I grew up in the shadow of the nuke plant. We lived about two-miles from the reactor.
In those days, my father raised chickens and ducks, for the eggs, and goats for milk. The sumer that the reactor went on line, people from Edison came out and told us that you could not eat the eggs or drink the milk from animals raised within FIVE-MILES of the reactor core. Of course the plant was completely safe, they assured us. They ended up paying my father for the animals, but we never could get a straight answer about the danger, from any source.
A couple years after the plant opened, the commercial fishing guys noticed that good fishing grounds offshore from the plant, now contained nothing but green slime. All the fish were gone.
In addition, the outfall pumps out warm water all-year round when it is in operation. This causes migratory fish to stick around all year. When the plant is forced to shut down in the winter all the fish die. This is a regular occurrence due to the many safety violatons/" Unusual incidents," at this facility.
So, in answer to your question, there are some fish to be caught there, If you're the " Pro-Nuke, Cell-Phone," sort of fisherman.
If I were looking for a spot to fish down that way, I'd try Manomet Point. Good structure that should hold fish at all tides, lots of moving water, and accessible from shore, with parking. Many big bass have been taken from there over the years.
And the fish may not glow in the dark.
Alternatively, if anyone wans to make the power plant safe for fish, you can buy it from Edison for one-dollar. I had a meeting there with management a couple months ago, and they said they are actively seeking a buyer. The asking price is one-dollar. They haven't had any takers yet. Apparently it costs like several jillion dollars to dismantle it and dispose of the waste.
Make a nice spot for a cottage though. Just don't drink the milk.
Jay