94-24997. West Coast Salmon Fisheries; Northwest Emergency Assistance Plan  

  • [Federal Register Volume 59, Number 195 (Tuesday, October 11, 1994)]
    [Unknown Section]
    [Page 0]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 94-24997]
    
    
    [[Page Unknown]]
    
    [Federal Register: October 11, 1994]
    
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
    
    National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
    [Docket No. 940844-4282; I.D. 082394C]
    RIN 0648-AG75
    
     
    
    West Coast Salmon Fisheries; Northwest Emergency Assistance Plan
    
    AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and 
    Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
    
    ACTION: Notice of program for financial assistance.
    
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    SUMMARY: NMFS establishes a program, the Northwest Emergency Assistance 
    Plan (NEAP), that will provide $12 million of assistance to salmon 
    fishermen in the Pacific Northwest who have been affected by a fishery 
    resource disaster during 1992 through 1994, while providing 
    conservation benefits to salmon resources. These disaster relief funds, 
    which were made available under the Interjurisdictional Fisheries Act 
    (IFA), will be applied toward the following three programs, 
    administered by the following intermediaries: A vessel permit buyout 
    program--Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife; and a habitat 
    restoration jobs program--Soil Conservation Services (SCS) of the U.S. 
    Department of Agriculture (USDA); and a data collection jobs program--
    Pacific States Marine Fisheries Commission (PSMFC). The intent is to 
    provide assistance to those commercial fishermen who have recently 
    participated in the salmon fisheries, who were substantially reliant on 
    West Coast salmon resources for their income, and who suffered an 
    uninsured loss as a result of a significant reduction in income because 
    of the resource disaster. The intent is also to provide this assistance 
    in a manner likely to contribute to conservation/restoration efforts 
    for salmon.
    
    EFFECTIVE DATE: October 11, 1994.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
    
    Bruce Morehead, (301) 713-2358, or Stephen Freese, (206) 526-6113.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    Background
    
        On May 26, 1994, the Secretary of Commerce (Secretary) declared a 
    fishery disaster and, with the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), 
    announced a $15.7 million emergency aid package for Oregon, Washington, 
    and northern California. This aid is intended to alleviate the economic 
    hardship suffered by individuals and communities because of the 
    collapse of salmon stocks in fishing areas along the Northwest coast. 
    Included in this package is $12 million available under the section 
    308(d) of the Interjurisdictional Fisheries Act of 1986, 16 U.S.C. 
    4107(d), to undertake the NEAP program, as described in this notice.
        In addition, $3 million is being administered by the Rural 
    Development Administration (RDA) of USDA. Grants by RDA will be made to 
    public bodies and private nonprofit corporations to finance development 
    of small business enterprises in cities under 50,000 in population. The 
    Economic Development Administration (EDA) of the Department of Commerce 
    is making $882,000 available, instead of the $700,000 originally 
    announced as part of the $15.7 million aid package. Grants by EDA have 
    been earmarked to communities for tourism development and to tribes for 
    stream reclamation.
        In addition to the $15.7 million package, aid to salmon fishermen 
    is also being provided by the Small Business Administration and the 
    Farmers Home Administration, in the form of loans and debt 
    restructuring programs, and by the Federal Emergency Management Agency 
    (FEMA) and the Department of Labor (DOL) in the form of unemployment 
    assistance, up to $14 million, to dislocated Washington, Oregon, and 
    California fishermen who are unemployed as a direct result of the 
    continuing effects of El Nino on salmon fishing.
        On behalf of the Secretary, NMFS published an advance notice of 
    proposed rulemaking (ANPR) on June 3, 1994 (59 FR 28838), to solicit 
    public comment on issues to be considered in development and 
    implementation of the $12 million NEAP program. In addition to the 
    ANPR, NOAA's Office of Sustainable Development and Intergovernmental 
    Affairs arranged a series of eight town meetings designed to gather 
    information about the effects of the decline in the salmon resources on 
    local communities and fishermen. A notice of the proposed program, 
    which included responses to comments received on the ANPR, was 
    published on September 7, 1994 (59 FR 46224). Comments received in 
    response to that notice are summarized and responded to in this 
    document.
    
