HomeMy WebLinkAbout05062020 PACAB Packet
Port & Commerce Advisory Board
Agenda Packet
Photo Credit: Stefan Nilsson
Regular Meeting
Wednesday, May 6, 2020
Council Chambers, City Hall
12:00 p.m.
PUBLIC NOTICE
TEMPORARY PROCESS FOR
CITIZENCOMMENTSAT MAY 6, 2020
PACABMEETING
PACABwill hold a VirtualRegular Meeting on Wednesday,May 6, 2020. Because the City of
Seward is currently experiencing a declared publichealth emergencydue to Coronavirus Disease
2019 (COVID-19), alternate methods forproviding Citizen Comments have been created:
How To VirtuallyAttendThe Meeting
1.The meeting will be Live Streamed on the city’s YouTube page. Log onto YouTube and type
“City of Seward Alaska” into the search bar.
2.Listen on the radio. Tune to KIBH-FM 91.7
3.Watch on television. Tune into GCI Cable Channel 9.
How To Submit Your CITIZEN COMMENTS
1.Email your writtenCitizen Commentsto jstallard@cityofseward.netno later than 11:00
a.m.on Wednesday,May 6, 2020. Identify whether you want your comments READ
ALOUD at the meeting or EMAILED to PACABupon receipt. Comments requested to be
read aloudwill be delivered verballyto PACABby the Deputy City Clerkat the appropriate
time duringthe meeting.
2.If you wish to be called onthe telephoneduring the meeting to provide your comments
telephonically, send an email request tothe Deputy City Clerk along with your contact
information to jstallard@cityofseward.net, including your full name and the telephone
number you wish to have called. The clerk must receive your request no later than 11:00
a.m.on May 6, 2020.Identify whether you wish to be called during the FIRST or SECOND
citizen comment period. If you wish to be contacted for the first Citizen Comment period,
please be prepared to answer your phonestarting at 12:00 p.m. If you wishto be contacted
for the second Citizen Comment period, there is no estimate of time to expect the call.
All Citizen Comments will betimed and limited to three minutes (first period) or five minutes
(second period).The telephone number will be called ONE time; if there is no answer, the clerk
will move on to the next citizen.
Thank You For Your Cooperation!
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The City of Seward, Alaska
SEWARD PORT AND COMMERCE
ADVISORY BOARDREGULAR
MEETING AGENDA
May 6, 202012:00 p.m.CouncilChambers
Laura Schneider
1.CALLTOORDER
Chair
Term Expires July, 2020
2.PLEDGE OFALLEGIANCE
Bruce Jaffa
3.ROLLCALL
Vice Chair
Term Expires July, 2021
4.CITIZEN COMMENTS ON ANYSUBJECTEXCEPT THOSE
ITEMS SCHEDULED FOR PUBLIC HEARING\[Thosewhohave
Carl Hughes
signed in will begiven the first opportunityto speak. Time islimitedto 3
Board Member
minutes perspeakerand 36 minutestotaltimeforthisagendaitem.\]
Term Expires July, 2020
5.APPROVAL OF AGENDA AND CONSENTAGENDA\[Approval
Colby Lawrence
of Consent Agendapassesallroutineitems indicated byasterisk(*).Consent
Board Member
Agenda items arenot consideredseparatelyunlessacommission member so
Term Expires July, 2022
requests.Intheeventof such a request, theitemisreturned to theRegular
Agenda\]
Lynda Paquette
Board Member
6.SPECIALORDERS,PRESENTATIONSANDREPORTS
Term Expires July, 2021
Erin Lemas
A.Proclamations and Awards–None
Board Member
B.Alaska Railroad Report by Christy Terry.............................Pg. 4
Term Expires July, 2021
C.Chamber of Commerce Reportby Jason Bickling...............Pg. 5
D.Harbormaster Report by Norm Regis...................................Pg. 12
Benjamin Smith
E.Other Reports andAnnouncements–None
Board Member
F.Presentations\[Presentations are limitedto ten minutes each, excluding
Term Expires July, 2022
Q&A, and are limited to two per meetingunlessincreasedbycouncil.\]
1.Halibut ByCatch PresentationbyAndy Mezirow............Pg. 13
Scott Meszaros
City Manager
Norm Regis
Harbor Master
Jessica Stallard
Deputy City Clerk
City of Seward, Alaska Port & Commerce
Advisory BoardAgenda
May 6, 2020
2
7.UNFINISHEDBUSINESS–None
8.NEW BUSINESS
A.Resolutions
*1.Resolution 2020-002,Recommending To TheCityCouncilToAuthorize TheCity
Man
ager To ApplyFor The Harbor Facility Grant For The Replacement OfG, K AND L-
Float........................................................................................................Pg. 29
B. OtherNew Business Items
*1. Approve theMarch 11, 2020 Regular MeetingMinutes........................................Pg. 60
2.Reviewhigh vesselproperty tax.....................................................................................Pg. 64
3.Set goals calendar forthe second half of theyear 2020..........................................Pg. 69
4.Update from the energy committee.
5.Discuss solar energyimplementation.(Jaffa)..........................................................Pg. 73
6.Discuss Local Government Climate Action–Cohort.(Paquette).........................Pg. 91
7.Discuss summer hiatus and possibilityofhaving a Junemeeting.(Schneider)
9.INFORMATIONAL ITEMS AND REPORTS \[No Action Required\]– None
10.CITIZEN COMMENTS\[There is no sign in for this comment period. Time is limited to five (5)
minutes per speaker.\]
11.COMMISSION AND ADMINISTRATIONCOMMENTS & RESPONSE TO
CITIZEN COMMENTS
12.ADJOURNMENT
City of Seward, Alaska Port & Commerce
Advisory BoardAgenda
May 6, 2020
3
4
Chamber of Commerce – Executive Director Report
(report submitted April21st, 2020)
CoVid19 Update:
I am submitting everything that is related to the COVID19 situation up top here, including our
chamber events status.
We are continuing to collaboratewith Healthcare, City, EMS, Seward Prevention Coalition
-Getting business info to help essential businesses operate safely
-Creating collaboration and contacts between organizations and businesses
-Connecting community resources with community members in need
We are helping promote and support business that are open(specific details below in the
membershipreport).
We are continuing to help members through the SBA loan process, which has been frustrating at
best. We have done threezoom calls with SBA/SBDC staff. The SBA loans are currently out of
money and they have identified some problems and prejudices with those first rounds. We are
hoping that those will be taken care of and that they will be passing more money into those PPP and
EIDL loans shortly. On a positive note, we do have members that have received PPP and/or EIDL
SBA loan money to help keep their business above water during this economic crisis.
We are preparing a member survey to help us understand where our businesses are at. The survey’s
that were done by other organizations 3 weeks ago are now somewhat out of date as things are
moving so quickly. We want to know what their world looks like and find out what barriers they have
to get going again. We are organizing calls in the coming weeks for business managers/owners in
specific industries to be able to talk with one another and have discussions about how to best move
forward. (i.e.restaurants, charters, retail, excursions, etc.)
Reopening Prep:
We are working on some language and guidelines for business to be able to open (with social
distancing) when we get the go ahead to make those next steps. Europe is a great template to work
from. (Restaurants opening but tables have to be X feet apart or a table between each group.
Campgrounds – every other site being used, retail – limited people in stores at a time. We are also
working on marketing pieces as well. We have the Visitor Center prepped, cleaned (outside and in),
and ready to go when we are able to open it.
Video:
Our staff team (along with Janessa Anderson) put together a great video that we put out on all of our
media channels to help visitors past and future to be thinking about us and coming (again).
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Halibut Derby
I am in conversations with ElleZernia (representing the charter fleet) and we are monitoring the
situation. If we are able to make something happen(safely and legally)with charter boats and the
halibut season – we want to try and make it work – even if it’s just the last weeks in June. We believe
that we could have a loosening of restrictions enough to make something happen to help try salvage
part of a season for our charter fleet.
Mount Marathon Race
The announcement came out on April15 on cancellation / postponement of MMR. There were a
number of factors on this decision by the Race Director and MMR Committee, all having to do with
safety – runner, spectator, and community safety. Runner Safety: the race has a significant safety
plan (for runners) that is put in place each year that requires a lot of planning and coordination with
EMS, Providence, Para/Mountain Rescue groups along with the 300 volunteers in support of that
plan. With the current situation, EMS and Healthcare workers are not and will not be available for
the foreseeable future to be able to put that plan in place. This was even more important this year
as the number of racers increased. Community Safety: Even before the COVID situation, we had
people coming down to train on the mountain. This was only going to increase and we wanted to
make sure that we are protecting the community during the travel restrictions. Spectator Safety:
There is a strong belief that we aren’t going to be able to gather 20,000+ people for any reason by the
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time the 4comes and probably not this year. This was a difficult decision to make and we know that
there are economic impacts to this decision. We have received feedback where people are upset
and don’t think we should have made that call. We have received a majority of feedback of in support
(disappointed but feel we made the right call). We have also received feedback that we need to
cancel every event this summer.
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4of July
th
We are monitoring the 4of July – to see if it’s something that we can make happen under allowable
guidelines. It would be different and are making possible contingency plans of different, creative
ways it could look. We will revisit this officially on June 1. We are willing to make a call later than that
date if we see that thereis potential to have something rather than nothing. It’s really hard to guess
what we will be able to do at that point.
