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Industry Topics
- Asset Protection
- Biotechnology
- Crisis Management
- Cybersecurity
- Food Assistance Programs
- Food Price Inflation
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- Frozen Foods
- Health & Well-being
- Independent Operator
- Labeling
- Labor & Employment
- Nonfoods
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- Payments
- Pharmacy
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- Sustainability
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- Workforce & Talent
- Research & Insights
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- Food Safety
- Government Affairs
- Get Involved
Priority Issues
Federal Priority Issues
Our priority is to support policies that keep inflation in check for American consumers. A number of factors contribute to inflation and food prices, including weather events, animal diseases, and transportation limitations. The food industry is among the most competitive sectors in our economy. Grocers negotiate prices with vendors on every product they sell and every service they use and operate on very slim profit margins – about 12% annually on average (1.6% in 2023). Grocers are doing everything possible to avoid passing inflationary costs onto shoppers. Competition in the grocery sector is fierce, and the battle for market share helps keep prices down for shoppers.
Our priority is to guarantee that food retailers remain the most efficient partners in delivering federal feeding assistance nationwide – ensuring that no American goes hungry when falling on difficult times and communities continue to benefit from the programs' local economic impact. FMI and its members are committed to supporting and strengthening these programs, including SNAP, WIC, School Meals and Sun Bucks, which rely on grocery stores and food suppliers as key partners in food security for millions of Americans. We strongly support the passage of a bipartisan farm bill in 2025 to provide long-term stability and certainty for families, farmers, and the food industry at large. We are committed to collaborating with Congress to enhance program effectiveness, reduce inefficiencies, and maintain bipartisan support for these vital initiatives.
Our priority is to deliver American consumers the safest, most transparent food system in the world, predicated on sound science and risk-focused collaboration rather than costly and unfocused regulations that drive up costs without improving food safety. Food safety is a top priority of our industry, and we are committed to continuous improvements to prevent foodborne illness. However, FDA’s food traceability rule (FSMA 204) presents significant challenges due to its far-reaching scope, complexity, and aggressive compliance timeline. Without targeted reforms, these regulations will add tremendous costs across the food supply chain without delivering commensurate food safety benefits. FMI supports legislative and regulatory action to implement more practical, effective, and science-based solutions and extend the current compliance date.
Our priority is to support policies that ensure we have the workforce, flexibility, and efficiency needed to drive economic growth. The food industry provides a wide range of full-time, part-time, seasonal, and flexible workforce opportunities in a diverse variety of careers and serves as an essential employer in every community around the country. Service-related industries continue to face headwinds in recruiting and retaining workforce talent and complying with burdensome and complex regulations. Federal legislation and regulations should foster flexibility and promote a diversity of solutions to address industry workforce and operation needs.
Our priority is to ensure transparency, clarity and consistent science to provide consumers with accurate information and confidence in the safety of the foods they consume. The food industry empowers Americans to make informed dietary decisions by providing clear labeling, educational tools, and reliable resources. Public policies governing food and consumer goods should be grounded in science, ensuring safety, health, and hygiene without limiting consumer choice. Efforts to restrict access to legally approved ingredients and products must be carefully weighed against scientific evidence and consumer autonomy.
Our priority is to ensure that businesses can operate in an environment devoid of organized crime and fraud and that builds and enhances the civility of communities. The threat environment facing the food industry has evolved into a complex tapestry of domestic and transnational challenges including: the safety and security of customers, employees and property; civil unrest; drug activity in and around stores; organized retail crime and theft, shoplifting and product theft in-transit to stores and distribution centers; panhandling; natural or human-made disasters; payments skimming and shimming; and social engineering and fraud to falsify product ordering. To combat the growing threats, Congress should prioritize strengthening public safety and anti-money laundering statutes, while increasing cross-agency and jurisdictional investigations and prosecutions.
Our priority is for Congress to inject competition into the broken credit card marketplace that drives up consumer prices. Runaway credit card swipe fees continue to negatively impact grocery customers and merchants. The bipartisan Credit Card Competition Act mitigates the hidden swipe fees levied on grocers and our customers through market-based competition and prohibits China Union Pay and other foreign-owned government entities from entering the U.S. credit card market. Grocers also remain vigilant in protecting and defending federal debit swipe fee reforms enacted over a decade ago to ensure a viable debit system for customers and merchants.
Our priority is to ensure a competitive marketplace where pharmacies and pharmacists remain accessible to consumers nationwide by addressing the urgent need for pharmacy benefit manager (PBM) reform. PBMs use anti-competitive tactics that inflate drug prices, force pharmacy closures, and restrict patient choice. Comprehensive PBM reform is essential to securing fair pharmacy reimbursement, preventing drug price manipulation, and protecting access to essential medications. On behalf of our retail members that operate roughly 12,000 supermarket pharmacies nationwide, FMI urges Congress to advance the bipartisan PBM reforms that were included in the December 2024 negotiated government funding package. These reforms, which have broad public support, would ensure fair pharmacy reimbursement, address problematic PBM contract terms and violations, prohibit spread pricing, de-link drug prices from PBM revenues, and increase transparency.
