It’s disappointing that the Chilmark selectmen would vote on the proposal of MV@Play without including the volunteer proponents.
It’s disappointing that the Chilmark selectmen would vote on the proposal of MV@Play to privately fund and rebuild the athletic campus at the high school without including the volunteer proponents, all parents of current or former school athletes. To us, that endangers public process where it would seem opponents of anything can control the outcome by ensuring that the proponents have no opportunity to present their proposals and receive an impartial hearing. It is only right and fair that the proponents be given the opportunity to represent their project in front of the Chilmark selectmen as custodians of good public process.
Nonetheless, we welcome the referral to the Martha’s Vineyard Commission and in fact were in the process of making it ourselves. The delay, which we would have told the selectmen had they chosen to include us in their decision-making, has simply been due to the demands of work and retrieving final schematics from our engineering team.
It’s worth repeating that our proposal — at this stage phase one — was developed according to specific and stringent requirements outlined by the high school athletic department and school administrators. The full master plan leaves 65 per cent of the 41 acres of public athletic fields natural grass. Phase one would rebuild the track, likely to be condemned by state athletic officials, threatening the spring 2017 season, with a multi-sport synthetic turf field with organic infill of coconut husks, sand and cork.
We are incredibly lucky on this Island to have a booming crop of student and adult athletes. Unfortunately, we do not have fields that can accommodate the amount of practice and play from multiple sports — football, soccer, field hockey and lacrosse for men and women, boys and girls. Our existing fields have not and cannot stand up to that use and abuse.
Natural grass fields must be rested on a schedule so the root system can repair and heal from use. Synthetic fields, which can be played on rain or shine, allow for that rotation and additionally produce zero nitrogen run off, unlike grass, which is threatening our aquifer. They also don’t require fertilizers or pesticides. Cleaning turf — if it happens at all — is done with certified “green” products. Our plan also includes natural grass multi-sports fields to be used by our youngest players.
There is much more to say about our proposal — a proposal by a group of volunteer parents and business owners — that we are happy and anxious to share with the Martha’s Vineyard Commission which we know values facts. And we would hope that if there is, as there seems to be, a concerted effort by opponents to get other public bodies to weigh in, that elected officials would have a sense of basic fairness and civic duty to ask that we participate. In truth, we’re excited about what can happen at the high school. It can be a safe and healthy center of activity for players young and old. That’s been our vision from the beginning and we welcome any opportunity to present the proposal.
Matthew Poole
Chilmark
The writer is a member of of MV@Play.

Comments
No one is trying to endanger
Rebekah Thomson West TisburyNo one is trying to endanger the public process. To the contrary, sending the project to the MVC will provide a forum for an (hopefully) even-handed review. MV@Play planned to go to the MVC? That's wonderful news, but unfortunately the opposite message was conveyed at the Tisbury BOS meeting. Glad everyone is on the same page now and hopefully the community can start to come together to make sure this project is truly great. And safe.
Speaking of safety, I find it shocking that school officials are comfortable installing plastic fields treated with flame retardant chemicals and containing lead. Just this week, the American Association of Pediatrics called for more testing and tighter rules on lead exposure. http://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2016/06/20/482208272/pediatric… "It's unethical, of course, to purposefully poison kids with varying amounts of lead and then see what happens with their blood lead level and how that corresponds to developmental problems... If we want to actually do the right thing, we should prevent it from happening in the first place." We should be preventing exposures to lead, not introducing new sources. Dr. David Brown, Sc.D. notes, "Installing a synthetic turf field, you will increase lead exposure no matter what. It is the single largest source of lead in the town." I honestly can’t understand why MVRHS isn’t concerned about the safety of plastic fields when institutes including Mount Sinai and UMASS Lowell’s Toxics Use Reduction Institute http://www.turi.org/Our_Work/Home_Community/Artificial_Turf, as well as the federal government sure are.
Also glad that MV@Play is no longer stating that the track had been condemned. It hadn’t been. But yes, we all know it’s in need of repair and fortunately different people are working to address that issue. Looking forward to working together to make sure athletes get the facilities they need, without hurting them, the environment or taxpayers.
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