SSSD
I met with the committee a couple of weeks ago. We are moving forward with the planning. We
recently received all of our permits for this eventand needed supplies (tags). I have been in contact
with the new Hatchery Manager for the Fish restoration piece. We will be using a new software to run
this derby that will increase sales and decrease labor.
Budgets:
We are continuing to provide services for our members as well as marketing actions(like the video
we created)and plans to deal with this scenario. We are looking at some budget adjustments as we
realize that we are currently looking at a 70% bed tax loss this season that will hit in 2022. Our goal
is to streamline so that we can have consistent marketing services year over year, even with this
down year. We will be making cuts to fill in the gap of revenue in 2022 and likely 2023 as well as we
don’t foresee a full rebound next year. I have already developed a rough 4-yearbudget plan and
when I get that finalized and built with graphics, I will be presenting it to City Council and PACAB.
Seward Marine Front:
The Seward Marine Front Committee met last week to check in and see what the status was around
the industry. It was very helpful and will continue to meet regularly. We have put a hold on our data
collecting for the supply chain issues we were working on.
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Sustainable Tourism Conversation – This has been put on hold temporarily.
Blue Pipeline Update
We have just drafted a letter of support for this program for the future. Given theeconomicsituation
that is being caused by COVID19, I believe that this position is more relevant than ever. I have
worked it out with Karen Gillis to have our payment from this year (with no employee) applied to the
2022 year, which will also help us in the year where the low bed tax hits. Unfortunately, with the
COVID19 situation, the strong candidate that was interviewed (schooling/working on aninternational
visa) had to go back to Germany and will likely not be able to fill the position.
Membership: (report from Aisha)
MEMBERSHIP REPORT:
Total Active Members:385 No drops since 11/2019
New Members:
o Vergeben Services (classic 1-4)
Prospective/Processing Members:
o Kayaker's Cove (small business - to rejoin after many years)
o Portage Transport (small business) (rejoining)
Other recent/ongoing projects:
Chamber By-Laws - Input on changes
Research & Development of Mentorship/OJT Program with Seward HS
Research & Development of Community Partner membership level
Grant Writing: From Start to Funded (8-week class)
Website/CRM updates:
Seward.com transition from Chambermaster to Simpleview
o designing/developing changes & accurate quote with ITS
Expand Member Portal functionality & push for listing updates
Updated Chamber Membership materialsand info available on Seward.com
o New Chamber of Commerce copy (updated on website)
Membership benefits, Board of Directors descriptions, Staff
o Updates still needed: Privacy Policy, Moving to Seward, Seward Conferences, Development,
Resources
Re-development of targeted leads generation program via seward.com as an opt-in marketing benefit
for members
COVID-19 response
Bi-weekly newsletters/CV-19updates
Curating and updating Seward.com landing page:
o Seward Area & Business CV-19 Resources
CV-19 Campaigns
o Suspended meals program with local restaurants - w/ Kelli Hatfield
o#supportseward “bingo card” - weekly $50 visa gift card drawing
Partnership w/ Seward Prevention Coalition for social media community-related updates and
announcements, volunteer information
SBA & AKSBDC Zoom Calls w/ membership
Grow with Google - Get your Business Online webinar w/ AKSBDC
Online Social media/marketing videos: Instagram & Canva
COMMUNICATIONS REPORT:
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COVID-19 response - Transition from messaging of “Visit” to “Plan” --actively engaging social
media by invoking memories, promoting planning, and highlighting community efforts to stay
connected.
EXAMPLE OF POST/GOOD ENGAGEMENT
https://www.facebook.com/VisitSeward/photos/a.10150092264823548/10158009682743548/?ty
pe=3&theater
COVID-19 response - Reiterating that traveling to Seward is not recommended at this time.
Statement released online, soon to be followed by a short video highlighting Seward’s
attractions with a “We’ll be here” message (4/15 deadline)
Revamping SEO and SEM of Seward.com by increasing keywords and internal links, working
towards increasing external link traffic
Creating a press release methodology for Chamber events, news, and efforts to be reported to
the media
Connecting with other chambers and creating “Staycation in Alaska” travel plans to promote
when the time is right
Reassessing and evaluating advertising decisions moving forward
Web traffic is down about 50% over last 30 days - expected with current travel climate, but
working to maintain higher numbers with SEO content and ‘plan now, travel later’ marketing
messaging.
Catching up onand learning the ways to use SimpleView to increase marketing, public relations
and visitor strategies.
We are working on the planning and development of our websites to be better positioned
moving forward.
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Dear Seward Chamber Members and Friends,
I wanted to reach out to you all in this incredibly difficult time. I want to acknowledge that I am
not a business owner and I can’t imagine what you are all going through in your different
businesses. I have hada lot of conversations with many of you and I know that it’s scary,
stressful, and frustrating (to name a few). We know that we can’t solve the COVID19 situation,
but are doing our best to be here for you - representing you, supporting you, and advocatingfor
you. If you need something from us or see something that we could be doing better to support
you, please reach out.
Unfortunately, there isn’t a template on navigating this kind of situation (which is probably a
good thing). We are trying to problem solve this as best as we can through your feedback.
Thanks for your input and support as we try to figure out how to serve you and promote Seward
as best as we can.
During this time, our staff has shifted our efforts on both the membership and marketing sides of
our organization. Here are a few things I’d like to highlight:
I am part of the Community COVID19 Workgroup that meets three times a week to stay
on top of the situation - we are working to be a resource connection, information source,
and help communicate important messaging relevant to our membership..
Our staff has weekly meetings and conversations with organizations (Alaska Travel
Industry Association, US Chamber, etc.) to give us the best information for both our
organization and to be able to give you.
Upped our member newsletter to two times a week to keep you informed with
opportunities for engagement.
Advocating for our small businesses and the tourism industry with state and federal
legislators and agencies.
Help create visibilityand programs for our businesses that are able to be open
Working with SBA and SBDC to help businesses with the SBA Loan process.
Created a video that protects our community and sends the message that we are here
and ready when things open up.
We are going to start zoom calls for our members who operate similar businesses to
create community and collaboration.
Although the visitor center is not open to the public, we are still doing business. Things started
picking up this last week as far as calls coming into the visitor center. They have been slower
than normal, but consistent. We are getting a number of inquiries from potential visitors about
coming later this summer (July, August, and September) and visitor guide requests for this
summer and next, which is encouraging!
We know that tourism will look different this year and are making plans accordingly to get the
most out of the summer that we have, as well as making plans and opportunities for the fall and
winter seasons.
This month’s Alaska Magazineis on Road Trips. There is an article about visiting Seward and
being a local tourist. There is another article about birding and seabird festivals which includes
a picture of Alaska Sea Life Center staff and mentions other great things to do in Seward . We
also have an ad in the issue as well. Although it was planned way before this situation - this
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couldn’t have been more timely. We will continue workingto get as many people down here
from the rest of the state when things open up.
We had conversations before this situation in regards to making Seward more of a conference
destination and ways that we can increase traffic in the fall, winter, and spring. We are moving
this up on our list of priorities to get a plan in place to help build the off season.
In regards to our events, I wanted to let you know how things are shaping up and how we are
evaluating those with the COVID19 situation. I did want to mention that for all of our events, we
have had significant sponsors drop out due to theeconomic downturn. We aren’t taking this
into account as to whether we hold an event, but because our sponsorships play a huge role in
making those events possible and financially feasible, some of the events make look a little
different this year.
Although the Chamber technically dropped the Seward Halibut Tournament from our signature
event lineup last fall, we have been working with Elle Zernia and our local charter fleet on
supporting a similar event. . We will make that call as late as possible andare open to helping
support those efforts (within safe guidelines) even if we have a significantly shorter promotional
window.
The announcement came out on April15 on the postponement of the 2020 Mount Marathon
Race. There were a number of factors on this decision by the Race Director and MMR
Committee, all having to do with safety – runner, spectator, and community safety.
Runner Safety: the race has a significant safety plan (for runners) that is put in place
each year that requires a lot of planning and coordination with EMS, Providence,
Para/Mountain Rescue groups along with the 300 volunteers in support of that
plan. With the current situation, EMS and Healthcare workers are not and will not be
available for the foreseeable future to be able to put that plan in place.This was even
more important this year as the number of racers increased.
Community Safety: Even before the COVID situation, we had people coming down to
train on the mountain. This was only going to increase and we wanted to make sure that
we are protecting the community during the travel restrictions.
Spectator Safety: There is a strong belief that we aren’t going to be able to gather
th
20,000+ people for any reason by the time the 4comes and probably not this year.
This was a difficult decision for the MMR community considering the wide-ranging economic
impacts to our community. The feedback from stakeholders has been varied, but for the most
part is very supportive of this safety-first approach.
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We are monitoring the 4of July Festival to see if it’s something that we can make happen
under allowable guidelines. Any July 4th event will no doubt look extremely different than our
regular annual celebration.We will revisit this officially on June 1.
