As Rents Rise, Island Employers Do Double Duty as Landlords

For countless Island businesses, providing employee housing has become a cost of doing business.

Surfcaster Sale Is Right on Time

This Saturday, the Martha’s Vineyard Surfcasters Association hosts its annual used tackle sale. All proceeds support scholarships for Island students.

International Film Fest Turns 19

For five days, the Martha's Vineyard International Film Festival will showcase nine feature films, two documentaries and nine short films from a variety of countries including Senegal, Bangladesh and Mexico.

Repairing Alabama Masts Is Journey of a Lifetime

Antonio Salguero first visited Vineyard Haven as a child in the late 1970s. At the time, his uncle Ross Gannon was a young local carpenter.

Plastic Bottle Ban Deserves More Attention

August is coming to an end on Martha’s Vineyard, the 20th August I can remember in my time living on this Island.

Gazette Chronicle: So Long

From the August 30, 1965 edition of the Vineyard Gazette: The blossoms of rose of sharon bushes are already pronouncing a dirge for August.

Getting to the Heart of the Matter With the Language of Law

Patricia Williams, author of The Miracle of the Black Leg: Notes on Race, Human Bodies, and the Spirit of the Law, does not shy away from hard subjects.

Hurdles Remain Ahead of 100-Unit Affordable Housing Project

Green Villa, a proposed 100-apartment affordable housing complex in Oak Bluffs, needs to bring more details to Island planners before it can start a full public review.

Honoring a Life Spent in Service to the Island

In the depths of sorrow, gratitude is one of the hardest things to cultivate.

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