 2002 is January 1-February 28, March 1-April 30, May 1-June 30, July 1-August 31, September 1-October 31, and, November 1-December 31. (ii) One month means the first day through the last day of the calendar month. (iii) One week means 7 consecutive days, Sunday through Saturday. (2) Fishing ahead. Unless the fishery is closed, a vessel that has landed its cumulative or daily limit may continue to fish on the limit for the next period, so long as no fish (including, but not limited to, groundfish with no trip limits, shrimp, prawns, or other nongroundfish species or shellfish) are landed (offloaded) until the next period. As stated at 50 CFR 660.302 (in the definition of ``landing''), once the offloading of any species begins, all fish aboard the vessel are counted as part of the landing. Fishing ahead is not allowed during or before a closed period (see paragraph A.(7)). See paragraph A.(9) for information on inseason changes to limits. (3) Weights. All weights are round weights or round-weight equivalents unless otherwise specified. (4) Percentages. Percentages are based on round weights, and, unless otherwise specified, apply only to legal fish on board. (5) Legal fish. ``Legal fish'' means fish legally taken and retained, possessed, or landed in accordance with the provisions of 50 CFR part 660, the Magnuson-Stevens Act, any document issued under part 660, and any other regulation promulgated or permit issued under the Magnuson-Stevens Act. (6) Size limits and length measurement. Unless otherwise specified, size limits in the commercial and recreational groundfish fisheries apply to the ``total length,'' which is the longest measurement of the fish without mutilation of the fish or the use of force to extend the length of the fish. No fish with a size limit may be retained if it is in such condition that its length has been extended or cannot be determined by these methods. For conversions not listed here, contact the state where the fish will be landed. (a) Whole fish. For a whole fish, total length is measured from the tip of the snout (mouth closed) to the tip of the tail in a natural, relaxed position.[Page 1542] (b) ``Headed'' fish. For a fish with the head removed (``headed''), the length is measured from the origin of the first dorsal fin (where the front dorsal fin meets the dorsel surface of the body closest to the head) to the tip of the upper lobe of the tail; the dorsal fin and tail must be left intact. (c) Filets. A filet is the flesh from one side of a fish extending from the head to the tail, which has been removed from the body (head, tail, and backbone) in a single continuous piece. Filet lengths may be subject to size limits for some groundfish taken in the recreational fishery off California (see paragraph D.(1)). A filet is measured along the length of the longest part of the filet in a relaxed position; stretching or otherwise manipulating the filet to increase its length is not permitted. (d) Sablefish weight limit conversions. The following conversions apply to both the limited entry and open access fisheries when trip limits are effective for those fisheries. For headed and gutted (eviscerated) sablefish, the conversion factor established by the state where the fish is or will be landed will be used to convert the processed weight to round weight for purposes of applying the trip limit. (The conversion factor currently is 1.6 in Washington, Oregon, and California. However, the state conversion factors may differ; fishers should contact fishery enforcement officials in the state where the fish will be landed to determine that state's official conversion factor.) (e) Lingcod size and weight conversions. The following conversions apply in both limited entry and open access fisheries. (i) Size conversion. For lingcod with the head removed, the minimum size limit is 19.5 inches (49.5 cm), which corresponds to 24 inches (61 cm) total length for whole fish. (ii) Weight Conversion. The conversion factor established by the state where the fish is or will be landed will be used to convert the processed weight to round weight for purposes of applying the trip limit. (The states' conversion factors may differ, and fishers should contact fishery enforcement officials in the state where the fish will be landed to determine that state's official conversion factor.) If a state does not have a conversion factor for headed and gutted lingcod, or lingcod that is only gutted; the following conversion factors will be used. To determine the round weight, multiply the processed weight times the conversion factor. (A) Headed and gutted. The conversion factor for headed and gutted lingcod is 1.5. (B) Gutted, with the head on. The conversion factor for lingcod that has only been gutted is 1.1 (7) Closure. ``Closure,'' when referring to closure of fishery, means that taking and retaining, possessing, or landing the particular species or species group is prohibited. (See 50 CFR 660.302.) Unless otherwise announced in the Federal Register, offloading must begin before the time the fishery closes. The provisions at paragraph A.