Seward Silver Salmon Derby planning and promotion are moving along and our SSD planning
committee is in the process of selecting the new 2020 logo. We are happy to announce the
implementation of new, state-of-the-art fishing tournament software that will improve the SSD
experience for our anglers, volunteers, and coordinators alike, through upgrades like online
ticket purchasing and mobile device capabilities. We are regularly getting calls at the visitor
center for this and look forward to ending the summer strong with this event.
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We are making plans and budget adjustments to ensure we can continue to provide consistent
destination marketing member services over the next four years, even through the expected
drop in bed-tax revenue (estimated at about a 70% loss for this year, which will hit our budget in
2022). We are also part of a collaborative lobbying effort to petition for disaster relief for
DMMO’s through Alaska Travel Industry Association. If there are any other relief opportunities
that apply to 501(c)(6) non-profits, we will be pursuing those as well.
We are thankful for the opportunity to serve our city and member businesses during this time - if
there is any way in which you feel that we can do that better, please let us know.
I am confident that we,as the Seward Community, will be able to get through this with courage,
strength, perseverance, and helping each other out. We are thankful to be working with you all!
Sincerely,
Jason Bickling and the Seward Chamber of Commerce Team
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PACABHARBOR
1.The 50 ton lifts have picked up the entire harbor crew is working, we are adjusting to
COVID-19 issues/mandates.
2.The 330 ton lifts have also picked up we have placed many vessels into the water and some
vessels are showing up for maintenance.
3.All the water has been turned off for the winter, there are 4 year round water locations in the
harbor located at the F float trestle, at the end of F-float, the T-dock, on Z-float and
fisherman’s float located at SMIC. (Water will probably be turned on around May
st
1.,weather dependent)
4.We are still working with ADF&G to replace the North East Boat Launch Ramp, funding is
currently available through the same grant, looks like the Governor approved the funding at
this point.
5.The harbor is currently short one office staff.
6.The harbor crew is continuing maintenance throughout the harbor.
7.The US Coast Guard contacted the harbor about location and designs for the new FRC,
which will be located at SMIC, we are currently looking at 3 concepts. More information to
come later.
8.The Harbor has upgraded with the new software and are still running parallel to fix any
issues. The harbor will be bringing a resolution to council with a Tariff change in early 2020.
9.The harbormaster is working on the 2022 Municipal Facility Grant to replace G, K and L-
float, a few resolutions to follow for grant process.
10.The harbor has ordered the dumpsters approved in Resolution 2020-029.
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4/29/2020
Halibutbycatchandstockstatus
13
1
4/29/2020
HalibutSpawningBiomass
14
2
4/29/2020
Howdidthebiomassgetsolow?
LowerRecruitment
Harvestsabovereferencelevel
HalibutStockStatus19932019
15
3
4/29/2020
BSAIGroundfishStockStatus2019
Halibut
*showingcoastwidehalibutstockstatus
16
4
4/29/2020
FederalActionstoMinimizeHalibutBycatch
•ProhibitedSpecies
CatchLimits(PSC)set
bygear/sector/season.
•Halibutavoidance
incentiveprogramfor
CPtrawlers
•DeckSortingtogetfish
AbundancebasedPSC
backalive
limitsforBSAI
•Carefulreleaseforhook
groundfishCPscurrently
caughtfish
beingevaluated
17
5
4/29/2020
vǒĻƭƷźƚƓƭͪ
18
6
Pacific Halibut Bycatch Update April 20, 2020
North Pacific Fishery Management Council
use needs, recreational fisheries, charter fisheries, commercial halibut fisheries, and groundfish
fisheries. Whether caught incidentally as bycatch in recreational or commercial fisheries,
halibut are tightly regulated, and in many cases these regulations require halibut to be
discarded.
The International Pacific Halibut Commission (IPHC) is responsible for the determining the size
of the halibut stocks (via surveys and stock assessments) and establishing total annual catch
limits for directed fisheries off Alaska, Canada, and the Pacific Northwest. In the Alaska region,
the North Pacific Council (Council) and NOAA Fisheries are responsible for setting halibut
bycatch limits, allocating the halibut catch limit to the charter and directed halibut fisheries
through a catch share plan, and establishing regulations for the directed halibut fishery IFQ
program.
In the recreational halibut fishery, halibut may be discarded
because they are considered too small or large for the angler to
retain, or they may be required by regulation to be discarded
because they are not within a regulated size limit that allows legal
retention, or would be in excess of daily bag limits. In the
commercial halibut fishery, halibut are required to be discarded
available Individual Fishing Quota. In the federally managed
commercial fisheries for groundfish (cod, flatfish, rockfish, etc.) halibut bycatch is capped, and
if the fishery reaches that cap, it is closed. All halibut bycatch in the federal groundfish fisheries
iuired by law to be counted toward the cap and then
discarded, in order to disincentivize bycatch. The rest of this update focuses on halibut bycatch
in the groundfish fisheries.
Halibut Bycatch
Total halibut mortality (catch
and bycatch) has fluctuated
since the 1970s. Removals
peaked in the mid-2000s and
declined substantially since.
Bycatch of halibut in groundfish
fisheries began with major
commercial exploitation of
groundfish in the 1960s by
foreign fleets, which were
phased out after the passage of
Figure 1. Fishing mortality of Pacific halibut by different sectors, 1900-2019.
the Magnuson-Stevens Act in
Source data: IPHC-2019-tsd-009.
1976.
Halibut Bycatch Update 19 1April 2020
Bycatch in non-directed fisheries
accounted for 17% of the coastwide
mortality in 2019. Due to regulations
established by the Council to minimize
bycatch to the extent practicable, and
voluntary measures implemented by the
groundfish fleets, halibut bycatch has
been substantially reduced over time.
Current halibut bycatch mortality in the
Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands (BSAI)
and Gulf of Alaska (GOA) groundfish
Figure 2. Percent of Pacific halibut removals by different sectors, 2019.
-directed
fisheries is half of what it was in the early
Source: Stewart et al. 2020. IPHC-2020-AM096-09 Rev_2
1990s as shown in the figures below.
Figure 3. Bycatch mortality of halibut in BSAI groundfish fisheries.
Figure 2. Bycatch mortality of halibut in GOA groundfish
Data from AKFIN file: Halibut PSC (3-24-20).
fisheries. Data from AKFIN file: Halibut PSC (3-24-20).
Status of the Halibut Stock
The halibut stock has declined substantially
since its peak in the late 1990s as a result
of poor recruitment. These declines have
been particularly severe in the central and
western GOA areas.
The IPHC projects that the halibut
spawning stock will continue to decline in
the next few years, even under a relatively
Figure 3. Model estimates of halibut spawning biomass 1990-2019,
conservative harvest rate policy.
and projections to 2025. Source: Stewart et al. 2020. IPHC-2020-
AM096-09 Rev_2
Halibut Bycatch Update 20 2April 2020
History of Major Halibut Bycatch Actions
The Council and NOAA Fisheries have taken many actions over the years to minimize bycatch of halibut
to the extent practicable, while achieving groundfish optimum yield, consistent with the standard set
forth in the Magnuson-Stevens Act. A history of relevant major actions is provided below.
History of major actions to reduce halibut bycatch in Federal groundfish fisheries off Alaska.
1973Foreign trawling prohibited in eastern part of Bering Sea and in GOA areas to limit halibut bycatch
though international convention and bilateral agreements.
1976Closure areas to foreign trawling continued under Council management.
1978GOA Groundfish FMP implemented with limits on halibut taken in foreign trawl fisheries.
1982BSAI Groundfish FMP implemented with annual bycatch limits for foreign trawl fisheries.
19842 million mt Optimum Yieldlimit establishedin BSAI, which limits total catch, ecosystem impacts,
and bycatch of crab and halibut.
1985Annual halibut bycatch limits (PSC)implemented for domestic trawl fisheries in GOA(2000 mt). The
PSC limits greatly limit the harvest of flatfish stocks well below Acceptable Biological Catchlevels.
1990Annual halibut PSClimits implemented for domestic longline fisheries in GOA(750 mt).
1990Annual halibut PSC limits implemented for domestic trawl fisheries in BSAI (5,333 mt bycatch).
1990Domestic groundfish observer program implemented to estimate total catch and discards.
1992Annual halibut PSClimits implemented for domestic longline fisheries in BSAI (750 mt mortality) and
reduced for trawl fisheries (5,033 mt bycatch).
1993Halibut PSClimits in BSAI established as mortality limits and set at 3,775 mt for trawl fisheries and
900 mt for longline fisheries.
1995Halibut and sablefish IFQ program implemented and halibut PSC reduced for Catcher Vesselhook and
line sector to 300 mt to account for IFQ halibut that could be retained in sablefish fishery.
1998Halibut donation program authorizes halibutPSClanded by Catcher Vessels to be donated for
distribution to foodbanks.
1999Halibut PSClimits for BSAI reduced by 100 mt with prohibition on bottom trawls for pollock fishing.
2007Amendment 80 Program authorizes formation of BSAI bottom trawl Catcher Processorcooperatives to
end race for fish and provides incentives to minimize bycatch.
2011GOA Rockfish program implemented with a portion of halibut PSC unallocated (left in the water).