    Fishery Resource Disaster
    
        Although West Coast (Washington, Oregon, and California) salmon 
    stocks experience annual fluctuations in abundance, stock abundances in 
    the last few years have been exceptionally low. West Coast salmon 
    species are coho, chinook, chum, sockeye, and pink salmon. Landings of 
    chinook and coho, have declined significantly, from roughly 6.2 million 
    fish in 1988 to 2 million fish in 1993. Chinook salmon fisheries in the 
    ocean waters off Washington and Oregon north of Cape Falcon were closed 
    in 1994 by the Federal Government. Other salmon fisheries in the ocean 
    waters off central and southern Oregon and northern California are at 
    reduced levels and are closed to fishing for coho. Additional 
    information regarding the declines in chinook and coho can be found in 
    the ANPR and the notice of the proposed program, and is not repeated 
    here.
        Despite increasingly stringent management measures enacted in 
    recent years to protect these salmon stocks, they have reached a 
    critical stage of depletion, due in part to environmental conditions 
    unfavorable to salmon survival that include: (1) An extended drought in 
    California, in combination with the already depressed condition of 
    northern California stocks; (2) less than normal snowpack throughout 
    the western United States; (3) drought followed by extensive flooding 
    in the State of Washington; and (4) poor upwelling, due to an extreme 
    El Nino ocean warming event during 1992-1993, all of which are believed 
    to have been responsible for extremely poor salmon survival.
    
    Comments and Responses
    
        During the comment period, thirty-three comment letters were 
    received including several that had multiple signatures. Almost all of 
    the comments were from Oregon and California. Almost all comments 
    recommended the need for direct grants while the majority of comments 
    were recommending reduction in the total Washington State targeted-
    state distribution and for elimination of the Washington State permit 
    buyout program. Other major comment areas concerned loosening of the 
    eligibility criteria, and recommendations for improvements in the 
    Habitat Restoration and the Data Collection Jobs Programs.
    
    Direct Assistance to Impacted Salmon Fishermen
    
        Comment: Many respondents requested that direct assistance be 
    provided to eligible salmon fishermen for a variety of needs including 
    family related expenses and vessel maintenance and moorage.
        Response: NOAA has decided not to provide direct assistance to 
    impacted salmon fishermen for a number of reasons. Direct aid is 
    inconsistent with other Federal actions such as the aid granted to 
    distressed New England fishermen or to distressed Northwest timber 
    workers. DOL Disaster Unemployment Assistance is available in all three 
    states. Special administrative mechanisms would need to be established 
    which would slow relief and increase administrative expense. Another 
    key consideration is that direct aid, unlike the jobs and permit buyout 
    programs, would do little to improve the prospects for an 
    overcapitalized salmon fishery.
    
    State Funding Targets
    
        Comments were received concerning the state funding targets. 
    Several comments acknowledged that Washington State may have suffered 
    the greatest impact but did not agree that Washington's share should be 
    as high as 55 percent, particularly if the share was based on 
    information concerning the private recreational harvests and associated 
    impacts. Alternative suggestions were to divide the aid equally between 
    the three states; to allocate 40 percent to Washington State and 30 
    percent each to the other states; or to base the allocations on the 
    apportionment guidelines used for other purposes under the IFA.
        Comment: Targeted state distributions between the states should be 
    changed.
        Response: After careful review of such factors as potential salmon 
    fishing employment, commercial revenues and recreational expenditures, 
    NOAA has chosen to maintain the state funding targets at 55 percent to 
    Washington, 22.5 percent to the Oregon, and 22.5 percent to California 
    as proposed. These percentages are established as targets that allow 
    some flexibility and not as rigid allocations, since no data can 
    conclusively apportion the relative economic impact among the three 
    states.
    