(2) for fishing ahead do not apply during a closed period. It is unlawful to transit through a closed area with the prohibited species on board, no matter where that species was caught, except as provided for in the Cowcod Conservation Areas at A.(20). (8) Fishery management area. The fishery management area for these species is the EEZ off the coasts of Washington, Oregon, and California between 3 and 200 nm offshore, bounded on the north by the Provisional International Boundary between the United States and Canada, and bounded on the south by the International Boundary between the United States and Mexico. All groundfish possessed between 0-200 nm offshore or landed in Washington, Oregon, or California are presumed to have been taken and retained from the EEZ, unless otherwise demonstrated by the person in possession of those fish. (9) Routine management measures. Most trip, bag, and size limits in the groundfish fishery have been designated ``routine,'' which means they may be changed rapidly after a single Council meeting. (See 50 CFR 660.323(b).) Council meetings in 2002 will be held in the months of March, April, June, September, and November. Inseason changes to routine management measures are announced in the Federal Register. Information concerning changes to routine management measures is available from the NMFS Northwest and Southwest Regional Offices (see ADDRESSES). Changes to trip limits are effective at the times stated in the Federal Register. Once a change is effective, it is illegal to take and retain, possess, or land more fish than allowed under the new trip limit. This means that, unless otherwise announced in the Federal Register, offloading must begin before the time a fishery closes or a more restrictive trip limit takes effect. (10) Limited entry limits. It is unlawful for any person to take and retain, possess, or land groundfish in excess of the landing limit for the open access fishery without having a valid limited entry permit for the vessel affixed with a gear endorsement for the gear used to catch the fish (50 CFR 660.306(p)). (11) Operating in both limited entry and open access fisheries. The open access trip limit applies to any fishing conducted with open access gear, even if the vessel has a valid limited entry permit with an endorsement for another type of gear. A vessel that operates in both the open access and limited entry fisheries is not entitled to two separate trip limits for the same species. If a vessel has a limited entry permit and uses open gear, but the open access limit is smaller than the limited entry limit, the open access limit cannot be exceeded and counts toward the limited entry limit. If a vessel has a limited entry permit and use open access gear, but the open access limit is larger than the limited entry limit, the smaller limited entry limit applies, even if taken entirely with open access gear. (12) Operating in areas with different trip limits. Trip limits for a species or a species group may differ in different geographic areas along the coast. The following ``crossover'' provisions apply to vessels operating in different geographical areas that have different cumulative or ``per trip'' trip limits for the same species or species group. Such crossover provisions do not apply to species that are subject only to daily trip limits, or to the trip limits for black rockfish off Washington (see 50 CFR 660.323(a)(1)). In 2002, the cumulative trip limit periods for the limited entry and open access fisheries are specified in paragraph A(1)(d), but may be changed during the year if announced in the Federal Register. (a) Going from a more restrictive to a more liberal area. If a vessel takes and retains any groundfish species or species group of groundfish in an area where a more restrictive trip limit applies before fishing in an area where a more liberal trip limit (or no trip limit) applies, then that vessel is subject to the more restrictive trip limit for the entire period to which that trip limit applies, no matter where the fish are taken and retained, possessed, or