2014Total halibut PSClimit for BSAI reduced by year phase-in to 3,515 mt overall by 2016, a 15-25%
reduction for all sectors (to 1,745 mt for Am 80, 745 mt for trawl limited access, 710 mt for non-trawl,
and 315 mt for CDQ); GOA sectors reduced to 1,972 mt overall, a 7-15% reduction (to 1,706 mt trawl,
266 mt hook-and-line).
2016Council begins evaluation of scientific abundance-based PSC limits for halibut.
2020Deck sorting of halibut on BSAI bottom trawl CPs authorized by regulation with catch handling and
monitoring requirements.
Other actions related to halibut bycatch management include a halibut
donation program to reduce waste, a comprehensive observer program
to accurately estimate bycatch amounts, deck sorting to reduce mortality
of halibut that come up in bottom trawls, and industry bycatch avoidance
plans that provide incentives for the trawl fleet to avoid halibut bycatch.
The Council currently is examining abundance-based approaches to set
halibut bycatch limits in the BSAI groundfish bottom trawl catcher-processor sector (Amendment 80
sector). When halibut abundance declines, halibut bycatch limits based on fixed amounts becomes a
larger proportion of total halibut removals and can result in lower catch limits for directed halibut
fisheries. Both the Council and the IPHC have expressed concern about impacts on directed halibut
fisheries under the status quo and identified abundance-based halibut bycatch limits as a potential
management approach to address these concerns.
Halibut Bycatch Update 21 3April 2020
makers?
-
00 nautical miles
2
-
Who are the decision
makers
-
A group of decisionthat work with experts, stakeholders, staff, and the public to balance conservation, economic, and social concerns to manage sustainable Federal fisheries for the
greatest benefit to the nation.
Together manage U.S. Federal fisheries off Alaska, 3Management is coordinated, and in some cases jointly managed, with the State of AlaskaCouncil makes recommendations to NMFSNMFS approves,
implements and enforces them
What is the Council?
••••
The North Pacific Fishery Management Council and National Marine Fisheries Service
24
page page
22
October 2019
Council Process
Introduction to the
North Pacific Fishery Management Council
Stevens Fishery
-
mile limit for Federal
-
ouncils composed of
equirements for conservation
ishery authority
8 Regional Fishery Management Cgovernment and fishermen representativesa 3 to 200fNational Standards and other rand management
The Council is guided by the MSA or the MagnusonConservation and Management Act. Established:•••
3
page
International Commission
Pacific Halibut
Conservation
specific
-
EcosystemEnforcementFishery MonitoringCharter halibut measures
Committees
Issuecommittees provide stakeholder advice on particular actions.Standing committees••••Ad hoc
•••
Alaska
3)
-
Dept. Fish & Game
Board of Fisheries/
Some state fisheries (0GOA crab fisheries, Joint management in BSAIFishery managementSport fish dataFishery managementFishery managementFishery management
-
BSAI/GOA GroundfishBSAI Crab Scallop
Plan Teams
Scientists, managers, or academicsStock assessment:•••Bering Sea Fishery Ecosystem PlanSocial Science
••••
Fisheries off Alaska?
National Marine
Fisheries Service
Implements Federal regulationsBering Sea fisheries regulationsLicense regulationsAllocation regulations
-
What
joint
–
Federal employeesState employeesAcademicsIndependent experts
Committee
The Council‘s advisory bodies
18 members••••
•
Scientific & Statistical
Manages
North Pacific Fishery
Management Council
Allocation & conservationBering Sea fisheries with State of AlaskaJoint with State of Alaska License limitsAllocationEEZ closed to fishing with exceptions
(shrimp,
Who
User groupsEnvironmentalistsRecreational fishermenConsumer groups
Groundfish(pollock, cod, flatfish, rockfish, etc.)Crabs(king, snow, Tanner crabs)ScallopsHalibutHerringSalmonOthers urchins, etc.)
22 members ••••
Advisory Panel
•
68
When reviewing potential rule changes, the Council draws upon the services of various advisory bodies. Advisory bodies provide comments, both written and oral, on relevant issues being
considered by the Council.
page page
23
Voting
Glenn Merrill
NMFS alternate
Balsiger
Lt Yang
NOAA GC
Steve Marx
Jim
Kenny Down
Cora Campbell
US Coast Guard
NMFS Regional Dir
PSMFC
Dave Hanson
Analytical staff
Council Staff
Bill Tweit
WA DF&G
AK (5), WA (2)
Kinneen
Chair
Simon
15 Council Members
AK, WA, OR, NMFS
7 appointed: 4 agency representatives:US Fish & WildlifeUS Coast GuardPSFMCUS State Dept.Council Executive DirectorNOAA General Counsel
voting
-
••••••••
Council Membership
11 voting4 non Also at table
Witherell
David
Executive Director
Gerken
Mezirow
ADF&GUSFWS
USFWS
Craig Cross
John Jenson
Rachel Baker
Nicole Kimball
Andy
Jonathan
State
Karla Bush
US Dept of
ADF&G alternate
Directors and Administrative Staff
57
page page
10
page
to the
Cod
Crab
Cod
Crab
adopt an alt.
Sablefish
–
10 Pot Gear
300 Pot Gear
feedback on alts and impacts
proposed amendment
–
Cod
JigGear
. Final Rule
ScallopsPublic testimony to the Advisory Panel or Council identifies a problem or need. Council develops problem statement and alternatives, often through a discussion paper or with
Committee input.Council initiates analysis of alternatives.1. Initial review 2. Public review/Final action Council forwards Secretary of Commerce for review and approval.1. Proposed
Rule and Public Comment2Final decision by the Secretary of Commerce is implemented.
15
5 Dredge Gear
Cod
Cod
Turbot
Halibut
Sablefish
Sablefish
ProposalReviewAnalysisReview/ApprovalRulemakingImplementation
50 Longliners
500Longliners
The Fishing Fleet Managed by the Council
Cod
(Vessel numbers are approximate and based on recent participation)
Pollock
Flatfish
Pollock
Flatfish
Rockfish
Rockfish
35 Trawlers Atka Mackerel
150 Trawlers
Council
Process
Decision
(deliver shoreside)
(process at sea)
Catcher Vessels
Processors-Catcher
1212
page page
24
rtainty
evelopment of regulationsycatch limitsrotections
nforcement including observers
Adherence to scientific adviceStakeholder involvement in dConservative and strict catch and bEffective monitoring, accounting, and eLimits on fishing capacityPrecautionary approach to
address unceHabitat and protected species pEcosystem considerations
Protected Resources
Bycatch and PSC LimitsHabitat
••••••••
Elements of Fishery Management Plans (FMPs):
Gear Types and SeasonsCommunity Protections
Catch QuotasLimited Access Privileges
Types of Management Actions
Create limited access programs, sector
identification of legal gear types, and
Harvest quota set asides for
Time and area closures to protect critical
Bycatch and prohibited species catch limits, time/
Specify overfishing limits (OFL), allowable biological
Important Elements of Fishery Management Plans in the North Pacific
Description and identification of essential fish habitat for all
9
1111
page
page page
Catch Quotas: catch levels (ABC), and total allowable catch (TAC) Gear Types and Seasons:seasons to distribute harvest in time to avoid ger conflicts, reduce bycatch and marine mammal
interactions Bycatch and PSC: area/ gear type closures Protected Resources: areas, prey species limitations Habitat:managed species, gear/area closures to protect key areas Community
Protections: communities, regional delivery restrictions Limited Access Privileges: allocations, rationalization privileges
1416
page page
Website
Newsletter!
Sign up for the
the homepage
Items for upcoming
meetings appear on
Navigating the Council
www.meetings.npfmc.org
The Agenda serves as the final record
Visit Agendas can be filtered by meeting body, month, and year, and are searchable. Documents and related presentations are upload prior and during the meeting, they are organized by
their respective agenda item. Agenda documents may be downloaded and printed.for the meeting. Archived meetings are also available online for your review.Public comment is made through
the Agenda online.
16
The Agenda The Agenda is where you find up to date documents related to the Council meeting. ••••••
page
25
15
page
time.
-
SSC & AP AP and SSC provide input to Council at each meeting.Listen Live Audio is available to listen to the Council meetings online in real
3 Meeting Outlook
All meetings are open to the publicMeeting agendas and schedules are published online.
AccessAgenda & Schedule
Schedule
Council Meetings
and more. These documents are available online at www.meetings.npfmc.org.
3 in Anchorage1 in local fishing community1 in Seattle or PortlandPublic testimony is taken for each agenda item at the SSC, AP, and Council.
5 Meetings Annually Public Testimony
Council Meeting Information Resources
Agenda
There are several resources available which provide detailed information on meeting schedules, locations, subjects,
13
page
ScheduleSchedule
Rooms for each meeting groupThe AP’s approximate schedule. This schedule can fluctuate more than the others.
26
chedule and
approximate s
ot all groups take up every
n
SSC’s
Schedule
Theagenda items. Note:agenda item.
meetings
-
ouncil
c
-
column on the day they are scheduled.
eting, the SSC, and the AP, and the Council.
r left
chedule for the day/time your item would be addressed in
he Council on Wednesdays.
Visit www.npfmc.org/upcomingThere are three main meetings that make up a Council meThe SSC generally starts on Monday, The AP on Tuesday and tIf you are planning to testify on an item,
refer to the sthe meeting. After hour sessions and committee meetings are listed in the faThe Schedule is approximate and subject to change.
