Lagoon Woes Seen Years Ago
1987 Report on Water Quality Found Problems ‘Particularly
During the Summer Months'; Recommended Dredging
A comprehensive study documented water quality problems in the
Lagoon Pond 16 years ago, but the recommendations from the study -
including a dredging program - were never carried out because of a
lack of funding.
It took seven hours and 43 minutes for the fastest sailboat to
complete the 'Round the Island race on Saturday. Sforzando,
captained by Blair Brown of the New Bedford Yacht Club, was the first to
cross the finish in the Edgartown outer harbor at 3:43 p.m. The speedy
Taylor 44's lap around the Island typified the pace of most
sailing in the 80th annual Edgartown Yacht Club event.
Culinary Arts Teacher at High School Charged With Stealing Kitchen
Supplies
By CHRIS BURRELL
High school culinary arts teacher Peter J. Koines was arraigned
yesterday in Edgartown District Court on charges that he stole
school-owned kitchen supplies and diverted school funds to buy food for
his own commercial kitchen.
Helen Maley, the founder of the Early Childhood Program of
Martha's Vineyard Community Services, died peacefully at her West
Tisbury home Sunday of Alzheimer's disease, just two months before
her 90th birthday.
At the Troubled Shellfish Hatchery, Good Work Depends on Good Water
By JULIA WELLS
This place runs on water.
Filtered salt water fortified with home-grown algae to feed the baby
shellfish. Pure pond water pumped straight from the Lagoon to feed the
adolescent shellfish. Fresh water pumped straight from a well to keep
everything - as Eloise's aunt would say - clean,
clean, clean.
New Fundraiser Just for Employee Pay?
It's the Latest Idea from Management in Community Services
Dispute; Union Leaders Are Skeptical
By MANDY LOCKE
Management waved an olive branch across the negotiation table at
Martha's Vineyard Community Services Friday - offering to
add a new fundraiser to the agency's social calendar for the
purposes of boosting the earnings of agency staff.
Yesterday, the union informally rejected what they termed as
"a bake sale."
After First Weekend of Stop Signs, Some Traffic Backups, Complaints
By CHRIS BURRELL
The stop signs went up at the notorious blinker light intersection
early Friday morning, officially ending the days of nonstop travel
between Vineyard Haven and Edgartown.
The director of the Martha's Vineyard Shellfish Group said yesterday that nearly four million healthy juvenile shellfish under culture at his Lagoon Pond hatchery have died in the last three weeks because of extremely poor water quality in the pond.
The deteriorating water quality has not affected mature shellfish and there is no danger to humans who eat shellfish from the pond.
Like most Island cocktail parties, the Tisbury Street Fair was slow
to start. An hour into the annual town celebration though, and it was
standing room only.
Johnny Hoy and the Bluefish rocked through the evening. Youngsters
danced in the middle of the street in front of the band. Many of the
Island's nonprofit organizations sold T-shirts, raffle tickets
and plenty of food on the sidewalks.
Refusing to let the fundraiser be a stage for escalating labor
tensions, Martha's Vineyard Community Services officials this week
denied the request of Possible Dreams poster child Carly Simon to
earmark a portion of her gift's proceeds to staff wage increases.