ANNAPOLIS, MD – March 2, 2020 – Marylandโs Best Seafood, a marketing program within the Maryland Department of Agriculture, today released a survey measuring the economic impact of the stateโs crab industry and the importance of the federal H-2B temporary visa program. Secretary Joe Bartenfelder joined the Chesapeake Bay Seafood Industry Association at an event on Hoopers Island to discuss the results of the survey and the critical role the seafood industry plays in many Maryland communities.
โBlue crabs are an integral part of our stateโs heritage and our economy,โ said Secretary Bartenfelder. โThe world-class crabmeat produced by Maryland processors relies heavily on the availability of seasonal labor via the H-2B visa program. This survey reinforces what we have learned in previous years: a lack of reliable access to H-2B workers poses a major threat to the future of this iconic industry.โ
Marylandโs Best Seafood contracted Market Solutions, LLC, to survey the stateโs eight largest crab processors to determine the industryโs economic impact and how it is affected by the availability of H-2B workers. All eight crab processors surveyed agreed that the current lottery system for awarding temporary visa requests creates uncertainty that hurts their businesses, and that limiting the number of available H-2B visas hurts Marylandโs seafood industry as a whole.
Seven of the eight crab companies indicated that they would not open for the 2020 crab season without adequate H-2B workers. The shuttering of these processors would severely impact the supply of โTrue Blueโ Maryland crabmeat, as well as the livelihoods of American workers who rely on the industry for employment, including commercial watermen, restaurants, and local businesses. Without these seasonal workers, the survey shows that income for watermen would drop by $12.5 million; processors would lose $37-$49 million in sales; Maryland would lose 914-1,367 jobs; and the overall hit to the stateโs economy could be $100-$150 million.
In 2019, the survey participants bought more than 14 million pounds of crabs from 416 local watermen at a value of $19 million, and directly employed 123 American workers. These businesses supplied crabmeat to 243 restaurants, 94 food service distributors, 182 retailers, and 2,300 consumers directly, for a combined $36.7 million in total sales.
The full report, โImpacts of the H-2B Visa Program for Seasonal Workers on Marylandโs Seafood Industry and Economy,โ is available on the departmentโs website.
โWithout these temporary workers, and without an end to the arbitrary lottery system, local seafood processors will be unable to open for business or be forced to significantly reduce their operations,โ said Governor Larry Hogan in a January 21 letter to federal officials requesting an increase in H-2B visas in support of the industry. โAnother year of hardship could permanently damage Marylandโs sustainable seafood industry.โ
The H-2B visa program is capped at 66,000 visas per year, though the U.S. Department of Homeland Security is authorized to release up to 64,716 additional visas at the secretaryโs discretion.
After a shortage of H-2B visas in 2018, Marylandโs Best Seafood partnered with Maryland Public Television to produce โMaryland Crabs: Tradition & Taste.โย
