Alaska Board of Fisheries Home, Alaska Department of Fish and Game (2024)

Latest News

  • Updated Notice of Joint Committee of the Alaska Board of Fisheries and Commercial Fisheries Entry Comission on Alaska Herring Revitalization - April 12, 2024 location change (PDF 80 kB)
  • 2024/2025 Board of Fisheries Call for Proposals due April 10, 2024 (PDF 220 kB)
  • 2023–2024 Meeting Schedule (Revised 10-18-23) (PDF 58 kB)
  • 2024–2025 Meeting Schedule (PDF 222 kB)

Meeting Schedule

  • 2023–2024 Meeting Schedule (Revised 10-18-23) (PDF 58 kB)
  • 2024–2025 Meeting Schedule (PDF 222 kB)

Agenda Change Requests (ACRs)

ACRs are requests to consider proposals that aren't part of the current cycle. Read the Agenda Change Request Submission Policy (PDF 8 kB) for further info.

You may submit a completed Board of Fisheries Agenda Change Request Form (Word doc 26 kB) to the Board of Fisheries by:

   Mail: Alaska Board of Fisheries
      P.O. Box 115526
      Juneau, AK 99811-5526

   Fax: 907-465-6094

   Online:

   

Submission Deadline: August 30, 2024

2024/2025 Board of Fisheries Call for Proposals (PDF 220 kB)

The Board of Fisheries is now accepting Proposals for the 2024-2025 meeting cycle until April 10, 2024.

Alaska Board of Fisheries 2023-2024 Proposal Book

Read the proposals to be considered during the 2023/2024 meeting cycle.

Calendar

Join our e-mail list

The Board of Fisheries provides notices for meetings, regulatory changes, proposals, and calls for proposalselectronically. Sign up to receive e-mails on your areas and regions of interest. To request information by hard copy, please contact us at (907) 465-4110.

Long-Term Cycle

Proposed changes to regulations (proposals) are considered for each region once every three years, on the schedule outlined below. *Due to COVID-19, these schedules are subject to change.* Proposals are typically accepted from December-April on subjects scheduled for the upcoming cycle.

  1. Meeting years: 2022-2023, 2025-2026, 2028-2029, 2031-2032
    • Alaska Peninsula/Bering Sea-Aleutian Island/Chignik Areas Finfish
    • Arctic-Yukon-Kuskokwim Areas Finfish
    • Bristol Bay Area Finfish
    • Statewide Provisions for Finfish
  2. Meeting years: 2023-2024, 2026-2027, 2029-2030
    • Cook Inlet Area Finfish
    • Kodiak Area Finfish
    • Statewide (except Southeast/Yakutat, and Prince William Sound Tanner Crab) King and Tanner Crab*
  3. Meeting years: 2021-2022, 2024-2025, 2027-2028
    • Prince William Sound Finfish and Shellfish (except shrimp)**
    • Southeast/Yakutat Finfish and Shellfish
    • Statewide (except SE/Yakutat/PWS) Shellfish

*Starting in 2021-2022, the Statewide (except Southeast/Yakutat/PWS Tanner Crab) King & Tanner Crab meeting will become part of Statewide (except SE/Yakutat/PWS) Shellfish.Starting in 2023-2024, this meeting cycle will have only two meetings, Cook Inlet Finfish and Kodiak Finfish.

The board may also consider subsistence proposals for other topics (including other areas), if proposals are submitted by the typical annual deadline in Apriland the board determines they meet the criteria in either 5 AAC 96.615(a)(1) or (2).

About the Board

The Alaska Board of Fisheries consists of seven members serving three-year terms. Members are appointed by thegovernor and confirmed by the legislature. Members are appointed on the basis of interest in public affairs, good judgment, knowledge, and ability in the field of action of the board, witha view to providing diversity of interest and points of view in the membership (see Alaska Statute 16.05.221).

Read an overview of how regulations are made

The Board of Fisheries's main role is to conserve and develop the fishery resources of the state. This involves setting seasons, bag limits, methods and means for the state's subsistence, commercial, sport, guided sport,and personal use fisheries, and it also involves setting policy and direction for the management of the state's fishery resources. The board is charged with making allocative decisions, and the department is responsible for management based on those decisions.

The board has a three-year meeting cycle (above), and generally holds meetings from October through March. The Board of Fisheries meets four to six times per year in communities around the state to consider proposedchanges to fisheries regulations. The board uses biological and socioeconomic information provided by the Alaska Department of Fish and Game, public comment received from people inside and outside of the state, and guidance fromthe Alaska Department of Public Safety and Alaska Department of Law when creating regulations that are sound and enforceable.

Board of Fisheries Authority

The Board of Fisheries is established under Alaska Statute 16.05.221 for the purposes of the conservation and development of the fisheries resources of the state. The Board of Fisheries has the authority to adopt regulations described in AS 16.05.251 including:establishing open and closed seasons and areas for taking fish; setting quotas, bag limits, harvest levels and limitations for taking fish; and establishing the methods and means for the taking of fish. The regulations the Board of Fisheries has authority over are 5 AAC Chapters 1- 77.

Contact Us

Contact the Boards Support main office at (907) 465-4110, or see detailed contact information.

Alaska Board of Fisheries Home, Alaska Department of Fish and Game (2024)
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