<p>Retired Chilmark police chief Timothy Rich is back on the job again, serving as acting chief and continuing a long battle against moped rentals on the Island.</p>
In 1979 the Chilmark selectmen took a chance and appointed him as town police chief. He was 23. It was not a unanimous vote.
But the bet paid off and Timothy Rich stayed on the job for 30 years. He retired in 2009 and is now back on the job again, albeit briefly, serving as acting chief while the town searches for a permanent head of the department.
“When do you actually become an old-timer,” he mused in an interview last week at his modest, comfortable home in the rugged south coastal perimeters of Chilmark, with views stretching across the moors that run to Squibnocket Pond and Noman’s in the distance. A dusting of snow had fallen the night before and slate-colored February clouds scudded across the sky. He recalled the early years on the job, and even before that, when he was in second grade and wrote a paper about what he wanted to be when he grew up. The list was short: police officer, fireman, farmer.
“Looking back, I think I’ve done everything I wanted to do,” he said.
Like many who call themselves Islanders today, Tim Rich came to the Vineyard for a summer job and stayed. He was trained as a firefighter and first responder in his late teen years when he was a kid living just outside New York city. His best friend growing up was Steve Flanders, whose family lived nearby. The Flanders family had deep Vineyard roots and when job circumstances changed, they moved back to the Island. In 1977 Steve told Tim about a summer police officer job in Chilmark. Tim came to the Vineyard and police chief Andy Parker gave him the job. He had no police experience but his experience as a first responder was an asset on the Island, where the population was sparse compared with today and there was only a handful of trained EMTs.
He actually had two job offers; as things turned out Oak Bluffs offered him a job too. “At six-seven they had a place for me patrolling Circuit avenue,” he deadpanned, referring to his height. But he had already committed to working in Chilmark.
Two years later Andy Parker left for a mainland job and Mr. Rich was named chief. It was controversial: one selectman wanted to hire the sergeant from Vineyard Haven who had earned his stripes, not the kid from New York who had only been a patrolman. But the other two selectmen went with their gut and voted to appoint him. In a final twist, he almost didn’t take the job. He had an offer from the New York city fire department to come back.
He decided to stay.
“I’m what you call a washashore,” he said. “But I’m an avid fisherman . . . and Martha’s Vineyard was a good fit for me on all other counts.”
Completing that second grade list, he became a farmer too, spending his retirement years tending 70 acres owned by his neighbor. He is also a handyman, filling a needed niche by doing small jobs for people who are elderly. And there’s one more thing.
“If I couldn’t do any of those things, I always wanted to be a good father, and I think I’ve fulfilled that too . . . I have three children who are 13th-generation Islanders,” he said, referring to his first wife’s family.
He retired eight years ago at age 54, said he knew it was time. “I didn’t want to become a burned-out, jaded, us-against them policeman,” he said. “I needed to begin to live as a civilian. You know, there’s a saying that everyone always thinks the bad stuff is going to happen to the other guy. In law enforcement we get to deal with the other guys. And it can have an effect on you.”
These days, at 62 Tim Rich is also on a mission: he is at the forefront of an effort to eliminate moped rentals on Martha’s Vineyard. His passion for the issue is a perfect storm of sorts, born of his years as a police officer, first responder and father.
“When I retired I really considered it unfinished business,” he said.
During his three decades in police work he responded to countless moped accidents, some minor, some serious. He has one vivid memory of a July 4 accident in town in the 1990s where he was a first responder. He remembers going back to the station that day and being told by officers that his shirt had bloody handprints on the back. They were the handprints of a child who had clung to him as he administered first aid to her father.
Soon after, he paid a visit to Sam Feldman, a Chilmark resident who was organizing an Island effort against mopeds that continues today. “I felt strongly that something needed to be done,” Tim said. “I had to be careful, I knew because I was in law enforcement. But I thought some good would come out of this.”
Two years ago his own son was involved in a fatal moped accident on State Road near the Chilmark/West Tisbury town line. His son was working at the Grey Barn farm and driving a pickup truck out of the farm. His passenger was a young woman who worked at the farm. A moped with a single driver was headed their way and lost control. They pulled the truck off the road as far as possible to avoid the collision, hemmed in by a stone wall. But it was not enough. The moped driver died at the scene. No one was found at fault; the moped driver had simply lost control, police said, and the pickup truck was unfortunately on the road in the same spot.
Then there was the accident last summer involving two young women on a moped and a dump truck on Barnes Road. The women were day trippers from New Hampshire, both athletes at the University of Massachusetts, Lowell. The driver lost part of her leg in the accident.
“Every time one of these accidents happens, it stirs everything up again,” Mr. Rich admitted. But he added: “You can talk about the number of accidents. But that’s just a number. I say one accident is too many, because you have no idea afterward how many people are affected. The people who were involved in the accident, the first responders, the people who saw it, and more . . . the tentacles extend out to family, friends and how their lives change.”
The number of moped rentals on the Vineyard has dwindled since the 1990s. Mr. Rich and his wife Laurisa are helping to lead an effort to eliminate them altogether. Among other things, the group is working to put a nonbinding question on town ballots in the spring, and has launched an investigation of rental license bylaws and violations in Oak Bluffs. (Laurisa Rich owns a family home in Oak Bluffs and they are taxpayers in that town.)
Last week the Gazette launched an independent survey through its Community Surveys project to gauge current public opinion about the moped issue.
Mr. Rich concluded: “At the end of the day, moped rentals have no place on Martha’s Vineyard — and I’m clear that I am talking about rentals.”

Comments
You're a good man, Mr. Rich.
