New Bedford Mayor Still Optimistic About Offshore Wind in State of City Speech

Mayor Jon Mitchell said the presidency has a four-year term but “the runway for climate change is a much longer one,” suggesting future presidents may revive support for the offshore wind industry

Mayor Jon Mitchell said his administration is "rebuilding the port of New Bedford at a blistering pace."
Mayor Jon Mitchell said his administration is “rebuilding the port of New Bedford at a blistering pace.”
City of New Bedford
Share
Mayor Jon Mitchell said his administration is "rebuilding the port of New Bedford at a blistering pace."
Mayor Jon Mitchell said his administration is “rebuilding the port of New Bedford at a blistering pace.”
City of New Bedford
New Bedford Mayor Still Optimistic About Offshore Wind in State of City Speech
Copy

In his annual state of the city speech, New Bedford’s longtime mayor Jon Mitchell expressed a strictly positive outlook for the city’s economy, despite the president’s plans to obstruct the offshore wind industry and deport an unprecedented number of undocumented immigrants.

New Bedford’s waterfront includes a pier where offshore wind turbines are assembled and a long row of seafood processing plants, which rely on immigrant labor.

But the mayor’s wide-ranging speech touched only briefly on what he called the “sound and fury” of federal politics. Instead, Mitchell emphasized his administration’s local efforts to “forge ahead” with beautifying streets, expanding port facilities, attracting new businesses, building more housing, improving schools and fighting crime.

Turning to the city’s recent accomplishments, Mitchell called attention to a new publicly owned pier for fishing and offshore wind vessels, renovations of existing fishing piers, and an expansion of the New Bedford Marine Commerce Terminal, where Vineyard Wind is marshaling construction for one of America’s first offshore wind farms.

“We are rebuilding the port of New Bedford at a blistering pace,” Mitchell said.

This story was reported by The Public’s Radio. You can read the entire story here.

Written before COVID but hitting close to home, the comedy by Jonathan Spector skewers groupthink, social justice jargon and the limits of consensus
Counterclaim comes after three years and a trio of lawsuits by North Kingstown country club over shoreline dispute
From a sharp school-board satire at The Gamm to Black storytelling, chamber music and medieval fencing, here’s what’s happening this weekend and beyond in Rhode Island
In the aftermath of the deadly shooting at Brown University, Providence Mayor Brett Smiley reflected on what the city did right following the tragedy and what it can do better in the event of future emergencies
Mayor Brett Smiley said initial indications are positive, but that he ordered the city to engage an outside firm to review the city’s response
Activists gather in the State House rotunda with a list of demands for McKee administration