Global Food Collaborative

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Fish Notes


Table of Contents - June 30, 2008 Issue
   
FEDERAL
1.      NMFS.  Annual Catch Limits & National Standard 1 Guidelines: NMFS announces three public meetings to solicit comments on the proposed revisions to the National Standard 1 Guidelines
2.      Commerce Announces 2008 Ocean Fishery Council Appointments (6/27)
3.      Even Exxon gets chunk of money (6/26)
4.      Opinion.  Slow justice (6/28)
5.      Exxon plaintiffs updated (6/29)
6.      Murkowski urges Congress to pass legislation to support fishermen hurt by rising fuel prices (6/27)
7.      Entangled: Saving Sea Lions Snared In Trash (6/29)
8.      Southeast charter owners get reprieve on halibut limit (6/29)
9.      Alaska Ranger's owners seek to limit liability in lawsuits (6/29)
10.  Road work damages salmon streams (KFSK Audio) (6/26)
11.  NPFMC.  June Newsletter
STATE
12.  Weak runs of king salmon alarm, puzzle biologists (6/29)
13.  State reaches settlement with owners of grounded boat.  NORDIC VIKING: $27,500 to be paid to state, Gulf Keeper. (6/29)
14.  BOF.  United Cook Inlet Drift Association Petition & Teleconference (6/26)
15.  Alaska Supreme Court.  Wilber v. State, Commercial Fisheries Entry Commission (6/27)
MARKETING
16.  2008 Alaska Salmon Price Report for Jan-Apr (6/13)
MISC
17.  You too can be a virtual Bering Sea crabber.  New video game puts players in the skipper's chair (6/30)

Click on Full Story, below for details on these and more stories.

Fish Notes Calendar


Fish Notes Calendar 2008 - June 30

Jun 26-28Fish Ireland 2008 Expo, Donegal, Ireland

Jun 30Comments due on proposed rule to exempt groundfish catcher/processors and motherships equipped with an operational vessel monitoring system (VMS) transmitter from check-in/checkout requirements 

Continued Calendar in Full Story - Below
Bill Webber, a lifetime resident of Cordova and commercial harvester of Alaska salmon was always curious what happened at the other end of his supply chain.    He wanted to know more about who bought it and what they thought about his product.    He wanted to meet and get to know the chef's and restaurant owners, as well as have them learn more about Alaska, the region, the harvest and the salmon.  He started Gulkana-Seafood Direct in 2002 to do exactly that. 

For 40 years Bill has been part of every seafood quality program and adopted those and many of his own technologies and processes to keep the quality bar as high as possible on his product.   With independent boutique clients throughout the US, Bill's skill as a fisherman and direct marketer is only surpassed by his communications with his buyers on each and every one of their fish.  It is a unique story often proudly displayed in the restaurants featuring the Gulkana Seafoods Direct, genuine Copper River salmon product.

Sustainability Game - Courtesy CSR Europe

The Guide is complemented by the '4Ps for 3Ps' Sustainable Marketing Online Game. The interactive 3D game aims to show marketers that environmental criteria can be a part of consumers' choice of product, and that in view of the vast amount of information that consumers must deal with, these criteria should be clearly communicated. Set in a shopping mall, the game puts the marketer in the shoes of the consumer during a virtual shopping experience.

Get The Code

Do you know the code?   The code isn't actually that secret.  What should definitely not be a secret is the fact that Alaskan Brewing company has established a partnership with the Ocean Foundation and created the Coastal CODE Fund. We encourage each of you to check out the engaging website by a company that is always the consummate good corporate citizen and now stepping up their philanthropic efforts.

CODE stands for Clean Oceans Depend On Everyone and the purpose of the fund is to encourage everyone to keep our oceans healthy.    One year ago, in June 2007, Alaskan Brewing committed 1% of proceeds from its popular Alaskan IPA to the Coastal CODE Fund. This unique initiative combined efforts with ocean-minded organizations, a Portland artist and hundreds of Pacific Northwestern residents to clean up and protect all 7,863 miles of coastline in California, Oregon, and Washington, and the more than 44,000 miles of coastline in Alaska.

How can you participate in the Coastal Code?   Donate, volunteer, buy or serve IPA or purchase the CODE T-Shirts "Making A Difference One Beer At A Time" or follow the code and .......Make Waves.

"Making a difference one Beer at a time”
Make Waves

"By adopting the Coastal CODE, you join thousands of others in committing to do the ocean good. With these simple but significant acts, you can help ensure the Pacific Ocean is protected and healthy. You can help MAKE WAVES." - Coastal Code Website. 