    Eligibility Requirements
    
        The proposal identified eligibility criteria for participation in 
    both the jobs programs and the permit buyout program. Under the 
    proposal for the buyout program, the commercial fisherman would have 
    been required to demonstrate that he/she suffered a loss between a 
    selected base year and 1992 or 1993. Under the proposal for the jobs 
    programs, the commercial fisherman would have been required to show 
    that: At least 50 percent of his/her income in the base year was 
    derived from fishing, he/she fished in either 1992 or 1993, his/her 
    income declined by at least 50 percent between the base year and 1992 
    or 1993, and his/her 1993 gross income must be no more than $25,000 for 
    individuals or $50,000 in combined spousal income (husband's plus 
    wife's). Several comments and suggestions sought relaxation of the 
    eligibility criteria, thereby enlarging the pool of eligible 
    participants.
        Comment: Several commenters suggested that NMFS should expand the 
    years for comparison to determine loss. Currently, the commercial 
    fisherman selects a base year from 1986-1989 and compares fishery 
    income to either 1992 or 1993. Expanding the possible base years to 
    include 1990 and the possible comparison years to include 1994 would 
    broaden the number of participants eligible for the programs.
        Response: NMFS has made changes in how NEAP eligibility and 
    uninsured losses are determined to give added opportunity for 
    participation by fishermen. Fishermen can use 1991 and 1994 in addition 
    to 1992 and 1993 as years to establish eligibility with respect to 
    earning commercial fisheries income. For calculating the amount of 
    uninsured loss, 1990 can be used as a base year and 1994 can be used as 
    a comparison year. If a fisherman had commercial fisheries income in 
    1991, but none in 1992 through 1994, income for the comparison year can 
    be zero.
        Comment: Decrease the percentage of base year fishery income 
    necessary to qualify for the jobs programs.
        Response: Under the proposal, the commercial fisherman must show 
    that at least 50 percent of his/her income is derived from fishing in 
    the selected base year. Suggestions were made to reduce this to 40 
    percent. Because of limited funds, the purpose of using 50 percent is 
    to capture individuals who depended on fishing for a majority of their 
    income.
        Comment: Modify the gross income requirements for the jobs 
    programs.
        Response: Under the current proposal, if single, the applicant's 
    1993 gross income must have been less than $25,000 and if married the 
    1993 gross combined income of the applicant and his/her spouse must 
    have been less than $50,000. There is a suggestion to increase the 
    $25,000 level to $40,000. Maintaining this $25,000 cap is expected to 
    assist the neediest fishermen and will allow for a sufficient pool of 
    applicants.
        Comment: Apply eligibility criteria equally to all programs.
        Response: Under the current proposal, to qualify for the permit 
    buyout program an individual need only show an uninsured loss. To 
    qualify for the jobs programs, however, an individual must meet 
    additional criteria. Extending the jobs' criteria to the buyout program 
    would exacerbate the administrative complexities of the program. It 
    could possibly lead to more funds being absorbed in administrative 
    costs and less funds going directly to fishermen. By reducing the 
    number of potential bidders under the buyout program, the additional 
    criteria would tend to raise the price paid for each permit and reduce 
    the number of permits that could be purchased.
    
