Title 16 › Chapter 38— FISHERY CONSERVATION AND MANAGEMENT › Subchapter V— FISHERY MONITORING AND RESEARCH › § 1881
Requires the Secretary of Commerce, working with the Coast Guard, States, regional fishery councils, and fishery commissions, to make recommendations for a regional, standard system to register fishing vessels and manage fishery information. The plan must standardize rules across relevant marine laws, combine existing data to avoid duplication, use current State/tribal/Federal systems when practical, and set up cooperative agreements and funding (subject to appropriations) to help with implementation. It must set common units and formats, cut paperwork, cover all species and all commercial and charter vessels (but not recreational vessels), require U.S. processors and first buyers to provide non‑economic data, and protect confidential information while allowing timely public release consistent with existing confidentiality rules. The recommended vessel registration must collect basic ID and owner/operator contact, vessel size and gear and mode, and the fisheries the vessel takes part in (by species, gear, area, season). The information system must show basic fishery performance: number of vessels (including charter), season timing, location or reporting area, gear types and effort, plus other required data. A registration under this system is not a permit and cannot be used as a permit or to punish or limit a registration under this law. The Secretary had to publish a proposal in the Federal Register within one year after October 11, 1996, open it for 60 days of public comment, and then send a final recommended proposal to Congress 60 days after the comment period. The Secretary must also set up a regional recreational registry in each of the 8 management regions, with no fee required before January 1, 2011. The registry must cover people who fish in the Exclusive Economic Zone, for anadromous species, or for Continental Shelf resources beyond the EEZ, and may register vessels. State programs can be used instead if the Secretary finds the State data suitable. Within 24 months after January 12, 2007, the Secretary had to create a program to improve the Marine Recreational Fishery Statistics Survey and implement the improved survey by January 1, 2009, following National Research Council recommendations where feasible (including better sampling, more intercepts, use of State-licensed angler lists, charter trip reports, weather correction, and an independent review committee). The Secretary must offer grants to States, send biennial reports to Congress on data accuracy and priorities, report progress within 24 months of starting the program, and—within 90 days after December 31, 2018—hire the National Academy of Sciences to evaluate the recreational data program and, within 6 months after that report, send Congress recommendations for changes and interim management options.
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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 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60