Tea Lane Residents Clamor for Paving Ancient Town Byway

Tea Lane Residents Clamor for Paving Ancient Town Byway

By MAX HART

Fed up with the ruts and potholes on their dirt road, residents
along historic Tea Lane in Chilmark are pleading with town leaders to
consider paving the 242-year-old byway.

"This is not just a colonial road anymore," Thomas
Rivers, a resident who lives off Tea Lane, told the Gazette this week.
"This is a colonial road in modern times, and it is failing its
residents. It is past time that the town responds accordingly, and some
of us think that means paving it."

After the Storm, Sledding Is Fine Sport from Farm Neck Fairways to Tashmoo

After the Storm, Sledding Is Fine Sport from Farm Neck Fairways to
Tashmoo

By MAX HART

The snowdrifts near the tee box on the third hole at Farm Neck Golf
Club in Oak Bluffs are deep, very deep.

So deep, in fact, that they rise up past the waist of an
average-sized adult, a good three to four feet of snow. Trying to wade
through them is an exercise in absurdity; it's nearly impossible
to navigate without falling on your face.

Road Crews Tackle Epic Storm Cleanup

Road Crews Tackle Epic Storm Cleanup

Highway Departments in All Six Towns Labor Tirelessly Around the
Clock to Remove Mountains of Snow

By JAMES KINSELLA

Vineyard road crews worked through the teeth of last weekend's
storm, battling white-out conditions and drifting snow to keep the
public ways clear.

When the snow slowed, workers in down-Island towns began hauling
away tons of the white stuff, building small mountains in designated
dumping areas.

Vineyard Commissioners Urge U.S. Army Corps: Put Cape Wind on Hold

Amid an escalating political climate around the controversial Cape Wind project, the Martha's Vineyard Commission decided last week to finally step into the fray.

While commission members were clear they would not take a position on the project itself, they unanimously agreed to take up as a cause the inadequate regulatory framework for permitting offshore wind farms.

Wastewater Treatment Workers Suffer from Mercury Exposure

Wastewater Treatment Workers Suffer from Mercury Exposure

By JAMES KINSELLA
Gazette Senior Writer

Two employees at the Oaks Bluffs wastewater treatment plant are now
receiving medical treatment for exposure to mercury after they handled a
chemical at the plant that contained the toxic substance.

The exposure was first reported in late December, but town officials
confirmed yesterday that it may in fact reach back for as long as two
years.

January Blizzard Hits Hard; Deep Snow and Gale Wind Force Widespread Closures

The worst blizzard in several decades dumped at least two feet of snow on the Vineyard last weekend, leaving roads impassable, homes isolated and emergency workers in a state of exhaustion.

The northeaster which began late Saturday night and continued into Sunday with gale force winds and gusts up to 70 miles per hour paralyzed the Island Sunday and Monday, and in the case of schools, right on through the week.

Officials Announce Delay in State Forest Clearing; Restoration Plan Altered

Officials Announce Delay in State Forest Clearing; Restoration Plan
Altered

By TOM DUNLOP

State environmental officials said this week that they will delay
and radically change a plan to clear more than 500 acres of planted
trees in the Manuel F. Correllus State Forest.

School Study Group Sees Little Progress

School Study Group Sees Little Progress

Task Force Charged with Fiscal Probe of Up-Island Regional School
District Hits One Roadblock After Another

By IAN FEIN

A study group charged with evaluating the finances of the Up-Island
Regional School District hit yet another snag this week, as the deadline
for consultant proposals came and went without a single response.

The financial analysis was supposed to be ready for annual town
meetings in April - but that timeline now appears well out of
reach.

Voters in Cottage City Say No to Historic District Expansion

Oak Bluffs voters this week narrowly defeated a proposal to include the North Bluff section of town in the Cottage City Historic District.

At Tuesday night's special town meeting, voters also argued over how much money a resident could earn and still qualify for town-subsidized property for affordable housing.

In the end, voters opted by majority voice vote to qualify households making up to 140 per cent of median income in Dukes County - a level that advocates said would include people such as teachers and police officers in the program.

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