Oak Bluffs and Edgartown are both considering bans on the sale of miniature alcohol bottles, commonly known as nips.
Ivy Ashe

Oak Bluffs Looks to Ban Nips, But Only if Edgartown Does Too

The Oak Bluffs select board signaled Tuesday that it plans to put an article to town meeting that would ban the sale of nip bottles.

Nips, the popular miniature alcohol bottles, could soon leave the shelves of Oak Bluffs package stores. 

But only if they are banned in Edgartown, too. 

The Oak Bluffs select board signaled Tuesday that it plans to put an article to town meeting that would ban the sale of nip bottles, and asked town staff to include language that would make the prohibition go into effect only if Edgartown also bans them.

The proposed Oak Bluffs ban was mulled over at the board’s meeting Tuesday, where liquor store owners were invited to weigh in on the idea. The ban comes after a long history of public complaints about plastic and town litter. Several towns across the state, including Nantucket and Falmouth, have banned the selling of miniature bottles in an attempt to reduce single-use plastics and curb litter problems. 

“Oak Bluffs is pretty much flooded with nips,” said board member Brian Packish. “We recently banned water bottles and you’ll pretty much find 100 nips for every water bottle you find.” 

Many attendees agreed that litter is a pressing issue in Oak Bluffs, especially in the summer months. 

Sherry Countryman, president of the Lagoon Pond Association, claimed that nips are the main culprit of Oak Bluffs litter and are the majority of trash picked up during Island clean-up events. 

Store owners were not so thrilled about the potential ban. 

Jamie McNeely, of Our Market, proposed a 10-cent nip bottle deposit enforced by business owners to incentivize people to pick up discarded bottles. The state currently does not have a deposit for nip bottles. 

“I walk through our parking lot any day of the week in the summer and it’s trashed,” said Mr. McNeely. “But the reality is that the number of nips people might find on a road is probably less than one per cent of the nips that are actually sold.”

A prohibition could be costly for shop owners, though.

“This would be a big financial hit for us,” Mr. McNeely said. “Unfortunately, booze has its little cloud and that’s our living and you just can’t teach people not to litter.”

Edgartown is also considering a ban on nip bottles and the select board plans to have an article on its town meeting warrant. The Oak Bluffs board decided that it wants language that would put a ban in effect only if its neighbor also does, to help protect the town’s package stores.

The board is expected to place an article on the warrant later this month. 

Other changes to how alcohol is sold in town came up as the board heard from bar and restaurant owners about the idea of changing last call from 1 a.m. to 12:30 a.m. 

The earlier last call is meant to address contradicting town policies and concern over people rushing from Edgartown to Oak Bluffs to get a few more drinks.

Several restaurant owners argued that eliminating the extra half hour would harm them financially. 

Larkin Stallings, owner of The Ritz Cafe, a popular bar and live music venue on Circuit avenue, said that the change would hurt his tipped employees and goes against Oak Bluff’s long-standing reputation as a vibrant late-night entertainment hub. 

“We’re talking about the last half hour of our business and taking large amounts of money out of the pockets of my staff,” said Mr. Stallings. 

“There’s a reason that people choose Oak Bluffs instead of Edgartown and instead of Vineyard Haven,” he continued. “I think that it has a great deal to do with our identity and how much fun Oak Bluffs is.”

The select board plans to have a special meeting March 7 at 4:30 p.m. to continue its conversation about the town’s alcohol policies and the annual town meeting warrant. 

The board also discussed plans to build a new path from East Chop Yacht Club to the nearby beach and approved the installation of a sculpture near the Steamship Authority terminal.

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 03/01/2023 - 17:12

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J Klingensmith Naples , Florida

Come on now. Do you really think a ban on nips with clean up OB and the other towns from discarded nip bottles. Once people find out about the nip ban, they will just bring them over the next time they travel off the island.

M OB

Nah. Nips are impulse buys. You think nip drinkers are going to plan ahead and stock up at Kappy's once a month, packing the day's supply in their lunchbox each morning before work? If they're not available in our stores, they won't end up empty on our roadsides.

