The Oak Bluffs board of health decided Tuesday to ask the Inter-Island Public Health Excellence Collaborative, a group that brings together boards of health from the Vineyard towns, to discuss the prohibition.
Officials in Oak Bluffs are turning to an Islandwide public health organization in an attempt to figure out an all-Island approach to the Vineyard’s, at times unenforced, plastic water bottle ban.
The Oak Bluffs board of health decided Tuesday to ask the Inter-Island Public Health Excellence Collaborative, a group that brings together boards of health from the Vineyard towns, to discuss the prohibition.
The plastic bottle bylaw has been on the books in Oak Bluffs since it was approved at town meeting in 2021. The ban, which targets the sale of plastic bottles under 34 ounces that hold soft drinks or water, was passed in all six Island towns between 2019 and 2022.
A review of Island stores last year found that offending bottles were still for sale, and Oak Bluffs acknowledged that it hasn’t designated anyone to enforce the regulation.
The Oak Bluffs select board first sent the bylaw to the town’s board of health to discuss enforcement last year. Since then, the board of health’s discussions have focused on the feasibility of enforcing the bylaw.
On Tuesday, the discussion also touched on what would be necessary to change the culture around water consumption to reduce plastics, including installing more refill stations in the town.
Alexa Arieta, a health agent, explained that in order to enforce the bylaw, the board of health would have to adopt it as a regulation. She said the board has three options: adopt the regulation as written in the bylaw, write its own regulation, or not adopt anything.
The board declined to commit to the regulation, leaving enforcement in limbo.
“I understand the intention of this, I really do,” said William White, the board of health chair. “We have more important things to deal with. We have a staff of two.”
Board member Tom Zinno asked Ms. Arieta to bring the issue to the Inter-Island Public Health Excellence Collaborative.
“It sounds like it needs to be brought to them...If all the towns have passed this ban, we need to come up with a regulation,” Mr. Zinno said. “Because every board is going to say the same thing. Well, we can’t, we don’t have the staff to do this, we’re doing all these other things.”
Mr. White said that as the regulation stands, he does not want the town board of health to adopt it.
“Where I am right now is that we’re not going to adopt, as we speak right now, we’re not going to make this a regulation,” he said. “We need to do more research because it just doesn’t seem to work for me as one member of the board.”
James Butterick, the third member of the board, echoed Mr. Zinno’s belief that this should be an all-Island discussion.
“We’ve got to get all the towns to do this,” Mr. Butterick said. “I’m all for eliminating a lot of plastics in our environment…but for us to embark on this solo with no other towns, it just doesn’t make sense to me.”
Ms. Arieta said that she would bring it to the collaborative, but that she could not guarantee any specific outcome.
“It’s a conversation I can have with them,” she said, noting that grant funding— which allows the collaborative to exist— is currently in flux. “We’re attacking the tobacco regulations in much the same way right now...so there’s no reason why we can’t tackle this as a group as well.”

Comments
I don’t support water bottles
Peter EdgartownI don’t support water bottles. Just don’t buy them.
We have such greater problems on the island.
Skyrocketing food prices, fuel, home ownership insurance
The single-use water bottle
Tim Johnson TisburyThe single-use water bottle ban is backward when every other type of less healthy product can be purchased in a similar format. It was a feel-good concept that in the real world is a failure. It is time to move on and make recycling of more the actual goal
I agree. Now kids are buying
Jen OBI agree. Now kids are buying soda and energy drinks… not good… water would be better.
We have bigger problems…
I just got my propane bill for example, or my groceries!!!
Glass bottles break.
Aaron Jackson EDGARTOWNGlass bottles break.
Plastic bottles bounce.
Metal bottles/cans taste like metal.