landed. (b) Going from a more liberal to a more restrictive area. If a vessel takes and retains a groundfish species or species group in an area where a higher trip limit or no trip limit applies, and takes and retains, possesses or lands the same species or species group in an area where a more restrictive trip limit applies, that vessel is subject to the more restrictive trip limit for the entire period to which that trip limit applies, no matter where the fish are taken and retained, possessed, or landed. (c) Minor rockfish. Several rockfish species are designated with species-[Page 1543]specific limits on one side of the 40 deg.10' N. lat. management line, and are included as part of a minor rockfish complex on the other side of the line. (i) If a vessel takes and retains minor slope rockfish north of 40 deg.10' N. lat., that vessel is also permitted to take and retain, possess or land splitnose rockfish up to its cumulative limit south of 40 deg.10' N. lat., even if splitnose rockfish were a part of the landings from minor slope rockfish taken and retained north of 40 deg.10' N. lat. [Note: A vessel that takes and retains minor slope rockfish on both sides of the management line in a single cumulative limit period is subject to the more restrictive cumulative limit for minor slope rockfish during that period.] (ii) If a vessel takes and retains minor slope rockfish south of 40 deg.10' N. lat., that vessel is also permitted to take and retain, possess, or land POP up to its cumulative limit north of 40 deg.10' N. lat., even if POP were a part of the landings from minor slope rockfish taken and retained south of 40 deg.10' N. lat.Note: A vessel that takes and retains minor slope rockfish on both sides of the management line in a single cumulative limit period is subject to the more restrictive cumulative limit for minor slope rockfish during that period. (iii) If a vessel takes and retains minor shelf rockfish north of 40 deg.10' N. lat., that vessel is also permitted to take and retain, possess, or land chilipepper rockfish and bocaccio up to their respective cumulative limits south of 40 deg.10' N. lat., even if either species is part of the landings from minor shelf rockfish taken and retained north of 40 deg.10' N. lat.Note: A vessel that takes and retains minor shelf rockfish on both sides of the management line in a single cumulative limit period is subject to the more restrictive cumulative limit for minor shelf rockfish during that period. (iv) If a vessel takes and retains minor shelf rockfish south of 40 deg.10' N. lat., that vessel is also permitted to take and retain, possess, or land yellowtail rockfish up to its respective cumulative limits north of 40 deg.10' N. lat., even if yellowtail rockfish is part of the landings from minor shelf rockfish taken and retained south of 40 deg.10' N. lat.Note: A vessel that takes and retains minor shelf rockfish on both sides of the management line in a single cumulative limit period is subject to the more restrictive cumulative limit for minor shelf rockfish during that period. (d) ``DTS complex.'' For 2002, there are differential trip limits for the ``DTS complex'' (Dover sole, shortspine thornyhead, longspine thornyhead, sablefish) north and south of the management line at 40 deg.10' N. lat. Vessels operating in the limited entry trawl fishery are subject to the crossover provisions in this paragraph A.(12) when making landings that include any one of the four species in the ``DTS complex.'' (13) Sorting. It is unlawful for any person to ``fail to sort, prior to the first weighing after offloading, those groundfish species or species groups for which there is a trip limit, size limit, quota, or commercial OY, if the vessel fished or landed in an area during a time when such trip limit, size limit, commercial optimum yield, or quota applied.'' This provision applies to both the limited entry and open access fisheries. (See 50 CFR 660.306(h)). The following species must be sorted in 2002: (a) For vessels with a limited entry permit: (i) Coastwide--widow rockfish, canary rockfish, darkblotched rockfish, yelloweye rockfish, shortbelly rockfish, minor nearshore rockfish, minor shelf rockfish, minor slope rockfish, shortspine and longspine thornyhead, Dover sole, arrowtooth flounder, rex sole, petrale sole, other flatfish, lingcod, sabelfish, and Pacific whiting;Note: Although both yelloweye and darkblotched rockfish are considered minor rockfish managed under the minor shelf and minor slope rockfish complexes, respectively, they have separate OYs and therefore must be sorted by species. (ii) North of 40 deg.10' N. lat.