Jasper Ralph addressed the Oak Bluffs selectmen Tuesday.
Holly Pretsky

Plastic-Free MV Takes Mission Down-Island

<p>After an initiative to ban plastic bottles passed up-Island, students from Plastic Free MV are setting their sights on the three down-Island towns.</p>

After an initiative to ban plastic bottles passed with enthusiasm at town meetings up-Island, students from Plastic Free MV are setting their sights on the three down-Island towns.

Oak Bluffs selectmen had a lot of questions and some hesitation about the measure at their regular meeting Tuesday evening, opting not to take action to put the question on next year’s town meeting warrant just yet.

The bylaw is based on similar laws in other Massachusetts towns. It would ban the sale of water and soda in bottles smaller than 34 ounces. Vendors would be fined for violating the rule for more than one day. West Tisbury School sixth grader Jasper Ralph and teacher Annemarie Ralph of Plastic Free MV asked the Oak Bluffs selectmen to place the bylaw directly on next year’s annual town meeting warrant, rather than doing so by petition. Jasper said students are motivated by environmental concerns.

“Plastic is really bad; it ends up in fish,” he said, adding that the students had held public forums up-Island and planned to do the same in the down-Island towns.

Selectmen acknowledged the environmental problems caused by plastic, but they were quick to distinguish between their town and their more rural up-Island counterparts when it comes to the ban.

“Our town is very unique. We have a lot of restaurants, take-out type places that it will affect,” said selectman Mike Santoro, who is also a businessman himself. He suggested a committee of stakeholders including business owners, be convened to discuss the proposed bylaw.

Selectman Gail Barmakian questioned whether the town could legally ban the sale of certain drinks from certain businesses.

“I just want some background on this because it’s quite extreme,” she said. “It’s quite an impact.”

Ms. Ralph said similar laws in other communities had been approved by the Attorney General, and that the bylaws adopted by the up-Island towns were still awaiting review.

Selectman Brian Packish said he was in favor of starting slowly.

“I think it’s really important to start a conversation in a healthy way which begins with a dialogue with the public,” he said.

Jennifer Freeman, who identified herself as a family member of the owners of Reliable Market in Oak Bluffs, said the law unfairly targets businesses.

“You’re saying to me as a small store in Oak Bluffs, you cannot sell this product, but you’re not making it illegal for someone to possess it in their home. So they can go to Amazon, Walmart, order it and get it shipped to their door,” she said. “How is that not a restriction on trade?”

Pending approval from the Attorney General, the plastic bottle ban will go into effect in West Tisbury, Chilmark and Aquinnah in May 2020.

In other business Tuesday, county manager Martina Thornton presented a draft agreement between the town and the county outlining the county’s oversight responsibilities for administration of health and human services. Ms. Thornton is circulating the agreement to all Island towns.

Selectmen asked Ms. Thornton to return at a later meeting after they had reviewed the proposed agreement.

Selectmen appointed Alice Goyert, Rose Ryley and Sharon Cooke to the town conservation commission. There were two vacancies on the commission and another member was made into an alternate.

Selectmen approved licenses for two new businesses, a new art gallery owned by Valerie Francis on 91 Dukes County avenue and a new spa called Claire Day Spa owned by MingJing Liu at 97 Circuit avenue.

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 06/12/2019 - 17:28

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Moved to Maine USA

What a nice "feel good" plan. What is the alternative? Glass is not allowed at certain venues not to mention how many broken bottles will be scattered around. Think about a family of five coming out for one week. Is this family suppose to refill enough containers of some sort to supply them for a day? Not to mention it's hotel water or not so good tasting water. Good idea but I hate to burst the bubble of this ever taking off. It's just not practical. Maine has a five cent return which seems like a much better start rather than a ban.

bob

5 cents might have meant something in 1983 when bottle deposits were implemented in mass. you'd need at least 25 cents now to make someone think about holding onto it and returning it. and as a tourist and season oriented location, people visiting the vineyard may not even think a quarter is worth worrying about versus having to find a place to return the bottle to collect their deposit when they are here for a short time and looking to enjoy themselves

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 06/13/2019 - 13:46

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Health Nut Island

I am so proud of these kids embracing political action to improve our future!!! Us grownups can learn a lot from them. I am concerned about one major public health issue. Nothing that couldn’t be worked out, but something that should be addressed. The water refill stations must be frequently sanitized because people inadvertently, while trying to be part of the solution, accidentally contaminate them with all sorts of nasty bacteria and viruses, and they create a new problem. We on this busy island aren’t known for our keeping to cleaning schedules, or any other schedules really. This isn’t a situation where the classic island “oops I meant to, but we were so busy” will cut it. Using these refill stations is pretty much akin to sharing straws with strangers. It is extra-critical that this be addressed since we have so many kids, especially in West Tisbury, who aren’t vaccinated. We are an island society of dreamers, big thinkers, counterculture leaders, and skeptics. We can figure this out. But we can’t ignore the problem. Unvaccinated kids drinking water from reusable bottles tainted with second hand saliva through contact with shared public dispenser nozzles is a recipe for unwanted and unintended consequences.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 06/13/2019 - 14:04

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Steve Falmouth

I don’t understand how you could live on the island, see the plastic polluting the ocean and beaches right in front of you, and not think this is a good idea

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 06/14/2019 - 15:16

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Moved to Maine Usa

Steve please list a practical replacement. Trash is horrible but to get rid of all plastic is a real stretch. Why doesn't any of these articles talk about burning for energy or a refund program?

Carol formerly Chilmark

Cans. Metal cans are readily recyclable; there's a good market for them. Also bottle refilling stations for those of us who carry our own water bottles, like the ones at gyms & national parks. This is very simple. I'm so proud of these kids pushing this issue, keep it up kids, many of us agree & support this!

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