Oak Bluffs voters will consider several new bylaws, including one to ban smoking on town beaches, another to establish new regulations for street performers, and another to create new rules for wind turbines, when the annual town meeting resumes on Tuesday after a three-week break

Moderator David Richardson bangs the gavel at 7 p.m. at the Oak Bluffs School. Voters must still decide 10 remaining articles on the warrant.

The town meeting recessed April 14 after two nights of heated debate over the town budget and individual spending articles. In the same week, voters defeated 11 of the 12 override questions at the annual town election.

The first of the remaining articles asks voters to create a new affordable housing trust managed by the town affordable housing committee.

Members of the committee have pitched the trust as a self-sustaining solution to affordable housing that will allow the town to buy and develop property and generate revenue from sales or rentals. Voters will also be asked to allocate $335,701 in Community Preservation Act funds, $100,000 of which would be placed in the new affordable housing trust, if it is approved by voters.

Voters will also be asked to allocate $10,201 in CPA funds for window repairs at the Edgartown courthouse (a shared Islandwide project), $44,000 to restore the Niantic Park Pavilion, $132,000 to support the county rental assistance program, and $49,500 for a watershed survey and drainage study.

A new bylaw would ban smoking on town beaches and the pedestrian mall outside of the town post office, if it is approved. Another would regulate street performers, and define areas where they are permitted to perform.

Voters will be asked to adopt new federal flood maps, which are needed for certain town residents to be eligible for federal flood insurance, and establish two new flood zones.

Another bylaw would set rules for residential wind turbines.

Voters will also be asked to create a holding trust for postretirement benefits for town employees.

A final article asks voters to put $3,500 toward a new countywide reverse 911 system.