Five Candidates Compete for Top School Post
By IAN FEIN
Longtime Island educator Margaret (Marge) Harris, one of nine
semi-finalists who interviewed for the permanent superintendent of
Vineyard schools last week, learned Monday that she was no longer in the
running.
"I'm very, very saddened by it," said Mrs. Harris,
the Vineyard schools assistant superintendent for curriculum and
instruction. She also taught social studies at the regional high school
for more than 25 years. "I really feel that I was the best
candidate for the job."
Marie Allen is at home in the comfortable study that she built at her Munroe avenue house in Oak Bluffs: a place to read books and listen to the blues, where a carved wooden giraffe peers from behind the couch, African figurines line a tall bookcase and her granddaughter's stuffed toy dog rests on a cushion.
Mrs. Allen also is at home on Martha's Vineyard: an Island where she was married, where her children took their first steps, where her own daughter was married and where she retired about six years ago.
A property tax revolt is quietly brewing on Chappaquiddick, where a large group of landowners have banded together and hired an attorney to challenge their latest property assessments.
Ambitious Town Library Plan Unveiled
Historic Commission Takes First Look at Expansion
By IAN FEIN
Trustees of the Edgartown Free Public Library unveiled designs for
the proposed $11.5 million expansion project on North Water street this
week.
The plan, which would connect the Carnegie library and recently
purchased Captain Warren house by way of a 17,000-square-foot addition,
raised eyebrows at the historic district commission public hearing on
Wednesday.
A tight-knit community of family farmhouses in the wooded hills off
Tabor House Road. Homes that optimize their surrounding landscape and
maximize exposure to the sun. A rambling stone wall surrounded by
daffodils.
These are the images the Chilmark housing committee will introduce
to town residents next week as part of a new conceptual design and
feasibility report on the Middle Line Road project, the town-proposed
affordable housing development.
Oak Bluffs Building Torn Down Illegally
Army Barracks Building Is Demolished with No Permits and No Review;
Building Inspector Under Fire
By JAMES KINSELLA
The contractor who tore down the old Army Barracks building on
Circuit avenue in Oak Bluffs did the work with no building or demolition
permits, and town building inspector Richard Mavro failed to issue a
stop-work order on the project, even though demolition work had been
under way for several weeks.
The demolition of the building was completed last week.
Town Defends Tax Challenge
West Tisbury Assessors Dip Heavily Into Legal Spending Coffers;
Methods to Determine Values Come Under Close Scrutiny
By IAN FEIN
A pending property tax appeal in West Tisbury has triggered mounting
legal bills to defend the assessors' position in a complex case
that challenges their methods for determining property values.
Executive Director Resigns at Community Services; Heller Study Cites
Flaws
By JAMES KINSELLA
Gazette Senior Writer
Longtime executive director Ned Robinson-Lynch has abruptly resigned
from Martha's Vineyard Community Services in the midst of a
searching reappraisal by the agency of its operations and organization.
Change now looms large at Community Services, one of the oldest and
broadest human services organizations on the Vineyard.
Mr. Turkington Lands a Chairmanship
By JAMES KINSELLA
Marking the first time in eight years that a Cape and Islands
representative has taken a committee chairmanship, Rep. Eric T.
Turkington on Monday was named House chairman of the newly formed
Committee on Tourism, Arts and Cultural Development.
The appointment by House Speaker Salvatore F. DiMasi places the
nine-term representative for the Island in a position of power to
influence important Island endeavors such as tourism and the arts.
Boat Line Board Goes Forward with Oak Bluffs Wharf Project
By JAMES KINSELLA
Revised plans for the reconstruction of the Oak Bluffs Steamship
Authority terminal have won the backing of Vineyard SSA governor Marc
Hanover.
"I think it looks great," said Mr. Hanover, a resident
of Oak Bluffs as well as chairman of the boat line board, of the $10
million proposal to rebuild the wharf near the North Bluff section of
downtown. At the monthly boat line meeting in Woods Hole yesterday, Mr.
Hanover said the new terminal will be a welcome enhancement.