Texas Shrimp Association ‘Thrilled’ by USDA’s New Office of Seafood

RFD News correspondent Frank McCaffrey spoke with the Texas Shrimp Association at the Port of Brownsville about the future of the USDA’s new Office of Seafood.

BROWNSVILLE, TEXAS (RFD-TV) The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) recently announced the creation of a new Office of Seafood, aimed at helping seafood producers better access agency programs. The USDA says the office will focus on customer service and make it easier for seafood cultivators, producers, and processors to navigate available resources.

RFD News correspondent Frank McCaffrey spoke with the Texas Shrimp Association at the Port of Brownsville about what the change could mean. Executive Director Maria Jaross says the group is thrilled for the future resources that will become available to them through this expansion.

“Thrilled. We are so excited. This is a long time coming,” Jaross tells RFD News. “We’ve been asking for this for a long time to have parity with farmers and ranchers and have access to the many programs offered by the USDA.”

Jaross says the seafood industry has historically been regulated under a different system, focused more on fisheries management.

“The seafood industry is governed by the Magnuson-Stevens Act, which mainly covers fisheries, stocks, making sure that everybody is fishing sustainably and that the fish stocks are not diminished,” she explains.

Jaross says the hope is that this new office will help open the door to USDA programs, such as loans and price supports, given low seafood prices and high fuel costs.

“Just open the doors and let us know how to apply for those programs that are going to be offered through the USDA,” she says. “Guaranteed loan programs, price supports, everything that the USDA offers to farmers and ranchers,” Jaross continued, “We would like to see offered to fishermen and shrimpers in particular.”

The Texas Shrimp Association says its goal is to be more fully included in conversations about agriculture moving forward.

Frank McCaffrey reporting for RFD News.

RFD NEWS Correspondent Frank McCaffrey covers news from Texas, in the US-Mexico border region. He has provided in-depth coverage of immigration, the 2021 Texas freeze, the arrival of the New World screwworm, and Mexico’s water debt owed under a 1944 treaty.

LATEST STORIES BY THIS AUTHOR:

Rob and Emily Sharkey discuss new episodes, finding guests and what keeps the show going.
Riders will retrace more than 1,900 miles of the historic Pony Express route.
The conference helps members develop leadership skills while creating plans to serve their communities.
OOIDA’s Lewie Pugh discusses a new bipartisan surface transportation bill, industry efforts to address regulatory concerns, investments in truck parking and freight infrastructure, and the outlook for transportation policy.
The Washington State Tree Fruit Association says crop quality looks promising despite ongoing drought conditions.
New Fed surveys show farmland values remain historically high, though some Upper Midwest markets are beginning to soften.
Agriculture Shows
From the rapid technological advances in the business of farming to the policy that helps shape the industry, growers get unparalleled perspective from these guys. Max Armstrong, Mike Pearson and Greg Soulje: the names producers have long known and trusted for agriculture news, weather, and commentary.
Watch Rural Evening News on RFD Network to catch up on that day’s news surrounding agriculture and markets from across the world.
Every day on RFD Network, “Market Day Report” delivers LIVE coverage of agribusiness news, weather, and commodity market information from across the world. Our commodity markets coverage is updated every half hour to bringyou the latest agriculture news.
Farm Monitor shines a light on Southeastern agriculture and is the only weekly news and information program dedicated to Georgia’s largest and most important industry: agriculture.