Energy Conservation Lagging on Vineyard

Energy Conservation Lagging on Vineyard

By IAN FEIN

Climate change has been at the top of nearly every political agenda
this fall.

Growing Class Divide Cause for Worry

The greatest thing about the Vineyard for the Rev. Alden Besse is
not the natural beauty - as much as he appreciates it - but
the intimacy of the Island community.

As a longtime minister at Grace Episcopal Church in Vineyard Haven,
and someone who is involved in numerous nonprofit organizations, he
believes that people on the Vineyard have always taken care of one
another.

Landscape Master: Allen Whiting Publishes Book of Life's Work

It's raining outside, so artist Allen Whiting is doing a quick inventory of the leaks in his West Tisbury barn-turned-studio, making sure that stacks of finished oil paintings are out of the way of the runoff. Repairs can be put off to another day.

Vito Capizzo, a Nantucket Legend

As a 10-year-old boy in Sicily, Vito Capizzo was a sporting heretic. He never liked soccer, the sports obsession of his birth country. “Never liked it,” said the Nantucket football coach.
 
And 56 years since his arrival in America, after more than 40 years coaching high school football, Mr. Capizzo has more reason than ever not to like soccer, for it is rob­bing him of talented athletes and damaging and his reputation as the ”winningest” football coach in Massachusetts.
 
Just as he feared.
 

Enthusiasm Builds for Farm Agency

Enthusiasm Builds for Farm Agency

By IAN FEIN

Just over a decade ago, the Massachusetts state government cut
funding for the Dukes County Cooperative Extension Service and forced
closure of the popular Island program, which provided useful resources
for Vineyard farmers.

Today, with a resurgence of small-scale agriculture spreading across
the country and taking hold here on the Vineyard, the state is
recommending the creation of another Island public agency to address
farming interests.

Enthusiasm Builds for Farm Agency

Just over a decade ago, the Massachusetts state government cut
funding for the Dukes County Cooperative Extension Service and forced
closure of the popular Island program, which provided useful resources
for Vineyard farmers.

Today, with a resurgence of small-scale agriculture spreading across
the country and taking hold here on the Vineyard, the state is
recommending the creation of another Island public agency to address
farming interests.

Town, Tribe Pact on Land Use Nears Decision; Attorneys Press for Accord

Town, Tribe Pact on Land Use Nears Decision; Attorneys Press for
Accord

By IAN FEIN

After a three-month stalemate, a proposed land use agreement between
town and tribal officials in Aquinnah is approaching a tipping point,
but leaders on both sides remain unsure which way it will fall.

Vineyard Hopes to Keep the Island Cup in Big Game on Nantucket Tomorrow

With all the hype surrounding tomorrow's Island Cup game between the Vineyard and Nantucket, it's easy to overlook that at its core, it's only a game.

Unlike in previous years, when the contest often determined whether the Vineyarders or the Whalers made the playoffs, the only thing on the line this year is bragging rights until the two teams lock horns again next November.

Paul Dulac Resigns to Seek New Job as Superintendent

Paul Dulac Resigns to Seek New Job as Superintendent

Edgartown School principal G. Paul Dulac resigned his post on
Wednesday night, after deciding to remain in the running for school
superintendent in Marblehead, where he is a finalist.

Vineyard schools superintendent Dr. James Weiss said he asked for
Mr. Dulac's resignation after learning that he had kept his name
on the short list of final candidates in Marblehead.

"Edgartown needs to have stability and commitment and clearly
that was not the case," Mr. Weiss told the Gazette yesterday.

Lobbied by Longtime Tisbury Merchants, Selectmen Reduce Commercial Tax Rate

The Tisbury selectmen lowered the tax rate for businesses, agreed to
review a draft warrant article to introduce beer and wine in town and
took steps to regulate taxi companies more efficiently in a
three-and-a-half hour meeting on Tuesday night.

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