Commission Debates Fate of Three Trees at Stop & Shop

A trio of pesky locust trees on the Edgartown Stop & Shop property consumed the Martha’s Vineyard Commission for nearly two hours Thursday night.

A trio of pesky locust trees on the Edgartown Stop & Shop property consumed the Martha’s Vineyard Commission for nearly two hours Thursday night as commissioners discussed modifications to the flagship grocery store’s long-stalled renovation plans.

“I just want to say that I started this meeting with a headache,” commissioner Linda Sibley said as the proceedings trudged toward a close. “And it’s gotten worse.”

Approved by the commission in 2018, Stop & Shop intends to build approximately 17,000 square feet of additions to the existing 25,000-square-foot Edgartown store and perform significant site and landscape work, as well as demolish and rebuild a slightly larger Rockland Trust Bank building.

The plan had been held up in court for nearly 18 months after a neighbor objected to decisions by the planning board on the grounds that the new additions would cause undue shadows and noise on his property. A motion for summary judgment was granted in July 2019, clearing the way for the project to move forward.

In an email Friday, Stop & Shop attorney Geoghan Coogan confirmed that legal woes were no longer holding up the project and that the store hoped to begin construction in the fall of 2021.

But a condition in the commission’s 2018 approval required Stop & Shop to come back before the MVC with a redesigned western entrance before building permits could be issued. The condition also stated that the store was required to preserve three locust trees in the design.

On Thursday, those three trees proved a tricky Bermuda triangle for architects to navigate, as Stop & Shop presented a medley of alternatives for the store’s redesigned western entrance that included preserving, replacing and removing the trees.

Randy Hart, a traffic consultant for Stop & Shop, said during the meeting that the store had presented the new entrance to the Edgartown planning board earlier last month, and preferred a plan alternative that would remove the trees. The preferred redesign would consolidate the two western entrances into one, located across from Pinehurst Road, and expand the curb cut and parking area.

The store’s current one-way circulation plan would remain in place, Mr. Hart said, and new trees would be planted.

Erik Bednarek, a landscape architect, went into extensive detail regarding the pros and cons of removing the locust trees, saying that they risked root damage with the construction and would decline over time, even if the store preserved them.

Commissioners grappled over the redesigns and proposed alternatives for approximately an hour before voting that the applicant had adequately redesigned the entrance, that the changes did not require a public hearing, and that the applicant would have to return with a landscaping plan approved by a commission subcommittee that includes replacement trees.

“I’m one of the resident tree huggers who’s always obsessed about trees,” commissioner Linda Sibley said. “I want to say that when the Martha’s Vineyard Commission told them to save those three trees, it’s because we don’t want this place to look like an industrial wasteland. But there seems to have been tremendous agonizing about their traffic speed, their parking speed, all based on the notion that those particular three trees have to be saved.”

The votes were unanimous, except for the final two, in which commissioner Ben Robinson abstained and voted no.

In other business, the commission voted unanimously to reopen a public hearing on the Hob Knob Inn’s expansion plan. The inn pulled its plan in December after neighbors fumed over the proposal at public hearings.

A new proposal from the Hob Knob submitted this month removes a previously planned pool from the 128 Main Street property and adds parking so valet service is unnecessary, among other changes.

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 01/08/2021 - 16:40

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Bob Edgartown

At this rate the Stop & Shop will need an extension on the approval from the MVC to begin. Will this never end please let's start building a new store. Studied to death is a phrase that comes to mind. MVC Moves Very Carefully

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sun, 01/10/2021 - 12:29

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Tim Boland Polly Hill Arboretum

As we have before, the Polly Hill Arboretum can be helpful when accessing tree health and the impacts of urban planning and tree selection. The trees pictured, Thornless Honeylocust, Gleditsia triacanthos var. inermis, have clearly led a compromised life. They typically have a single trunk and a wide-spreading canopy. They were damaged early on in their cultivation (the typical life-span of a US urban street tree is less than 15 years) and they should be replaced with better specimens and given the cultivation care to realize their true potential as a shade tree. Trying to build around these trees and the inevitable root damage that will occur is not worth the expense. There are several options for superior trees that have been specifically selected for urban conditions, anaerobic soils, road and aerosol salts, and tough root systems. Honey-locust has been planted extensively on the Island for its tough virtues, however, the towns should strongly consider diversifying their tree inventories to avoid massive die-off of a single species known as a monoculture.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 01/11/2021 - 05:52

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Charlie Callahan So Boston/Edgartown

Kind of moronic,holding up an important project like this for 3 lousy trees. Too bad they don't find important things to address.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 01/11/2021 - 11:46

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Nancy Cohen Takoma Park, MD and Vineyard Haven

Its been obvious for years that the Vineyard needs a comprehensive island wide ordinance to protect the remaining tree canopy which is being compromised by the natural lost of old growth trees and development on residential and commercial properties. (Very recently, it was difficult to watch the the removal of healthy trees from a beachfront residential property for the installation of a swimming pool. But I digress) There are many communities that have enacted ordinances that require a tree impact study for the purpose of assessing the potential impact of land altering activity, a tree protection plan and permitting process and requirement when trees are planned for removal or may be adversely impacted when there is land disturbing activity in proximity to an existing tree(s). Many of these ordinances have requirements for tree replacement or in lieu of replacement requirements for donations to a tree fund allowing the jurisdiction to replace and/or preserve trees on public lands and in neighborhoods. These measures are critical if there is any interest on the Vineyard to assist in climate change mitigation, adaptation, and resilience, improve water quality, reduce noise and air pollution and preserve wildlife not to mention property values. Yes, I know, there is resistance to addressing any issue on an island-wide basis but this might be the place and time to do so. Again, this is not a unique initiative; there are many communities engaged in the preservation of tree canopy and addressing the challenges of climate change.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 01/13/2021 - 07:34

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fact checker edg

Cut them down. replace with appropriate species as the arborist above has noted. give the firewood to needy families

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