BillyB OBYou're a good man, Mr. Rich. Bless you for keeping this topic front of mind and on the front page.
Good plan fosusing on local
Michael stutz AquinnahGood plan fosusing on local rentals; they create the most danger. I hope and expect voters will support you to ban rentals. Thanks for keeping this alive, Tim!
Thank you Mr. Rich. Your
Chip Coblyn OBThank you Mr. Rich. Your presence at the selectmen's meetings is a source of unrivaled passion, for the reasonable cause of eliminating a well documented health hazard from the island.
I commend you for standing up
Elliot Kronstein W TisburyI commend you for standing up for what you believe. One avoidable death is one too many. Why have mopeds on the road?
Americans do not like to be
William Knight Vineyard HavenAmericans do not like to be told NO! The way around that passion is to say YES, but its going to cost you a lot to do that. A local tax on Moped rentals, or an ordinance requiring insurance to be paid for by the renter would be a dis-incentive. People like the feeling they have a choice. I often tell groups of visitors that for the cost of four moped rentals they could rent a car. Or for much less take public transit. Is there some way we could advertise these facts on the ferry? Knowledge is not only power, it could save lives.
No mopeds allowed at The Duck
Elise LeBovit AquinnahNo mopeds allowed at The Duck Inn. I applaud Chief Rich also for standing up for bike paths in Chilmark, when the State wanted to pay for them.Unfortunately, it didn't pass, which meant we in Aquinnah didn't get an extra 12" on either side of the road to walk or bike.Thanks for your work.
Doing a Great Job - Keep up
Cyril-Federal House Oak BluffsDoing a Great Job - Keep up the good work.
Around and around we go on
Tony Guernsey KatamaAround and around we go on this issue for many years. I am an avid motorcycle rider for over 50 years. The. Vineyard is a fantastic place to ride your motorcycle, but not a moped. It is very simple how to solve this issue. Take anyone in charge of voting on this issue and force them to come down to Oak Bluffs, wearing shorts and tivas, Do not require that they have any license to drive a motorized bike. Give them a flimsy half unsafe helmet and double the approved weight riding the moped by having their partner ride pillion behind them. Make them rent the moped for four hours. For those who do not fall off, skid on the sand on the State beach at the "bend in the road" or get caught between the wind of a tour bus on South Road, promise you, they will walk away terrified. This issue is not about the right of free passage, but of tourist and passenger safety. We safe guard our beaches with life guards and our harbors with harbor masters. Now please, protect our children, our roads and the safety of 100,000 tourists visiting our beautiful island.
Proud to know you, Tim.
Rebekah Thomson West Tisbury, MAProud to know you, Tim.
Thank you, Tim.
Albert Fischer West TisburyThank you, Tim.
Thanks Tim Rich for being a
Fish crowThanks Tim Rich for being a voice of reason. As an ex EMT (early 80s) I saw enough moped rental carnage to fuel a lifetime of nightmares. The poor mortals who rent them have no idea of their safety.And the people who rent them will have a special place in hell
Thanks
Clem Littleton ChilmarkThanks
I was a summer officer 2001
Josh Phelan Hopkinton RII was a summer officer 2001-2003 in Oak Bluffs. My first year there, I was on day shift walking the harbor where all the moped rentals are. All I did the first year was deal with moped accidents. The amount of people crashing just pulling out of the moped rental area was unbelievable. from ping ponging off the parked cars to braking legs and ankles. It was a gruesome mess. I remember three fatalities that summer due to mopeds. One was a newlywed girl who had lost control going out of Oak Bluffs and swerved into the oncoming lane at the top of a knoll. The driver of the SUV was a late teen girl working the summer. The newlyweds husband and her best friends were right behind her. That one accident hurt so many people. That was terrible and the kid that rented the scooter to her was so guilt ridden that he just left the island. Rent a bicycle and be safe . Block island has this same problem .
As a former island cab driver
Seb Caldwell ChilmarkAs a former island cab driver, I've seen more than my fair share of fatal moped accidents and understand that those vehicles are unsuited for Vineyard roads and traffic.
Any motorized two-wheel rental should be over 125 CCs and require a motorcycle license.
Electric bikes could be rented as an alternative and safe moped-free bike lanes should be gradually increased island-wide.
Chief Rich,
Oscar Hansen West Tisbury, etc.Chief Rich,
Thank you for stepping out of the comforts of retirement to resume your role at the CPD as well as providing a powerful voice to this rental moped/scooter debacle. I experienced the exact situation described by Josh above with a parked (old) truck on Seaview Ave and a very unskilled moped renter. Getting Vineyard residents to support the rental ban is one piece of the puzzle. I would encourage those who utilize social media sites such as Trip Advisor, Yelp, Google, etc to post reviews highlighting the dangers of traveling around the island on rented mopeds in an effort to get this message out to potential renters.
Thank you for your hard work
Mary Jane Nevin ChilmarkThank you for your hard work on this important project! Vineyard residents have wanted moped rentals banished for as long as I can remember. They simply are too dangerous for this location.
Yes, thanks Tim. Thanks for
Jenifer Parkinson Oak Bluffs, MAYes, thanks Tim. Thanks for standing up tall against this insane practice. The time is long overdue for us to put an end to Mopeds on the Vineyard. Let's all support Tim in this initiative and stand up, like him, at our town meetings and speak out for people, and against this senseless carnage. Let's stop Mopeds NOW!
Not sure why my comment never
Jim B OBNot sure why my comment never get added. Are we going to ban bike rentals also. Plenty of accidents with those also. Riders don't follow traffic laws. They ride on the wrong side of the road, don't stop at stop signs or for pedestrians in crosswalks. Dangerous.
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