17
The Schedule The Schedule provides detailed meeting times and locations by Agenda item and is available online. ••••••
page
Schedule
This column separates the days and notes evening events such as workshops or receptions.
meetings
-
council
-
Meeting Outlook
-
Meeting Outlook provides a list of
-
Meeting Outlook updates online to
-
ww.npfmc.org/upcoming
ubject to change.
hat have not yet been scheduled. Check for
Visit wItems for future meetings are agenda topics tThreesee when and where these items are scheduled. Scheduled items marked tentative (t) are s
24
The Three The Threeupcoming Agenda topics for the next 3 meetings. •••
page
27
spaced out
be
can
pproximate schedule.
item
agenda
Council’sa
ScheduleSchedule
TheOneover a week through as it is discussed in all three meetings.
for
www.npfmc.org
Serve
meeting schedule
All meetings are open to the
Join a workgroup or committee
public. Visit
Attend a meeting
Meet
create one
members and/or staff
Join a group
involved
Get to know your Council
representative, committee
How to get
Find a group that represents your
interests. If you can’t find a group,
up
-
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Talk to an expert
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•
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•
testify in person at a meeting
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26
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28
2809 Ph
-
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th
(907) 271
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Attachments are
605 W. 4
enda at www.meetings.npfmc.org
enda, must include the submitter's name
ouncil to the address.
genda items.
The Council accepts written testimony on a You may send a letter by mail or fax to the CThe Council accepts comments online via the AgComments must be for an item on the agand affiliation,
and must be submitted before the stated deadline.accepted.
••••
Written Comments
North Pacific Fishery Management Council
How to be Heard
p sheet
u
-
dies: the SSC, the AP, and the Council
et 3 minutes to testify, and persons
You can testify on an agenda item to all three bo You need to sign up on the signbefore the staff reports for your issue are completed. Before the Council, individuals or businesses
grepresenting organizations or associations get 6 minutes
Testimony at the Meeting
•••
2525
Questions?Ask now, find us at the meeting, or send us an email:Diana Evansdiana.evans@noaa.govMaria Davismaria.davis@noaa.gov
page page
Sponsored by:Regis
CITY OF SEWARD, ALASKA
PORT AND COMMERCE ADVISORY BOARD
RESOLUTION 2020-002
ARESOLUTION OF THE PORT AND COMMERCE ADVISORY BOARD
OF THE CITY OF SEWARD, ALASKA,RECOMMENDING TO THE CITY
COUNCIL TO AUTHORIZE THE CITY MANAGER TO APPLY FOR THE
HARBOR FACILITY GRANT FOR THE REPLACEMENT OF G, K AND L-
FLOAT
WHEREAS, the City of Seward hired R&M Engineering to inspect the northwest portion of
the original boat harbor in November 2019; and
WHEREAS, the report written in December 2019 foundthat the docks that were constructed
in the 1970’s are beyond their service life; and
WHEREAS, the report recommended that the replacement of G, K and L-Float should be the
harbor’s top priority; and
WHEREAS, Council approved Resolution 2019-108 adopting the 2020/2021 Capital
Improvement Planwith the replacement of G, K, and L-float in 2022; and
WHEREAS, the harbor is requesting the CityManager be authorized to file an application
with the Alaska Department of Transportation Harbor Facility Grant Program for a Tier II 50/50
matching grant; and
WHEREAS, the City utilized this program ontwo previous projects; the replacement of A,
B, C, and S-Float and the replacement of D-Float; and
WHEREAS, with State funding becoming scarcethis could be the lastopportunity to utilize
this grant.
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE PORT AND COMMERCE
ADVISORY BOARD OF THE CITY OF SEWARD, ALASKA that:
Section 1.The Port and Commerce Advisory Board recommends the Seward City Council
authorize the City managerto apply for the 2022 Harbor Facility Grant.
Section 2.This resolution shall take effect immediately upon its adoption and be provided to
Council at the next possible Council Meeting.
th
PASSED AND APPROVEDby the Port and Commerce Advisory Board this 6day of May, 2020.
29
30
31
32
33
Table of Contents
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY ............................................................................................................ 1
1.INTRODUCTION ........................................................................................................... 2
Existing Structure .................................................................................................................... 2
Tides .......................................................................................................................................... 5
Inspection Program ................................................................................................................. 5
Condition Assessment: Rating System Description .......................................................... 5
2.FINDINGS ........................................................................................................................ 8
General ..................................................................................................................................... 8
Potable Water System ........................................................................................................... 11
Fire Suppression System ...................................................................................................... 11
Electrical and Lighting System ............................................................................................ 12
Level of Service and Service Life ........................................................................................ 14
Condition Summary ............................................................................................................. 15
3.RECOMMENDATIONS AND COST ESTIMATES ............................................... 16
Recommendations - Replacement: ..................................................................................... 16
Replacement Cost Estimate: ................................................................................................ 16
APPENDICES .............................................................................................................................. 17
Appendix A: Drawings
Appendix B: Cost Estimate
34
35
Existing Structure
36
37
38
Tides
Inspection Program
Condition Assessment: Rating System Description
Waterfront Facilities Inspection and Assessment”
39
Waterfront Facilities Inspection and Assessment
40
Waterfront Facilities Inspection and Assessment
41
General
42
Planning and Design Guidelines for Small Craft Harbors
43
44
Potable Water System
Fire Suppression System
45
Electrical and Lighting System
46
47
Level of Service and Service Life
48
Condition Summary
49
Recommendations - Replacement:
Replacement Cost Estimate:
50
Appendix A: Drawings
51
SEWARD BOAT HARBOR
T DOCK
CITY OF SEWARD
J
K
TIMBER PILES, TYP
EXISTING 5' x 32' FINGER FLOATS, TYP
8' x 358' FLOAT
57'
I DOCK
3.5' x 31' FINGER, TYP
28'
CLEAR
31'-8"
CLEAR
10' x 125' FLOAT
L
C
50 TON TRAVEL LIFT DOCK
L
L
C
31'-3"
L
C
37'
L
C
81'
EXISTING SITE
25'-0" = 75'
3 SPACES @
8' x 250'
FLOAT
FISH CLEANING STATION
G
6 SPACES @ 37'-6" = 225'-1"
G
12' x 100' FLOAT
12' x 292' FLOAT
T DOCK
J
NEW 4' x 32' FINGERFLOATS TYP.
"
8
-
'
1
6
1
EXISTING 5' x 32' FINGERFLOATS TYP.
R
K
NEW 10' x 460'MAIN FLOAT
56'
PILING TYP.
I DOCK
L
C
32'
L
C
TRANSIENT FLOAT
NEW 10' x 200'
"
5
-
'
0
4
1
R
L
31'-8"
CLEAR
28'
CLEAR
50 TON TRAVEL LIFT
DOCK
115'
L
C
37'
L
C
25'-0" = 175'
7 SPACES @
CONCEPT PLAN
NEW 10' x 245'HEADWALK FLOAT
FISH CLEANING STATION
G
6 SPACES @ 40'-0" = 240'
G
W
F
E
W
F
E
F
W
E
SAFETY LADDER, TYP
F
W
FINGERS ON K FLOAT, TYP
E
F
W
E
F
W
E
F
W
E
F
W
E
LIFE RING AND FIREEXTINGUISHER @ 150'MAX SPACING, TYP
F
W
E
FE
F
LR
W
E
F
W
E
F
W
E
F
W
E
F
E
W
F
LIFE RING AND FIREEXTINGUISHER, TYP
E
W
F
E
W
F
E
W
F
E
F
E
F
W
E
E
F
W
E
FE
F
E
F
LR
W
E
LUMINAIRE AND DUPLEX OUTLETPEDESTAL, TYP
F
E
W
E
F
F
E
W
E
F
E
W
E
LR
F
F
E
E
W
STEEL PIPE PILE
PEDESTAL W/ LUMINAIRE,DUPLEX OUTLETS & WATER
NEW LUMINAIRE ON PEDESTAL
SYSTEM
DRY FIRE SUPPRESSIONELECTRICAL SYSTEM
F
E
FIRE RISER SPACING = 150' MAX, TYP
E
W
F
F
F
E
Scale: NTS
SPACING, TYP
FIRE RISER @ 150' MAX
USE INTERIOR PILE COLLAR WHEREINDICATED IN THE PLANS
MODULECONNECTION DESIGN
PER MANUFACTURER
VAULT @ VALVES
WATER SYSTEM
VAULT @ FLOAT
ELECTRICALINTERSECTION
VALVE
FIRE VAULT @
W
EEE
F
E
PLYWOODUTILITY TRAY
F
W
GLULAM BULLRAIL
TIMBER RUB BOARD
GLULAM
BULLRAIL TYP.
F
WATER/POWER PEDESTAL LOCATION
(SEE NOTE 3)
UTILITY TRAY
Scale: 1/2" = 1"-0"
REMOVABLE DECKING @ PEDESTAL
SIZE, & LAYOUT BY MANUFACTURER
POLYETHYLENE ENCASEDFLOTATION TUB FLOAT NUMBER,
GLULAM STRINGER, TYP.
Scale: 1/2" = 1"-0"
PLYWOOD,UTILITY TRAY
DECKING
F
7.5"
RUNS
INT. GLULAM STRINGER TYP.
