Automobile and passenger traffic on Steamship Authority ferries plunged into steep decline this month, just as the coronavirus pandemic began its spread into Massachusetts.
Automobile and passenger traffic on Steamship Authority ferries plunged into steep decline this month, just as the coronavirus pandemic began its spread into Massachusetts.
Preliminary traffic statistics released by the boat line this week for the month through March 19 show dramatic downward trends in car and foot traffic on the Vineyard route, beginning in the second week of the month.
Over a five-day period from March 15 to March 19, passenger traffic fell 34.6 per cent overall compared with the previous year. Car traffic overall was down 30 per cent. And trucks under 20 feet — a category that includes standard-sized pickups and large SUVs — were down 9.7 per cent overall.
But there were notable differences between excursion and non-excursion vehicles traveling on ferries between Woods Hole and Vineyard Haven, with excursion car traffic falling dramatically, while non-excursion car traffic rose.
It was the only category to see an increase.
Established for year-round Islanders, the excursion program offers deeply discounted round-trip fares for automobile reservations originating on the Island. Non-excursion fares are generally used by visitors and seasonal residents, who also can register for profile numbers for booking automobile reservations. Profile accounts include the state where the car is registered.
Between March 15 and March 19, excursion fare automobile traffic fell 44 per cent while non-excursion automobile traffic was up 10 per cent, preliminary numbers show. The trend was similar for trucks under 20 feet; in that category excursion fare traffic fell 32.4 per cent while non-excursion fare traffic was up 12.8 per cent.
SSA communications director Sean Driscoll said the tide changed quickly and suddenly.
“It really is that March is the tale of two months,” he said, speaking to the Gazette by phone. “Things were good through March 14 . . . January and February were pretty strong because the weather had been good,” he said. “And then the other March came in, and once that slip began there was no going back from it. I don’t know if we’re at the bottom of it yet.”
Prepared as of March 20, the statistics released this week are preliminary and still subject to audit. But they show a snapshot in time on the boat line, as the pandemic began to unfold.
Until March 7, traffic on the Vineyard route looked relatively normal, with passenger traffic up 5.7 per cent for the month and 6.6 per cent for the year. A total of 233,143 passengers had been carried for the year, 14,418 more than during the same period in 2019. Through March 15, ferries on the Vineyard route carried a total of 13,637 vehicles (cars and trucks under 20 feet).
Automobile traffic as of March 7 was down 1.7 per cent for the month but still up 3.4 per cent for the year. But excursion fare traffic had begun to fall off, dropping 7.5 per cent for the month. By contrast, non-excursion traffic was up 9.7 per cent month to date. Non-excursion trucks under 20 feet were also up 5.3 per cent for the month at that point, while traffic for excursion trucks under 20 feet fell 1.6 per cent.
Day by day, beginning March 15, the numbers went into steep decline — except in the non-excursion automobile categories, where the numbers climbed slightly.
Year to date as of March 19, the boat line was still in the black, with overall passenger traffic up 2.8 per cent, overall car traffic up .9 per cent, and overall truck traffic up 1.6 per cent.
Chartered to provide dependable year-round service to the two Islands, the boat line typically loses money in the winter months and makes up for it in the busy summer months. Ordinarily March would mark the beginning of an upward trend in traffic and revenues, with the Easter season and April school vacation ahead, followed by Memorial Day and the start of summer.
A reduced ferry schedule went into effect this week, with fewer trips. The service cuts were accompanied by about 65 employee layoffs, Mr. Driscoll said.
And an advisory has been posted on the SSA website from both Island hospitals urging people with second homes to stay away.
In an attempt to track available data about second home owners seeking refuge on the Vineyard during the pandemic, the SSA also released traffic statistics by license plate from March 1 to March 15. The statistics show modest increases in out-of-state travel to the Island.
During that period cars with a Massachusetts plate saw a net increase of 264 vehicles. Customers with a New York/New Jersey plate saw a net increase of 102 vehicles. Customers with New England state plates other than Massachusetts saw a net decrease of 21 vehicles.
“It does show there is a big increase in Massachusetts plates coming over, and there is a bump in New York and New Jersey,” Mr. Driscoll said. “But it’s not overwhelming. In that time period we carried 13,000 cars — a net flow of 100 it doesn’t seem huge to me.”
Meanwhile, Mr. Driscoll said while no hard numbers are available yet, ferry traffic across the board has continued its freefall since March 19.
“You could hold ballroom dancing classes on our freight decks this week,” he said. “We are still bringing trucks over in the morning, so at that time it is more crowded. But that’s about it.”

Comments
It will be a quiet summer. I
Nancy Oak BluffsIt will be a quiet summer. I can’t see many tourists coming over this year.
As long as the ferry
Bmc TisburyAs long as the ferry continues bringing potential virus carriers to the island, we’re sitting ducks. Imposing self-quarantines is pointless if we don’t suspend travel from the mainland. Monitor the very few who MUST come here to make certain they adhere to two week isolation, followed by testing. We’re at war with an invisible enemy… and islanders can’t just sit around waiting for state government to defend us. Stop boat travel immediately, before it’s too late! Food and medical only!
I totally agree with you.
Jenny TisburyI totally agree with you.
