NOAA Renews Scallop Catch Paperwork Ritual
Published Date: 4/24/2025
Notice
Summary
NOAA is renewing its info collection for managing the Atlantic Sea Scallop fishery, affecting about 800 fishermen and businesses. They’re keeping rules that track scallop catches, fishing trips, and quota trades to protect the ocean and keep fishing fair. This renewal asks for public comments for 30 more days and won’t add new costs but helps keep the fishery running smoothly.
Analyzed Economic Effects
5 provisions identified: 2 benefits, 3 costs, 0 mixed.
Sector proposals require large planning burden
Groups that want a sector allocation must submit a Sector Allocation Proposal at least 1 year before implementation and a legally binding Operations Plan signed by all sector members; preparing Sector Proposals and Operations Plans averages 250 hours per response. If approved, the Operations Plan becomes a contract governing how the sector operates.
Renewal continues reporting burdens
NOAA is renewing the information collection for the Atlantic Sea Scallop Fishery that affects 804 respondents and totals 980 annual burden hours. This renewal keeps required reporting for catches, trips, quota trades, and related paperwork in place without changing the underlying rules.
Annual IFQ cost recovery fee (up to 3%)
IFQ permit holders must pay an annual cost recovery fee of up to 3% of the ex-vessel value of landed scallops to cover management and enforcement costs. Payments must be submitted annually through the Federal payment system at www.pay.gov, which requires creating an online account with personal and financial information.
Optional IFQ transfers let quota be leased or sold
IFQ permit holders may temporarily or permanently transfer individual fishing quota between vessels by submitting transfer applications that include vessel and transfer details and signatures from both parties. The IFQ transfer program is optional and lets permit holders increase a vessel's quota or lease/sell quota if they choose not to fish it.
Access area trip exchanges reduce potential revenue loss
Vessels can use the one-for-one access area trip exchange program to swap trips and change where they may fish by submitting exchange applications with vessel name, permit number, owner signature, and area specifications; both vessels must submit forms for cross verification. Each trip exchange request takes about 15 minutes to submit.
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Key Dates
Department and Agencies
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Previous: 2025-07087 — Agency Information Collection Activities; Submission to the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) for Review and Approval; Comment Request; Economic Surveys of Specific US Commercial Fisheries
The government is asking for approval to keep collecting economic info from about 1,480 U.S. commercial fishers across various regions. This helps understand the fishing business better without adding too much paperwork. You’ve got 30 days to share your thoughts before they move forward—no big cost changes, just keeping the data flowing smoothly!
Next: 2025-07089 — Agency Information Collection Activities; Submission to the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) for Review and Approval; Comment Request; Coastal and Estuarine Land Conservation Planning, Protection or Restoration
NOAA is asking to keep collecting info from state, local, and tribal governments to help protect and restore coastal and estuarine lands. This paperwork helps decide who gets funding for important conservation projects. The process won’t cost extra money but takes about 1,455 hours total each year from about 55 respondents, and the public has 30 more days to share their thoughts.
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