Question: Is banning plastic
William EdgQuestion: Is banning plastic water bottles legal? Why not ban the sales of cigarettes, pot or alcohol? Banning moped rentals seems to be tremendously popular and yet moped rentals still exist. Plastic water bottles are legal under Federal and State laws. I know it's unpopular to question this and in my IMHO that's exactly why it should be questioned. What if the towns wanted to ban landscaping trucks due to pollution or any gas car for that matter? Could they regardless of the circumstances? So here is my wish list of things for the towns to ban: if water is not allowed in plastic under 32 oz why is alcohol allowed in a plastic container under 32 oz? Hmmm. Mopeds are dangerous and polluting (no catalytic converter) as are motorcycles, why not ban them? Hmmm. My favorite is the current trend to ban short term rentals because it is a business. Actually, you would have to ban long term rentals too because, it is a business. Hmmm.
This is a waste of time and
Mark EdgartownThis is a waste of time and money, how about focusing on ways to improve government services and reducing our taxes.
Somebody gets it!
Roddy Seasonal VisitorSomebody gets it!
just another feel good do
wake up mvyjust another feel good do nothing regulation. Do a better job of recycling and stop being a nanny parent to everyone. Put out recycling containers *if not already there* and concentrate on important matters.
We can't buy something we
Bill Oak BluffsWe can't buy something we need because "single use plastic" is evil and Martha's Vineyard is going to solve pollution by getting rid of the one healthy option for drinking while still allowing every other horrible option that's also single use. If you feel like your making a difference by deciding what's best for everyone and actually try to enforce this then i suggest a Google search of India or Bangladesh and see that no matter what we do there's more than 1/2 the earth that doesn't care in the slightest so save your time and energy for something else!
All liquid containers, of any
George McElroy, Jr., Esq. Bourne, MAAll liquid containers, of any sort, need a $.25 deposit. The bottle bill works. We need to apply what works. This should apply to all liquid containers, including cleaning products. Then we should have State and Federal laws requiring the companies that produce these products (water, alcohol, sodas, cleaning supplies, etc.) to handle the actual recycling of these containers. The problems associated with these "Negative Externalities" should be the responsibility of the producers of the products.
We don’t recycle any of this
Waste of time EdgWe don’t recycle any of this plastic. That would mean it’s being flaked, hot washed and extruded back into resin. Rather, any “recycling” you think is happening is merely sorting. It’s a feel good strategy being played out for 40+ years. This ban is out of touch with reality and serves little to no valuable purpose other than perpetuating the saga of single use plastic arguments from both sides. Take a step back and think on it, but globally 9% of plastic is recycled and 6% is recycled in the U.S. Revoke the bans and focus on something else.
You're broadly correct
sensible use of time Vineyard HavenYou're broadly correct regarding the problems with plastic recycling, but isn't that an argument for this bylaw, rather than against? It's trying to reduce the amount of plastic bottles going into the blue bin, as well as litter etc. Aluminum cans are much more truly recyclable.
First, to everyone who has
Some context Vineyard HavenFirst, to everyone who has pointed out that it is ridiculous to ban only water in plastic bottles, thus encouraging less healthy options like soda, etc, please read the bylaw. Or at least read the article you are commenting on. This is simply not true. The ban applies to sugared drinks too.
Second, the real story here isn't really about board of health regs and enforcement. It's not that technical. It's that a ban was passed at town meeting a few years ago, and most all businesses across the island are following it, essentially voluntarily, either because they think it's the right thing to do, or it's good for business. And that would be that, as they say, except a few very politically inclined businesses in OB want to fight it, and they have some support among the BOH and the select board. That's fine too, that's local politics. But we should be clear what's going on. No one in the other towns wants to participate in some contrived collaboration that has no intention of ever enforcing anything, when all is going fine in their town right now.
The plastic water bottle ban
Mike Oak BluffsThe plastic water bottle ban is ridiculous but I understand it's intentions. To apply the same ban to soft drinks is nightmare and an endeavor that is about last on my list of importance. As others have said, rising grocery costs, soaring energy costs and a growing unhoused population should be the towns focus.
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