A crowd of Vineyard residents registered their concerns with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers regarding a proposed private energy project that aims to plant 170 windmills in 28 square miles of shallow water in Nantucket Sound. For nearly two hours last Thursday night an audience of 60 entered comments into the formal record during a scoping session held in conjunction with a Martha's Vineyard Commission meeting in the basement of the Old Whaling Church in Edgartown.
Vineyard House: Women Find Island Haven For Recovery
By ALEXIS TONTI
On March 19, 2001, the first woman moved into Vineyard House's
third and newest residence - a house dedicated solely to Island
women in need of a safe living environment during the early stages of
recovery from drug and alcohol addiction. More than a year later, 14
women have already moved through the house, most staying for between one
and three months. Four live there now.
In Tisbury: Tisbury Voters Back Main Street Renovation
By JOSHUA SABATINI
Tisbury residents this week green-lighted major structural
improvements in town by approving both the initial phases of the
ambitious Main street project and the construction of a harbor
master's facility at the foot of Owen Park.
A 19-year-old Vineyard man was sentenced to five years in state
prison yesterday after he was convicted of raping a 15-year-old girl in
a late-night incident in Oak Bluffs two years ago.
Promising to show moped dealers no mercy this summer, Oak Bluffs selectmen have begun to toughen up moped bylaws, adding new language that will increase licensing fees, set higher penalties for violations and establish a minimum height limit for child passengers.
Counseling Center Employees Take Grievances to Island Public
By MANDY LOCKE
Island Counseling Center employees, locked in a labor dispute at
Martha's Vineyard Community Services, will take their grievances
to the public Monday night in a forum at the Oak Bluffs School library.
Chilmarkers at their annual town meeting this week backed a $1.5 million plan to expand their town hall, but shot down a proposal that would have banned piers on their ponds.
Off to Wisconsin
Wortzels Leave After Years of Caring Service
By ALEXIS TONTI
The boxes are packed, the walls are nearly bare and still the phone
is ringing. One, two, three, four calls in an hour. So many calls that
they take turns answering. They are spending each day - attending
meetings, leading discussions, fulfilling responsibilities - as
though they will be on the Island for the next year. They are, in fact,
leaving next Friday.
Season of Annual Town Meetings Continues in Two Island Forums
In Tisbury
If Tisbury residents approve more than $2.2 million in proposed
expenditures on top of the town's $14.5 million operating budget,
taxes for the average homeowner will increase by $160. But the
possibility of higher taxes is just one of the issues voters will
confront at Tuesday's annual town meeting, at the Tisbury School
gymnasium at 7:30 p.m.
The Environmental Protection Agency announced this week that it has
reached an agreement with R.M. Packer Co. for fines and compliance after
the company violated the Clean Air Act by releasing literally tons of
harmful pollutants into the air, both in Vineyard Haven and in New
Bedford.
The Packer company will now spend $300,000 to install emissions
control equipment at its Vineyard Haven terminal, and the company will
pay a penalty of $200,000 to the EPA over the next three years.