Supreme Judicial Court Soundly Upholds Town Sewage Plant Practices
By IAN FEIN
In a resounding victory for the town of Edgartown, the Massachusetts
Supreme Judicial Court ruled yesterday that the Edgartown wastewater
treatment plant is part of the solution - and not the problem
- to water quality pollution in Edgartown Great Pond.
The silver and gold still sparkles in the afternoon sun like it did
that summer in 1966, when the young college student from Boston with
long blond hair stepped off the ferry, walked into Vineyard Haven and
began selling her handmade jewelry on the Island for the first time.
Time has finally run out for the Nobska, the last coastal steamer in
America and the car and passenger vessel that served the Vineyard
between 1925 and 1973. Preliminary work to dismantle the historic vessel
began in the Charlestown Navy Yard early this week, and on Wednesday the
wrecking ball came down on her upper deck.
Students who have attended the Martha's Vineyard Public Charter School since it first opened its doors ten years ago have a nickname - they are called charter starters. The last two members of the charter starter club - Elliot Morris and Matthew McCurdy - will graduate tomorrow. The graduating class this year numbers five, and among the two girls and three boys, there are few interests in common. Future plans do not overlap and they do not hang out together outside of school.
Hospital Ends Year Flush with Cash
By JULIA WELLS
The Martha's Vineyard Community Hospital ended its fiscal year
on a high note drenched in black ink, posting a net operating gain of
just over $1.5 million, more than double the gain posted last year
before gifts and other income. Cash reserves are also at an all-time
high at the Island's only hospital, thanks in part to a surge in
volume.
Bringing Back Norton Point
Trustees of Reservations Assume Management of Barrier Beach;
Shorebird Protection Increases but Fishing Access Preserved
By IAN FEIN
Stretching from Metcalf's Hole to Mattakesett Creek, bordered
by the calm surface of Katama Bay and the rough waves of the Atlantic
Ocean, Norton Point Beach is a spectacular place - offering
popular spots for shellfishermen and surfcasters, prime habitat for rare
shorebirds, and a vital access route for people going to and from
Chappaquiddick.
Michael Dutton resigned abruptly from the Oak Bluffs board of
selectmen on Monday, and is now expected to apply for the town
administrator position, soon to be vacated by Casey Sharpe. Mr. Dutton
has served on the board since 1999.
Selectman and board chairman Duncan Ross read Mr. Dutton's
letter of resignation at Tuesday's regular selectmen meeting,
marking the second consecutive meeting to begin with an announcement of
resignation.
Every year before the students' traditional march to the sea,
Tisbury School teacher John Custer gives a lesson on Memorial Day
- the holiday many people confuse with Veterans Day and associate
with cookouts and sale shopping, long forgetting their own elementary
school lessons on the subject.
Finding that the Dukes County commission did not act in bad faith, a
superior court judge this week overturned the treble damages awarded in
a long-standing salary dispute with the current and former
Martha's Vineyard Airport managers.
The amended judgment - which was issued Tuesday morning by the
Hon. Richard T. Moses and revises an earlier decision from last July
- is significant because it lowers the pecuniary penalties owed in
the case from roughly $600,000 to $260,000.
Arthur Railton Publishes Work of Intelligencer
By JAMES KINSELLA
Arthur R. Railton had just taken over what he had been assured was a
temporary post as editor of the Dukes County Intelligencer when he began
to make the acquaintance of Jeremiah Pease.
Gale Huntington, the founding editor of the Intelligencer, the
publication of the Martha's Vineyard Historical Society, had been
running continuing excerpts from the diaries of Mr. Pease, written from
the 1830s to 1857, when he died on the street in Edgartown.