Amend the bill by striking out everything after the enacting clause and before the summary and inserting the following:
‘Sec. 1. 12 MRSA §6448, sub-§8, ¶E is enacted to read:
E. A person who has either successfully completed the requirements of the apprentice program under section 6422 or 6475 or held a Class I, Class II or Class III lobster and crab fishing license in the previous calendar year and who has registered to enter an established island limited-entry program as described under section 6449 may declare as that person's declared lobster zone the zone in which that island limited-entry program is located when the person becomes eligible to enter the island limited-entry program.
Sec. 2. 12 MRSA §6449 is enacted to read:
An island limited-entry program may be established pursuant to this section in order to maintain a number of licenses appropriate for the needs of an island community and the local lobster resource.
summary
This committee amendment replaces the bill.
1. It provides that a year-round island community on an island in the coastal waters that is not connected to the mainland by an artificial structure may petition the Commissioner of Marine Resources for the establishment of a limited-entry program for that island if a minimum of 5 Class I, Class II or Class III lobster and crab fishing license holders who are residents on the island or 10% of the island’s resident Class I, Class II or Class III lobster and crab fishing license holders, whichever is greater, signs the petition.
2. It provides that if 2/3 of the Class I, Class II or Class III lobster and crab fishing license holders who are residents of the island voting in a referendum support the establishment of an island limited-entry program, the commissioner may adopt rules to establish such a program.
3. It requires that before establishing or amending the number of licenses available to island residents, the Commissioner of Marine Resources must determine the number of licenses preferred by 2/3 of the Class I, Class II or Class III lobster and crab fishing license holders who are residents on the island but retains the discretion to accept or reject that preference.
4. It requires the Commissioner of Marine Resources to consult with the applicable lobster management policy council before making a decision on the number of licenses to be made available.
5. It authorizes the Commissioner of Marine Resources to adopt rules to implement the program to define residency and to provide exceptions to the island residency requirement for temporary absences from an island for medical or educational purposes and to allow, when appropriate, for an increase in the number of licenses available to an island community over time.
6. It provides that a person who obtains a Class I, Class II or Class III lobster and crab fishing license through an island limited-entry program and was a resident of the island for at least 8 years and harvested lobsters for each of those years and who no longer wishes to maintain residency on that island may fish elsewhere in the lobster management zone in which the island is located without having to go on the waiting list.