R&J Seafoods Gets Kosher Certified

R&J Seafoods recently completed Kosher certification of their product processing for their Kenai Select™ seafood products.  As a result of this certification, R&J has now created an opportunity for those that specify or prefer Kosher certified products to buy Alaska’s wild seafood direct from a well-established Alaska seafood business.  It also means an additional level of quality oversight due to the rigorous Kosher certification process.    

Kosher food products constitute a large share of foods sold throughout the world and it refers to foods that meet the dietary requirements of Jewish Law.  Certification focuses on two aspects: the source of the ingredients within the food product and the status of the production equipment. This provides all consumers added assurances of the food quality by employing a 3rd party inspection service (Kosher) to certify compliance of these quality standards.  “It seems to mean a great deal to our customers that we keep raising the bar on our food quality standards.   Our customers are now more discerning than ever about where they source their food, what’s in it, how it is processed and by whom”, says Nate Berga, General Manager for R&J Seafoods. “We just decided to reassure them, as well as respond to an audience of consumers that we believed were under served for Alaska wild seafood products.”  R&J offers their Kosher products at http://www.rjseafoods.com or wholesale buyers should contact R&J directly at 1 866 286 6946.

Food Bank of Alaska Seeks Seafood Processor For Creative Solutions

The Food Bank of Alaska is interested in working with a seafood processor to find creative solutions in your business to help hungry Alaskans.  Can you help Food Bank of Alaska and your hungry neighbors? Contact Reg Buchanan at FBA at (907) 272-3663 to discuss donation options.    FBA works efficiently to provide the right food at the right time to the right people. Alaska seafood is the right food for many hungry Alaskans. They have a year-round demand for emergency food assistance, including a high need for fresh protein sources. 



Food Bank of Alaska is dedicated to eliminating hunger in Alaska. Each year, FBA distributes millions of pounds of food across the state to provide our partners with a consistent source of nutritious food for the more than 83,000 hungry Alaskans they serve.

Amy DeBruhl, Development Manager
Food Bank of Alaska, 2121 Spar Avenue
Anchorage, Alaska 99501
T 907.222.3112 direct, 907.272.3663 main, F 907.277.7368

Global Food Alaska - 2009

Who should exhibit at next year's business and conference show?  Those that are the best of the best, adding value to the supply chain. Take a look at the categories here.
Now Open - Renewable Energy Solutions (5 exhibit spaces only) with applications to the food, beverage and bio products supply chain.
Solar - Geothermal - Biomass - Tidal - Wind - Low Impact Hydro

Exhibitor Booth: Early Registration Rate, $500
After 10.01.08 - $750
After 03.01.09 - $1000 Late Registration

Sign up here.

Who's the audience for the show?  1) Commercial buyers such as chefs, restaurateurs, retailers, distributors, institutional buyers and secondary processors of food, beverage and bio-products of all sizes and locations - local, national and international.  2) Others along the supply chain who are potential partners and collaborators on new products, partnerships and supply chain solutions.    (One of the most talked about and promising outcomes of last years participants.)

American Diabetes Association Releases New Statistics

2007 Diabetes Fact Sheet Provides Latest Statistics

Michelle Cassano provided the latest from the American Diabetes Association for our readers.

Today, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) announced the new 2007 Diabetes Fact Sheet, which is jointly produced by the CDC, the National Institutes of Health (NIH), the American Diabetes Association, and other agencies.

As most of you know, the Fact Sheet is the authoritative source of all of the diabetes statistics we use. The new Fact Sheet is an update to the 2005 Fact Sheet and should be used when communicating diabetes-related numbers to our audiences. Among the key new statistics to make note of:

- There are 23.6 million Americans with diabetes, and 57 million Americans with pre-diabetes
- The total prevalence of diabetes increased 13.5% from 2005 to 2007
- Only 24% of diabetes is undiagnosed, down from 30% in 2005 and from 50% ten years ago
- Over 10% of American adults have diabetes
- Nearly a quarter of Americans age 60 and older have diabetes (23.1%)
- Hispanics are 1.8 times more likely and blacks 1.6 times more likely to have diabetes than non-Hispanic whites
- Diabetes is the 7th rather than 6th leading cause of death (having been surpassed by Alzheimer's disease)

Michelle A. Cassano
American Diabetes Association Executive Director  -  Alaska
801 West Fireweed Lane #103
Anchorage, Alaska 99503
1-800-676-4065 X 7083
907-272-1424 

Building An Effective Metal Detection Program

Attention Processors and Manufacturers: Interested in learning more about metal detection best practices?   Sign up for the following webinar scheduled for June 25th at 2pm, EDT.

