Title 16 › Chapter CHAPTER 38— - FISHERY CONSERVATION AND MANAGEMENT › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER V— - FISHERY MONITORING AND RESEARCH › § 1881
The Secretary must work with the Coast Guard, States, regional fishery councils, and Marine Fisheries Commissions to make recommendations for a regional, standardized fishing vessel registration and information system. The plan must be made after talking with government and public groups. It must standardize registration and data rules across federal and agreed state fish laws, combine existing data so things are not duplicated, use current systems when possible, and rely on cooperative agreements with States, tribes, and regional groups. The plan must include ways to help pay for implementation (subject to available appropriations), set common units and formats, cut paperwork, cover all fish species and all fishing vessels except recreational boats, and require U.S. processors and first buyers to provide non‑economic information. The plan must protect confidential information and also allow timely public release consistent with section 1881a(b). A registration under the system is not a permit, and the Secretary may not treat it like a permit or use it to deny, suspend, revoke, or add conditions under this law. The registration should collect each vessel’s name and official number, owner or operator contact, gross tonnage and capacity, gear type and amount, mode of operation (for example catcher or catcher‑processor), and the fisheries it works in (by species, gear, area, and season). The information system should show for each fishery the number of vessels (including charter vessels), the season dates, the general location, gear description and effort units, and other data required under section 1853(a)(5) or requested by a Council under section 1881a. Deadlines: within one year after October 11, 1996 the Secretary must publish a proposal for 60 days of public comment and then send a final recommendation to Congress committees within 60 days after that comment period. The Secretary must also set up regional recreational registries in the eight fishery regions (no fee before January 1, 2011), improve the Marine Recreational Fishery Statistics Survey by the dates in the law, offer guidance and grants to States, report progress to Congress, and arrange a National Academy of Sciences review and follow‑up recommendations under the 2018 deadlines given.
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Conservation — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
16 U.S.C. § 1881
Title 16 — Conservation
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73