Enforcement of a plastic bottle ban has been limited since the bans were enacted several years ago.
Ray Ewing

Oak Bluffs Backs Enforcement of Plastic Bottle Ban

The Oak Bluffs select board reaffirmed its support for the town’s plastic water bottle ban Tuesday, agreeing to direct the town’s board of health to enforce the neglected ban on sales.

The Oak Bluffs select board reaffirmed its support for the town’s plastic water bottle ban Tuesday, agreeing to direct the town’s board of health to enforce the neglected ban on sales.

In 2021, the town of Oak Bluffs passed a ban on the sale of plastic water and soda bottles under 34 ounces. But over the past three years, town officials have failed to enforce the ban, the Vineyard Conservation Society and other environmental advocates have said.

All six Island towns passed similar bylaws between 2019 and 2022.

Select board member Emma Green-Beach leads the board’s working group on the plastic bottle ban, formed this spring to evaluate strategies for the enforcement of the ban.

“The bylaw which we passed is about litter reduction and public health and all of the maladies that come along with excess plastic and single use plastic,” Ms. Green-Beach said.

In the spring, the board of health told the working group that, having recently hired a new health agent, it wasn’t “properly staffed to be helping with this bylaw,” Ms. Green-Beach said.

With the summer drawing to a close, Ms. Green-Beach said the select board should direct the board of health to enforce the plastic bottle ban.

“The town meeting in 2021 approved this overwhelmingly,” select board member Tom Hallahan said. “Then we have to honor their wishes to do this… We need to move ahead to meet the intent of the voters.”

In the spring, business owners in the town of Oak Bluffs encouraged the board to opt out of enforcement and allow businesses to sell beverages in plastic bottles. Included in the 2021 bylaw is a provision that allows the select board to opt out of enforcement if the provision proves too costly or difficult to put in place.

“The businesses in general feel like this isn’t something that customers want,” Ms. Green-Beach reported.

“Day-trippers like single bottles, because they’re day-trippers, and residents tend to want cases of these plastic bottles, bottles of water,” she added.

At the select board meeting Tuesday, member Dion Alley concurred with fellow board members that the select board should attempt to honor the voter’s wishes before abandoning the ban.

“If there’s a bylaw, it should be enforced,” Mr. Alley said. “That means all bylaws. We can’t pick and choose.”

“I think we need to ask the town administrator and staff what it’s going to cost to try to enforce it,” Mr. Alley added. “You can’t say, ‘Go enforce it and then come back later and tell me what it’s going to cost.’”

The select board agreed that the plastic bottle ban working group should instruct the board of health to enforce the ban. 

The board also agreed to ask Oak Bluffs town administrator Deborah Potter to present a report on the costs of ban enforcement, so that the select board could more accurately decide whether the ban was reasonably enforceable.

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 09/11/2024 - 19:58

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OB Resident Oak Bluffs

This is a really stupid bylaw that never should have passed town meeting. Yes there are plastics in the ocean. They are not coming from people in OB throwing plastic bottles into the harbor. That thought is beyond ridiculous. We are a tourist town. Tourists don't want to carry some stupid metal container to carry their water for a day trip. So now, if this is enforced, they will buy a selection of dozens of non-water drinks in plastic containers! Children came up with this by law and we should be ashamed the adults were too afraid to tell them they were wrong.

Also an OB resident Oak Bluffs

I disagree. We are a town, and yes tourists do visit us. But a majority of us who actually live here don't want their single use bottles. I think your tourists don't really care, but the merchants who cater to them don't like change. Even if the change is for the better. And I think we have a lot to learn from "the children".

Islander61 Oak Bluffs

I don't believe children came up with the idea, I believe it was an adult who used their influence over the children and then used the children to present it to the towns. Question? Did the bottle ban ever go to a vote at the ballot box or was it just at the Town Meeting? Like the Tisbury school issue, a vote at town meeting can be different than what you get at the ballot box. Put it to a vote at the ballot box, according to this article, it was a town meeting floor vote.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 09/11/2024 - 21:04

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Bill Oak Bluffs

Makes no sense. I can't buy a bottle of water for fear of pollution, yet I can build a house with PVC trim and literally make plastic "sawdust" that is scattered on the ground. Insane.

tom Boston

So with that logic, since there is all sorts of pollution all around the globe we shouldn't bother to take any measures to reduce it? Just keep on adding to it? By the way, PVC trim has an enormous shelf life. A used water bottle does not.That's the point.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 09/12/2024 - 10:26

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H2O On the Ho Edgartown

There is less plastic by weight in two crushable 500 ml bottles than in one 2 liter bottles.

You are not cutting down on plastic use by eliminating small water bottles.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 09/13/2024 - 08:58

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Bob Kelly Oak Bluffs

This law reminds me of a company I worked for that offered free soda and water -- all in plastic bottles. It was decided that there would be no more bottled water to save on plastic. Everyone drank just as much as before, but now it was all soda. And then someone discovered a loop hole so that club soda could be ordered which gave way to ordering sparkling water! So you could have soda and sparkling water but no flat water in a bottle....accomplishing nothing!

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 09/16/2024 - 13:17

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Kate Feiffer Oak Bluffs

What in the world did people do on the Vineyard prior to 1973, when plastic bottles came into our lives? Fifty years later and we're hooked on them. Good move OB select board. Small steps matter. Let's take more of them.

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