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MASSACHUSETTS: New Bedford mayor unhappy with Baker pick for fish panel

July 2, 2021 โ€” New Bedford Mayor Jon Mitchell is once again expressing frustration with Beacon Hill leaders for a lack of focus on the Whaling City.

Last week, Plymouth resident Michael Pierdinock was named to a seat representing Massachusetts on the New England Fishery Management Council, a panel that sets rules for the fishing industry such as catch limits. It is one of eight such regional councils nationwide.

Pierdinock will replace former state Rep. John Quinn, a Dartmouth resident and longtime member who had years of expertise regarding commercial fishing issues in Greater New Bedford.

Pierdinock, a civil engineer who owns a charter boat, was Gov. Charlie Bakerโ€™s top choice for the seat and listed as a recreational fisherman. State campaign-finance records show he has made $2,500 in campaign donations to Baker since 2016.

A Baker administration official emphasized that Pierdinock docks his vessel in New Bedford, and said he is knowledgeable about issues โ€œthat impact recreational anglers and the for-hire industry.โ€

But that defense didnโ€™t satisfy Mitchell.

Read the full story at WPRI

NOAA Fisheries Announces 2021 Regional Fishery Management Council Appointments

June 28, 2021 โ€” NOAA Fisheries announced 2021 regional fishery management council appointments on June 28. The Administration broke down the appointments by region. Find the full list of appointments below.

New England Council

2021 appointees will fill four obligatory seats for Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts and Rhode Island and one at-large seat:

Mark Alexander (Connecticut), Geoffrey Smith (Maine), Michael Pierdinock (Massachusetts) and Eric Reid (Rhode Island) *.

The At-large seat will belong to Kristin โ€˜Togueโ€™ Brawn (Maine).

Read the full story at Seafood News

Opponents say Block Island wind farms are causing problems across prime fishing grounds

March 19, 2018 โ€” NEW BEDFORD, Mass. โ€” The five enormous turbines that have been generating electricity off Block Island over the past year are considered a model for the future of offshore wind.

But the nationโ€™s first ocean-based wind farm also has exposed what fishermen say are serious threats to them caused by scattering massive metal shafts and snaking underwater cables across prime fishing grounds.

With state officials poised to announce the winners of bids to develop much larger wind farms south of Marthaโ€™s Vineyard, fishermen across the region have been pressing officials for answers to their concerns about where the turbines will be located, how far apart theyโ€™ll be built, and the placement of the cables to the mainland.

โ€œItโ€™s true that the area where the turbines are have created habitat that attracts fish, which is good; but in the area where the cable lines extend to the mainland, itโ€™s completely devoid of fish,โ€ said Michael Pierdinock, chairman of the Massachusetts Recreational Alliance, which represents about 50,000 recreational fishermen. โ€œTheseused to be fruitful fishing grounds.โ€

The opposition of the fishing industry, a powerful interest group in New England, could prove a hindrance for developers of the proposed wind farms, which will be chosen next month.

Those projects, which could ultimately span hundreds of thousands of acres some 14 miles south of Marthaโ€™s Vineyard, are expected to generate 1,600 megawatts of power within a decade, or enough electricity for about 800,000 homes.

At a meeting last month in New Bedford of fishermen, developers, and state and federal officials, Pierdinock and commercial fishermen urged regulators to study the potential impact of the proposed wind farms on marine mammals, spawning grounds of herring and squid, and other species that inhabit the area.

Read the full story at the Boston Globe

 

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