NO HOLES THROUGH
EXTERIOR GLULAM STRINGER TYP.
STRINGERS FOR UTILITY
10'-0"
EEE
STALL FLOAT
HINGE
GLULAM
F
STRINGER
TYPICAL
NEW MAIN FLOAT LONGITIDINAL SECTION
TYPICAL
VARIOUS ELECTRICAL
NEW MAIN FLOAT MODULE PLAN
LINES
2
1
VARIES
VARIES
STALL FLOAT
STALL FLOAT
W
W
W
SILL BEAM
GALV.
W
F
20" FREEBOARD
ALL STEEL MINIMUM 3/8"
FLOAT MANUFACTURER.
STALL FLOAT HINGES BY
4'-0"
2'-0"
DECKING
OUTSIDE CORNERS
CORNER BUMPERS ON ALL
PER FLOAT.
CORNER BUMPERS
CLEATS EIGHT (8)
9'-4"
Scale: 1/2" = 1"-0"
Scale: 1/2" = 1"-0"
CLEAT, 4 PER SIDE,
MIN.
MANUFACTURER
TORSION BAR SYSTEM PER FLOAT
BLACK)
9'-4"
SIDES (HDPE
SILL BEAM'S ASREQ'D
RUB BOARD, 3
FLOAT
DECKING
SYSTEM PER
TORSION BAR
MANUFACTURER
20" FREEBOARD
3
S1.1
TYPICAL STALL FLOAT PLAN (K FLOAT)
TYPICAL STALL FLOAT SECTION (K FLOAT)
1
2
SILL BEAMS, AS NEEDED
HINGE CONNECTION TO MAIN FLOAT BYFLOAT MANUFACTURER
MANUFACTURER
STALL FLOAT INTERSECTION
MAX 1" GAP BETWEEN MAIN FLOAT DECKING EXTENSION AT
9'-4"
4'-0"
EXTERIOR
STRINGER
NUMBER, SIZE, & LAYOUT BY FLOAT
POLYETHYLENE ENCASED FLOTATION TUB
ALONG MAIN FLOATS
TIMBER RUB BOARD
BULLRAIL
2'-0"
B OR C MAIN FLOAT
GLULAM STRINGER
4' GAP IN BULLRAIL
HINGES PER FLOAT MANUFACTURER
Scale: NTS
Scale: NTS
WRAPWRAP
CORNERSCORNERS
PILEGALVALUM 3OR EQUAL
1-1/2" TYP.
1/41/4
EXISTING BASIN MUDLINEELEV. = APPROX -14' MLLW
ADDITIONAL PILING, LARGER
SHALL BE BASED ON 32 FEET OFOF +24 FEET MLLW.
EMBEDMENT AND A TOP ELEVATIONFLOAT SYSTEM MAY INCLUDEDIAMETER PILING, OR DEEPERPILING EMBEDMENT.
2.THE CONTRACTOR DESIGN OF THE
NOTES:1.MINIMUM FLOAT PILE LENGTH
-8' MLLW
SEE TIDALSHEET G2MAX ELEV. =
INFORMATION TABLE.
TYPICAL ANODE DETAIL
TYPICAL NEW FLOAT PILE
ELEV -8MLLW
Appendix B: Cost Estimate
58
59
City of Seward, AlaskaPort and Commerce Advisory Board Regular Meeting Minutes
March 11, 2020Volume 3, Page
CALL TO ORDER
The March 11, 2020regularmeeting of the Port & Commerce Advisory Board was called
to order at 12:00 p.m. by ChairLaura Schneider.
OPENING CEREMONY
Lynda Paquette led the pledge of allegiance to the flag.
ROLL CALL
There were present:
Laura Schneiderpresiding, and
Bruce Jaffa Erin Lemas
Carl HughesColby Lawrence
Lynda PaquetteBenjamin Smith
comprising a quorum of the board; and
Norm Regis, Harbormaster
Jessica Stallard, Deputy City Clerk
Excused – Hughes
Absent –Jaffa, Lemas
CITIZEN COMMENTS ON ANY SUBJECT EXCEPT THOSE ITEMS SCHEDULED
FOR PUBLIC HEARING
Phil Kaluza said heturned in his request to install a solar panel at his hometo the
Electric Departmentin November 2019. He received a letter from Electric Utility Manager John
Foutz in January 2020and on March 11, 2020, he received amore formal letter from Foutzwith
specific requirementsthat he needed to meet before he couldinstallhis solar panel.Kaluza asked
the board to adopt an interconnectapplication similar to Homer’s. Hefeltthat Homer’s
application was more concise than Seward’s and itoutlined the code requirements for installing a
solar system.
APPROVAL OF AGENDA AND CONSENT AGENDA
Motion (Paquette/Lawrence) Approval of Agenda and Consent Agenda
Motion PassedUnanimous
The city clerkread the following approved consent agenda items:
Approval of the February 5, 2020PACAB RegularMeeting Minutes.
60
City of Seward, AlaskaPort and Commerce Advisory Board Regular Meeting Minutes
March 11, 2020Volume 3, Page
Direct the clerk to order Robert’s Rules books for the board members to use during their
term.
SPECIAL ORDERS, PRESENTATIONS AND REPORTS
Alaska Railroad Report –Christy Terry said the Marathon Wrestling Tournament on
March 6 and March 7, 2020was a success and there were 480 wrestlers.The annual Ship Escort/
Response Vessel System (SERVS) training in the cruise ship terminal was scheduled for April
17, 2020. Repairs were being continued on the cruise ship dock. The Cruise Ship Dock Project
was currently in the Request for Proposal stage with two proposers: Global Ports Holding, Plc.
andConrac Solutions Holistica Destinations, Ltd. The railroad began the application processfor
a BUILD grant andFederal Port Grant for the lengthening and widening of the freight dock and
theextensionof Port Avenue.Terrysaid the railroad was actively staying informed of virus
concerns andworking closely with the coast guard and Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC). Economic ramifications of the coronavirus were unknownat this time. Two
Viking cruise ships had been added to the Seward’sitinerary for 2020.No cruise ships had
cancelled due to the coronavirus, but some ships hadcancelled for other reasons. There were
40,000 railroad passengers who came to Seward in 2019.
In response to Lawrence, Terry said there was not a decline in railroad reservations at this
time.
Chamber of Commerce Report–None
Harbormaster Report. Harbormaster Norm Regis said the appraisal process for the 43
lots leased out by the City of Seward had beencompleted. Hewould be coming before council in
April to request a change inthe Seward City Code and harbor tariff on how the rates for transient
vesselswereprocessed.
Other Reports, Announcements, and Presentations
Coronavirus Presentation by Cristan McLain, Providence Director of Quality,
Infection Prevention and Steven Clegg, Providence Emergency Management Coordinator.
NEWBUSINESS
Consider rescheduling the April 15, 2020 work session to April 22, 2020 due to the auditors
being in council chambers from April 13-17, 2020 and April 27-May 1, 2020.
The board kept theirApril 15, 2020 work session at 12:00 p.m.They were willing to change
locations, if needed.
Determine and provide recommendation to council on electric department matters.
Smith said the energy ad hoc committee met before this meeting but did not finish their
review of the February 19, 2020 PACAB work session on electric matters. Thelargest concerns
61
City of Seward, AlaskaPort and Commerce Advisory Board Regular Meeting Minutes
March 11, 2020Volume 3, Page
were the power factor adjustment and the interconnect policy. Smith said electric rates were
relatively proportional for the region, and Chugach Electric was in charge of the electric rates.
In response to Schneider, the clerk said thesecond council work session to discuss
electric matters had been scheduled for March 23, 2020.
The board added the topic of “Discuss power factor adjustment and interconnect policy” to the
March 18, 2020 PACAB work session.
Discuss sending a member of the Port& Commerce Advisory Board (PACAB) to the
Electrify Alaska Conference in Cordova on April 27-29, 2020.
In response to Lawrence, the clerk said the board could use their budget to send a citizen
to the conference. Regis saidif the board sends a citizen using their funds, then it should be
brought before council.
INFORMATIONAL ITEMS AND REPORTS
Tips to Avoid Coronavirus
CITIZEN COMMENTS
Brenda Ballou said council had solicited interest from citizens in the past and PACAB
also had the option to solicit interest from citizens.
Tony Baclaan asked employers to help protect their employeesand the community from
the coronavirus. He encouragedeveryone to reach out if they need help. He wanted to work
towards a solution to the electric department matters. He would be attendingthe Climate Action
Plan conference in Anchorage on March 19, 2020.
BOARD AND ADMINISTRATIVE RESPONSE TO CITIZEN COMMENTS
Smith thanked the public for attendingthe meeting. He said the coronavirus would be
affecting the community, and there was no way to prevent it from coming to Seward. He
reassured Kaluza that the Port & Commerce Advisory Board was working towards a solution for
the interconnect policy.
Paquette requested that Kaluza send the boardthe letter he had received from the Electric
Utility Manager regarding his solar panel installation. She reminded everyone to pay attention to
the little things and be more cautious about the spread of germs.
