The Island Autism Group and the Martha’s Vineyard Land Bank have teamed up to purchase a 17.5-acre former farm on Lambert’s Cove Road in West Tisbury for $1.2 million.
The Island Autism Group and the Martha’s Vineyard Land Bank have teamed up to purchase a 17.5-acre former farm on Lambert’s Cove Road in West Tisbury for $1.2 million.
On Monday, the land bank bought 10 acres of the former Child family property for $400,000, while the Island Autism Group paid $800,000 for the other 7.5 acres, with plans for the Island Housing Trust to develop residences on three acres.
“There’s a huge shortage of housing for people on the autism spectrum, particularly people who have severe autism,” said Kate DeVane, president and co-founder of the Island Autism Group.
“Most people who are 22 and up and have autism are living in their parents’ houses,” Ms. DeVane said. “It’s kind of a perennial problem.”
In addition to staffed housing for more than a dozen adults, the autism group has plans for a small farm, with a live-in manager, and a center for both residential dining and day programs serving all ages.
“We’re calling it Hub House,” Ms. DeVane said. “It’s going to be a fabulous community hub for people with autism, and also shared out with the general public.”
The farm purchase was funded by donations, Ms. DeVane said, including major support from seasonal Edgartown residents Joan and Ed Doherty and Jim and Susan Swartz, the Edwards Harris Family Trust and the Washington, D.C.-based Wyss Foundation.
Land bank executive director James Lengyel said the joint purchase with the autism group is the latest of many such deals, termed cooperative acquisitions, in which the land bank has partnered with one or more other parties to buy, then divide Island property.
Ms. DeVane credited real estate broker Russell Maloney with suggesting the co-purchase.
“He . . . suggested the property and helped to brainstorm the partnership,” she said. “But the true heroes are the Child family.”
Mr. Lengyel said for the land bank, one of the most appealing aspects of the purchase partnership was the autism group’s focus on agriculture as a core activity.
“The idea that this entity is going to go out of its way to make a fully functioning farm there is very exciting,” he said.
Outside a three-acre building envelope, the autism group’s new property is protected by an agricultural preservation restriction and will be restricted to agricultural use, Mr. Lengyel said. While farm buildings are permitted, the land bank holds the right to review any new construction to make sure it is sited properly.
“The land bank takes farming very seriously, but it also takes scenic vistas very seriously,” Mr. Lengyel said.
The 10 acres now owned by the land bank will see the extension of an existing trail that now follows the northern boundary of the property under a previous easement, he said.
“The land bank will make a complete loop trail so people can walk around the whole of the property, including the farm,” Mr. Lengyel said.
“It’s a nice wooded property with a very nice rise in the back, and I think people will enjoy it.”
Ms. DeVane said at the newly planned Hub House, some of the farm’s autistic residents may have day jobs in the community.
“Maybe all their connection to the farm is [that] they may collect eggs in the morning and come have breakfast at the Hub House before they go to their jobs,” she said.
Residents who need more support may meet with job coaches or do supervised work with the farm animals, Ms. DeVane said. School children will come to the farm in the afternoons.
“We think that there are probably about 200 people on the Island currently who would benefit from our programming,” she said.
Provisionally dubbed the Island Autism Center and Neighborhood, the farm represents a long-sought dream for the autism group, which Ms. DeVane co-founded with Marcy Bettencourt 14 years ago when each woman had an autistic toddler.
“We really started out as a support system for the schools,” Ms. DeVane said. “But what we were really trying to do was create a support for not only the teachers, but the caregiver and everybody who works with people with autism, and the people with autism as well.”
As their children grew, so did their aspirations, Ms. DeVane said.
“We set up an after-school program and a summer program, with a section for kids in elementary school and another section for high school kids.”
But children with special needs are only eligible for school services until they turn 22, and the number of autistic Island adults is continually growing, Ms. Devane said.
“One in 45 kids on the Island has autism or autism-related disorders,” she said. Nationwide, according to the national Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the rate in 2016 was one in 54 8-year-olds.
“The thing that’s tricky with this group is that it’s not a huge number of people, but it’s a non-refreshing number of people,” Ms. DeVane said. “There’s a constant influx of kids.”

Comments
This is so great! Thank you
Kenny Hartford Cohasset (wishing in MV)This is so great! Thank you to all those who helped. There is a desperate need for this type of housing / program.
Congratulations to the Child
Russell Maloney ChilmarkCongratulations to the Child family, the Island Autism Group and the Martha’s Vineyard Land Bank.
I’m so thrilled for the
Helene Lapman EdgartownI’m so thrilled for the Island Autism Group! This will help innumerable Islanders long into the future. Huge kudos to the amazing Kate DeVane, whose long term vision and deep commitment has helped bring this to fruition. She is one of those special people who make this island so great.
Wonderful news.
Immense gratitude to the
Curious West TisburyImmense gratitude to the Child Family for selling at such kind rates. What well-considered real estate transactions.
How wonderful this sounds. I
Diane EdgartownHow wonderful this sounds. I guess my concern is education for the public on autism. I have a young adult nephew who is on the spectrum. He has always been mainstreamed. I don’t think he would do well living in this community, Do you think I am wrong? Are you planning on having day programs for people on the spectrum? Congratulations, I wish you well and let’s all put effort into finding a cure.
Diane
Kate DeVane West TisburyDiane
We are calling our programming house Hub House because we intend to reach from it out into the community. There will be programming for all levels of need and we will be partnering with the community. There will be something for everyone.
Thank you to all who
Betsy Pfau Newton and EdgartownThank you to all who contributed. This sounds like a well-conceived, wonderful project; a win-win, helping many different constituencies.
Fantastic collaboration!!!
Richard Toole Oak BluffsFantastic collaboration!!! We need more great news like this! Thanks to everybody!!! Richard
Barbara and Ed Child were
Rebecca GilbertBarbara and Ed Child were wonderful people and farmers... I think they would be pleased... thank you
This is a great use of this
Linda Whittle BOSTONThis is a great use of this property and so needed on the Vineyard. Individuals want to grown up and move out kb their own. There is another house in VH which has run for the past 20 years where 3 adult individuals with unique abilities have been able to live on their own with house counselors and it's been a very engaging experience for everyone!
Huge Congrats to you Kate!!!
Michael Marcus West TisburyHuge Congrats to you Kate!!!
Hard work and perseverance pay off. Your efforts will benefit so many folks for a very very long time. Well done!!
I hope they honor Child
Susan West TisburyI hope they honor Child family and name this location after them!
They have given so much to the landbank. They clearly wanted to keep Martha's Vineyard lands preserved.
What a Win-Win-Win all the
Robert Klein Oak BluffsWhat a Win-Win-Win all the way around! Absolutely wonderful! As a Community, we all need to come together now to make the vision of Hub House a reality.
I applaud the MV Land Bank
Harvey Mazer 487 Lamberts Cove RoadI applaud the MV Land Bank and the Island Autism Group for their creative and caring plans in purchasing the 17.5 acres of the Child Farm. I know that the Farm is on Lamberts Cove Road!! Is the full property at that Lamberts Cove Road location?
I noticed that there is/?was a Child Farm East of 7.5 acres on Old County Road!
Is that part of the proposed plan? Or is that completely separate and NOT involved in the 17.5 acre purchase? Thank you in advance for your answer!
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