Good news: the long-sought home rule petition to prohibit rental mopeds, approved unanimously last spring by Oak Bluffs voters, has been filed by our state representative and is currently coursing through committees on Beacon Hill.

As a founding member of Mopeds are Dangerous, I would like to thank the Vineyard year-round and seasonal residents and visitors for their overwhelming support to Mopeds are Dangerous Action Committee. If the petition is approved as written it will finally bring the rental moped public safety issue to its hard-fought resolution.

I also acknowledge the Oak Bluffs selectmen for shepherding this pressing safety issue through many meetings and hearings and pursuing a home rule petition allowing the town to finally regulate its rental mopeds. (Owner/operators are unaffected.)

Here’s a recap:

In August 2016 another horrific accident occurred in which a young woman lost her leg and shocked even the most seasoned first responders. The Island community agreed — this carnage on our roads must stop. This grassroots Islandwide outrage reinvigorated Mopeds Are Dangerous, founded in 1982 by Sam Feldman and myself and spawned MADAC with many energized new members, including Nicole Friedler Brisson and Lisa Holley. Not surprisingly, both Island paper surveys showed public sentiment running above 90 per cent agreement that rental mopeds cannot safely co-exist on our narrow public roads.

I agree. As a police officer here on the Vineyard for over 35 years, I personally have investigated hundreds of rental moped accidents and believe it is impossible to make rental mopeds a safe and viable mode of transportation on our roadways — for the inexperienced operator or the motoring public.

After MADAC completed our end-to-end review of 40 years of rental mopeds’ impact on our Island, their current bylaws and a pattern of noncompliance and nonenforcement, we submitted our findings to the Oak Bluffs selectmen. After a public hearing involving the

three moped dealers, they voted in May 2017 not to renew their licenses.

The dealers appealed to the Dukes County Superior Court, which ruled that the current bylaws (approved in 2006 by the Massachusetts Attorney General) were legally defective and that the town could not deny licenses for moped rental companies because Massachusetts law allows mopeds the right to use public roads. The judge granted a temporary injunction order that the licenses be issued.

MADAC was disappointed by the injunction but not discouraged. Another winter of outreach culminated in the 2018 Oak Bluffs annual town meeting where Oak Bluffs voters unanimously instructed their selectman to pursue a home rule petition. They then requested that Rep. Dylan Fernandez fulfill the wishes of the voters and file the petition with the legislature.

Filed on July 10, the petition (H.4727) has progressed through several committees. If approved as written, it will allow voters of Oak Bluffs at a subsequent annual or special town meeting the opportunity to prohibit the rental of mopeds in their community — positively affecting the Island at large.

Please contact Rep. Dylan Fernandez and Sen. Julian Cyr, asking them to continue their support to get this approved on the state level and brought back to the town of Oak Bluffs for final voter approval.

End of the road or a just another crossroads? Your continued support and participation now will determine which road is taken.

Timothy S. Rich

Chilmark

The writer is chairman of the Mopeds are Dangerous Action Committee.