Early in the 1975 movie Jaws, a shark is spotted in the distance, and Amity police Chief Brody yells to swimmers to get out of the water.
Early in the 1975 movie Jaws, a shark is spotted in the distance, and Amity police Chief Brody yells to swimmers to get out of the water. The swimmers, terrified, rush to shore. The scene was filmed at State Beach in late spring, so the local extras didn’t need to use their acting skills as they scrambled to escape the frigid water.
The scene takes place after two people were killed in shark attacks. Mayor Vaughn downplays the attacks and fights against closing the beaches. He dismisses the mounting evidence of a menacing great white shark in Amity waters because, he argues: “Amity is a summer town. We need summer dollars. We depend upon summer people for our very lives.” Closing the beaches on the July Fourth weekend would have serious economic consequences. In the blockbuster movie, the medical examiner succumbs to political pressure to change a death certificate, removing shark attack as the cause of death.
Today, some are downplaying the threat posed by climate change. Arguments dismissing the scientific evidence run the gamut. But the science is clear. Climate change is a real threat to the Island, and we need to approach it with long-range problem-solving instead of shortsighted thinking.
There have already been countless destructive events around the globe caused by climate change. The Martha’s Vineyard Commission will soon make available storm tide pathways maps that will show flooding in the coming years in areas that have never flooded before. All roads to the Martha’s Vineyard Hospital could be inundated with a major hurricane. Already, Five Corners is periodically underwater.
The commission is developing a climate action plan to address climate-related issues. Over the past five months, working groups have been investigating how climate change will affect the Island’s land use and natural resources, infrastructure and transportation, food security, public health and safety, economic resilience, and energy transformation. This effort will culminate in a great opportunity for meaningful community engagement and action. The working groups have organized events during Climate Action Week from May 8 through May 14. A list of the events can be found at thevineyardway.org.
Jaws is an allegory for what we face today. The potentially disastrous effects of climate change on the Island are real. Unabated, the results will be impassable roads, an insecure economy, and devastation of natural beauty. The way forward is to work together to find actionable solutions.
Jon Harris is a member of the MVC’s climate action plan infrastructure and transportation working group and seasonal resident of Oak Bluffs.

Comments
Thank you to Jon Harris and
Laurie Howick Evanston IL and Oak BluffsThank you to Jon Harris and all others working to craft actionable solutions to the threats posed to our island by a changing global climate. Please make sure to include the voices and experiences of summer/parttime residents in your meetings. plans and distribution of information about how we can all contribute and help. Offering our day visitors information about why they won't find single serve water/soda bottles, how our bottle/can deposit/return system works, reminding all about the importance of strictly-leashing dogs to protect wildlife, encouraging composting at local dumps - all of these are steps we can take, whether we come for a day, a week, a month, the summer or are lucky enough to live here year round. Economics must take into account what the island can sustain, and we all may need to alter our expectations about how we live on and enjoy Martha's Vineyard. Thanks again and looking forward to seeing what the Commission's plan looks like.
The global climate can
Ron EdgartownThe global climate can certainly change. It has done so many times in the past from the Ice Age to the Medieval Warming Period. Yet there were no SUVs during these times. No one argues that the Ice Age was not global. Some argue that Medieval Warming was not global but even that argument misses the point that it did happen and was not the result of human activity. It may (or may not) be necessary to plan for an increase in sea level in this area, but those plans have little or nothing to do with carbon emissions.
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