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HomeFish and Game CodeDiv. 6Pt. 3Ch. 1Art. 9§ 8102 Fishery Permit Partnership Rights

§ 8102 Fishery Permit Partnership Rights

Fish and Game Code·California
AI Summary·Official Text·Key Terms·Related Statutes·References
AI SummaryVerified

§ 8102 Fishery Permit Partnership Rights

Key Takeaways

  • •If a fisherman with a permit can't work anymore (because they died, got hurt, or retired), their close family member or working partner can get the permit to keep fishing.
  • •The family member or partner must have actually worked on the boat and earned money from fishing to qualify.
  • •If the partner isn't family, they had to prove their working partnership by February 1, 1984, or when the permit was first issued.
  • •This rule doesn’t apply to fishing for herring roe in California.

Example

A father and son have been fishing together for years. The father holds the fishing permit, but he gets seriously injured and can’t work anymore.

The son can apply to get the permit because he’s family and has worked on the boat, earning money from fishing trips. This way, he can keep fishing and supporting himself.

AI-generated — May contain errors. Not legal advice. Always verify source.

Official Source
View on CA.gov

§ 8102 Fishery Permit Partnership Rights

(a) The Legislature finds and declares that, in some limited entry fisheries, two or more partners may be operating with one of the partners holding the permit to participate in the fishery. The Legislature further finds and declares that undocumented, de facto, family partnerships are a longstanding custom in these fisheries. The Legislature further finds and declares that great hardship results when the permittee partner is no longer able to continue working and leaves the other partner without a permit to continue participating in the fishery. (b) In any limited entry fishery in which permits are allocated to participants in the fishery, and where the death, incapacity, or retirement of a permittee from that fishery would deprive a working partner of the permittee of the ability to continue to derive a livelihood from that fishery, a permit shall be issued, upon application, to one remaining partner. (c) A working partner for the purposes of this section shall be a spouse, child (including an adopted child), or sibling of the permittee, whose investment or equity need not be proven by documentation, or a person who can prove an investment or equity in the vessel or gear used in the fishery, and who would otherwise have been eligible for a permit and did not obtain one because he or she was working with or was a partner with the permittee. (d) The working partner shall also provide substantial evidence of an actual physical working participation aboard the vessel supported by the submission of documents filed with the Franchise Tax Board and supported by trip settlement sheets or similar documents that demonstrate earnings from that participation. “Trip settlement sheet” means a document prepared after a vessel has completed a fishing trip which displays the costs incurred, revenues received, and profits paid out. Investment or equity alone does not establish that the person is a working partner. (e) Those existing working partners other than the family relationships specified in subdivision (c) may, not later than February 1, 1984, declare and prove the working partnership in a manner satisfactory to the department and request that the department state the fact of the working partnership upon the permit. Thereafter, a nonfamily working partnership shall be declared, proved, and noted upon any limited entry permit at the first issuance of the permit. (f) This article does not apply to permits to take herring for roe in California. (Amended by Stats. 1988, Ch. 1505, Sec. 2.)

Last verified: January 23, 2026

Key Terms

retirementspouseboatvesselportdeathlegislaturefishing

Related Statutes

  • § 8103 Family Fishery Permit Transfer
  • § 8100 Fishery Participation Limits
  • § 8230 Commercial Salmon Fishing Limits
  • § 8280 Dungeness Crab Fishery Limits
  • § 12006 Fishing License Violation Penalties

References

  • Official text at leginfo.legislature.ca.gov
  • California Legislature. Fish and Game Code. Section 8102.
View Official Source