Operations

Alabama eyes source-disclosure requirements for seafood

Under a bill introduced this week, restaurants would be required to disclose the countries of origin for all seafood that's sold, along with whether it was wild-caught or farmed.
Alabama has a robust seafood industry. | Photo: Shutterstock

Restaurants in Alabama would be required to reveal the origin of most seafoods on their menu under a bill heading for consideration by the state House of Representatives.

The measure would also require all foodservice establishments to indicate whether the fin or shellfish was farm-raised or wild-caught.

The country where the fish originated would have to be disclosed via either menus or placards on the wall. The same channels would be used for differentiating between farm-raised and wild-caught proteins.

The information would also be required on any advertisement of a restaurant's seafood options.

The bill is intended to protect the state’s vibrant seafood industry from foreign competition. Consumers would know when they were supporting local fishermen and when their money was going toward suppliers from outside the United States.

Alabama’s seafood business generated $560 million in sales and employed 11,476 people in 2020, according to the Mississippi-Alabama Sea Grant Consortium, a state and federal partnership aimed at protecting domestic commercial fishing.

Restaurants that failed to heed the requirement would be subject to fines that have yet to be determined.

Products that contain processed seafood, such as a heat-and-serve crab dip, are exempted, as are seafoods served in hospitals.

The bill, HB66, was introduced on Tuesday. It is scheduled for an initial reading to the House on Feb. 6.

Members help make our journalism possible. Become a Restaurant Business member today and unlock exclusive benefits, including unlimited access to all of our content. Sign up here.

Multimedia

Exclusive Content

Financing

The Red Lobster bankruptcy is a seminal moment for the restaurant business

The Bottom Line: The seafood chain’s bankruptcy declaration was not surprising after months of closures and Endless Shrimp recriminations. But that doesn’t make it any less notable.

Workforce

The White House has ideas about how all that AI on the Show floor should be used

Reality Check: President Biden issued a set of guidelines Thursday for protecting workers from the digital onslaught.

Financing

How Popeyes changed the chicken business

How did a once-struggling, regional bone-in chicken chain overtake KFC, the formerly dominant player in the U.S. market? With a fixation on sandwiches and many more new restaurants.

Trending

More from our partners