Vineyard Lands for Our Community needs to raise millions of dollars before it can buy land along the waterfront for its large project.
Ray Ewing

With Closing Date Looming, Vineyard Haven Project Makes Donor Push

In a meeting Thursday, Vineyard Lands for Our Community president Steve Bernier said the nonprofit is scrambling to raise the closing costs for a massive redevelopement project on the Vineyard Haven waterfront before the August 1 deadline.

Spirits were high when the Vineyard Lands for Our Community announced sweeping plans earlier this month to revamp a stretch of the Vineyard Haven waterfront.

The nonprofit proposed buying properties from the DeSorcy family along the harbor, expanding Gannon & Benjamin Marine Railway, creating new gallery space and building a park complete with a pavilion for performances.

But just weeks after the plans were unveiled, leaders behind the project say they are scrambling to raise the millions of dollars needed to purchase the Beach Road parcels. 

In a meeting Thursday in Vineyard Haven, nonprofit president and former Cronig’s Market owner Steve Bernier told people working on the project that the group had failed to officialy raise a single penny for the ambitious proposal.

“We have a tough place we have to traverse and I’ve been losing sleep over it because I can’t change the direction this is going in,” Mr. Bernier said in the meeting at developer Sam Dunn’s downtown office.

The nonprofit is hoping to overhaul the area to create a more vibrant harborfront.
Ray Ewing
The nonprofit is hoping to overhaul the area to create a more vibrant harborfront.
Ray Ewing

Nonprofit executive director Phil Wallis, board director Andrew Flake, principal designer Josh Dunn and engineer George Sourati were among the approximately 20 people at the meeting. Mr. Bernier invited members of the press to attend. 

In an interview with the Gazette after the meeting, Mr. Wallis said there is some nuance to Mr. Bernier’s concerns. 

It is correct there is no money in the account for the project, but several donors have made pledges, he said. 

While Mr. Bernier had set a $6 million goal for closing, Mr. Wallis said the actual closing cost for the land alone is $3.5 million. So far, about $1.5 million in verbal donor agreements have been reached. 

The $6 million goal would encompass permitting and other costs ahead of construction, Mr. Wallis said. 

The nonprofit has a closing date of August 1 and Mr. Bernier said the nonprofit set a June 26 fundraising deadline.

The foundation has been communicating with 62 major donors since Christmas, and have pushed their funding timeline twice. But Mr. Bernier said the nonprofit won’t be able to delay any longer.

Mr. Wallis said that fundraising season was just getting into gear on the Island, and it is not uncommon to have verbal pledges for donations ahead of the closing date.

“Donors are just arriving and some of them expressed interest but we haven’t looked them in the eyeball and gotten commitment,” he said.

Plans for weekly social gatherings along the waterfront to show people the project’s vision are also in the works for July, according to Mr. Wallis.

In Thursday’s meeting, Mr. Bernier assured the team that the nonprofit would carry on with dignity and not give-up hope, and it would make a last-minute push to speak to as many donors as possible.

“I have gained so much respect for you,” he said to the group. “I cannot put us in a place where we’re going to get pushed around and beat up and look like Swiss cheese… failing is not an option.”

Their current proposal would redevelop five parcels from Ernie Boch Jr. Park to the now closed DeSorcy paint building. The nonprofit had applied to the Tisbury conservation commission for its proposed 25,000-square-foot building for artists and artisans, as well as moving the Althea Gallery and the home of the Martha’s Vineyard Times – a newspaper owned by Mr. Bernier. 

The project would have to go through several regulatory reviews before coming to fruition.

“We’re at the edge of doing something very noteworthy and it should be done in a way to test time,” Mr. Bernier said. “It’s not for us, but for this community.”

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 06/29/2024 - 00:22

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Tom Engley West tisbury

The great Bob Carrol once told me the way to wealth is thru debt. I’m sure the powers at be will pull a rabbit out of somewhere. It’s taken decades for people to wake up and do something to attract more interest in Tisbury. Good luck.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 06/29/2024 - 19:11

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Tim Greer Tisbury

It's a little to late to save the Tisbury waterfront after the Town rubber stamped the ugliest most commercial building on the Vineyard. The Vineyard Wind building never should have been built to that size. How was it ever allowed is the question many people ask as they travel along Beach Rd passed it. Forget about the waterfront the elected Town Officials have.

Jim VH

I agree the Vineyard Wind building is an eye sore, but so is Stop n Shop.
From my understanding Stop n Shop was going to rebuild and the Town and some other Business people stopped it.?? Why??? This is the first thing you see as you exit the ferry.
In fact I am learning they were going to build all the way to the five corners?

Laurence Edgartown

From the street, the most noticeable thing about the building is its first floor. Because Vineyard Haven is so deep in the flood zone, federal regulations required the new construction to be elevated. The headquarters sits on steel piles about 15 feet above street level.

Vineyard Gazette

May 23, 2024

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 06/29/2024 - 20:48

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Gina Menemsha/nyc

I’m surprised the local Banks aren’t stepping up to invest in this project hey it’s a non profit a perfect fit for the feel good MV wonder their interest ??

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sun, 06/30/2024 - 12:09

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Jane Chittick Formerly Edgartown

As a former national nonprofit executive in charge of raising funds for major medical-, university-, museum-centers (and, who started the Preservation Trust here in 1980-92), it is shocking to me that any budding nonprofit would announce a fundraising goal before >50% of its funds were in hand (not pledged). Add that to an unrealistic deadline, and it's even more bizarre and unattainable. Why would people, hearing this now, flock to this well-meaning group with cash? BTW, Bob Carroll was one of my good friends - he was joking. Bunny Rabbits aren't normally the way to go about convincing donors of investing their assets in something that has no foundation. Something is totally fake with this project--- it's not real and I'd start to investigate what the real story is. Why aren't journalists doing their job?

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sun, 06/30/2024 - 16:03

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Not Again? Vineyard Haven

Not sure what you're talking about Tom. If you look at what Tisbury has done in decades your comment is unfounded .

Islander Too

You are right. This whole thing is bizarre. I see zero public benefit in this project. This is a nonprofit like Beach Road Concerts is a nonprofit. Exists for the benefit of the principals. Who seem to be the only entities who benefit from it. There certainly is no need for the MV Times and a proposed "digital hub" to be situated at Five Corners and to eat into the now very pretty Boch Park in the process.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 07/02/2024 - 07:26

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Anne Luzzatto VINEYARD HAVEN

Copenhagen Infrastructure Partners, are you listening? With billions in equity committed to projects throughout the world, surely Vineyard Wind owes its new island home some good will. Why not step up with a meaningful donation? You might even get a plaque! And I also say this after Vineyard Wind, badly fumbling what was originally a beautiful and graceful design, built out a clunky eyesore of a headquarters.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 07/02/2024 - 09:47

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Peter VH

This is just my opinion. I think most people have there doubts on Vineyard Wind. I think the next 3-7 years will tell the story..
In regards to others stepping up? I thing right now with an election year and the so many unknowns, people are waiting for the election to be over and things will get rolling again…
Let’s hope and pray I am right on that.
Because with inflation etc… skyrocketing we are going down a bad road.

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