    Habitat Restoration Jobs Program
    
        Comment: Flexibility should be afforded to the habitat restoration 
    jobs program to allow for broader types of activities. Respondents 
    suggested the following: pre-restoration stream surveys, post-
    restoration monitoring, public education, and habitat protection.
        Response: NMFS will provide flexibility to SCS to include a wider 
    range of habitat related activities as part of this program.
        Comment: Priority should be given to those projects that include 
    matching or in-kind contributions.
        Response: NOAA will stipulate in the Interagency Agreement with SCS 
    that greater consideration be given to those projects that include a 
    cost share/match or in-king contribution.
        Comment: Funds provided to California for purposes of the habitat 
    restoration jobs program should be divided equally between the resource 
    conservation districts and the Salmon Stamp Program.
        Response: SCS will consider providing these funds to the California 
    Association of Resource Conservation, which in turn will award funds to 
    Tribal organizations, conservation districts, state agencies and other 
    organizations capable of conducting habitat restoration work based on 
    scientific merit and priority needs.
        Comment: None of the NEAP money should be made available for the 
    Columbia/Snake, Klamath/Trinity, or Central Valley watersheds, because 
    they have already received substantial Federal funds. Instead, funds 
    should be directed to smaller but more critical habitats.
        Response: Currently almost all Federal funds spent to undertake 
    habitat restoration projects in the named watersheds are applied to 
    projects on public lands. To complement these existing Federally funded 
    activities, NOAA intends for funds under this program to be used 
    primarily for projects on private lands in the named watersheds. At the 
    same time, program funds may also be used to restore other critical 
    watersheds.
        Comment: A number of respondents expressed concerns that no 
    specific criteria were identified to assess scientific merit and/or 
    need for individual habitat restoration jobs projects. Another 
    respondent stated that projects should be developed after a watershed 
    analysis. Similarly, there were concerns that the habitat restoration 
    jobs program not overlap or duplicate other similar state and Federal 
    projects undertaken as part of the Forest Plan.
        Response: NMFS is working with SCS to develop a review process that 
    evaluates the biological aspects of individual projects and ensures the 
    activities do not duplicate ongoing efforts. As deemed appropriate, a 
    watershed analysis will be required for projects.
        Comment: Specific caps should be stipulated for the administrative 
    costs associated with the habitat jobs restoration program.
        Response: The Interagency Agreement between NOAA and SCS will 
    stipulate that the cumulative administrative costs for the habitat 
    restoration jobs program not exceed 15%.
    
    Data Collection Jobs Program
    
        Comment: Funds provide to the PSMFC should not be restricted by 
    state allocation levels. All applicants, regardless of residence, 
    should compete openly for a single pool of funds.
        Response: The PSMFC has the flexibility to deviate from the state 
    allocation targets, if there is substantial justification. State 
    distribution targets are intended as guides rather than rigid 
    allocations. Final state distributions may differ from these targets.
    
    Other
    
        Comment: If the jobs programs are not available until spring, some 
    fishermen will be participating in other fisheries, and unable to 
    participate in the program.
        Response: The timing of many habitat restoration jobs will be 
    limited by weather and biological considerations. It is intended that 
    the habitat restoration jobs program include a broader range of 
    projects, which may provide for jobs during all seasons.
        Comment: The jobs programs are not structured to lead to permanent 
    employment at a living wage. There is no long-term assistance for 
    training, placement, or business startup.
        Response: The intent of the programs is to compensate fishermen for 
    uninsured losses and not to provide long-term assistance for other 
    employment or business opportunities.
        Comment: Salmon fishermen currently receiving unemployment funds 
    and or Federally funded training should not be ineligible to 
    participate in the habitat restoration jobs program.
        Response: Salmon fishermen receiving Federal unemployment funds or 
    Federally funded training are not precluded from receiving funds from 
    NEAP. However, funds received for such purposes are considered 
    compensation. The IFA provides that eligible commercial fishermen may 
    only receive 75% of their total uncompensated and uninsured loss, and 
    may not receive in excess of $100,000 in total Federal compensation.
        Comment: Why are support industries and government entities 
    ineligible for assistance?
        Response: NOAA acknowledges that the closure of the salmon fishery 
    negatively impacted the recreational support industries, fish 
    processing workers, and local governments. However, the IFA clearly 
    provides that aid under this authority will be made available only to 
    commercial fishermen.
        Comment: Why is this program taking so long to get started?
        Response: Certain procedural steps must be undertaken to comply 
    with the IFA and other applicable law. These steps include opportunity 
    for public notice and comment. Also the programs need to be designed 
    and made operational. All three programs require agreements with the 
    administrative intermediaries who in turn must create programs and 
    processes that comply with the NEAP. All efforts are being undertaken 
    to expedite the assistance.
        Comment: Because of the recent Sonoma County, California, FEMA 
    disaster declaration, the geographic range of the jobs programs needs 
    to be expanded.
        Response: The listing of counties was to serve as a means of 
    illustration of the likely counties where projects are to take place. 
    The eligibility criteria do not require that fishermen must live in the 
    county where the projects take place. Habitat restoration projects are 
    geographically limited to locations within close commuting distance of 
    commercial fishermen as defined under this action. However, for sake of 
    completeness Sonoma County will be specifically mentioned as well as 
    the counties bordering on the tributaries of the Columbia River.
    
