April 2, 2020 โ The Monica should be steaming across the open Atlantic right now, cruising 80 miles southeast off the coast of New Jersey over the deep Hudson Canyon on a 10-day hunt for lucrative golden tilefish.
But the Monicaโs owner, Dan Mears, had to call his boat back to the Barnegat Light docks after just two days. The COVID-19 pandemic had shuttered virtually every restaurant dining room in the nation. And by the time Mayor Jim Kenney ordered the closure of nonessential businesses for Philadelphia on March 16, the market value for tilefish had dropped by more than 50% overnight. Ernie Panacek, Mearsโ seafood wholesaler at Viking Village, told him his catch wasnโt worth the price of diesel, bait, and tackle.
โNever had to do that in 42 years of fishing,โ said Mears, 60, the son of a Barnegat Light fisherman, whose own son, Dan Jr., is now the Monicaโs captain. โItโs Lent and people should be eating fish right now โ but they arenโt. The (crewโs) food is still on the boat. Weโre ready to go. But we just have to wait and wait for the word.โ
That word โ a return to normalcy of some sort โ canโt come soon enough for Rodney Dickson, 55, a fish hauler who normally packs the Monicaโs catch on ice but whoโs spent his days of unemployment walking up and down Long Beach Island like a zombie: โYesterday I took 22,945 steps and walked 10.9 miles.โ