Chris Senge

I agree. The people who mostly buy them are in their 20s or (illegally) teens. They don’t have the full brain development to plan ahead, nor to consider the community impact as they discard them, driving around intoxicated.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 03/01/2023 - 20:04

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Tom Engley West Tisbury

This is a waste of time and money. Ciggy butts everywhere. Where do u stop. U can’t protect people from theirselves. Plastic shopping bags ban was a good idea single serve plastic bottles maybe. But not this. It’s getting out of control. Get it?

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 03/01/2023 - 21:34

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Charlie Callahan So Boston/Edgartown

Nips are the alcoholics way of drinking and hiding their drinking. There is no other reason for them accept as a bracer for drunks thruout the day,so they don't have a bottle showing.Too bad the island didn't push harder for more sobriety meetings,but that doesn't make the liquor stores any money.There are more liquor stores here than in that dump So Boston where I grew up,never thought I would live in a nice place like the Vineyard that seems to have more drunks and junkies than where I come from

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 03/02/2023 - 05:41

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James Kozak Vineyard Haven

I compliment the Oak Bluffs Selectman on their very courageous leadership on this issue.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 03/02/2023 - 10:22

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Robert England

Ban the small nips and they should make larger sized nips so you don't have to throw as many out. Flask sized nips. Billion dollar idea right here.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 03/02/2023 - 10:35

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Charlie Callahan So Boston/Edgartown

The only people who buy nips are drunks who need a drink,ban them and at least if they are not banned make it a $500 fine if caught throwing them out the window.Maybe start some AA meetings. This island is loaded with drunks,junkies and dysfunctionals. It's turning into happy acres,like it was in the projects in southie where I unfortunately grew up. I thought I left that behind me 40 years ago,but this place is just like it only it's more hidden behind the money

Sara Oak Bluffs

Oh, Mr. Callahan "start" some AA meetings? Please check the listings in the local papers and you will see that ship sailed long since. There are many resources for alcoholics who want to recover here. It's my observation that nips are attractive to many other segments of our society,including alcoholics.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 03/02/2023 - 11:31

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Charlie Callahan So Boston/Edgartown

The weather stinks ,no clamming,no fishing etc so nothing to do but make comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 03/02/2023 - 13:26

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Bob Edgartown

The liquor stores will not go out of business if they cannot sell nips. Just like stores did not go out of business that do not sell cigarettes. And a $.10 deposit is a joke if you want to put a deposit on them that my curb the litter, make it a $1.00 then people might actually pick them up or return them.

KM OB

My elementary school age kids and I pick up a ton of nip bottles (and all the other trash) because we don’t want to look at it, and it’s detrimental for birds and sea life. They’d be delighted to be rewarded ten cents a bottle.

Susan of OB OB/CT

agree with you -- stop selling them....alas, those who need their alcohol hit, will most likely buy the next size up -- and will more than likely swill it down and be more "drunk". Maybe cheaper to have a street vacuum travel from OB to Edgartown beach road.....as the trash along the roadside could use it ....just saying as I've walked it, picked up nips and thrown them away in OB trash barrels near "Pay Beach".

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 03/04/2023 - 14:29

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Martha Magee

Homo Insanitis is the cause of every problem on this planet. Nip bottles strewn everywhere shows you the unconscious disconnect in our throwaway polluting culture and total disrespect of our home, Mother Earth. Sadly this disconnect has reached the island. This is cause for concern. Because there is no self responsibility, although I believe in free will choice, no one has the right to assault our island or our planet. So I agree the solution has to be to remove the access to nips as a benevolent protective measure for the good of the land and sea. Earth is our Home.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sun, 03/05/2023 - 13:17

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Ken Rusczyk Oak Bluffs

Please please tell me how you're going to enforce this law? When I'm jogging on County Road everyone is going 20 miles an hour over the speed limit, and they're all talking on cell phones.Good luck!

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