R.I. Seas a Possible Growth Industry
By TIM FAULKNER/ecoRI News staff
Making Rhode Island 
Commissioned by the General Assembly in June, the group of fishermen, researchers and seafood buyers is following the approach used by the local food movement. In about three years, collaboratives such as Rhody Fresh milk and innovative distributors like Farm Fresh Rhode Island have spurred dramatic growth in the number of farms, farmers' markets and overall access to quality local produce, meats and dairy.
The local seafood industry wants Rhode Islanders to know that eating Ocean  State 
"That's why we are here," said Derek Wagner, owner of Nick's On Broadway restaurant, "to get (consumers) to want it and demand it at their local restaurants and their local stores."
Much like the sustainable agriculture movement, the collaborative wants to keep more of its locally produced product from being sent across the country or around the world.
John DelGado, fish buyer for Dave's Marketplace, said he sees more Rhode  Island  seafood sold in Philadelphia , New York  and Boston 
"For years (Rhode Island 
DelGado and several fishermen emphasized that local seafood, such as Point Judith squid, is often superior to the fish shipped to Rhode Island 
Ken Ayars, head of the state's agriculture programs, assured the fishermen that the collaborative is simply a public-relations campaign. "This is not about catch limits, this is not about regulations. It's about marketing," he said.
Ann Cook, of the boat-to-plate program The Local Catch, explained that in one year her business has had success selling fresh-caught flounder, blackfish, scup and little necks at farmers' markets and directly from the boat in Narragansett to restaurants and consumers. "The idea is to make the whole dining experience move beyond the plate," she said.
Fishermen can remove the middlemen and earn a premium for their catch if it's based on quality, not quantity, she said. "It's making the seafood about the experience."
To create that experience members of the collaborative will design a marketing and public-education plan to report to Gov. Lincoln Chafee and the General Assembly by April 30.


 
