Oak Bluffs voters powered through a hefty annual town meeting Saturday, becoming the fifth Island town to approve a ban on plastic bottles, and spending millions on capital improvements.
Oak Bluffs voters powered through a hefty annual town meeting warrant Saturday, becoming the fifth Island town to approve a ban on plastic bottles, and agreeing to spend millions for more than a dozen capital improvement projects that had been deferred from 2020.
But a request for funds to build a park and ride on town-owned land near Pennsylvania avenue failed after lengthy discussion.
Mostly the meeting went off without a hitch as voters approved a $34 million operating budget, changed the name of the selectmen to select board and approved $315,000 to replace the historic roof under which they were sitting.
Held outdoors at the Tabernacle for the second time in as many years due to the ongoing Covid-19 pandemic, the four-hour meeting kicked off a delayed Island political season on what felt like the first day of the summer.
At noon, voters filed into the Camp Ground in short sleeves, penny loafers and sun hats, happy to sit in the shade as temperatures approached the mid-70s.
Although the quorum was reduced to 50 voters, 150 turned out, with longtime town moderator Jack Law 3rd presiding.
The meeting began with a warm tribute for outgoing selectman Greg Coogan, who had served on the board for six terms before announcing his retirement this spring.
“I would like to take a moment to recognize Greg Coogan, who has given us 18 years of service,” selectman Brian Packish said.
Laughing, Mr. Coogan himself led the standing ovation.
Then the meeting got down to business.
Voters readily approved $25,000 to improve the Ocean Park bandstand and $35,000 for improvements to Niantic Park and the Civil War statue. They okayed a $200,000 expenditure as part of a $1 million Massachusetts Seaport Economic Council Grant for traffic and streetscape improvements in the North Bluff area, and backed $1.3 million for a comprehensive wastewater management plan.
The meeting moved so fast that the moderator accidentally skipped article four, which asked for $37,000 for harbor master maintenance. It was no matter; once Mr. Law realized the mistake, the article was also quickly approved.
Money for police body armor and body cameras were approved with short discussion, as well as an article authorizing the town to acquire easements along Beach Road properties for the construction of a shared use path.
But the meeting bogged down over a $510,000 request to build a park and ride on town property at the corner of County Road and Pennsylvania avenue. The financial advisory committee had recommended a no vote on the article, calling the project incomplete.
“Half a million dollars is a lot of money to pay to put a parking lot two miles out of town if we don’t know who is going to use it,” advisory committee member Sherry Countryman said.
But the town planning board had backed the project, and chairman Ewell Hopkins urged voters to approve the expenditure, saying it would add about 50 parking spaces for the downtown workforce, alleviating pressures on Circuit avenue.
“This is part of the larger vision to support decongestion downtown,” Mr. Hopkins said.
Voters were mixed. After 40 minutes of discussion, Mr. Law called the vote.
“All right, I think we’ve kind of talked this one out,” he said.
The article needed a two-thirds majority to pass, and failed 58-61 after a hand count.
As afternoon set in and stained glass shadows crept over the Tabernacle floor, discussion stretched on over capital spending projects, including money for the Tabernacle roof, $36,000 to add seats to the Sharks baseball stadium, and $68,197 to support regional health and human services.
All were ultimately approved.
School spending articles — at times a point of contention at Oak Bluffs town meetings — were also approved with little disagreement. Voters agreed to put $73,000 toward the purchase of electric school buses at the regional high school, as well as $183,000 to improve technology infrastructure.
In perhaps the only surprise of the day, three articles connected to a student movement to ban plastic and the sale of small plastic bottles across the Island earned the overwhelming support of voters.
The plastics ban had generated considerable concern from the downtown business community amid worry about the economic impacts, especially in light of the pandemic. Business owners had pitched an alternative bylaw that would set up a committee to work on reducing plastics in the town.
“I hope we can come to an agreement,” said longtime businessman Bill Giordano.
The working committee was approved, but voters also went on to also approve the voluntary elimination of polystyrene. And when the original plastic bottle ban came up, the argument was made again that bans were the most effective way to eliminate plastics.
Students Quinlan Slavin and Finn Robinson, who have both been involved with the plastics reduction initiative, emphasized the need, noting that it wouldn’t take effect until 2022, when the pandemic will have hopefully abated.
“This is something we really need to do right now,” Finn Robinson said.
Voters overwhelmingly agreed, drawing applause. Oak Bluffs joins Tisbury, West Tisbury, Chilmark and Aquinnah in approving the ban. Edgartown is set to vote on the measure after postponing it at town meeting last year.
Voters also approved zoning bylaw changes that will allow it to become eligible for state Green Communities funds, and selectman Ryan Ruley moved to dismiss an article requesting to change the town’s fire chief position from a so-called strong to a weak chief, after the town’s newly-hired chief Nelson Wirtz was introduced earlier in the meeting.