Lawrence thanked the public for attending the meeting. He thanked Cristan McClain and
Steven Clegg for educating the public about coronavirus.He wanted to solicit interest from
citizens for the Electrify Alaska Conferencein Cordova onApril 27-29, 2020.
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City of Seward, AlaskaPort and Commerce Advisory Board Regular Meeting Minutes
March 11, 2020Volume 3, Page
Schneider feared misinformation about coronavirus would causeeconomic impactsfor
Seward.She was grateful to live in a community where everyone took care of each other.
Sustainable Sewardhad ameeting on March 11, 2020. She thanked Baclaan, Paquette, and Jaffa
for attending theClimate Action Plan meeting in Anchorage on March 19, 2020.
ADJOURNMENT
This meeting was adjourned at 1:05 p.m.
____________________________________ ____________________________________
Jessica Stallard Laura Schneider
Deputy City ClerkChair
(City Seal)
63
CITY OF
SEWARD
TAX AMOUNT
TAGBOAT CLASSCOUNTASSESSED VALUEMILL RATE
4012 5603.84$ 2.15
40222 83,9053.84$ 322.20
40344 822,8343.84$ 3,159.68
4042698,759,909 3.84$ 33,638.05
405236 20,833,5683.84$ 80,000.90
40631 28,565,6463.84$ 109,692.08
4076 10,092,1743.84$ 38,753.95
4110- 3.84$ -
4120- 3.84$ -
4131 2,2753.84$ 8.74
4140- 3.84$ -
41591,428,070 3.84$ 5,483.79
416244,032,960 3.84$ 15,486.57
41741,745,525 3.84$ 6,702.82
$ 293,250.92
64
FLAT TAX KPB
RATETAX AMOUNT
0$ -
0$ -
50$ 2,200.00
150$ 40,350.00
250$ 59,000.00
500$ 15,500.00
1000$ 6,000.00
0$ -
0$ -
50$ 50.00
150$ -
250$ 2,250.00
500$ 12,000.00
1000$ 4,000.00
$ 141,350.00
65
TAGBOAT CLASSCOUNT
40 - SEWARD CITYBoat Class 1 Count1
40 - SEWARD CITYBoat Personal Class 1 Count1
40 - SEWARD CITYBoat Class 2 Count10
40 - SEWARD CITYBoat Personal Class 2 Count12
40 - SEWARD CITYBoat Class 3 Count6
40 - SEWARD CITYBoat Personal Class 3 Count38
40 - SEWARD CITYBoat Class 4 Count33
40 - SEWARD CITYBoat Personal Class 4 Count236
40 - SEWARD CITYBoat Class 5 Count35
40 - SEWARD CITYBoat Personal Class 5 Count201
40 - SEWARD CITYBoat Class 6 Count28
40 - SEWARD CITYBoat Personal Class 6 Count3
40 - SEWARD CITYBoat Class 7 Count5
40 - SEWARD CITYBoat Personal Class 7 Count1
41 - SEWARD SPECIALBoat Personal Class 3 Count1
41 - SEWARD SPECIALBoat Class 5 Count3
41 - SEWARD SPECIALBoat Personal Class 5 Count6
41 - SEWARD SPECIALBoat Class 6 Count15
41 - SEWARD SPECIALBoat Personal Class 6 Count9
41 - SEWARD SPECIALBoat Class 7 Count2
41 - SEWARD SPECIALBoat Personal Class 7 Count2
648
66
TAGBOAT CLASSVALUE
40 - SEWARD CITYBoat Class 1 160
40 - SEWARD CITYBoat Personal Class 1 400
40 - SEWARD CITYBoat Class 2 15,512
40 - SEWARD CITYBoat Personal Class 2 68,393
40 - SEWARD CITYBoat Class 3 158,242
40 - SEWARD CITYBoat Personal Class 3 664,592
40 - SEWARD CITYBoat Class 4 2,751,173
40 - SEWARD CITYBoat Personal Class 4 6,008,736
40 - SEWARD CITYBoat Class 5 6,927,496
40 - SEWARD CITYBoat Personal Class 5 13,906,072
40 - SEWARD CITYBoat Class 6 28,514,271
40 - SEWARD CITYBoat Personal Class 6 51,375
40 - SEWARD CITYBoat Class 7 8,599,486
40 - SEWARD CITYBoat Personal Class 7 1,492,688
41 - SEWARD SPECIALBoat Personal Class 3 2,275
41 - SEWARD SPECIALBoat Class 5 564,420
41 - SEWARD SPECIALBoat Personal Class 5 863,650
41 - SEWARD SPECIALBoat Class 6 1,018,650
41 - SEWARD SPECIALBoat Personal Class 6 3,014,310
41 - SEWARD SPECIALBoat Class 7 1,574,400
41 - SEWARD SPECIALBoat Personal Class 7 171,125
76,367,426
67
WATERCRAFT ADVALORUM TAXATION
Owner reports year purchased and purchase price of the respective vessel on a submitted boat
information form or personal property statement. This information is entered into our system and a 5%
depreciation factor is applied each year until a floor of 40% good is reached. This 40% good factor is
maintained on the vessel until such time as it is sold or removed from the respective account.
Should the owner not report the purchase price staff will estimate the purchase price using the best
means available to them at the time.
68
Port & Commerce Advisory Board
2020 GOALS CALENDAR
DATESUGGESTED AGENDA ITEMS
January 8 Meeting
Set 2020 priorities.
Establish committees for Seward
Climate Action Plan, SMIC
Development, and Energy.
Provide input on Capital
Improvement Plan for 2020-2021.
January 15 Work Session
Discuss and review the January 20,
2020 Council work session on
electric rates and utilities.
February 5 Meeting
Discuss the halibut fishery.
February 19 Work Session
Review the January 20, 2020
Council work session on electric
rates and utilities.
March 4 Meeting
Determine and provide
recommendation to Council on
electric department matters.
March 9 Joint Work w/ Council
Joint Work Session w/ Council on
PACAB Priorities
March 18 Work Session
Review high vessel property tax.
April 1 Meeting
Provide recommendation to Council
on high vessel property tax.
April 15 Work Session
Evaluate the Blue Pipeline Initiative.
May 6 Meeting
Give summary of evaluation on Blue
Pipeline Initiative.
Set goals calendar for the second
half of year 2020.
Update from energy committee.
May 20 Work Session
Discuss Public Works utilties
June to end of August
HIATUS –MEET AS NEEDED
September 2 Meeting
September 16 Work Session
October 7 Meeting
October 21 Work Session
November 4 Meeting
November 18 Work Session
December 2 Meeting
December 16 Work Session
69
4185
S S S
111825152229121926
p.m.)
F 3F 7F 4
April
101724142128111825
August
(12
2963
16233013202710172431
Th ThTh
December
18529
W W W
152229121926162330
7418
T T T
142128111825152229
637
M M M
13202710172431142128
5296
S S S
121926162330132027
4
747
S S S
14212811182512128
July
636
F F F
13202710172431132027
March
5295
121926162330121926
Th ThTh
November
4184
W W W
111825152229111825
373
T T T
10172431142128101724
Deadline to get materials in for packets
29629
M M M
162330132027162330
18518
S S S
152229121926152229
70
1863
S S S
15222913202710172431
F 7F 5F 29
June
142128121926162330
Work Sessions
6418
October
132027111825152229
Th ThTh
February
537
W W W
121926101724142128
s
4296
T T T
111825162330132027
3185
M M M
101724152229121926
Meeting
2974
S S S
1623142128111825
Meeting Schedule
PACAB
4 295
S S S
111825162330121926
May
F 3 F 18F 4
10172431152229111825
20
6
2 973
12330142128101724
January
ThThTh
20
1 8629
W W W
152229132027162330
September
7518
T T T
142128121926152229
end of August is a hiatus but meetings will be called as necessary!
Holidays
-
647
M M M
132027111825142128
536
S S S June
12192610172431132027
PACAB*
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
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85
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90
From:Brenda Ballou
To:bballou@cityofseward.net ("bballou@cityofseward.net") ("bballou@cityofseward.net")
Subject:FW: Local Government Climate Action - Cohort Letter of Interest
Date:Friday, April 03, 2020 11:59:30 AM
Attachments:Alaska Climate Change Planning Cohort Support Letter 200402.docx
Alaska Climate Change Planning Cohort Proposal 200317.docx
Forwarding to city council, city manager and PACAB.
Brenda
From: Louie Flora \[mailto:louie@akcenter.org\]
Sent: Friday, April 03, 2020 11:56 AM
Subject: Local Government Climate Action - Cohort Letter of Interest
External Email: This email originated from outside of the organization. Do not click links or open attachments
unless you recognize the sender and know the content is safe.
Hi Everyone,
Following the discussion at the March 19th Local Government Climate Action
Workshop - your community has the opportunity to participate in a climate action
cohort, conducted by the GEOS institute, Lotus Engineering and staff from the
University of Alaska Anchorage, and the University of Alaska Fairbanks. Attached to
this email is a white paper discussing the cohort proposal, and a draft letter of
community interest. Below I have outlined some immediate next steps:
Near term, cities or boroughs need an official indication that they want to be part of
this cohort. The ideal deadline is May 15, but could reasonably be pushed back to
May 31 if need be, as everyone is strapped with COVID-19 response duties. A show
of support can come in several forms—
•The attached letter signed by the Mayor;
•The attached letter signed by the assembly or council or passed as a resolution by
the assembly or council;
•The attached letter signed by the president of the assembly or council;
•The attached letter signedby the Executive Director of a non-profit or group of non-
profits who are/will be collaborating with the city or borough.
