May 12, 2024 โ Restaurants and grocery stores will have to label their seafood as imported or domestic, after Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey signed a bill requiring it into law Friday.
โThis is as bad as itโs ever been. We need help,โ Kerry Mitchell, secretary of the Alabama Commercial Fishermen Association, a newly formed nonprofit advocating for fishermen in the area. โIโm happy that the government is talking about itโฆlegislators are finally helping us.โ
HB66, sponsored by State Rep. Chip Brown (R-Hollingerโs Island), requires food service establishments, like restaurants, grocery stores and delis, to label seafood as โimported,โ or note the productโs country of origin. Domestic seafood can be labeled with the state of origin, U.S.A. or United States of America.
In addition, the law requires food service establishments to distinguish between โwild fishโ and โfarm-raised fish,โ but only for fish and shrimp. These labels must be displayed conspicuously, for example on the product itself, attached to a menu or displayed on a sign. Establishments that violate these rules will be fined after the first offense.
The goal of the bill is to bring awareness to consumers about the origin of their seafood and provide relief to Alabamaโs fisherman, who have been struggling with low dock prices of shrimp due to the influx of imports. Currently, foreign shrimp accounts for 94% of the U.S. market, Caine OโRear, communications director for Mobile Baykeeper, said.
Last year, the Bayou La Batre City Councilโthe epicenter of Alabamaโs seafood industryโdeclared a disaster, requesting help from Ivey for the seafood industry. โShrimp dumping,โ where foreign, typically farm-raised shrimp floods the market, causing dock prices to drop had driven the industry to the point of near-collapse.
โIโve never seen shrimp prices this low, ever,โ Amanda Schjott, a resident of the area whose husband has worked in shrimping since he was a teenager, told the Mobile Press-Register in August. โItโs a dying industry, and theyโre killing it even faster.โ
Brown says that the hope is that demand for domestic seafood, and particularly Alabama seafood, will increase as a result. Consumers will be more aware of the kind of seafood theyโre getting, he says, and in turn, theyโll ask for the local kind.