 “Building an Effective Metal Contamination Detection Program”.  The link below provides information on the webinar content and allows you to register to attend.     Sign up here.

All registered attendees will receive a copy of a new guide “Reduction of Metal Detection – Building an Effective Program”.
Do you know where your tomatoes come from? Likely, you do not.

Tomato recalls impact grocers, wholesalers, produce buyers, local farmers, roadside stands, restaurants and consumers.    One possible solution? The only working item-level traceback system - www.ScoringAg.com.

www.ScoringAg.com provides traceback records in seconds. Here is the proof: Go to www.scoringAg.com , click on Search SSI-EID or www.Traceback.com or www.ScoringRestaurants.com and type in these traceback sticker codes for tomatoes

SSI_D6EE18D44C and/or SSI_2DB8DAECB9

As fast as you type or in this case copy and paste as fast is ScoringAg traceback.

Monterey Bay Aquarium Schedules Oceans Webcast

June 13th, 2008
12:00 Noon, Pacific Standard Time
"What Fish To Savor and What Fish To Avoid"
Who's the sophisticate in the Tux?    By now he is more often seen in the the likely wear of Alaskans living in coastal communities, but we think that this image signifies the different type of new Alaskan he really is.  

At Global Food Collaborative, it has become evident where there are great strengths and where we have gaps to be addressed along the supply chain.  One of those gaps is the sparse number of Alaskans with expertise in food and food processing.    It's a wonder since the food industry is the second largest in the US, behind health-care.  The Northwest Food Processors Association estimates that it is a $17 billion dollar industry in just Idaho, Washington, Oregon and Alaska, alone.

So who is this new Alaskan?  He is a food scientist.  He is a food scientist with a world of practical and academic experiences and now directs an Alaska-based program charged to add value and economic sustainability to our marine resources.  His networks and expertise goes way beyond seafood and we're thrilled to welcome him to Alaska to fill a very much needed gap in food science.    Please welcome Dr. Murat Balaban, Director of the University of Alaska, Fishery Industrial Technology Center, located in Kodiak Alaska.
It was an honor to be invited last month to the opening of Alaska Glacier Refreshments new manufacturing facility located just 25 miles North of Anchorage.    It's not every day that we get to meet such a distinguished, international humanitarian such as Quincy Jones.    It is even more rare for a celebrity such as Mr. Jones to be addressing a group with an obvious passion and knowledge of the relationship between drinking water and good health.

It was also an honor to be part of a grand opening of someone's realization of a dream to produce and market water from Alaska.   While marketing water is not new to Alaska Glacier Refreshments - they do have a brand new bottle watering facility of their own which was the cause for a big celebration.    Congratulations Alaskans Gil and Jason Serrano, your family, partners and investors.  Through your efforts we are further expanding our capacity and knowledge base in our food supply chain system with products that provide a broader and broader range of markets and opportunities for collaboration --- and spreading good health!
Supply chain discussion in Alaska is almost exclusively about transportation options for product import into, transport/distribution throughout and export from Alaska.   Businesses perpetually seek transportation solutions that respond better to their markets and buyers, as well as to their own bottom line.    That is why, we advise - to stay well informed and connected to your transportation partners and communicate consistently about your new business processes, markets and developments to utilize their expertise to really work for you and your business.       Thus, we will revisit our transportation sector in the next few issues to update readers with solutions that may support stronger and better business for your companies.

Panalpina is one such company, with offices and services worldwide, now celebrating 10 years of business in Anchorage.    Who do they serve?   What is their competitive advantage?   What might they offer your business?
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Member News

Welcome New Blogger - Autum Shumacher

Welcome Autum as our newest blogger.
Autum is an accomplished chef who has just returned to her home in Alaska.   Check out her blog on our home page.















» Read More

Crab Connoisseur Tour







Crab Connoisseur Tour
Taking Reservations
October 24-26th, 2008
Dutch Harbor, Alaska

Designed For Chefs and Commercial Buyers of Premium, Sustainable Crab seeking on-site experience of supply chain. Phone#: 888-454-2722 or email » Read More

Wild Alaska Berries and Rhubarb Wanted!