–Keep in mind that if the city or borough does not feel it has staff time to participate in
the cohort, that contribution can come from a non-profit partner, the planning
commission or a sustainability commission–
Longer term, cities and boroughs should answer the following questions and
communicate them with Tonya at GEOS (tonya@geosinstitute.org) to help her in her
grant writing:
•How much staff time is available (remember you can partner with a non-profit)?
91
• Are you interested in adaptation measures, mitigation measures or both?
•What has your city or borough done with regard to climate adaptation and/or
mitigation? When was this work done?
•What political considerations are necessary with regard to climate action in your city
or borough?
Please reach out to Tonya with any questions. Her contact information is below.
I will also be following up with participants to help answer questions.
Thank you,
Louie Flora
Government Affairs Director,
The Alaska Center
(907) 717-9602
Tonya Graham|Executive Director | She/Her/Hers
Geos Institute| 84 Fourth Street | Ashland, Oregon 97520
Phone: 541.482.4459 x301
Spam
Phish/Fraud
Notspam
Forgetpreviousvote
92
Date
Signing Organization Name
Address
City, ST Zip
Dear Potential Funder,
On behalf of the \[Community City Council / Sustainability Commission, etc\], we offer this letter
in support of the Alaska Climate Change Planning Cohort proposal put forward by the Geos
Institute, Lotus Sustainability, and University of Alaska (Anchorage and Fairbanks). Alaskan
communities are some of the first to feel the impacts of a rapidly changing climate and some of
the first to suffer the consequences. Melting permafrost, changing patterns of subsistence food
sources, and increasing wildfire seasons are few of the challenges that communities in Alaska
are facing as a result of climate change.
To navigate those changes, many communities in our state are working to develop and
implement climate plans that build resilience to the impacts that are underway, while also
addressing the root causes of the climate change through the reduction of greenhouse gas
emissions.
The proposal put forward will provide our community with the technical support and guidance
it needs to develop and implement a climate change plan that is based on the best available
science and traditional knowledge, addresses our most pressing needs, and aligns with our
community values. By doing much of the planning work ourselves, we will also strengthen our
adaptive capacity and our ability to implement and update our plan over time as conditions and
projections continue to change.
We support the proposal put forward by this research teamand are excited to be included in
the cohort.
Sincerely,
Name
Title
93
Alaska Communities Climate Action Planning
A Cohort Proposal
March 17, 2020
As the impacts of climate change are being felt much more severely in Alaska than in the lower
48, it is no surprise that so many local leaders and the communities they serve are stepping up
to address both the causes and impacts of the climate crisis. The proposal that follows outlines
a possible support structure that will allow diverse communities in Alaska to move through
their planning efforts in a way that is cost effective and efficient, and results in actionable,
community-based climate plans. This cohort structure is designed to allow individual
communities to chart their own unique course while taking advantage of the efficiencies and
personal support that comes from working with others in a cohort.
Community Participation
The cohort would be made up of mid-sized communities that serve as hubs for surrounding
areas in Alaska. This allows smaller neighboring communities to learn from the plans ofthe
larger communities in the region, creating a long-term synergy and strengthening community
relationships. These communities will be starting at various parts of the process given that
many communities have already done some, if not quite a lot, of climate work already.
Structure
Fundraising efforts (philanthropic sources, State/Federal government, and industry donations)
would be implemented to supply each community with the following:
Some amount of funding (likely $10-$15k) for communities to support the local work of
participating in the process
A technical services budget (likely $30-$40k for communities working on comprehensive
climate plans that address both mitigation and adaptation, $15 - $20K for communities
working on climate plans that address only one). This budget can be used to secure
specific support services (see below) with Geos Institute (adaptation), Lotus Engineering
and Sustainability (mitigation), and/or SNAP (climate projections).
Annual Subscription to Climate Ready Communities
(www.climatereadycommunities.org)
Greenhouse gas assessment and mitigation tracking program from Lotus Engineering
and Sustainability (www.lotussustainability.com)
Monthly video calls that include presentations from experts (most if not all Alaska-
based) on climate resilience topics of interest to the cohort communities, progress
check ins, and coordination of support elements when appropriate. Through this
monthly process, Geos Institute will connect cohort communities with the federal, state,
94
and university programs in the state thatare listed in the Toolkit developed in
Anchorage andcan offer assistance for community climate planning.
Support Organizations
The core team of Support Organizations would include University of Alaska-Anchorage,
University of Alaska-Fairbanks(Scenarios Network for Alaska and Arctic Planning), Geos
Institute, and Lotus Engineering and Sustainability.
Support Services
Cohort communities would be able to access the following services with their Technical Support
budgets:
University of Alaska-Anchorage: One-on-one consultation for subject matter expertise
in specific sectors (e.g. health impacts, food systems, transportation, energy).
Consultation and assistance with external grant writing for project implementation.
University of Alaska-Fairbanks (Scenarios Network for Alaska and Arctic Planning):
Local climate change projections to serve as the foundation for adaptation and
resilience planning, training on how to use the data and projections, one-on-one
consultation
Geos Institute: Adaptation workshop facilitation and/or training, community
engagement training (focused on adaptation and equity), adaptation strategy menu,
assistance with report writing, one-on-one consultation regarding adaptation and
resilience planning
Lotus Engineering and Sustainability: Greenhouse gas emissions inventories and
scenario modeling, GHG reduction strategies, carbon sequestration emissions
accounting, mitigation workshop facilitationand/or training, workshop facilitation,
community engagement training (focusedon mitigationand equity), assistance with
plan writing, one-on-one consultation regarding mitigation planning
While the initial structure focuses on climate planning, it is designed to be extended to continue
to support cohort communities as they implement the plans they develop in this first stage,
potentially while a new cohort begins the planning phase.
Benefits
Builds on local knowledge of residentsregarding the values of the communityand the
impact of climate change on those values
Allows each community to access high quality planning assistance and one-on-one
support without the costs associated withcompletinga process like this entirely on their
own
95
Creates actionable climate plans that are community-based, complete, and ready for
implementationwithin 12-16 months
Develops and/or strengthens relationships between local leaders and communities
Provides personal support to helpprocess leaders in each communityeffectively deal
with the emotional toll that working on climate change takes
Meets existing efforts where they are and helps cohort communities move forward by
providing only what the communities themselves determine they need
Strengthens local adaptive capacity andtrains local leadersto be able to update their
plans going forward with little outside help at a reasonable cost
Keeps cohort communities together through at least the first phase of implementation
to ensure that they are moving forward toward their goals
Allows participants to leverage their technical support budget. For example, if multiple
communities want workshop facilitation training, they could all receive that training at
the same time for a fraction of what it would cost any one community by themselves.
Next Steps
If this cohort proposal, in its current form or revised, appeals to your community, the next steps
will be to secure support from your local governing council to commit to the project contingent
on funding being secured. Once the cohort communities are identified, we would work
together to finalize a budget and begin fundraising.
Contact
Micah Hahn Tonya Graham
Institute for Circumpolar Health Studies Geos Institute
University of Alaska-Anchorage tonya@geosinstitute.org
mbhahn@alaska.edu 541.778.0718
907.786.6577
Nancy FrescoEmily Artale
University of Alaska, Fairbanks Lotus Engineering and Sustainability
nlfresco@alaska.eduemily@lotussustainability.com
907.474.2405 303.709.9948
96
From:Aeschliman, Melanie
To:"nregis@cityofseward.com";Jessica Stallard
Cc:Tilly, Chris
Subject:FW: Seward Boat Info
Date:Monday, March 16, 2020 3:28:29 PM
Attachments:image001.png
CityofSeward_Boat_Detail_2019.xlsx
Importance:High
External Email: This email originated from outside of the organization. Do not click links or open attachments unless
you recognize the sender and know the content is safe.
Hello,
It is my understanding this got lost? I am resending the report and added Ms. Stallard.
From: Aeschliman, Melanie
Sent: Thursday, March 12, 2020 8:42 AM
To: 'nregis@cityofseward.com' <nregis@cityofseward.com>
Subject: FW: Seward Boat Info
Importance: High
Good Morning,
Attached you will find data you requested.My appraisal manager, Chris took all the
boats in each of the Seward TAGS from 2019 (both main and supp roll combined)
and calculated the City Tax and what the KPB Flat tax is. From that information you
should be able to take the numbers and re-calculate whatever you are thinking of
doing whether it be adopting a flat tax or changing the mill rate.
I cannot say with any certainty if the Finance department would allow/can even
permit a different mill rate for personal than real property, so I would suggest if that
is a consideration that you contact Brandi/Jen downstairs at the Borough Finance
office.
Sincerely,
Melanie Aeschliman, Assessment Director
Kenai Peninsula Borough Assessing Dept.
Phone: (907) 714-2230
Email:maeschliman@kpb.us
PUBLIC RECORDS LAW DISCLOSURE: This email and responses to this email may be
subject to provisions of Alaska Statutes and may be made available to the public upon
request.
97