Supplement 512 for Fish and Fishery Products
ID: 12-3J14-Notice-26-004Type: Special Notice
Overview

Buyer

DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTUREAGRICULTURAL MARKETING SERVICEUSDA AMS 3J14WASHINGTON, DC, 20250, USA

NAICS

Seafood Product Preparation and Packaging (311710)

PSC

MEAT, POULTRY, AND FISH (8905)
Timeline
    Description

    The Department of Agriculture, specifically the Agricultural Marketing Service (AMS), is seeking contractors for the procurement of fish and fishery products as outlined in the Final Supplement 512, effective January 2026. This opportunity requires contractors to be USDA/NOAA SIP Approved Establishments, comply with FDA regulations, and maintain an AMS-approved food defense plan, with specific updates including revised raw material requirements for shrimp and new labeling mandates. The products are essential for federal food assistance programs, emphasizing quality assurance, domestic sourcing, and compliance with stringent inspection protocols. Interested parties should prepare technical proposals detailing product specifications and quality measures, as well as be ready for pre-award assessments and post-award audits, with all associated costs borne by the contractor.

    Point(s) of Contact
    No information provided.
    Files
    Title
    Posted
    Supplement 512 to the AMS Master Solicitation outlines requirements for purchasing fish and fishery products for federal food assistance programs. It specifies that contractors must be USDA/NOAA SIP Approved Establishments, comply with FDA regulations, and have an AMS-approved food defense plan. The document details two inspection types: audit-based grading and onsite finished product grading. Contractors must submit a technical proposal outlining product details, quality assurance, and corrective actions, subject to USDA approval and pre-award onsite capability assessments. Post-award audits will also be conducted. The supplement also covers product specifications for Atlantic Fish Fillet Portions, Pacific Seafood Items (Rockfish, Whiting, Salad Shrimp), and Wild-Caught Frozen Shrimp, emphasizing domestic origin, specific portion weights, packaging, labeling (including allergen statements and USDA/NOAA shields), and checkloading procedures. All audit, monitoring, and certification costs are borne by the contractor.
    Lifecycle
    Title
    Type
    Special Notice
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