We have had a number of inquiries from commercial buyers for a consistent supply of Alaska wild berries and Alaska rhubarb.  If you are able to source and supply wild Alaska berries or rhubarb, please contact GFC at 907.563.0154 or email us here.  Special emphasis on blueberries, but open to others. 
» Read More

Taste Of Alaska Offers Up "Always Fabulous" Recipes






It's healthy, easy and within budget.


EXTRA HEALTHY CHILI
ISLAND DELIGHT
ON THE GRILLE (BEST BURGERS EVER!)
PARTY BALLS (LITTLE MEATBALLS)
QUESADILLAS
SALMON BREAKFAST SKILLET
SALMON SAUSAGE CHILI
SALMON SAUSAGE STIR FRY
SOME MORE BREAKFAST IDEAS
TACOS OR NACHOS DIP

Eagle Rock's Taste of Alaska produces a wild Alaska salmon blend with only organic ingredients.  The product is available for both food service applications and in retail packages.
» Read More

Seeking Operations Manager for New Interior Alaska Slaughterhouse

Seeking Operations Manager of small, new slaughterhouse located in interior Alaska (Fairbanks area).   Experience with management of food processing and compliance with USDA, DEC, HACCP, FSIS, SSOP  and all other federal and state regulations. Perform all management functions of planning, controlling, organizing, staffing and evaluation.  Reports to a private board of directors.  Those qualified/interested may contact Mark Sanders at Alaska Electrical Rebuilders (907-451-8071).
» Read More

Visiting Homer This Summer?
















Eat Responsibly!











Sourdough Express
Homer, Alaska » Read More

Do You Shop At FishEx Market?

Product selections change regularly, so we suggest bookmarking their page.  Click on logo and you're there!









» Read More

Matanuska Creamery Opening - May 30, 2008

Former State Representative, Jeanette James joined Robin for the first taste of Matanuska Creamery's FRESH milk.    You can take your own taste test as the milk is available at Fred Meyer and will be available at Target stores when they open in October.








































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Help Wanted

A 2008 survey of members resulted in the following open request. When asked how a sustainable food, beverage and bio products sector could best be supported, an overwhelming need was identified in the quality assurance/production areas.  Members are seeking out an individual to work on a consultancy or job sharing basis with local manufacturers - to be located in Alaska's south-central region with small and medium, hands-on food production experience and current knowledge of regulation and compliance in food, beverage an related processing.    Interested?   Contact GFC.
» Read More

Food Grade Pipe For Sale

Arctic Paws has about 8000 feet of sanitary stainless food grade pipe and fitting.  Great for beer making, water, dairy etc.
 
Prices are:
1 inch to 1.5” pipe   $2.50 per foot
2 inch to 2.5 inch     $5.00 per foot
3 inch to 4 inch       $8.00 per foot
Elbows, y pipe, t-pipe any size are 8.00 per piece
Connecting clamps-  5.00 each
These prices are over 50% less than what is would cost to purchase this pipe and fittings.
Email For More info: Brett
Call: (907) 348-8811 » Read More

Are You Alaskan Enough?

Are You Alaskan Enough?  Sure you are. Jump on the website and answer why you are Alaskan enough and be
eligible for the Alaskan Amber Fishing Adventure of A Lifetime.   

Deadline - August 1, 2008
» Read More

Red Dog Saloon Features Wild Frontier Pizza



Can you imagine blending the wild, natural seafood of Alaska with the most popular food item in the world - Pizza?   Yes, Wild Frontier Foods, of Hoonah, Alaska is now well underway to distributing their famous Halibut Pizza at featured locations in Juneau, Alaska.    If you're in the area - please stop in the famous Red Dog Saloon and ask for some Wild Frontier Pizza and an Alaskan Amber and then let us know what you think!   If that isn't an all Alaskan experience - what is?

» Read More

Summer Fit and Healthy - NEW ITEM










A new item from Ed
's Kasilof Seafoods. 
Ed's Yukon Burgers are made from choice cut ground wild salmon, they are lightly seasoned & frozen for convenience. From freezer to fryer! Two, quarter pound patties per package. - Yukon Burgers are a Low fat, heart healthy alternative to beef patties. » Read More

Alaska Glacier Refreshments Debut's It's New Water Bottling Plant


Jason and Gil Serrano At Opening Of Alaska Glacier Refreshments.  Special Guests Included Their Board Of Directors and Investors, included world famous, artist and business executive Quincy Jones.

» Read More

Alaskan Heat Goes To The Movies



Alaskan Heat will be featured in an upcoming Disney movie, "The Proposal".    Alaskan Heat is a salsa manufactured and marketed throughout Alaska.  More here.  » Read More
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