--Pacific ocean perch, yellowtail rockfish, and, for fixed gear, black rockfish and blue rockfish; (iii) South of 40 deg.10' N. lat.--chilipepper rockfish, bocaccio rockfish, splitnose rockfish, and Pacific sanddabs. (b) For open access vessels (vessels without a limited entry permit): (i) Coastwide--widow rockfish, canary rockfish, darkblotched rockfish, yelloweye rockfish, minor nearshore rockfish, minor shelf rockfish, minor slope rockfish, arrowtooth flounder, other flatfish, lingcod, sablefish, Pacific whiting, and Pacific sanddabs; (ii) North of 40 deg.10' N. lat.--black rockfish, blue rockfish, Pacific ocean perch, yellowtail rockfish; (iii) South of 40 deg.10' N. lat.--chilipepper rockfish, bocaccio rockfish, splitnose rockfish; (iv) South of Point Conception--thornyheads. (14) Limited Entry Trawl Gear Restrictions. Limited entry trip limits may vary depending on the type of trawl gear that is on board a vessel during a fishing trip: large-footrope, small-footrope, or midwater trawl gear. (a) Types of trawl gear. (i) Large-footrope trawl gear is bottom trawl gear, as specified at 50 CFR 660.302 and 660.322(b), with a footrope diameter larger than 8 inches (20 cm) (including rollers, bobbins or other material encircling or tied along the length of the footrope). (ii) Small-footrope trawl gear is bottom trawl gear, as specified at 50 CFR 660.302 and 660.322(b), with a footrope diameter 8 inches (20 cm) or smaller (including rollers, bobbins or other material encircling or tied along the length of the footrope), except chafing gear may be used only on the last 50 meshes of a small-footrope trawl, measured from the terminal (closed) end of the codend. Other lines or ropes that run parallel to the footrope may not be augmented or modified to violate footrope size restrictions. (iii) Midwater trawl gear is pelagic trawl gear, as specified at 50 CFR 660.302 and 660.322(b)(2). The footrope of midwater trawl gear may not be enlarged by encircling it with chains or by any other means. Ropes or lines running parallel to the footrope of midwater trawl gear must be bare and may not be suspended with chains or other materials. (b) Cumulative trip limits and prohibitions by trawl gear type--(i) Large-footrope trawl. It is unlawful to take and retain, possess or land any species of shelf or nearshore rockfish (defined at A.(21) and Table 1) except chilipepper rockfish south of 40 deg.10' N. lat. (as specified in Table 2) from a fishing trip if large-footrope gear is on board; this restriction applies coastwide from January 1 to December 31. It is unlawful to take and retain, possess or land petrale sole, rex sole, or arrowtooth flounder from a fishing trip if large-footrope gear is onboard and the trip is conducted at least in part between May 1 and October 31; cumulative limits for ``all other flatfish'' (all flatfish except those with cumulative trip limits in Table 2) are lower for vessels with large-footrope gear on board throughout the year. (See Table 2.) It is unlawful for any vessel using large-footrope gear to exceed large-footrope gear limits for any species or to use large- footrope gear to exceed small-footrope gear or midwater trawl gear limits for any species. The presence of rollers or bobbins larger than 8 inches (20 cm) in diameter on board the vessel, even if not attached to a trawl, will be considered to mean a large-footrope trawl is on board. Dates are adjusted for the ``B'' platoon (See A.(16)).[Page 1544] (ii) Small-footrope or midwater trawl gear. Cumulative trip limits for canary rockfish, widow rockfish, yellowtail rockfish, bocaccio, minor shelf rockfish, minor nearshore rockfish, and lingcod, and higher cumulative trip limits for chilipepper rockfish and flatfish, as indicated in Table 2, are allowed only if small-footrope gear or midwater trawl gear is used, and if that gear meets the specifications in paragraphs A.