    Changes From the Proposed Program
    
        In response to comments, NMFS has made substantive changes to NEAP, 
    from the proposed program, to provide added opportunity and flexibility 
    for participation by fishermen impact by the disaster. As noted in the 
    response to comments, these changes are: (1) Fishermen can use 1991 or 
    1994 in addition to 1992 or 1993 as years to establish eligibility with 
    respect to earning commercial fishing income; (2) fishermen can use 
    1990 as a base year and 1994 as a comparison year to calculate the 
    amount of uninsured loss; (3) charterboat permit holders are eligible 
    for the buyout program at the discretion of Washington State; and (4) 
    the geographical range for habitat restoration projects has been 
    expanded.
    
    NEAP Program
    
    I. Statutory Authority
    
        Section 308(d) of the IFA, codified at 16 U.S.C. 4107(d), 
    authorizes the Secretary to award grants to persons engaged in 
    commercial fisheries, for uninsured and uncompensated losses determined 
    by the Secretary to have been suffered as a direct result of a fishery 
    resource disaster. Set forth below are the conditions and definitions 
    established by NOAA, pursuant to authority delegated by the Secretary, 
    to implement the programs described in part III.
        The IFA requires that ``the Secretary shall determine the extent, 
    and the beginning and ending dates of any fishery resource disaster'' 
    (16 U.S.C. 4107)(d)(2)). Although there have been declining trends in 
    landings from the salmon fisheries in recent years, a sharp decline did 
    not occur until after 1991. This sharp decline coincided with an 
    extreme El Nino ocean warming event during 1992-1993. The 1994 season 
    is the first season in which all ocean fisheries for coho were closed; 
    the projected chinook harvest for ocean fisheries indicates a new 
    record low will be achieved, eclipsing the previous record low in 1992. 
    Therefore, for the purposes of the NEAP, the beginning and ending dates 
    of the fishery resource disaster are January 1, 1992, and December 31, 
    1994, respectively.
        The extent of this disaster includes the waters and habitat 
    associated with the salmon fisheries of northern California, Oregon and 
    Washington.
    
    II. Definitions
    
        For the purposes of the NEAP program:
        Commercial fishermen are vessel owners, operators, or crews 
    directly involved in the commercial fishery.
        Commercial fishery is defined as the salmon fishery off the coasts 
    and in the state waters of Washington, Oregon, and California for 
    purposes of either selling the salmon harvested or providing a vessel 
    for hire that carries recreational fishermen to engage in fishing for a 
    fee (e.g., charterboats and headboats). Subsistence fisheries do not 
    fall under this definition.
        Commercial fishery income is earned income derived from 
    participation in the commercial fishery.
        Gross income includes all income received in the form of money, 
    goods, property, and services that is not exempt from Federal income 
    tax.
        Loss is defined as a loss of income not subject to Federal or state 
    compensation and determined by a multi-step procedure, as follows:
        1. The applicant (commercial fisherman) selects a base year from 
    the years 1986 through 1990.
        2. The applicant determines his/her commercial fishery income from 
    1992, 1993, or 1994, and selects whichever year commercial fisheries 
    income was the highest. This is the comparison year. If an applicant 
    had no commercial fisheries income from 1992 to 1994, the amount for 
    the comparison year is zero.
        3. If the amount of the applicant's commercial fishery income, as 
    selected in step 2 above, is less than the applicant's commercial 
    fishery income from the base year, then a loss has occurred. The amount 
    of the annual loss is the difference between the applicant's base year 
    commercial fishery income and that from the comparison year selected in 
    step 2 above.
        4. The amount of the annual loss calculated in step 3 above is 
    multiplied by three to determine the applicant's total loss for the 
    disaster period.
    
