Mayor Jon Mitchell responds to work being halted on Northern Edge scalloping grounds

NEW BEDFORD, Mass. (WLNE) — The New England Fishery Management Council has decided to halt work on opening the Northern Edge scalloping grounds to commercial fishermen.
Back in April, Mayor Jon Mitchell before the board in Mystic, Conn. and said that making these areas available would benefit the industry greatly, to create a “key new source of scallops.”
“While there are multiple species that are harvested by New Bedford fishing vessels, scallops are the prime drivers of economic activity within the Port of New Bedford,” he said.
“The fishermen of New Bedford know this, and they take great care in maintaining the resource and recognize the strategic long-term importance of managing the biomass,” he continued.
New Bedford is currently home to 7,000 jobs and 400 fishing vessels.
“The Port is a major driver of the regional economy, as shoreside businesses thrive by providing services to the fishing fleet, and tens of millions of dollars of public and private investment is currently underway modernizing port infrastructure,” he said.
In a recent statement, Mitchell said:
“I am disappointed by the New England Fishery Management Council’s decision last week after scant public notice to reverse itself and halt further discussion of the opening of the Northern Edge scallop access area. The decision comes less than three months after the Council voted to advance the opening of the Northern Edge, which was grounded in more than a decade of research showing that scallops are abundant in the area. Halting work on the Northern Edge so abruptly is an affront to scallop fishermen who were given every reason to believe that the council was working toward a fair, long-term solution.