(14). (iii) Midwater trawl gear. Higher cumulative trip limits are available for limited entry vessels using midwater trawl gear to harvest widow or chilipepper rockfish. Each landing that contains widow or chilipepper rockfish is attributed to the gear on board with the most restrictive trip limit for those species. Landings attributed to small-footrope trawl must not exceed the small-footrope limit, and landings attributed to midwater trawl must not exceed the midwater trawl limit. If a vessel has landings attributed to both types of trawl during a cumulative trip limit period, all landings are counted toward the most restrictive gear-specific cumulative limit. (v) More than one type of trawl gear on board. The cumulative trip limits in Table 2 must not be exceeded. A fishing vessel may have more than one type of limited entry trawl gear on board, but the most restrictive trip limit associated with the gear on board applies for that trip and will count toward the cumulative trip limit for that gear.Example: If a vessel has large-footrope gear on board, it cannot land yellowtail rockfish, even if the yellowtail rockfish is caught with a small-footrope trawl. If a vessel has both small-footrope trawl and midwater trawl gear on board, the landing is attributed to the most restrictive gear-specific limit, regardless of which gear type was used. (c) Measurement. The footrope will be measured in a straight line from the outside edge to the opposite outside edge at the widest part on any individual part, including any individual disk, roller, bobbin, or any other device. (d) State landing receipts. Washington, Oregon, and California will require the type of trawl gear on board with the most restrictive limit to be recorded on the State landing receipt(s) for each trip or an attachment to the State landing receipt. (e) Gear inspection. All trawl gear and trawl gear components, including unattached rollers or bobbins, must be readily accessible and made available for inspection at the request of an authorized officer. No trawl gear may be removed from the vessel prior to offloading. All footropes shall be uncovered and clearly visible except when in use for fishing. (15) Permit transfers. Limited entry permit transfers are to take effect no earlier than the first day of a major cumulative limit period following the day NMFS receives the transfer form and original permit (50 CFR 660.335(e)(3)). Those days in 2002 are January 1, March 1, May 1, July 1, September 1, and November 1, and are delayed by 15 days (starting on the 16th of a month) for the ``B'' platoon. (16) Platooning--limited entry trawl vessels. Limited entry trawl vessels are automatically in the ``A'' platoon, unless the ``B''platoon is indicated on the limited entry permit. If a vessel is in the ``A'' platoon, its cumulative trip limit periods begin and end on the beginning and end of a calendar month as in the past. If a limited entry trawl permit is authorized for the ``B'' platoon, then cumulative trip limit periods will begin on the 16th of the month (generally 2 weeks later than for the ``A'' platoon), unless otherwise specified. (a) For a vessel in the ``B'' platoon, cumulative trip limit periods begin on the 16th of the month at 001 hours, 1.t., and end at 2400 hours, 1.t., on the 15th of the month. Therefore, the management measures announced herein that are effective on January 1, 2002, for the ``A'' platoon will be effective on January 16, 2002, for the ``B'' platoon. The effective date of any inseason changes to the cumulative trip limits also will be delayed for 2 weeks for the ``B'' platoon, unless otherwise specified. (b) A vessel authorized to operate in the ``B'' platoon may take and retain, but may not land, groundfish from January 1, 2002, through January 15, 2002. (c) A vessel authorized to operate in the ``B'' platoon will have the same cumulative trip limits for the November 16, 2002, through December 31, 2002, period as a vessel operating in the ``A'' platoon has for the November 1, 2002, through December 31, 2002 period. (17) Exempted fisheries. U.S. vessels operating under an exempted fishing permit issued under 50 CFR part 600 are also subject to these restrictions, unless otherwise provided in the permit. (18) Application of requirements. Paragraphs B. and C. pertain to the commercial groundfish fishery, but not to Washington coastal tribal fisheries, which are described in the section on Washington Coastal Tribal Fisheries in this document. The provisions in paragraphs B. and C. that are not covered under the headings ``limited entry'' or ``open access'' apply to all vessels in the commercial fishery that take and retain groundfish, unless otherwise stated. Paragraph D. pertains to the recreational fishery. (19) Commonly used geographic coordinates. (a) Cape Falcon, OR--45 deg.46' N. lat. (b) Cape Lookout, OR--45 deg.20'15" N. lat. (c) Cape Blanco, OR--42 deg.50' N. lat. (d) Cape Mendocino, CA--40 deg.30' N. lat. (e) North/South management line--40 deg.10' N. lat. (f) Point Arena, CA--38 deg.57'30" N. lat. (g) Point Conception, CA--34 deg.27' N. lat. (h) International North Pacific Fisheries Commission (INPFC) subareas (for more precise coordinates for the Canadian and Mexican boundaries, see