        (Note: The Federal assistance programs announced in this notice 
    are limited to compensation to commercial fishermen for uninsured 
    losses that have not been addressed through compensation from other 
    state or Federal programs.)
    
        Salmon means chinook (king) salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha), coho 
    (silver) salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch), pink (humpback) salmon 
    (Oncorhynchus gorbuscha), chum (dog) salmon (Oncorhynchus keta), and 
    sockeye (red) salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka).
    
    III. Program Descriptions
    
    A. Vessel Permit Buyout Program
    
        This program is intended to compensate commercial fishermen for 
    uninsured lost income and to aid the long-term viability of the fishery 
    resource by reducing fishing effort on the stocks.
        Only Washington State has indicated a strong interest in a buyout 
    program and currently has a limited entry program that meets the 
    program requirements. Therefore, Washington State will function as the 
    sole administrative intermediary. However, if another state or tribal 
    government entity has in place an appropriate limited-entry system and 
    wants to participate in the buyout program, NMFS will consider allowing 
    buyouts of limited entry permits issued under appropriate limited entry 
    permit programs other than Washington State's. Washington State, in 
    consultation with NMFS, shall design a permit buyout program that is 
    consistent with state and Federal management and grant regulations, 
    including a ``permit offer'' application that allows assessment of the 
    uninsured, and otherwise uncompensated, loss of the applicant, any 
    receipt of benefits by the applicant from all other assistance programs 
    associated with this disaster, and the gross income of the applicant in 
    1993 (or, if married, the combined gross income of both spouses). The 
    administrative costs charged by Washington State shall be kept at a 
    minimum; such costs should not exceed 7.5 percent of the total funds 
    distributed for this program.
        Offers to sell gillnet or troll permits from commercial fishermen 
    who participate under limited entry systems of qualified government 
    entities will be solicited by the State of Washington. (Qualified 
    government entities are those governments that administer limited-entry 
    commercial salmon fisheries and can ensure that permits bought out will 
    not be replaced.) These commercial fishermen will need to demonstrate 
    an uninsured, and otherwise uncompensated, loss as a result of the 
    fishery resource disaster, as defined for the purposes of NEAP.
        Permits will be selected for buyout based on a sealed bid process. 
    Starting with the lowest offers, permits will be purchased until the 
    funds are exhausted. Maximum purchase prices for these permits will be 
    limited to amounts that ensure that the offerer (commercial fisherman) 
    will not be receiving total benefits from this and any other program 
    that exceed 75 percent of his or her uninsured, and otherwise 
    uncompensated, commercial fishery loss resulting from this fishery 
    resource disaster, and in no case more than $100,000 per individual. 
    The State of Washington, in consultation with NMFS, will reserve the 
    right to reject any and all bids.
        This program was originally designed to be applied to the 
    Washington State troll and gillnet fleets. However, Washington State 
    may elect to include the charterboat fleet. Fishermen may contact the 
    Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife for updates on the 
    development of this program. For more details about the buyout program, 
    consult the September 7, 1994, notice of the proposed program.
    