Our priority is to support policies that reduce food waste and maximize resources. Estimates suggest that as much as 40% of food produced in the United States is wasted – ending up in landfills rather than feeding families. This waste imposes significant financial, economic, and societal costs and puts unneeded strains on the food and agriculture supply chain. Collaborative, market-based solutions that promote food donation and alternative destinations, like food to energy, can create a more stable and cost-efficient food system that maximizes efficiency and reduces cost.
Our priorities include ensuring that we can source quality food products and ingredients that guarantee year-round availability at competitive price points for American consumers and that local communities, domestic supply chains and manufacturing operations are not adversely impacted by tariffs. The food industry is at the direct intersection of our nation’s robust domestic manufacturing system and a global trading environment rooted in competition. Over the decades, international food sourcing has evolved in response to consumer demands for a more diverse offering, available throughout an entire calendar year. For example, the array of fresh produce available year-round in grocery stores today is more plentiful thanks to international sourcing. The food industry has been at the heart of global trading for centuries, making available products and commodities to Americans that cannot be readily grown or produced domestically like bananas, coffee, cocoa, spices, and cinnamon.
Federal Priority Issues
- Economy: Inflation/Food Prices
- Food Assistance Programs
- Food Safety: Traceability
- Labor: Workforce Supply and Regulatory Enforcement
- Nutrition & Ingredients Related Policies
- Organized Retail Crimes, Fraud & Threats
- Payments: Swipe Fee Reform
- Pharmacy: PBM Reform
- Sustainability: Food Waste
- Tax Reform
- Trade: Tariffs
State Affairs Priority Issues
Latest Government Relations News
FMI Condemns Federal Regulatory Action on State Swipe Fee Reform
FMI Endorses Bipartisan Legislation to Permanently Prohibit Additional SNAP Transaction Fees on Retailers
FMI Applauds Senate Committee for Hearing on Visa-Mastercard Credit Card Duopoly
Government Relations Videos
FMI Government Relations Blogs
If They are Secure Enough for the Senate Credit Union, What’s the Worry?
We welcome you to join us for the following events.
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Conference
2026 Legal, Regulatory and Compliance Conference
- Sunday, July 19 - Tuesday, July 21, 2026
- | Portland, ME
The FMI Legal Conference is designed for the legal leadership of the retail and wholesale food industries, including general counsel, corporate counsel and invited retained counsel, as well as other corporate executives involved with legal issues. -Food Safety and Supplier Verification -Trends in Food Labeling and Litigation -Crisis Management CLE Credits will be awarded for this conference, pending state approval. -
Conference
FMI State Issues Retreat 2026
- Wednesday, December 2 (12am) - Friday, December 4, 2026 (12pm US/Eastern)
- | Isle of Palms, SC
The FMI State Issues Retreat is an annual event that brings together food retail grocery associations and food and grocery company government relations professionals from each state to discuss state and local legislative and regulatory issues. -
Conference
2027 Midwinter Executive Conference
- Wednesday, January 20 - Saturday, January 23, 2027
- | Chula Vista (San Diego), CA
The annual FMI Midwinter Executive Conference is our signature, invitation-only gathering that attracts more than 1,700 food industry executives spanning all facets of the marketplace. It is a prestigious member-only event offering an opportunity for a diverse group of top industry leaders to converge and gain insights relevant to the success of their businesses, including retailers, wholesalers, independent operators, suppliers, manufacturers and solution providers. Depending on their level of membership, suppliers qualify for at least two, and up to an unlimited number of invitations. -
Conference
2027 Financial Executive and Internal Auditing Conference
- Sunday, May 16 - Tuesday, May 18, 2027
- | Providence, RI
The Financial Executive and Internal Audit Conference is design and developed by your peers. This year's conference promises to deliver a robust education and networking program that meets your professional and educational needs. -
Conference
2028 Midwinter Executive Conference
- Tuesday, February 1 - Friday, February 4, 2028
- | Orlando, FL
The annual FMI Midwinter Executive Conference is our signature, invitation-only gathering that attracts more than 1,700 food industry executives spanning all facets of the marketplace. It is a prestigious member-only event offering an opportunity for a diverse group of top industry leaders to converge and gain insights relevant to the success of their businesses, including retailers, wholesalers, independent operators, suppliers, manufacturers and solution providers. Depending on their level of membership, suppliers qualify for at least two, and up to an unlimited number of invitations.

Leadership
The FMI Government Relations Committee reviews, formulates and recommends to the Public Affairs Committee the programs and positions necessary to represent the interests of grocery retailers and wholesalers before the federal and state governments. The Committee recommends priorities and directions for the maximum utilization of FMI's resources and assists in influencing and implementing government relations programs at the national and state levels.
Learn More Committee Portal
Mega Menu
Industry Topics address your specific area of expertise with resources, reports, events and more.
Our Research covers consumer behavior and retail operation benchmarks so you can make informed business decisions.
Events and Education including online and in-person help you advance your food retail career.
Food Safety training, resources and guidance that help you create a company food safety culture.
Government Affairs work — federal and state — on the latest food industry policy, regulatory and legislative issues.
Get Involved. From industry awards to newsletters and committees, these resources help you take advantage of your membership.
Best practices, guidance documents, infographics, signage and more for the food industry on the COVID-19 pandemic.
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