The National
Restaurant Association has asked the governors in five Gulf States to
support their local restaurants in a quest to maintain uncompromised,
year-round access to seafood fished in the waters of the Gulf of Mexico.
In a letter sent today to Governors Bobby Jindal of
Louisiana, Rick Scott of Florida, Robert Bentley of Alabama, Phil Bryant of
Mississippi and Rick Perry of Texas, the NRA asked the Governors to “stand with
us and support the commercial fishing sector that supplies restaurants in your
state[s] and throughout the country.”
“In recent months, the Gulf of Mexico Fisheries Council
has proposed changing the red snapper allocation in the Gulf to reduce the
share that currently goes to commercial fisherman,” said Scott DeFife,
Executive Vice President, Policy and Government Affairs, NRA. “We strongly oppose these efforts. If successful, these proposed
changes could seriously harm the commercial fishing industry and the ability of
restaurants to source red snapper from the Gulf. Ultimately these changes could
result in shortages and lead to significant price hikes or an inability to
fulfill our customers’ desires for locally caught seafood.”
DeFife noted that the Association supports existing catch
share allocations for red snapper in the Gulf. The ability to continue to
source the fresh, local seafood of the area is essential to the growth of the
affected states’ economies and their various foodservice businesses.
“We are committed to helping ensure that this seafood is
not only fished sustainably so its population continues to grow, but that the
voices of small businesses here, their employees and customers, also are
heard,” DeFife added.
In April, the NRA
and its Gulf State partners joined Share the Gulf, a coalition of chefs,
restaurateurs, restaurant associations, seafood suppliers, fishermen, consumers
and conservationists, seeking to protect their access to fish in the Gulf
States. The initiative, launched in
2013, aims to ensure the region’s restaurants and grocery businesses maintain
an equitable share of the Gulf States’ red snapper catch.
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