    B. Habitat Restoration Program
    
        The habitat restoration program will hire eligible commercial 
    fishermen (i.e., those who suffered uninsured losses as a result of the 
    West Coast salmon fishery disaster), both tribal and non-tribal, at a 
    ``living wage'' to perform work that has a long-term beneficial impact 
    on the habitat of the salmon. Generally, ``living wages'' are wages 
    commensurate with the prevailing rate for similar work conducted in a 
    specific locality. Depending on the locality and the skills required, 
    living wage may range up to $10-15 per hour. The types of work 
    fishermen may do under this program will involve the operation of 
    backhoes and skiploaders, and undertaking the necessary plantings of 
    vegetation. Generally, fishermen will need 1 to 2 days of training. 
    Commercial fishermen who meet the eligibility criteria will be hired on 
    a first-come, first-served basis by contractors associated with 
    projects that have been solicited and approved by the administrative 
    intermediary.
        Habitat restoration projects are to take place in areas 
    geographically accessible to displaced fishermen, which include the 
    coastal counties from Sonoma County, CA, to Whatcom County, WA; Clallam 
    County, WA; and counties bordering on Puget Sound or the Columbia River 
    or its tributaries. If within commenting distance, projects can be 
    undertaken in other counties, if they contain habitat important to the 
    salmon resources associated with the fishery resource disaster.
        NMFS intends to enter into an agreement with the SCS to serve as 
    the administrative intermediary for the habitat restoration program. A 
    discussion of the rationale for choosing the SCS as the intermediary 
    for this program can be found in the September 7, 1994, notice of the 
    proposed program.
        The SCS will enter into agreements with the appropriate state 
    conversation agency, conversation commission, or association of 
    conservation districts, which, in turn, will develop: A grant 
    solicitation process, including guidelines for making a grant 
    application; a grant application review process; deadlines for grant 
    applications; and a monitoring and evaluation process. Each state 
    conservation agency, conservation commission, or association of 
    conservation districts will develop agreements with state employment 
    departments to establish a program to determine the eligibility of 
    commercial fishermen according to the criteria described elsewhere in 
    this notice.
        While it is NMFS' intention to make financial assistance available 
    as soon as possible, it should be noted that, due to weather, habitat 
    considerations, and the need for project review, planning, and 
    implementing, it is unlikely that many fishermen will start receiving 
    wages in this program prior to April 1, 1995. Every effort to expedite 
    the program will be made.
    
    C. Data Collection Jobs Program
    
        NMFS has chosen the PSMFC as the administrative intermediary for 
    the data jobs program in the three affected states. NMFS has selected 
    the PSMFC as the administrative intermediary because PSMFC goals, 
    objectives, and organizational structure coincide largely with the 
    implementation needs of this program. The rationale for choosing the 
    PSMFC as the intermediary for this program is discussed in the 
    September 7, 1994, notice of the proposed program.
        The data collection program will provide jobs associated with 
    collecting information or performing tasks that will be of use to 
    scientists and fishery managers. Under this program, eligible 
    commercial fishermen, both tribal and non-tribal, will be hired on a 
    first-come, first-served basis, at a ``living wage,'' up to $10-15 per 
    hour, to perform various tasks by contractors associated with approved 
    projects. Examples of these tasks include collecting tissue samples for 
    genetic research, measuring parameters of the ocean environment 
    (temperature, upwelling, etc.), performing baseline surveys of habitat, 
    participating in test fisheries to determine ocean fish distribution, 
    and assisting hatchery technicians in collecting information or in 
    improving hatchery operations. Commercial fishing vessels may also be 
    chartered to do research. For some tasks, as with the habitat 
    restoration program, training of fishermen will be required.
        Proposals will be competitively solicited by the administrative 
    intermediary from states, tribes, academia, and industry or 
    conservation organizations for projects to be considered under this 
    data collection jobs program. These proposals will be ranked according 
    to criteria established in section IV of this notice. To ensure that 
    this program complements the habitat restoration program and does not 
    duplicate other Federal assistance programs, representatives from NMFS 
    and SCS will be members of this review panel. Priority will be given to 
    projects that provide the greatest benefits to displaced fishermen; 
    address the sustainability or rebuilding of anadromous species, 
    especially threatened or endangered salmon stocks; address Federal, 
    Pacific Fishery Management Council, PSMFC, or state fishery research 
    needs; are based on sound scientific methodology; and have low 
    administrative costs. Applicants must demonstrate ability to manage and 
    account for Federal funds. Matching funds or cost sharing are not 
    required, but may be taken into consideration during the final 
    selection process. The timing of the actual employment of fishermen 
    will depend on the planning and proposal selection process, as well as 
    the best seasons in which to undertake research.
    