Finally, a sleeper petition article asking the town to withdraw from the Martha’s Vineyard Land Bank was dismissed by the moderator as outside the scope of the law. Under the land bank enabling legislation, withdrawing from land bank requires a ballot vote. Instead, Mr. Law called for a resolution vote from the floor on the matter, which saw nearly unanimous support for staying in the land bank.
West Tisbury’s town meeting is next up, scheduled for Tuesday, May 18 at the Tabernacle.

Comments
They should ban nips too.
Charlie Callahan So Boston/EdgartownThey should ban nips too. There are a lot more nip bottles on the street than water bottles. And nips are bought by alcoholics,not casual drinkers
I came here to say this, ban
JimI came here to say this, ban the nips! They often end up tossed overboard.
Draft a petition, get the
John Graham MVDraft a petition, get the required signatures, bring it to town meeting floor and let the voters decide.
So lets say someone comes
get serious edgSo lets say someone comes here and rides a bicycle. And they require some hydration. So they stop at a store to buy a bottle of water. do you expect them to buy a gallon bottle of water to carry around with them. Does anyone think before they come up with these proposals? A more logical way to deal with smaller plastic bottles is to increase the bottle bill deposit if its that big of a deal. I'll just continue to buy my plastic bottles of bottled water and soft drinks off island by the case
Buy a refillable bottle in
Alison Oak BluffsBuy a refillable bottle in whatever size you prefer.
They bring a refillable
KM OBThey bring a refillable container with them, and refill it (and it's free!). There are plenty of places to do this, and perhaps 'water refill stations' could eventually be added to the tourist maps.
Managing not to use the plastic in the first place is always better than recycling.
There are two outdoor water
Edgartownie EdgartownThere are two outdoor water fountains on the Island. Edgartown playground and OB. They're turned off more than they're on.
Where are the water stations again?
These strong remarkable kids
Vasha Brunelle Vineyard HavenThese strong remarkable kids who have worked to pass the plastic bottle can also tell you about bottle refill stations, the next step in this ban. Thanks to all who voted for it.
This will force more people
Youth of tomorrow Martha's vineyardThis will force more people to do exactly what you said, buy off island and in bulk.
Kids thought this up as a school project and then ushered it through the towns with the praise of these yutes changing our environment. Fat chance this will happen and I think more people will need those little nip bottle to deal with this every changing society. Drink to common sense.
Enjoy your besphenol A, esp
john W TisburyEnjoy your besphenol A, esp if you buy & store warm.
So true. Oak Bluffs was
BS Oak BluffsSo true. Oak Bluffs was swayed by some misguided children to pass a foolish bylaw that made them all feel good at town meeting. Will uneducated children guide our decisions in the future? Very scary!
I'm welling to bet the kids
BStoBS Oak BluffsI'm welling to bet the kids are smarter than you and your disparaging comments.
I expect them to think ahead
Mr. B ChilmarkI expect them to think ahead and do what many people I see doing: bringing their own, non-plastic, refillable beverage containers.
I think change over time is
Rena Vine Oak BluffsI think change over time is possible. I attend a music festival that banned disposable cups and bottles and although there was a huge protest at the time, in a couple of years everyone had a reusable water bottle that they carried. Maybe for day trippers this is an issue but for people who've been here before, they can learn to pack a real water bottle - not a disposable one.
So when visitors come over on
Jason OBSo when visitors come over on a hot summer day they will not be able to buy some bottled water? But they can buy coke and other junk beverages??? This makes no sense... put out some barrels and have the DPW so pickups...
come on people get real. People need water...
I wish OB had term limits....
Rob OBI wish OB had term limits.... we should have a park n Ride for the summer months
On a recent up-Island journey
Andrew T BostonOn a recent up-Island journey. I stopped in a shop for water. It Came in a carton like milk sometimes does. So why is water mostly sold in plastic??
This plastic ban is just more
Bob OBThis plastic ban is just more empty posturing and pointless virtue signalling. Want to make an immediate environmental difference? Then why not work to make recycling easier on this island. That’s about as elemental an environmental issue as I can think of. Why do we make people feed cans and bottles into a machine, and throw away the ones the machine doesn’t like? Newsprint and cardboard ends up in the garbage flow. Why do we make people drive their recycling to the dump, and buy a dump sticker just to drop them off? Any environmentally serious community would pick recycling up at the curb. This system seems designed to disincentivize recycling. Islanders gasp and clutch their pearls at the amount of litter, but we do nothing to make it easier to responsibly recycle and/or dispose of litter. At a dime a can, curbside recyling might actually turn a profit. Perhaps it could be privatized. We should at least get this right before we move on to loftier goals.
Can someone tell me why the
Christine SengekontacketCan someone tell me why the Oak Bluffs Police Department needs body armor? Do they think they are in Minneapolis?
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