CA Sea Grant informs new law to permit Fishermen’s Markets

October 09, 2015
Media Contact— / dseiler@ucsd.edu / (858) 246-1661

California Governor Jerry Brown has signed new legislation to streamline the permitting and operation of direct, local fishermen’s markets in California. Dubbed the “Pacific to Plate” bill and sponsored by Speaker Toni Atkins (D-San Diego), AB 226 allows fishermen’s markets to operate as food facilities, vendors to clean their fish for direct sale, and multiple fishermen to organize a market under a single permit.

It’s a victory that has been a long time coming for local San Diego fishermen like Zack Roach, Jr. and Peter Halmay, part of a dwindling community of family-run fishing businesses. Prior to 2014, direct sales to consumers were limited to boats and a few farmers’ markets, which could be difficult to transport fresh catch to. Halmay and Roach sold to a few dozen savvy customers each weekend from Roach’s family boat. They had looked before into expanding their operation onto land, but the means to legally permit a fishermen’s market in California simply wasn’t there.

Their situation caught the attention of Theresa Sinicrope Talley, an Extension scientist with California Sea Grant and East Coast transplant with fond memories of buying clams and lobster on the waterfront. Charged by her position to put science to work for Californians, Talley had first met Halmay when she asked for an introduction to San Diego’s harbor and fishing community. Now, she saw an opportunity to help.

Demand for local seafood on the rise

“One hold up in the launching of a fishermen’s market stemmed from a general lack of confidence in whether a it could succeed,” Talley said. “So we decided to look at: What’s the supply? What’s the demand?”

During the fall and winter of 2013, Talley and her co-investigator Adina Batinzky of University of San Diego conducted surveys for a market feasibility study. The project brought together fishermen, nutritionists, local regulators, scientists, chefs and community members to discuss and learn about San Diego’s fisheries. Their results demonstrated a widespread demand for local seafood, and enough supply to keep customers happy.

Having the hard numbers gave the push for a fishermen’s market new momentum. “It was a very, very helpful study,” Halmay said. “It gave us credibility for the ideas we had… Whenever we had to appear in front of a commission or anything, I asked Theresa to present her study.”

Halmay credits the researchers for working closely with fishermen who know the ins and outs of their business and asking the right questions. “Theresa did not do her work in the ivory tower, she came down to the docks where she could meet with fishermen formally and informally.”

Launching the market

While public outreach from the study was creating a groundswell of interest in launching a fishermen’s market, demand alone couldn’t create a permit process where none existed. When local seafood journalist Clare Leschin-Hoar covered the roadblock in Voice of San Diego, San Diego County Supervisor Greg Cox took notice.

“That was the big turnaround,” Talley said. “It only took a couple weeks for Supervisor Cox and Bob Nelson [Chairman of the Unified Port of San Diego] to get a temporary permit approved.”

The Tuna Harbor Dockside Market opened on August 2, 2014, drawing more than 1300 customers in five hours. In its first months, the market averaged an impressive 350 customers and 1.1 tons of seafood sold each week, generating about $15,000 in direct sales. Roach’s sales of rock crab have tripled from when he sold off the boat, and the diversity of seafood available to buyers has grown. Halmay said the market is a boon for keeping San Diego’s historic fishing culture alive.

“The market allows fisherman to be viewed by the community as people who exist here,” Halmay said. Although the majority of San Diego’s local catch will continue to be sold to seafood distributors, the market allows a personal connection between the fishermen and their customers that would otherwise be lost. In addition to discussing taste and prices, Halmay says seafood eaters can now also ask the fisherman directly – “what are you doing to ensure the sustainability of this product?”

San Diego creates new model for California

As the market gained popularity, the San Diego County Board of Supervisors followed up to find a solution for long-term permitting. They tasked the County Department of Health with developing a proposal to make a permanent change to California’s regulation of fishing markets.

Staff at the Department of Health identified and drafted the regulatory changes needed with support from Supervisor Cox, Assembly Speaker Toni Atkins, and a stakeholder workgroup including fishermen, California Sea Grant and state and local agency representatives. Their results became Assembly Bill 226, which was introduced by Atkins in February 2015 and received unanimous support in the California Assembly and Senate. It was a win-win for both California’s thriving local food movement and small business owners.

“As we’ve seen by the massive growth of farmers markets across the state, allowing direct sales of produce benefits farmers and consumers,” said Speaker Atkins in a press release. “These small-business owners and coastal communities throughout California deserve these same opportunities. Pacific to Plate does this by removing unnecessary hurdles in state law.”

Halmay expects the new permits will lead to more fishermen transferring their direct sales from small, off-boat operations to bustling markets in California’s coastal communities. “I see one in Ventura, Santa Barbara, Half Moon Bay – all of them have some form of market. All of [these fishermen] will be able to look at this legislation and say, ‘Hey, we exist.’”

 

 


Seen in the Press

08/03/15 "Pacific to Plate" Bill Set to Boost Coastal Fish MarketsSan Diego 6
04/17/15 SD’s Dockside Market Could Become a Statewide ModelVoice of San Diego
01/20/15 Assembly Speaker Atkins Wants Fish Markets To Run SwimminglyKPBS
01/17/15 Atkins’ ‘Pacific to Plate’ Bill Would Help Fish MarketsTimes of San Diego
08/02/14 Hundreds Turn Out for Grand Opening of Seaside Fish Market​Times of San Diego
07/16/14 Local Fishermen Land the Big One: a Dockside Market, Voice of San Diego
06/18/14 What’s Stopping Fishermen from Tackling the Market on Dry LandVoice of San Diego
05/27/14 San Diegans bait hook for seafood market, JMS Reports
09/09/13 Fishermen, Researchers Gather String On Dockside Fish Market IdeaKPBS


Resources

About California Sea Grant

NOAA’s California Sea Grant College Program funds marine research, education and outreach throughout California. Headquartered at Scripps Institution of Oceanography at the University of California San Diego, California Sea Grant is one of 34 Sea Grant programs in the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), U.S. Department of Commerce.