    IV. Eligibility Criteria
    
        For purposes of the habitat restoration and data collection 
    programs under NEAP, job applicants must meet all of the following 
    eligibility criteria to receive assistance:
        1. The applicant must show an uninsured loss.
        2. In the base year (1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, or 1990) used by the 
    applicant in determining loss, the applicant must have earned at least 
    50 percent of gross income from the commercial fishery.
        3. The applicant must have earned commercial fishery income in 
    1991, 1992, 1993, or 1994.
        4. The applicant's 1992, 1993, or 1994 commercial fishery income, 
    whichever is greater, must have declined by at least 50 percent from 
    the applicant's commercial fishery income from the base year selected. 
    If an applicant had no commercial fishery income in 1992-1994 and had 
    commercial fishery income during a base year, this criterion is 
    satisfied.
        5. If single, the applicant's 1993 gross income must have been less 
    than $25,000. If married, the applicant's 1993 gross combined income of 
    the applicant and his/her spouse must have been less than $50,000.
        No person may receive financial assistance under NEAP that exceeds 
    75 percent of any uninsured and otherwise uncompensated commercial 
    fishery loss resulting from the fishery resource disaster, and no 
    person may receive more than $100,000 of Federal funds in the aggregate 
    for all losses resulting from the disaster.
        The intent of these criteria is to provide the available assistance 
    to those commercial fishermen who have been most heavily dependent on 
    salmon fishing and who have suffered the greatest losses. In order to 
    comply with the requirements of the IFA, an uninsured loss must be 
    shown. The second criterion is intended to determine those applicants 
    that have been dependent on the commercial fishery for most of their 
    livelihood. The third criterion is intended to limit eligibility to 
    those who commercially fished during the disaster period. The final two 
    criteria are intended to focus the available financial assistance on 
    those commercial fishermen who have suffered the greatest losses due to 
    the disaster and who do not have significant income from other sources.
        In applying for any of the programs, a commercial fisherman will be 
    required to submit documentation, including salary, earnings, or crew-
    share statements and affidavits that demonstrate eligibility.
        Discussion of the rationale for these criteria was provided in the 
    notice of the proposed program and is not repeated here.
    
    V. Program and State Funding Targets
    
        NMFS anticipates that the NEAP program will result in the following 
    distribution of available financial assistance among the affected 
    states and programs: 55 percent of available funds will be distributed 
    to the State of Washington and 22.5 percent of available funds will be 
    distributed to each of the States of Oregon and California. NMFS 
    emphasizes that these are ``target'' distributions, not fixed 
    percentages, and are flexible; redistributions could be made, if 
    increased total benefits can be achieved.
    
    Classification
    
        This action has been determined to be not significant for purposes 
    of E.O. 12866.
        This action establishes a financial assistance program that will 
    contain collection-of-information requirements subject to the Paperwork 
    Reduction Act. The necessary information collection forms and specific 
    reporting requirements have not been fully identified at this time, and 
    will be developed in conjunction with the intermediaries administering 
    the program, and submitted to OMB for approval prior to implementation.
        Because this notice establishes a program to address some of the 
    immediate needs of salmon fishermen affected by the resource disaster, 
    there is good cause under section 553(d)(3) of the Administrative 
    Procedure Act to make this notice effective upon publication in the 
    Federal Register. Any delay in making this program effective will delay 
    relief to those adversely affected by the disaster and, therefore, 
    delaying the effective date of this notice for 30 days in contrary to 
    the public interest.
    
        Dated: October 4, 1994.
    Gary Matlock,
    Program Management Officer, National Marine Fisheries Service.
    [FR Doc. 94-24997 Filed 10-4-94; 5:06 pm]
    BILLING CODE 3510-22-M
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
10/11/1994
Department:
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
Entry Type:
Uncategorized Document
Action:
Notice of program for financial assistance.
Document Number:
94-24997
Dates:
October 11, 1994.
Pages:
0-0 (1 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Federal Register: October 11, 1994, Docket No. 940844-4282, I.D. 082394C
RINs:
0648-AG75