(Bay City News) A new state law banning the possession or sale of shark fins takes effect today, although local Chinese neighborhood groups are continuing to fight the legislation in federal court.

AB 376, authored by Assemblymen Paul Fong, D-Cupertino, and Jared Huffman, D-San Rafael, went partially into effect in January, but contained exemptions allowing the sale of previously obtained shark fins until the end of June.
Fong said in a statement that the legislation was authored “in response to clear scientific evidence that the global sale of shark fins posed a direct and immediate threat to the health of the ocean.”
He said, “The high value of the fins and the low value of the rest of the shark drive this brutal practice of finning, where sharks are finned and thrown back into the ocean to slowly bleed out and die.” Fong has noted that shark fins sell for up to $600 per pound versus no more than $100 for the rest of the shark and that the law does not ban the possession and sale of a full shark carcass with the fin still attached.
However, a lawsuit filed in U.S. District Court last July by the San Francisco-based Chinatown Neighborhood Association and the Burlingame-based Asian Americans for Political Advancement says the legislation discriminates against Chinese Americans.