Roy Imhoff

Oars In

The Vineyard’s coastal ponds are in trouble, and nothing short of bold action will save them.

The Vineyard’s coastal ponds are in trouble, and nothing short of bold action will save them.

That, like the simple fact that climate change is occurring, needs to be the starting premise as reasonable minds debate exactly how to address this looming environmental crisis.

The Tisbury board of health should be applauded, not castigated, for putting its oars in murky waters with a proposed new bylaw that seeks to slow the amount of nitrogen entering the Lagoon Pond and Lake Tashmoo by levying fees on new development around the two ponds. Revisions to the bylaw are likely and in order before it reaches a final vote, probably in the next couple of weeks.

Some critics of the bylaw, for example, have raised valid concerns about its fairness. Taxing only new development without regard for wastewater produced by existing dwellings — while protecting longtime homeowners from an unexpected new cost — could have the effect of asking newcomers to pay for the sins of their neighbors.

Already there are indications that the fees may be dropped in favor of another model when the board drafts its final version of the bylaw.

But other critics have strayed well off the reservation by questioning the methodology and science used to evaluate the nitrogen problem. Among other things, they have taken sharp aim at the work of the Massachusetts Estuaries Project.

Certainly the estuaries project has been far from perfect — it took years longer to complete than originally planned, and has been plagued at times by funding problems and political infighting. Still, the approach taken by the project to measuring nitrogen loads in saltwater ponds and estuaries is widely considered to be sound.

And experts, including William Wilcox, the respected longtime water quality planner for the Martha’s Vineyard Commission, now retired, leave no doubt that there is a strong link between increased development and pond water deterioration.

Enough, already. Baseless attempts to tarnish the credibility of the estuaries project serve only as a distraction from the urgent need to begin developing rules to control the amount of nitrogen entering ponds.

That recent public hearings held by the Tisbury board of health on its proposed bylaw seemed to attract more critics than supporters is not surprising. Who wants to spend a summer evening in a hearing room debating public policy?

But here’s an activity that might spur you to action. On a calm summer morning, rent a kayak from Wind’s Up in Vineyard Haven and go out on the pond. Skirt Hine’s Point, point toward the drawbridge and turn south. From there it’s a pleasant, easy paddle to the head of the pond, a marshy place fed by freshwater streams where wild watercress grows in the spring. There’s a herring run in the upper pond too, named for Richard Madeiras, the late Oak Bluffs shellfish constable.

Along the journey you will encounter sunfish sailors, paddle boarders and possibly quahauggers if the tide is out. Roughly midway down the western edge of the pond you will pass the solar hatchery run by the Martha’s Vineyard Shellfish Group.

Then look landward, and you will see lots of houses, many with lawns running down to the edge of the pond.

And a clear study in contradictions will begin to emerge. Here is the shellfish group, dedicated to supporting the traditional Island way of life and health of saltwater ponds by growing seed clams and bay scallops. And here is a pond in trouble, fed by too much nitrogen from septic systems, and also fertilizer on lawns. The telltale signs include yearly algae blooms, especially in late summer and fall and especially at the head of the pond, where the water is brackish and circulation is lowest.

The Tisbury board of health is paddling in the right direction. Let them know you appreciate and support their bold efforts to save a critical Island resource.

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sun, 07/24/2016 - 18:32

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Charles Whitcomb Washington DC

Oak Bluffs ponds are polluted. Not nitrogen challanged or ecologically unbalanced. POLLUTED. That seems to be a dirty word (no pun intended) for the powers that be. Polluted means property values go down. Polluted means poisonous shellfish and crabs, radioactive scallops and unhealthy swimming conditions. It means septic overflow. It means chemical contamination. Development killed Sengie. Island wide development is killing the rest of the ponds. And all that lovely government grant money targeted for it's rescue is being spent by professional grant hogs who are living comfortably in their big houses overlooking the ocean writing psuedo scientific reports on meager progress - just enough to keep the money flowing.
The almighty dollar has killed the ecology of the island. There is no way to fix it. Wise up.

Gina Menemsha/nyc

Sadly , Charles you have hit on 1 of the many stumbling blocks trying to get any serious problem fixed.. No Selectman wants to use the "P " word although it's fairly well established especially in Lagoon & Sengie Ponds.. Although population growth & use does have it's down side, your point of the endless grant studies is well taken.. While common for a town to apply for an appropriate grant to research a possible solution it seems that on MVY that grant process has become an art form with very little concrete results to show for.. Not only for the polluted Ponds issue but think the affordable housing Merry Go Round that has produced countless grant feasability studies for a few, but actually very little in positive actions take on mostly as you say pseudo scientific reports etc… Since a grant never has to be paid back the solution motivation is low @ best..

Gina Mitchel Bristol RI

I agree with you both. Thanks for bringing up the housing issue. This has been going on for decades. For God's sake please allow hard working tax paying citizens some avenue to decent housing. I do not think you would be disappointed. It's why so many of us left the island years age. Not because we didn't love everything about MV, it's because we could not afford it. The island lost an entire generation of great artists, environmentalists and potential stewards to a lack of reasonable year round homes. Lets not continue that tradition one more winter.

Anna Edey West Tisbury

YES, there is a way to fix it, and the key word and silver bullet is - wood chips! For more than 20 years, I have been proving that a simple wood chip filter system is capable of reducing nitrogen in septic leachate by better than 90%, reliably and very economically. A 3-bedroom home with a standard Title 5 leaching field pollutes the groundwater and the ponds with about 25 pounds of nitrogen per year - whether that home is 200 feet from the edge of the pond or 5 miles inland. DEP scientists know this horrific fact, and yet these are the systems that DEP forces people to install. There are some 15,000 of them on the Vineyard, each leaching some 20 pounds of Nitrogen annually into the groundwater - most of it ends up in our ponds. However, they can all be retrofitted with simple reliable wood chip filters, at way less cost than Title 5 systems or central sewering. Now we need to exercise our right to comply with Fed and State Law under the Clean Water Act - Title 5 regs are in total violation of this Law. Now we must exercise our right to reduce our own nitrogen pollution by 90% or better, and we must be free to do so with professional installation of any system that appears to be capable of reducing Nitrogen better than Title 5 septic systems, and that is also to protect public health and the environment at least as well as Title 5. Anyone interested in gathering to plan effective local political action on this issue? Contact me: [email protected].

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 07/28/2016 - 07:18

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Marie

The environment is always a topic on Martha's Vineyard. Is there a comprehensive Island approach to recycling?

This is basic to every state in the union. There are deposits charged on bottles and cans but we all know that this is not a plan. I would have to pay the trash haulers to accept my recycling items. I don't know how much garbage separation they actually do.

While discussing coastal ponds and bird habitats the conversation about recycling never happens. Too much trouble?

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