Town Extends Eviction Notice for Trustees at Katama Farm

With Tuesday’s move-out date looming, the Edgartown conservation commission has extended the Trustees of Reservations lease at Katama Farm until Oct. 15.

With Tuesday’s move-out date looming, the Edgartown conservation commission has extended the Trustees of Reservations lease at Katama Farm until Oct. 15, giving the land trust another month until it formally vacates the property.

The conservation commission had originally ordered that the Trustees move off the 180-acre town-owned farm by Tuesday, Sept. 15 amid longstanding grievances, including winnowing of livestock on the property, sick goats and a late rent payment. The Trustees disputed many of the claims after the eviction notice.

On Monday, Edgartown conservation agent Jane Varkonda told the Gazette that the one-month extension will give the Trustees time to remove animals and make arrangements for the lease transfer.

“It’s just to give them more time to make all the arrangements they need to make,” Ms. Varkonda said. “I don’t know much except that we gave them more time and they are proposing to do some work in the fields regardless of whether they stay or not.”

Mr. Hart said on Monday in a phone conversation with the Gazette that the Trustees were pleased that the vacancy date had been extended. The pandemic has impacted boat reservations for livestock, Mr. Hart added, and said the first livestock transfer was scheduled for the 17th.

"We’re just doing our best to be considerate and treating the livestock in the best possible manner," Mr. Hart said. 

The decision to postpone the eviction date was made at a conservation commission meeting last Wednesday, according to Ms. Varkonda. The commission met in executive session to discuss lease negotiations for the farm. Brief discussion in public session that followed largely centered around a letter sent to the conservation commission from the Katama Homeowners Association, requesting a meeting with the commission to ensure the farm retained its educational and working farm components.

The historic farm is owned by the town but has been leased to the Trustees at a rate of $12,500 per year since 2016, when they took over management of the farm and The Farm Institute, a nonprofit teaching farm that held the lease.

The conservation commission acts as landlord for the property. The original 2016 lease was set to last 30 years, and requires that the tenant maintain a working farm on the property, with adherence to a strict farm management plan.

Since the lease termination, the town has received numerous letters from former campers and others supporting the Trustees, who prominently posted a statement on their website following the eviction notice. Ms. Varkonda said the town has also received letters of interest from farmers across the Island, including Morning Glory Farm and The Grey Barn and Farm.

She said the town intends to put out a new request for proposals seeking a tenant for the property. In the interim, she said the Trustees plan to do some work on the fields, including cover crops where pumpkins and sunflowers were grown this summer.

“They are going to do an application of lime, spread manure...and they have to plant a cover crop,” the conservation agent said. “It takes time to make arrangements. If they are going to give up the lease and remove the animals, it takes time to get the animals off the Island. It took them time to get them on the Island, so it is going to take time to get them off.”

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 09/14/2020 - 20:50

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Kelce OB

Ready, Fire, Aim -- the implicit policy of the conservation commission. Something smells about their sudden eviction of the Trustees. And it's not the farm animals.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 09/15/2020 - 09:44

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Elizabeth Edgartown

It would be fantastic to have local farmers take over the lease and make the farm what it used to be, and can become. It is imperative that we preserve the land, continue the educational process and make it a viable alternative to McMansion building on island.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 09/15/2020 - 14:53

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fact checker edg

A large farm operation has proven to be not a sustainable model. I'd suggest a 'co-op,' where various small farmers can use a common barn, common field, etc. One can have goats, another chicken, others sheep, others cows. Smaller is better.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 09/15/2020 - 22:11

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Local MVY

It was a state Supreme Court victory for the town led by Gray Bryan that kept all of the Farm Institute acreage and more from being a neighborhood. The Wallaces eventually sold the farm to the town which has very specific mandates to be responsible for it. Those mandates are clear in the lease agreement. The farm is obviously not what it was if even reasonably maintained. Have you been? Where there was a herd there are six cows. The Trustees wanted the land for the bird habitat. Well intended land conservationists; not farmers. Thank you for the effort Trustees. Best we part, see you in the beaches and look forward to the expansion of one of our already successful farms in the island. Peace.

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