Title 16 › Chapter CHAPTER 71— - ATLANTIC COASTAL FISHERIES COOPERATIVE MANAGEMENT › § 5106
The Secretary must decide within 30 days after the Commission tells them a State is not following a coastal fishery plan. The Secretary must decide (1) if the State failed to do what it was supposed to do, and (2) if the steps the State missed are needed to protect the fishery. The Secretary must listen to the State’s comments and, if asked, let the State meet and speak. The Secretary must also get input from the Commission and the regional Councils. If the Secretary finds the State failed and the missing steps are needed, the Secretary must put a moratorium (a stop to fishing) in that State’s waters. The moratorium’s start date can be any date within 6 months after it is declared. If the Commission later withdraws its noncompliance finding, the Secretary must check again and end the moratorium if the State is now following the plan. The Secretary can make rules to carry out the moratorium. The rules may allow aquaculture fish under State rules and may let vessels keep incidental fish from menhaden fisheries if keeping them is impractical to discard, they are not a large part of the catch, and keeping them won’t harm conservation. While a moratorium is in effect, it is illegal to fish, land, sell, possess, or transport fish taken in violation of the moratorium; to refuse inspection or resist or attack enforcement officers; or to help someone avoid arrest. Violators face civil penalties under Magnuson‑Stevens Act section 308, certain criminal penalties under sections 309(a)(1) and 309(b), and forfeiture of vessels, gear, and fish under section 310. Authorized federal or Coast Guard officers may enforce the moratorium and the Secretary may use other federal or State resources to help.
Full Legal Text
Conservation — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
16 U.S.C. § 5106
Title 16 — Conservation
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73