(1) A
sea cucumber dive fishery license is required to take sea
cucumbers for commercial purposes. A sea cucumber dive fishery
license authorizes the use of only one diver in the water at any
time during sea cucumber harvest operations. If the same vessel
has been designated on two sea cucumber dive fishery licenses,
two divers may be in the water. A natural person may not hold
more than two sea cucumber dive fishery licenses.
(2) Except as provided in subsection (6) of this section,
the director shall issue no new sea cucumber dive fishery
licenses. For licenses issued for the year 2000 and thereafter,
the director shall renew existing licenses only to a natural
person who held the license at the end of the previous year. If
a sea cucumber dive fishery license is not held by a natural
person as of December 31, 1999, it is not renewable. However, if
the license is not held because of revocation or suspension of
licensing privileges, the director shall renew the license in the
name of a natural person at the end of the revocation or
suspension if the license holder applies for renewal of the
license before the end of the year in which the revocation or
suspension ends.
(3) Where a licensee failed to obtain the license during
either of the previous two years because of a license suspension
by the director or the court, the licensee may qualify for a
license by establishing that the person held such a license
during the last year in which the person was eligible.
(4) Surcharges as provided for in this section shall be
collected and deposited into the sea cucumber dive fishery
account hereby created in the custody of the state treasurer.
Only the director or the director's designee may authorize
expenditures from the account. The sea cucumber dive fishery
account is subject to allotment procedures under chapter 43.88 RCW, but no appropriation is required for expenditures.
Expenditures from the account shall only be used to retire sea
cucumber licenses until the number of licenses is reduced to
twenty-five, and thereafter shall only be used for sea cucumber
management and enforcement.
(a) A surcharge of one hundred dollars shall be charged with
each sea cucumber dive fishery license renewal for licenses
issued in 2000 through 2010.
(b) For licenses issued for the year 2000 and thereafter, a
surcharge shall be charged on the sea cucumber dive fishery
license for designating an alternate operator. The surcharge
shall be as follows: Five hundred dollars for the first year or
each of the first two consecutive years after 1999 that any
alternate operator is designated and two thousand five hundred
dollars each year thereafter that any alternate operator is
designated.
(5) Sea cucumber dive fishery licenses are transferable.
After December 31, 1999, there is a surcharge to transfer a sea
cucumber dive fishery license. The surcharge is five hundred
dollars for the first transfer of a license valid for calendar
year 2000 and two thousand five hundred dollars for any
subsequent transfer whether occurring in the year 2000 or
thereafter. Notwithstanding this subsection, a one-time transfer
exempt from surcharge applies for a transfer from the natural
person licensed on January 1, 2000, to that person's spouse or
child.
(6) If fewer than twenty-five persons are eligible for sea
cucumber dive fishery licenses, the director may accept
applications for new licenses. The additional licenses may not
cause more than twenty-five natural persons to be eligible for a
sea cucumber dive fishery license. New licenses issued under
this section shall be distributed according to rules of the
department that recover the value of such licensed privilege.
[2005 c 110 § 2; 2001 c 253 § 59; 1999 c 126 § 2; 1998 c 190 § 105; 1993 c 340 § 44; 1990 c 61 § 2. Formerly RCW 75.30.250.]
NOTES:
Finding, intent -- Captions not law -- Effective date -- Severability -- 1993 c 340: See notes following RCW 77.65.010.
Legislative findings -- 1990 c 61: "The legislature finds
that a significant commercial sea cucumber fishery is developing
within state waters. The potential for depletion of the sea
cucumber stocks in these waters is increasing, particularly as
the sea cucumber fishery becomes an attractive alternative to
commercial fishers who face increasing restrictions on other
types of commercial fishery activities.
The legislature finds that the number of commercial fishers
engaged in commercially harvesting sea cucumbers has rapidly
increased. This factor, combined with increases in market
demand, has resulted in strong pressures on the supply of sea
cucumbers.
The legislature finds that increased regulation of
commercial sea cucumber fishing is necessary to preserve and
efficiently manage the commercial sea cucumber fishery in the
waters of the state.
The legislature finds that it is desirable in the long term
to reduce the number of vessels participating in the commercial
sea cucumber fishery to fifty vessels to preserve the sea
cucumber resource, efficiently manage the commercial sea cucumber
fishery in the waters of the state, and reduce conflict with
upland owners.
The legislature finds that it is important to preserve the
livelihood of those who have historically participated in the
commercial sea cucumber fishery that began about 1970 and that
the 1988 and 1989 seasons should be used to document historical
participation." [1990 c 61 § 1.]