Don't be xenophobic (out of
Lisa EdgartownDon't be xenophobic (out of staters included). FYI the virus is already here, Can't blame New Yorkers or anyone else. It travels before people are known to be infected, so it already arrived on the Island many, many weeks ago. Slower growth only because we're more spread out. It's going to increase here for sure like everywhere else but if we're smart, we won't overwhelm our hospital. Be kind, that's what we'll ultimately get us through.
We have paid hundreds of
JT VermontWe have paid hundreds of thousands of taxes on a house in Edgartown over 81 years. Other than streets and police in town we have used few services that are paid for out of the town budget. Out tax payments subsidize the year round residents. Our house and boat maintenance supports the local economy. Until recently we had no heat so it was truly a seasonal residence. We finally added heat to get more days of use over which to spread the increasing tax expense. And now you want me to stay away? Our annual tax bill exceeds our purchase price by 40%. And I live the rest of the year in a sparsely populated rural area. The year round residents of the Vineyard need to learn which side their bread is buttered on. As for MV Hospital, we would go home for most medical service other than an accident. (I do agree that a bridge would ruin the Vineyard)
There are essential workers
SS Oak BluffsThere are essential workers such as doctors and nurses that live on the island, but work on the mainland and visa versa. We need to be able to get back and forth.
Maybe it's because of the way
RickMaybe it's because of the way year round residents are threatening seasonal residents to stay away. It's sad to see the island that I love treat others like that.
It truly has become an island
Edgartownite EdgartownIt truly has become an island of hate (not all). I will never be able to forget the nastiness exhibited by so many.
We are the ones who are being
Jason Oak BluffsWe are the ones who are being threatened by those who ignore the stay away admonition by our State and local authorities.
When you do this, you release local indignation. Deal with it. We are rightly not happy with you.
I'm afraid you're not right,
lisa EdgartownI'm afraid you're not right, and your fear is guiding your thinking, not your brain. The virus is here, has been for weeks. Came when people had it but were hardly or not at all symptomatic. Slower to spread because we're a bit more isolated. Don't blame others. It's the new world my friend, we're all in this together. Be kind.
Im appaled by the behaviour
RiverIm appaled by the behaviour of ‘islanders’ and sad that the place i made my home 20 yrs ago is not special anymore. The attacks in the papers, on the roads ect. Who do you think you are? Only the wampunaug tribe has a right to be here at all, truth be told. Think about that one, knock it off, and just do you......
Seriously, Would we be
Really EdgartownSeriously, Would we be telling our home owners not to come if they didn’t come from the hot beds of Corona? Of course not. This is not a cold we are fighting. Please listen and realize how this virus is spread. Stop the ferries and isolate the island except, of course, for necessities. If not, good luck .
You choose to live on an
Elizabeth New York, New YorkYou choose to live on an Island, that has consequences, good and bad. I choose to live in a densely populated city, that has consequences, good and bad. Not only will your businesses suffer, if you work, but your charities will as well. No one likes your mean spirit and small minded comments.
And no one is coming so stop screaming.
Elizabeth, you, too, line on
Bulkington EdgartownElizabeth, you, too, line on an Island. All that is said in your post likewise applies to Manhattan. I went to school at W. 116th and Broadway. I used to live on the Upper West Side, but I chose to leave. Wow! That was...well, a long time ago. Anyway, of the things I studied while living on the island of Manhattan was that one cannot kill a virus. A virus is never actually alive, so all the bleach and alcohol and sanitizers, while denaturing its proteins, do not physically kill what was and what is never alive. (That being noted, please wash your hands and use sanitizer. You cannot kill it, but you can destroy it, keep it from functioning, and being picked up or transferred to a host.) The odd thing about a virus, and, here comes the point: A virus cannot walk or crawl, or, even fly, unless it is hitching a ride on someone or something that is doing one of those things for it. A bacterium is an animal. Yes, an animal, and it can multiply and move about on its own. Some even have little tails that help them 'swim.' Not so with a virus. The closer people get to one another and the frequency that happens is one of the determing factors of the rate of spread of a virus. Using hand sanitizer can effectively 'ruin' a virus, just as soap and water used as frequently as possible, can likewise break up those pesky, little peptides and remove them from our skin. Both are necessary and both are essential in slowing down the spread of a virus. Likewise, distancing, be it keeping oneself at six feet or even keeping oneself in another State, significantly increases the chances that we can all live to argue about this another day.
When you think about it, how
Dean Rosenthal EdgartownWhen you think about it, how is this even news? Their service should be next to zero and that would be a GOOD thing for the SSA! Don’t they know that? It’s not about money for them. Am I supposed to feel sorry their business has dropped off? Bizarre. Onwards!
According to the article, the
Rich Vineyard HavenAccording to the article, the real risk is Islanders going to the mainland and infecting the population there.
Martha's Vineyard is for me
Allan PennsylvaniaMartha's Vineyard is for me the joint best in the world, the other being St. Mary's in the Isles of Scilly where I grew up.In both places I've seen this like/dislike attitude to seasonal visitors among the native- born. Can't have it both ways, MV folk or Scilly islanders. If you want the peaceful paradise to yourself go back to fishing from the sea or plundering shipwrecks like my grandad did.
Add new comment