Authority Members Talk Tomorrow About Future of the Chief Executive
By ALEXIS TONTI
The future of the Steamship Authority will be decided this week when
chief executive officer Fred C. Raskin steps behind closed doors to tell
the boat line board of governors whether he will resign.
At a meeting Wednesday, "I believe that Fred Raskin intends to
tell us whether or not he plans to stay for the full term of his
contract," Vineyard SSA governor Kathryn A. Roessel said.
SLIP Styling Away: Youth Group Organizes, Sponsors First Events
By CHRIS BURRELL
They call themselves The SLIP. That's the condensed form of a
name that sounds like it was plucked from a comic book bubble: The
Supporting League of Ideas and Projects.
A youth-driven group, their whole purpose is fostering creative
outlets for their peers, giving Island teenagers an alternative to the
weekend or summertime party scene.
Like a twist on the old Homer Price story, it wasn't the doughnuts that piled up this weekend at Janice Casey's bakery in
downtown Oak Bluffs, but the signatures.
Business Leaders Want to Say: Boat Reservations Are a Mess
By ALEXIS TONTI
The Steamship Authority vehicle reservation system is broken.
That was the take-home message this week at a forum that started as
a focused debate about the boat line's new guaranteed standby
policy and expanded to a broad indictment of the way the SSA books
passengers.
The forum, hosted by the Dukes County Commission, was held Wednesday
at the Vineyard Transit Authority administration building.
When Robert Breckenridge started teaching Spanish three years ago at the Tisbury School, the seventh and eighth graders eyed him with understandable skepticism. To them, Señor Breckenridge was just the latest in a long line to stand at the blackboard and say "Hola."
Now that the Island Health Plan has received a green light from
officials on Beacon Hill, leaders of this grassroots affordable
insurance program must turn their attention home - enlisting
doctors and Island business owners to sign on to this experimental
project.
"We all want this to work. Now is the time for all the players
to translate their words into action," said Tad Crawford, chairman
of the Dukes County Health Council.
It's like gardening, William Wilcox and Paul Bagnall explain,
but with a twist. All the planting is done underwater.
A bare quorum of Chilmark voters agreed without dissent this week to borrow another $200,000 to pay for a mounting list of problems in the physical plant at the Chilmark School.
"We are a little embarrassed but we are trying to put our best foot forward and fix the problems," said selectman Frank Fenner at a special town meeting held Wednesday night in the Chilmark Community Center.
The meeting saw a light turnout - about 40 voters attended. In Chilmark, 25 makes a quorum. Town moderator Everett Poole presided.
The money request was the sole article on the warrant.
Late-night snackers looking for their fix of apple fritters, doughnuts and cinnamon buns in Oak Bluffs could be locked out and left hungry tonight.
Aquinnah Fails to Pass Override; Budget Faces Cutback of Ten Per
Cent
By JULIA WELLS
Gazette Senior Writer
Voters in Aquinnah dealt a heavy blow to the town selectmen this
week, rejecting a $260,000 Proposition 2 1/2 override and sending a
tough message about government spending that reverberated around the
Island.
The general override failed by three votes in a special town
election held Wednesday afternoon.
The final tally was 40-37 against the override.