Quiet springtime in Menemsha, but the town is planning for a busy summer ahead.
Jeanna Shepard

Chilmark Adopts Early Summer Safety Guidelines

Limited attendance at Menemsha sunsets, a drastically cut down book festival: the Chilmark selectmen and board of health took up an array of summer safety plans and guidelines this week.

Limited attendance at Menemsha sunsets, a drastically cut down book festival, carry-in carry-out at town beaches: the Chilmark selectmen and board of health took up an array of summer safety plans and guidelines this week.

“This summer is going to be a very busy summer and we are going to have the pressure of lots and lots of people showing up in Menemsha,” said selectman Warren Doty at a joint meeting of the two boards Wednesday.

Echoing last summer, selectmen and health agents voted unanimously to limit attendance at Menemsha sunsets by closing the park and ride and accompanying shuttle service for the season. Both boards also agreed to eliminate parking in the center of the Menemsha beach lot and on the southwest side of the road to the water.

Menemsha’s two fish markets will decide on takeout or in-store configurations independently but will likely remain in takeout form for the early summer, town officials said.

Larger summer events and programming also dominated the conversation.

Suellen Lazarus, founder and director of the Martha’s Vineyard Book Festival, came before the two boards with her proposal for an adapted book festival from August 6 to August 10 on the Community Center grounds. Ms. Lazarus had previously proposed the event to selectmen at a meeting last month.

According to Ms. Lazarus, the event would include 15 authors, with big-name guests like Elizabeth Kolbert, Ibram Kendi and possibly Elizabeth Warren. Ms. Lazarus said the festival would be restricted to 150 ticketed in-person guests with an option to attend virtually. She also requested attendance for up to 250 guests for the bigger authors, pending state expansion of outdoor capacity limits.

Selectmen and health board members pushed back on Ms. Lazarus’ request for 250 guests, voting instead to approve the event with a 150-person cap and an option to re-evaluate later in the summer.

Other summer programs received similar approval.

A request from Chilmark Community Center director Alexandrea London-Thompson to run pandemic versions of the center’s summer camp, tennis and indoor exercise programs was approved with the caveat that she write a positive-case procedure for the program.

Chilmark General Store owner Joel Glickman was granted permission to open in May with 12-person indoor capacity. The two boards signaled a willingness to hear plans for other prospective community events — including a version of the film festival — assuming they are Covid-appropriate.

In general, selectmen and health agents said they planned to follow state and CDC guidelines as closely as possible. Both boards also acknowledged the challenges of crafting safety policies in an ever-changing pandemic landscape, noting the likelihood of re-evaluating decisions and loosening restrictions later in the summer.

“The state is struggling like the rest of us to write guidelines quickly enough in response to all these changes,” said board of health member Matt Poole. He added that personal vaccination status should not affect adherence to town safety rules.

“Outside of people’s private property, your vaccination status is not factored into the dos and don’ts,” said Mr. Poole.

In other business, the board of health settled on a recommendation to adopt a carry-in and carry-home trash policy for beachgoers at Lucy Vincent and Squibnocket beaches this summer, with an exception for beach department-related trash.

Discussion of beach and harbor trash disposal in Menemsha, which presents larger challenges, will be ongoing through the spring and summer, town officials said.

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 05/07/2021 - 14:50

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Matt Poole Chilmark

This article is an accurate reflection of the joint meeting of the Chilmark boards. I'd like to expand here on the my comment in the article regarding how vaccination status fits into the overall picture. An important benefit of being full vaccinated is that it allows an individual who is identified as a close contact to be exempt from the quarantine (and associated 5th day test) test protocol if they're identified as a close contact. The tremendous benefit of vaccination is that it allows an individual identified as a close contact to not be required to quarantine, continue with their everyday life, not miss work or school and protect others.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 05/07/2021 - 19:23

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Dave Foulser West Tisbury

You mention limiting attendance at Menemsha sunsets. The selectmen should catch up with latest WHO advice that the pandemic is driven by airborne spread, with vastly lower incidence outdoor than indoor. Let ALL the people attend and asks them to mask or maintain distance. Focus your attention on reducing indoor spread, where the risk is much higher.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 05/08/2021 - 20:29

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Islander MV

With all due respect, I feel being fully vaccinated should factor in the ‘do’s and don’ts’, I have no problem showing my proof of vaccination if that is what it takes to live freely today sadly, the point of vaccinations is to protect one self and others per the ‘science’ and ‘health officials’ to get back to ‘normal’, so having a blanket ‘rule’ will only deter people from getting vaccinated and those who are fully vaccinated feel frustrated and mislead. If you want to encourage the vaccination efforts, listen to what the various health experts have to say, not just the biased ‘health experts /politicians ‘ and more people would feel more comfortable and well informed. Keeping the restrictions and mandates in place for the vaccinated will only deter people from getting vaccinated in general, it goes against what we’ve been told by the so called ‘health experts’ from the beginning. Also people vaccine hesitant deserve respect as this is a new vaccine and in reality, we do NOT know the long term affects if any at this point.

Matt Poole Chilmark

Islander -- Currently the CDC and Massachusetts DPH [MDPH] don't differentiate between the vaccinated and non-vaccinated in the public setting, both indoors and out. The Chilmark Board of Health is required to follow MDPH and isn't able to generate a less stringent local policy. The same standards apply to everyone. When or if the federal and state guidelines are revised to take vaccination status into consideration regarding the 'public do's and don'ts, the Chilmark Bd of Health will have a basis to reconsider their current position. There are many reasons to get vaccinated and no fact based reason not to in my opinion.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 05/11/2021 - 10:47

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Alice West tisbury

Agreed with Dave above regarding outdoors activities. But maybe there were other considerations specific to the sunset watchers’ situation? It’s more crowded than a regular outdoor activity. Is that the concern? I hope the island is opening nearly all its normal outdoor activities for this summer, at least where social distancing and masks are possible.

Also look forward to the day our libraries open (with Covid limitations)?!

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 05/12/2021 - 07:41

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August West Edgartown

We can go outside now. Keep that in mind, Chilmark people. If you are vaccinated or recovered, you can act like it.

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